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  • Jan. 29, 1870
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Table Of Contents.

TABLE OF CONTENTS .

PAGE NOTABLE ROSICRUCIAN WORKS 49 LINES ON THE RETIREMENT OF THE M . W . G . M .... 49 THE BADGE OF FREEMASONRY AND THE GOLDEN FLEECE 49 and 50

LEAVES FROM MY LIBRARY 50 THE C RAFT 51 , 52 and 53 ROYAL ARCH 53 ORDERS OF CHIVALRY 53 BIRTHS , MARRIAGES , AND DEATHS 54

A NEW MASONIC PROVINCE 54 and 55 MULTUM IN PARVO 55 INAUGURATION OF THE PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF MIDDLESEX , AND CONSECRATION OF THE BURDETT LODGE , No . 1293 55 and 56

MASONIC BALL AT NEWBURY 56 and 57 ORIGINAL CORRESPONDENCE 57 OCCULT SCIENCE 57 and 58 ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION ... 58 ROSICRUCIAN SOCIETY OF ENGLAND 5 S MASONIC MEETINGS FOR NEXT WEEK 59

Notable Rosicrucian Works.

NOTABLE ROSICRUCIAN WORKS .

BY WILLIAM J AMES HUGHAN , IX . ( Continued from page 239 , vol . 2 . ) I am again indebted to my friend Capt . F . G . Irwin , of Bristol , for the perusal of another work , interesting to Rosicrucians ,

as it is by Thomas Vaughan , alias "Eugenius Philalethes . " The title is " Lumen de Lumine , or a new Magical Light discovered and communicated to the World , " London : 1651 , ( pp . 101 , 32 mo . ) Time will not allow

me to quote all I should like from the scarce little book , but the following , entitled "A Letter from the Brothers of R . C ., concerning the Invisible Magicall Mountaine , and the Treasure therein contained , " ought at least to

be reproduced in THE FREEMASON . Strange titles , and still stranger customs , seem to have been in favour with the early Rosicrucians , especially as they served to veil the character of their teaching from the world ,

and thus the initiated only participated in their esoteric mysteries and discoveries . The letter is written both in Latin and English , and no doubt Captain Irwin would spare the volume to the Editor of this paper , in

order that its contents may become known . Thomas Vaughan says of the Letter of the Brothers R . C ., that " They have described unto us the Mount of God , the mysticall philosophical ! Horeb ; which is nothing else

but the highest and purest part ofthe earth . For the superiorsecrct portion of this clement is Holy Ground , and Aristotle tells his Peripatetics Locus quo Excelsior co Dumoir . It is the seed-plot of the cternall nature , the

immediat vessell and rcceipient of Heaven , where all minerals and vegetables have their Roots , and by which the animal monarchic is maintained . The Philosophicall Black Saturn mortifies and coagulates the

invisible Mercury of the stars , and on the contrary the Mercury kills and dissolves the Saturn , and out of the corruption of both thecentral and circumferential ! suns gencrat a new body . Hence the Philosophers

describing their stone , tells us it is Lapis niger vilis , and fceteus , dicitur origo mundi et oritur sicut Gcrminantia . As for the epistle of the Fraternitie , I shall , for satisfaction of the ordinary reader , put it into English . I

know some doctors will think it no advantage , but then they convess their ignorance . I can assure them , the subject is nowhere so clearly discovered , and for

the first abstruse prcperation there is no private author hath mentioned it , but here we have it entirely , and withall most faithfull y , described . I confesse , indeed , that

Notable Rosicrucian Works.

instruction wears amask ; it speaks in tropes , but very plaine and pervious . " Another work by the same writer , is called

" The Second Wash , or The Moore Scour'd once more , " London : 1651 , ( pp . 188 , 32 mo . ) The whole that we know of , are as follows : —

Anima Magica Abscondita , " . D . 1650 . " The Fame and Confession , " A . D . 1650 . " Magica Adama , or the Ancient Magic from Adam . "

" Aula Lucis , or The House of Light , " . D . 1651-2 . " Discourse ofthe Waters ofthe East , " A . D . 1655 . " Lumen de Lumine , " . D . 165 r . " The Second Wash , " A . D . 1651 .

Thomas Vaughan , who wrote under the assumed name of Eugenius Philalethes , was a noted alchymist , and was quite an enthusiastic supporter of the Rosicrucian Society

in the middle of the seventeenth century . We are unable to say who he was . Any positive information as to his history will be much esteemed by the writer , should any of his readers be aware of such .

