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  • March 1, 1878
  • Page 7
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1878: Page 7

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    Article PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. ← Page 2 of 8 →
Page 7

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Papers On The Great Pyramid.

Iii order to render each paper as complete as possible in itself , Ave "will divide the subject under five heads , and , discussing first the building itself , will proceed to consider the times in which it was built ; AVIIO the builders Avere ; why they built it ; and what it teaches . Since one of the chief points which I Avish Masonic readers to impartially consider is the origin of the Craft at the building of the Great Pyramid , I may as well state here

that Avherever any matter concerning the Pyramid itself appears to me to bear upon Masonic tradition , I shall endeavour to support it by such authorities as are free from any suspicion of having then vieAvs influenced by Masonic teaching . Thus , should any Mason note anything in the theories of Professor Piazzi Smyth which may tend to explain certain difficult points in the ritual of the Craft , he may safely conclude that the connection is quite unintentional on his partfor that gentleman isas yet , far from

, , being prepossessed in favour of the Order . Where , too , find Prof . Smyth ' s theories vioAved from a Masonic standpoint , corroborated by so competent an authority as Mr . llichard A . Proctor , Ave shall , I assume , he proceeding hy steps sufficiently sure , if we Avalk at the same time by the light of that Sacred Volume Avhich shoidd ever be as a lamp to guide our feet .

That the building itself is Avorthy the attention of every true Mason Avill appear when we consider that of all the stately buildings Avhich the hand of Man , instructed and aided by Science , has reared upon the face of the earth , there is , ancl has been , none Avhich could equal , much less excel , that stupendous monument of Masonry , Avhich , after the lapse of more than four thousand years , still speaks to men of the mighty dead ivho have gone before , and extorts a wondering admiration of their labours .

But there is in the building something more than at first meets the eye ; something wMch tells of a purpose ancl design in its construction Avhich stamps it Avith a character purely its own . Mr . James Bonwick , in his recently published Pyramid Facts and Fancies , a hook from Avhich I shall frequently have occasion to quote , after impartially giving a general review of Pyramid theoriesancient and modernthus decides : —" There is something

, , in the pyramid ; and men who see what others cannot , would not see if derided for their second sight , may yet be proved to haA'e a vision true and clear . " Situated on the 30 th degree of latitude north , and about 31 ° longitude east of Greenwich , * the Great Pyramid stands , not only centrally Avith regard to the countries composing what is popularly termed the Old World , but also on the geographical centre of the land surface of the whole Avorld .

Standing , then , m this unique position , upon a four-square base whose sides are perfectl y oriented—that is , correspond exactly with the cardinal directions—it rises to a . point at that peculiar angle which gives as its result that the height is the radius of a circle AA'hose circumference is equal to that of the base . It thus presents , or rather , did present—though throughout these papers we shall consider the Avork in its perfect state , as Avhen the builders completed their labours—a perfect specimen of that peculiar style of architecture which has ahvays been regarded as emblematic of stabilityand this

, may he the import of its name in the Arabic tongue , Haram , Avhich is variously translated to signify an old structure , or a holy place . But this meaning is doubtful , as it is considered " very possible that the Egyptians might have written 'HRAM , Avithout any voAvel , after the aspirated consonant , "t To the figure of a pyramid as the typo of strength for endurance , or stability , the British Constitution is happily compared ; nor uideed is there other stle of monument Avhich could contest its claims in this

any y Aspect . Into its external structure two classes of limestone entered . For the squared but ^ finished structural masonry , the nummulitic limestone of the levelled rock upon which it is built was used ; but for the finished casing stones a more compact white milestone from the eastern side of the Nile was obtained . Into the levelled rock were

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-03-01, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031878/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 2
PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 6
WHAT MATTER? Article 13
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 14
EXTRACTS FROM THE MINUTE BOOKS OF THE CARMARTHEN LODGE. Article 16
"WOUNDED." Article 18
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 19
AMABEL VAUGHAN.* Article 25
ALEXANDER PUSCHKIN. Article 27
THE ANGEL. Article 28
WHAT HAST THOU TO DO WITH MY POOR NAME ? Article 29
I LOVED THEE. Article 30
AN ELEGY. Article 30
A HEART. Article 30
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 31
FREEMASONS' WIVES. Article 33
ON THE TESTING AND STRENGTH OF RAILWAY MATERIALS, &c. Article 34
THE TRUE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 38
LOST AND SAVED ; OR NELLIE POWERS THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 41
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 44
A STORY OF CHINESE LOVE. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Papers On The Great Pyramid.

