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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • April 1, 1876
  • Page 43
  • HALF-WAY DOIN'S.
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The Masonic Magazine, April 1, 1876: Page 43

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    Article HALF-WAY DOIN'S. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article GODFREY HIGGINS ON FREEMASONRY. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 43

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

Half-Way Doin's.

I thanks you for de 'tention you has gib dis afternoon—Sister Williams will oblige us by a-raisin ' ob a tune—I see dat Brudder Johnson ' s 'bout to pass around de hat , And don ' t let ' s hab no half-way doin ' s Avhen it comes to dat ! Scribner ' s Monthly .

Godfrey Higgins On Freemasonry.

GODFREY HIGGINS ON FREEMASONRY .

BY WILLIAM JAMES HUGHAN . ( Continued from piage 360 . ) SUCH works as these have undoubtedly a special value to masonic studentsfor

, they furnish the originals of several of our Traditions and Customs , though not to the extent some suppose , and certainly the evidence so accumulated and made known in the exhaustive works of Brother Higg ins must be carefully examined aud

considered before his opinions are accepted as correct , and while we cannot fail to admire the diligence of the author , Ave must also admit that his inferences are frequently not justified by the evidence he submits . However , the Avorks are most

valuable , and especially so to the thoughtful Mason . We now come to a most interesting portion of the work under review , and to Avhich Ave desire to invite the

attention of the thinking portion of the Fraternity . Bro . Higgins tells us that . " The Temple of Eleusis had a very large dome , which was of great antiquity , long before the time usually allotted to the invention of the arch , Avith radiated stones . . . . . I request my brother Masons

of the Royal Arch , to place themselves in the middle of the New Room at Freemasons' Tavern , when lighted up , and then to reflect upon all their ceremonies , on Avhich of course I cannot enlarge , and I suspect they will find themselves both at

Eleusis and at Bit-Chem , and in India . We know very Avell that there were no arches in the temple of Jerusalem , that is , radiated arches ; but we also knoAV that there were vaults in Avhich there were great treasures . . . . These arches , I apprehend , were of the nature of that of the treasury of Atreus at

Messina , and of the Cupola of Komilar , described by Col . Tod . If a person wanted to open such an arch , he Avould use a rope putting it round the cap , and pulling it inside ; if he Avanted to open a key-stoned arch he would not use a rope , but a

hammer . " ( p . 719 , vol 1 . ) " The persons called Royal Arch Masons Avere the Archi-tect-onici , before the invention of key-stoned or radiated arches the Cyclopsean builders of the only stone edifices , at that time , in the Avorld , Avhich

were temples . . . . The Archi-tectonici , the Chaldsei , the Gnostici , the Mathematici , the Dionisiaci , constituted a MYSTERY , and erected Gothic buildings , the ruins of Avhich now remain in India , thousands of years before they existed in

Europe . ... I beg to repeat to such of my readers as are Royal Arch Masons , that Solomon Avas a Ras or wise man , and that a Mason in Rajapoutana is called a Raz , which also means mystery ; and now I take the libertof observing to my

y brethren , that they are called Royal-Arch Masons , not because they have anything to do Avith Kings , but because they are Raia-pout-an Masons . " ( p . 770 . )

Well , for our part , Ave have never been able to trace the Royal Arch of Freemasonry long before 1740 , and our experience agrees , we believe , with others , particularly Brother DR . MACKEY , who has made the Ritual and History of that degree his special studyand who is not

, surpassed by any brother in both hemisp heres in his knoAvledge of the subject . We have , ourselves , devoted some years to the question , and have had more than one friendly discussion with our esteemed and learned brotherthe Rev . A . F . A .

WOOD-, FORD , M . A ., who rather leans to a much older origin than we can ascribe to Royal Arch Masonry . It is not for us in a printed publication , to lay much stress on the peculiar objects of Royal Arch Masonry , nor to dwell upon

its distinctive features , though even if we did , our attempt Avould not be the first of the kind as the revered and Reverend Dr . George Oliver , is the author of the bestAvork on the subject extant . ( " Origin of the English Royal Arch . " )

We are pretty sure , however , that nothing as yet been published to prove the existence of such a degree prior to A . D . 1738 , and we know that Rituals about the

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-04-01, Page 43” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01041876/page/43/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
SONNET. Article 1
THE WILSON MANUSCRIPT CONSTITUTION. Article 2
AN HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF MASTER AND FREE MASONS. Article 7
AIMEE. Article 11
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY. Article 11
LINES Article 14
THE ANTI-MASONIC VICAR Article 15
TO A SNOWDROP Article 17
"MILKLAT "—THE CITY OF REFUGE. Article 18
ODDS AND ENDS OF WIT AND HUMOUR. Article 19
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 24
ORATION Article 26
THE OLD FOLKS' PARTY. Article 28
BENEFIT MANKIND. Article 32
CURIOSITIES OF THE POST OFFICE. Article 32
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 34
BRO. DANIEL COXE—THE FATHER OF FREEMASONRY IN AMERICA. Article 36
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 39
HALF-WAY DOIN'S. Article 42
GODFREY HIGGINS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 43
THE SITE OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE DISCOVERED. Article 44
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 46
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Half-Way Doin's.