John Heydon , an attorney of London , devoted much of his spare time to the study ofalchymicaland Rosicrucian philosophy , so also did Robert Fludd , M . D ., JacobBohmen , Peter Mormuss , and Branda Borri .

As we intend ere long to compile a list of Rosicrucian works published during the seventeenth century , as also works bordering on that subject , we shall feel greatly obliged if brethren would send us the titles of works

in their possession , or which they have perused , as also any notes taken of their character . To suppose that the early Rosicrucians were the absurd impostors their enemies declare , would require more

credulity than we would credit their most determined opponents of the present day with , and therefore it would be superfluous to endeavour to answer many of the puerile objections made by their contemporary

writers . Dr . Mackay , in " Popular Delusions , " states that no lover of poetry can wish that such a sect of philosophers had never existed , although he is very far from being a favourable reviewer of their history ,

and the works now extant pro . and con . sufficiently exhibit the tendency of Rosicrucianism to clear their members from the false imputations of witchcraft , irreligion and immorality .

Lines

LINES

Written on hearing ofthe intended retirement ofthe Most Worshipful , the Grand Master of Freemasons , the EARL OF ZETLAND , K . T .

DY BRO . A . C . SWAIN . Thou art leaving the office thou long hast adorn'd , And thy loss to the Craft will be generally mourned ; Tho' the life wc so value is spared to us yet , Thy retirement will cause universal regret .

For every true-hearted Freemason hath known , That during the years thou hast sat on the throne . Our Order hath flourished , and Heaven hath blest Thine efforts to succour the poor and distressed .

The Charities , Brother , we point to with pride , Whose fame , fast increasing , extends far and wide ; Our Homes for the Aged , our Boys and Girls'School , Have prospcr'd beneath thy beneficent rule .

Tts true thy successor is greatly esteemed , That the light of benevolence also hath beamed In the efforts with which lie has aided thine own , In the spirit of kindness his actions have shown .

Yet still wc look back with a sigh to the past , As we pray that thy life will for many years last ; And when thou art summon'd to mansions above , May we meet thee again in God ' s haven of love .

The New Vadc Mccum ( invented and manufactured by Charles II . Vincent , optician , of 23 , Windsorstreet , Liverpool ) consists of a telescope well adapted for tourists , Sec ., to which is added an excellent microscope of great power and first-class definition , quite equal to others

sold at ten limes the price . Wonderful as it may seem , the price of this ingenious combination is only 3 s . 6 d ., and Mr , Vincent sends it ( carriage free ) anywhere , with printed directions , upon receipt of post-office order or stamps to the amount of 3 s . iod , —[ Advt . l

The Badge Of Freemasonry And The Golden Fleece.

THE BADGE OF FREEMASONRY AND THE GOLDEN FLEECE .

BY BRO . CHALMERS I . PATON , P . M . No . 392 , ETC ., ETC . The badge of Freemasonry is the Lamb's Skin , or white leather apron . The apron is worn by operatives to preserve their garments from stain . We use it for a nobler purpose . By the

whiteness of its colour , and the innocence of the animal from which it is obtained ( for the lamb in all ages has been deemed the emblem of innocence ) , we are admonished to preserve that blameless purity of life and conduct which will

alone enable us hereafter to present ourselves to the Master of the Universe unstained with sin , and unsullied with vice . The Iamb ' s skin is presented to every newly-made brother as the badge of our Order , and is the emblem of

innocence and the bond of brotherhood . It is more ancient than the Golden Fleece , or any other order that can be conferred on earth . Emperors , kings , popes , and potentates have not thought it beneath their dignity to put aside the crown and

tiara , doff the trappings of state , and lay down the sceptre and the sword , and , putting on this simple badge , join in the celebration of our mysteries . Members of the Craft are never to put on that badge if at variance with any brother who may be in the lodge . You must first

attempt to reconcile your differences , but if you find that impossible , you must retire , that the assembly of the brethren be not disturbed by your unseemly strife . Freemasons are ever expected to wear the badge worthily , for it would be a disgrace ever to cast a stain upon its purity .

" It is more ancient than the Golden Fleece , " is a word familiar at the investure to all intrants . Many have enquired as to what is the history or legend of the Golden Fleece ; having , after a long time , gathered it together , I now proceed to explain .

