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  • Nov. 1, 1875
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    Article THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. ← Page 2 of 5 →
Page 19

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The Origin And References Of The Hermesian Spurious Freemasonry.

centuries amidst an idolatry of such a specious and attractive character as Avas that of Egypt . " if Moses , " says Faber , * " bad been the first who asserted a cosmogony , and a deluge , and had such events never beeu heard of until he , in the full sense of the word , revealed them , it is easy to perceive that he must have been immediately rejected as an impostor by the Israelites themselves . "

The fact is , that the Egyptian priests , in order to preserve their learning , religion , aud science , and to make it difficult for strangers to discover the occult meaning of their mysterious knowledge , made use of an hieroglyphic peculiar to themselves , and

intermixing it with the common symbolical figures which Avere more generally understood , they inscribed their temples , catacombs , obelisks , and subterranean places thickly with them . And thus they became sacred to HERMKSAVIIO was esteemed b

, y the Egyptians as the god of Avisdom . Plutarch in bis Erotica , speaks clearly of this difficulty . He says , "There are some slight and obscure traces of true history here and there to be found , as they lie scattered up and CIOAVII in the ancient

Avritings of Egypt . But it requires a person of uncommon address to find them out ; one who can deduce great truths from scanty premises .

The project was successful ; for the greatest scholars and the wisest philosophers amongst the Greeks and Romans were inadequate to the task of elucidating the great secret ; and though Jamblichus , Diodorus , Horns Apollo , Clement of

Alexandria , Plutarch , and many others , brought all their learning and talents to bear upon the subject , they signally failed ; and the Hieroglyphics of Egypt remained a sealed book after the full exercise of their united erudition aud ingenuity . Bryant

thinks their failure arose partly from an ignorance of the Egyptian language ; and questions whether any Grecian writer ever learned it . " Many negative- proofs , " he adds , " might be brought to show that neither Platonor Pythagorasnor Strabo

, , , were acquainted with that tongue . If any of them had attempted the acquisition of it , such was their finesse and delicacy , that the first harsh word would have shocked them , and they would immediatel y have

given up the pursuit . If they could not bring themselves to introduce an uncouth word in their writings , how could they have endured to have uttered one , aud to have adopted it for common use . " * Their respective systems are plausible and speciousbut modern discovery has proved

, fcliem to be decidedly erroneous . The great originator of the symbolical scheme , according to Egyptian tradition , was HERMES THISMEGISTUS , who fabricated the figure before us . He is said to have been the first king of the ancient Egyptians ;

and it seems quite clear that the triple Hermes of Egypt ,, the triple Rama of India , and the Hermes Trismegistus of the Greeks , are one and the same person . And the ancients invested him with a three-fold glory , viz , the power of a king ; the

illumination of a priest ; and the learning of a philosopher , The learned Faber seems to think that Hermes is nothing more than a corruption of Hermon or Ar-inon , the deity of the Lunari-arkite mountain . Bin Washih , or rather his translator , asserts that the oriental historians divide the Egyptian kings into three dynasties , viz .,

1 , the liermesian ; 2 the Pharaohs ; and 3 , the C'iptic . To the first , and particularly to the triple Hermes himself , they ascribe the tombs , catacombs , temples , palaces , pyramids , obelisks , sphinxes , and ail the royal , funeral , religious , and astronomical

discoveries and monuments , which astonish the traveller in Upper Egypt . But incapable of distinguishing them , or of finding out their true appropriation , they believe all of them to have been constructed for the purpose of hiding treasuresof raising

, spirits , of telling fortunes and future events , of performing chemical operations , of attracting affection , of repelling evils , or of indicating approaching enemies . Impelled by the powers of the magician , the spirits had no option but to reply to all his

questions . Thus Apollo exclaims when summoned by the sorcerer , " I am compelled to speak against my will . " Various forms of invocation may be found in Jamblichus , Lucan , and other ancient writers ; one of which was a threat that the magician would

reveal the mysteries of Osiris , and deliver his members to T yphon . The secrets ivhich were contained in the Egyptian monuments , and the arts by