I thanks you for de 'tention you has gib dis afternoon—Sister Williams will oblige us by a-raisin ' ob a tune—I see dat Brudder Johnson ' s 'bout to pass around de hat , And don ' t let ' s hab no half-way doin ' s Avhen it comes to dat ! Scribner ' s Monthly .

Godfrey Higgins On Freemasonry.

GODFREY HIGGINS ON FREEMASONRY .

BY WILLIAM JAMES HUGHAN . ( Continued from piage 360 . ) SUCH works as these have undoubtedly a special value to masonic studentsfor

, they furnish the originals of several of our Traditions and Customs , though not to the extent some suppose , and certainly the evidence so accumulated and made known in the exhaustive works of Brother Higg ins must be carefully examined aud

considered before his opinions are accepted as correct , and while we cannot fail to admire the diligence of the author , Ave must also admit that his inferences are frequently not justified by the evidence he submits . However , the Avorks are most

valuable , and especially so to the thoughtful Mason . We now come to a most interesting portion of the work under review , and to Avhich Ave desire to invite the

attention of the thinking portion of the Fraternity . Bro . Higgins tells us that . " The Temple of Eleusis had a very large dome , which was of great antiquity , long before the time usually allotted to the invention of the arch , Avith radiated stones . . . . . I request my brother Masons

of the Royal Arch , to place themselves in the middle of the New Room at Freemasons' Tavern , when lighted up , and then to reflect upon all their ceremonies , on Avhich of course I cannot enlarge , and I suspect they will find themselves both at

Eleusis and at Bit-Chem , and in India . We know very Avell that there were no arches in the temple of Jerusalem , that is , radiated arches ; but we also knoAV that there were vaults in Avhich there were great treasures . . . . These arches , I apprehend , were of the nature of that of the treasury of Atreus at

Messina , and of the Cupola of Komilar , described by Col . Tod . If a person wanted to open such an arch , he Avould use a rope putting it round the cap , and pulling it inside ; if he Avanted to open a key-stoned arch he would not use a rope , but a

hammer . " ( p . 719 , vol 1 . ) " The persons called Royal Arch Masons Avere the Archi-tect-onici , before the invention of key-stoned or radiated arches the Cyclopsean builders of the only stone edifices , at that time , in the Avorld , Avhich

were temples . . . . The Archi-tectonici , the Chaldsei , the Gnostici , the Mathematici , the Dionisiaci , constituted a MYSTERY , and erected Gothic buildings , the ruins of Avhich now remain in India , thousands of years before they existed in

Europe . ... I beg to repeat to such of my readers as are Royal Arch Masons , that Solomon Avas a Ras or wise man , and that a Mason in Rajapoutana is called a Raz , which also means mystery ; and now I take the libertof observing to my

y brethren , that they are called Royal-Arch Masons , not because they have anything to do Avith Kings , but because they are Raia-pout-an Masons . " ( p . 770 . )

Well , for our part , Ave have never been able to trace the Royal Arch of Freemasonry long before 1740 , and our experience agrees , we believe , with others , particularly Brother DR . MACKEY , who has made the Ritual and History of that degree his special studyand who is not

, surpassed by any brother in both hemisp heres in his knoAvledge of the subject . We have , ourselves , devoted some years to the question , and have had more than one friendly discussion with our esteemed and learned brotherthe Rev . A . F . A .

WOOD-, FORD , M . A ., who rather leans to a much older origin than we can ascribe to Royal Arch Masonry . It is not for us in a printed publication , to lay much stress on the peculiar objects of Royal Arch Masonry , nor to dwell upon

its distinctive features , though even if we did , our attempt Avould not be the first of the kind as the revered and Reverend Dr . George Oliver , is the author of the bestAvork on the subject extant . ( " Origin of the English Royal Arch . " )

We are pretty sure , however , that nothing as yet been published to prove the existence of such a degree prior to A . D . 1738 , and we know that Rituals about the

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