Ihe Golden Fleece occupies a prominent place in foreign tradition , concerning the legendary and mythical pre-historic period of Greece , and was a favourite subject of the Grecian poets and dramatists . It was , according

to the most ordinary form of the legend , the fleece of the ram Chrysonallus , the recovery of which was the object of the Argonautic expedition . The legend seems , or professes , to relate , to a period about a generation before the Trojan

war . Homer refers to it , and it is related by Hesiod and many other of the most ancient Greek authors . It is not wonderful that their accounts differ widely and irreconcilably from each other . According to the ordinary form of the

legend in which it is related by Apollodurus , Jason was commanded by his uncle Pelias , King or Chief of Toleus , in Thessaly , to fetch from . Colchis the Golden Fleece , which was suspended on an oak and guarded by a sleepless dragon .

He therefore caused Argus , the son of Phixus , to build a ship of fifty oars , and gathered together the choicest heroes of Greece to partake in this adventure . Their first landing-place was Sennois , where they stayed two years , because the women ,

in consequence of the wrath of Venus , had slain all the men excepting Thoas . Tlieir subsequent voyagings and adventures arc related by Appolodorus in the same minute and particular manner , but so contradictory are the accounts of different

authors that it has been pronounced impossible to say whether the expedition sailed north , south , east or west . Of course , it is vain to conjecture as to any reality covered by sucli a myth , although it probably derives its origin from some really

adventurous enterprises . Hercules and Polyphemus are represented by Appollodorus as taking part in the expedition , but they wandered too far inland when it touched at the shores of Mysia , in pursuit of the lost Hylas , and were left behind . The adventures of the Argonauts with

those winged monsters , the harpies , are very particularly narrated ; and how , by the advice of the blind seer , Phineus , whom they delivered from the harpies , they were enabled to steer through the Symphlegades and lo escape their wondrous dangers . Phineus advised the Argonauts to let loose a dove when they approached

“The Freemason: 1870-01-29, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_29011870/page/1/.
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Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
NOTABLE ROSICRUCIAN WORKS. Article 1
LINES Article 1
THE BADGE OF FREEMASONRY AND THE GOLDEN FLEECE. Article 1
LEAVES FROM MY LIBRARY. Article 2
Reports of Masonic Meetings. Article 3
ROYAL ARCH. Article 5
ORDERS OF CHIVALRY. Article 5
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Ad 6
Foreign and Colonial Agents. Article 6
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
A NEW MASONC PROVINCE. Article 6
Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 7
INAUGURATION of the PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE of MIDDLESEX, Article 7
MASONIC BALL AT NEWBURY. Article 8
Original Correspondence. Article 9
OCCULT SCIENCE. Article 9
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 10
ROSICRUCIAN SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. Article 10
Untitled Ad 11
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
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Table Of Contents.

TABLE OF CONTENTS .

PAGE NOTABLE ROSICRUCIAN WORKS 49 LINES ON THE RETIREMENT OF THE M . W . G . M .... 49 THE BADGE OF FREEMASONRY AND THE GOLDEN FLEECE 49 and 50

LEAVES FROM MY LIBRARY 50 THE C RAFT 51 , 52 and 53 ROYAL ARCH 53 ORDERS OF CHIVALRY 53 BIRTHS , MARRIAGES , AND DEATHS 54

A NEW MASONIC PROVINCE 54 and 55 MULTUM IN PARVO 55 INAUGURATION OF THE PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF MIDDLESEX , AND CONSECRATION OF THE BURDETT LODGE , No . 1293 55 and 56

MASONIC BALL AT NEWBURY 56 and 57 ORIGINAL CORRESPONDENCE 57 OCCULT SCIENCE 57 and 58 ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION ... 58 ROSICRUCIAN SOCIETY OF ENGLAND 5 S MASONIC MEETINGS FOR NEXT WEEK 59

Notable Rosicrucian Works.

NOTABLE ROSICRUCIAN WORKS .