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-11-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111875/page/19/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
RANDOM RECOLLECTIONS OF FOREIGN TRAVEL. Article 3
TO LOIS. Article 7
THE DUVENGER CURSE Article 7
THE BADGE OF INNOCENCE." Article 10
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY. Article 14
ODE. Article 16
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 18
SHADOWS. Article 22
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 24
NARRATIVE OF AN UNRECORDED ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Article 27
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 28
THE ATTACK OF THE CHURCH OF ROME ON FREEMASONS AND FREEMASONRY. Article 29
THE MYSTIC TEMPLE. Article 33
Review. Article 34
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 35
THE ETRUSCAN LANGUAGE Article 38
SONNET. Article 40
THE FAMILY GHOST. Article 40
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Origin And References Of The Hermesian Spurious Freemasonry.

centuries amidst an idolatry of such a specious and attractive character as Avas that of Egypt . " if Moses , " says Faber , * " bad been the first who asserted a cosmogony , and a deluge , and had such events never beeu heard of until he , in the full sense of the word , revealed them , it is easy to perceive that he must have been immediately rejected as an impostor by the Israelites themselves . "

The fact is , that the Egyptian priests , in order to preserve their learning , religion , aud science , and to make it difficult for strangers to discover the occult meaning of their mysterious knowledge , made use of an hieroglyphic peculiar to themselves , and

intermixing it with the common symbolical figures which Avere more generally understood , they inscribed their temples , catacombs , obelisks , and subterranean places thickly with them . And thus they became sacred to HERMKSAVIIO was esteemed b

, y the Egyptians as the god of Avisdom . Plutarch in bis Erotica , speaks clearly of this difficulty . He says , "There are some slight and obscure traces of true history here and there to be found , as they lie scattered up and CIOAVII in the ancient

Avritings of Egypt . But it requires a person of uncommon address to find them out ; one who can deduce great truths from scanty premises .

The project was successful ; for the greatest scholars and the wisest philosophers amongst the Greeks and Romans were inadequate to the task of elucidating the great secret ; and though Jamblichus , Diodorus , Horns Apollo , Clement of

Alexandria , Plutarch , and many others , brought all their learning and talents to bear upon the subject , they signally failed ; and the Hieroglyphics of Egypt remained a sealed book after the full exercise of their united erudition aud ingenuity . Bryant

thinks their failure arose partly from an ignorance of the Egyptian language ; and questions whether any Grecian writer ever learned it . " Many negative- proofs , " he adds , " might be brought to show that neither Platonor Pythagorasnor Strabo

, , , were acquainted with that tongue . If any of them had attempted the acquisition of it , such was their finesse and delicacy , that the first harsh word would have shocked them , and they would immediatel y have

given up the pursuit . If they could not bring themselves to introduce an uncouth word in their writings , how could they have endured to have uttered one , aud to have adopted it for common use . " * Their respective systems are plausible and speciousbut modern discovery has proved

, fcliem to be decidedly erroneous . The great originator of the symbolical scheme , according to Egyptian tradition , was HERMES THISMEGISTUS , who fabricated the figure before us . He is said to have been the first king of the ancient Egyptians ;

and it seems quite clear that the triple Hermes of Egypt ,, the triple Rama of India , and the Hermes Trismegistus of the Greeks , are one and the same person . And the ancients invested him with a three-fold glory , viz , the power of a king ; the

illumination of a priest ; and the learning of a philosopher , The learned Faber seems to think that Hermes is nothing more than a corruption of Hermon or Ar-inon , the deity of the Lunari-arkite mountain . Bin Washih , or rather his translator , asserts that the oriental historians divide the Egyptian kings into three dynasties , viz .,

1 , the liermesian ; 2 the Pharaohs ; and 3 , the C'iptic . To the first , and particularly to the triple Hermes himself , they ascribe the tombs , catacombs , temples , palaces , pyramids , obelisks , sphinxes , and ail the royal , funeral , religious , and astronomical

discoveries and monuments , which astonish the traveller in Upper Egypt . But incapable of distinguishing them , or of finding out their true appropriation , they believe all of them to have been constructed for the purpose of hiding treasuresof raising

, spirits , of telling fortunes and future events , of performing chemical operations , of attracting affection , of repelling evils , or of indicating approaching enemies . Impelled by the powers of the magician , the spirits had no option but to reply to all his

questions . Thus Apollo exclaims when summoned by the sorcerer , " I am compelled to speak against my will . " Various forms of invocation may be found in Jamblichus , Lucan , and other ancient writers ; one of which was a threat that the magician would

reveal the mysteries of Osiris , and deliver his members to T yphon . The secrets ivhich were contained in the Egyptian monuments , and the arts by

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