Iii order to render each paper as complete as possible in itself , Ave "will divide the subject under five heads , and , discussing first the building itself , will proceed to consider the times in which it was built ; AVIIO the builders Avere ; why they built it ; and what it teaches . Since one of the chief points which I Avish Masonic readers to impartially consider is the origin of the Craft at the building of the Great Pyramid , I may as well state here

that Avherever any matter concerning the Pyramid itself appears to me to bear upon Masonic tradition , I shall endeavour to support it by such authorities as are free from any suspicion of having then vieAvs influenced by Masonic teaching . Thus , should any Mason note anything in the theories of Professor Piazzi Smyth which may tend to explain certain difficult points in the ritual of the Craft , he may safely conclude that the connection is quite unintentional on his partfor that gentleman isas yet , far from

, , being prepossessed in favour of the Order . Where , too , find Prof . Smyth ' s theories vioAved from a Masonic standpoint , corroborated by so competent an authority as Mr . llichard A . Proctor , Ave shall , I assume , he proceeding hy steps sufficiently sure , if we Avalk at the same time by the light of that Sacred Volume Avhich shoidd ever be as a lamp to guide our feet .

That the building itself is Avorthy the attention of every true Mason Avill appear when we consider that of all the stately buildings Avhich the hand of Man , instructed and aided by Science , has reared upon the face of the earth , there is , ancl has been , none Avhich could equal , much less excel , that stupendous monument of Masonry , Avhich , after the lapse of more than four thousand years , still speaks to men of the mighty dead ivho have gone before , and extorts a wondering admiration of their labours .

But there is in the building something more than at first meets the eye ; something wMch tells of a purpose ancl design in its construction Avhich stamps it Avith a character purely its own . Mr . James Bonwick , in his recently published Pyramid Facts and Fancies , a hook from Avhich I shall frequently have occasion to quote , after impartially giving a general review of Pyramid theoriesancient and modernthus decides : —" There is something

, , in the pyramid ; and men who see what others cannot , would not see if derided for their second sight , may yet be proved to haA'e a vision true and clear . " Situated on the 30 th degree of latitude north , and about 31 ° longitude east of Greenwich , * the Great Pyramid stands , not only centrally Avith regard to the countries composing what is popularly termed the Old World , but also on the geographical centre of the land surface of the whole Avorld .

Standing , then , m this unique position , upon a four-square base whose sides are perfectl y oriented—that is , correspond exactly with the cardinal directions—it rises to a . point at that peculiar angle which gives as its result that the height is the radius of a circle AA'hose circumference is equal to that of the base . It thus presents , or rather , did present—though throughout these papers we shall consider the Avork in its perfect state , as Avhen the builders completed their labours—a perfect specimen of that peculiar style of architecture which has ahvays been regarded as emblematic of stabilityand this

, may he the import of its name in the Arabic tongue , Haram , Avhich is variously translated to signify an old structure , or a holy place . But this meaning is doubtful , as it is considered " very possible that the Egyptians might have written 'HRAM , Avithout any voAvel , after the aspirated consonant , "t To the figure of a pyramid as the typo of strength for endurance , or stability , the British Constitution is happily compared ; nor uideed is there other stle of monument Avhich could contest its claims in this

any y Aspect . Into its external structure two classes of limestone entered . For the squared but ^ finished structural masonry , the nummulitic limestone of the levelled rock upon which it is built was used ; but for the finished casing stones a more compact white milestone from the eastern side of the Nile was obtained . Into the levelled rock were

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