BY WILLIAM J AMES HUGHAN , IX . ( Continued from page 239 , vol . 2 . ) I am again indebted to my friend Capt . F . G . Irwin , of Bristol , for the perusal of another work , interesting to Rosicrucians ,

as it is by Thomas Vaughan , alias "Eugenius Philalethes . " The title is " Lumen de Lumine , or a new Magical Light discovered and communicated to the World , " London : 1651 , ( pp . 101 , 32 mo . ) Time will not allow

me to quote all I should like from the scarce little book , but the following , entitled "A Letter from the Brothers of R . C ., concerning the Invisible Magicall Mountaine , and the Treasure therein contained , " ought at least to

be reproduced in THE FREEMASON . Strange titles , and still stranger customs , seem to have been in favour with the early Rosicrucians , especially as they served to veil the character of their teaching from the world ,

and thus the initiated only participated in their esoteric mysteries and discoveries . The letter is written both in Latin and English , and no doubt Captain Irwin would spare the volume to the Editor of this paper , in

order that its contents may become known . Thomas Vaughan says of the Letter of the Brothers R . C ., that " They have described unto us the Mount of God , the mysticall philosophical ! Horeb ; which is nothing else

but the highest and purest part ofthe earth . For the superiorsecrct portion of this clement is Holy Ground , and Aristotle tells his Peripatetics Locus quo Excelsior co Dumoir . It is the seed-plot of the cternall nature , the

immediat vessell and rcceipient of Heaven , where all minerals and vegetables have their Roots , and by which the animal monarchic is maintained . The Philosophicall Black Saturn mortifies and coagulates the

invisible Mercury of the stars , and on the contrary the Mercury kills and dissolves the Saturn , and out of the corruption of both thecentral and circumferential ! suns gencrat a new body . Hence the Philosophers

describing their stone , tells us it is Lapis niger vilis , and fceteus , dicitur origo mundi et oritur sicut Gcrminantia . As for the epistle of the Fraternitie , I shall , for satisfaction of the ordinary reader , put it into English . I

know some doctors will think it no advantage , but then they convess their ignorance . I can assure them , the subject is nowhere so clearly discovered , and for

the first abstruse prcperation there is no private author hath mentioned it , but here we have it entirely , and withall most faithfull y , described . I confesse , indeed , that

Notable Rosicrucian Works.

instruction wears amask ; it speaks in tropes , but very plaine and pervious . " Another work by the same writer , is called

" The Second Wash , or The Moore Scour'd once more , " London : 1651 , ( pp . 188 , 32 mo . ) The whole that we know of , are as follows : —

Anima Magica Abscondita , " . D . 1650 . " The Fame and Confession , " A . D . 1650 . " Magica Adama , or the Ancient Magic from Adam . "

" Aula Lucis , or The House of Light , " . D . 1651-2 . " Discourse ofthe Waters ofthe East , " A . D . 1655 . " Lumen de Lumine , " . D . 165 r . " The Second Wash , " A . D . 1651 .

Thomas Vaughan , who wrote under the assumed name of Eugenius Philalethes , was a noted alchymist , and was quite an enthusiastic supporter of the Rosicrucian Society

in the middle of the seventeenth century . We are unable to say who he was . Any positive information as to his history will be much esteemed by the writer , should any of his readers be aware of such .

John Heydon , an attorney of London , devoted much of his spare time to the study ofalchymicaland Rosicrucian philosophy , so also did Robert Fludd , M . D ., JacobBohmen , Peter Mormuss , and Branda Borri .

As we intend ere long to compile a list of Rosicrucian works published during the seventeenth century , as also works bordering on that subject , we shall feel greatly obliged if brethren would send us the titles of works

in their possession , or which they have perused , as also any notes taken of their character . To suppose that the early Rosicrucians were the absurd impostors their enemies declare , would require more

credulity than we would credit their most determined opponents of the present day with , and therefore it would be superfluous to endeavour to answer many of the puerile objections made by their contemporary

writers . Dr . Mackay , in " Popular Delusions , " states that no lover of poetry can wish that such a sect of philosophers had never existed , although he is very far from being a favourable reviewer of their history ,

and the works now extant pro . and con . sufficiently exhibit the tendency of Rosicrucianism to clear their members from the false imputations of witchcraft , irreligion and immorality .

Lines

LINES

Written on hearing ofthe intended retirement ofthe Most Worshipful , the Grand Master of Freemasons , the EARL OF ZETLAND , K . T .

DY BRO . A . C . SWAIN . Thou art leaving the office thou long hast adorn'd , And thy loss to the Craft will be generally mourned ; Tho' the life wc so value is spared to us yet , Thy retirement will cause universal regret .

For every true-hearted Freemason hath known , That during the years thou hast sat on the throne . Our Order hath flourished , and Heaven hath blest Thine efforts to succour the poor and distressed .

The Charities , Brother , we point to with pride , Whose fame , fast increasing , extends far and wide ; Our Homes for the Aged , our Boys and Girls'School , Have prospcr'd beneath thy beneficent rule .

Tts true thy successor is greatly esteemed , That the light of benevolence also hath beamed In the efforts with which lie has aided thine own , In the spirit of kindness his actions have shown .

Yet still wc look back with a sigh to the past , As we pray that thy life will for many years last ; And when thou art summon'd to mansions above , May we meet thee again in God ' s haven of love .

The New Vadc Mccum ( invented and manufactured by Charles II . Vincent , optician , of 23 , Windsorstreet , Liverpool ) consists of a telescope well adapted for tourists , Sec ., to which is added an excellent microscope of great power and first-class definition , quite equal to others

sold at ten limes the price . Wonderful as it may seem , the price of this ingenious combination is only 3 s . 6 d ., and Mr , Vincent sends it ( carriage free ) anywhere , with printed directions , upon receipt of post-office order or stamps to the amount of 3 s . iod , —[ Advt . l

The Badge Of Freemasonry And The Golden Fleece.

THE BADGE OF FREEMASONRY AND THE GOLDEN FLEECE .

BY BRO . CHALMERS I . PATON , P . M . No . 392 , ETC ., ETC . The badge of Freemasonry is the Lamb's Skin , or white leather apron . The apron is worn by operatives to preserve their garments from stain . We use it for a nobler purpose . By the

whiteness of its colour , and the innocence of the animal from which it is obtained ( for the lamb in all ages has been deemed the emblem of innocence ) , we are admonished to preserve that blameless purity of life and conduct which will

alone enable us hereafter to present ourselves to the Master of the Universe unstained with sin , and unsullied with vice . The Iamb ' s skin is presented to every newly-made brother as the badge of our Order , and is the emblem of

innocence and the bond of brotherhood . It is more ancient than the Golden Fleece , or any other order that can be conferred on earth . Emperors , kings , popes , and potentates have not thought it beneath their dignity to put aside the crown and

tiara , doff the trappings of state , and lay down the sceptre and the sword , and , putting on this simple badge , join in the celebration of our mysteries . Members of the Craft are never to put on that badge if at variance with any brother who may be in the lodge . You must first

attempt to reconcile your differences , but if you find that impossible , you must retire , that the assembly of the brethren be not disturbed by your unseemly strife . Freemasons are ever expected to wear the badge worthily , for it would be a disgrace ever to cast a stain upon its purity .

" It is more ancient than the Golden Fleece , " is a word familiar at the investure to all intrants . Many have enquired as to what is the history or legend of the Golden Fleece ; having , after a long time , gathered it together , I now proceed to explain .

Ihe Golden Fleece occupies a prominent place in foreign tradition , concerning the legendary and mythical pre-historic period of Greece , and was a favourite subject of the Grecian poets and dramatists . It was , according

to the most ordinary form of the legend , the fleece of the ram Chrysonallus , the recovery of which was the object of the Argonautic expedition . The legend seems , or professes , to relate , to a period about a generation before the Trojan

war . Homer refers to it , and it is related by Hesiod and many other of the most ancient Greek authors . It is not wonderful that their accounts differ widely and irreconcilably from each other . According to the ordinary form of the

legend in which it is related by Apollodurus , Jason was commanded by his uncle Pelias , King or Chief of Toleus , in Thessaly , to fetch from . Colchis the Golden Fleece , which was suspended on an oak and guarded by a sleepless dragon .

He therefore caused Argus , the son of Phixus , to build a ship of fifty oars , and gathered together the choicest heroes of Greece to partake in this adventure . Their first landing-place was Sennois , where they stayed two years , because the women ,

in consequence of the wrath of Venus , had slain all the men excepting Thoas . Tlieir subsequent voyagings and adventures arc related by Appolodorus in the same minute and particular manner , but so contradictory are the accounts of different

authors that it has been pronounced impossible to say whether the expedition sailed north , south , east or west . Of course , it is vain to conjecture as to any reality covered by sucli a myth , although it probably derives its origin from some really

adventurous enterprises . Hercules and Polyphemus are represented by Appollodorus as taking part in the expedition , but they wandered too far inland when it touched at the shores of Mysia , in pursuit of the lost Hylas , and were left behind . The adventures of the Argonauts with

those winged monsters , the harpies , are very particularly narrated ; and how , by the advice of the blind seer , Phineus , whom they delivered from the harpies , they were enabled to steer through the Symphlegades and lo escape their wondrous dangers . Phineus advised the Argonauts to let loose a dove when they approached

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