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  • March 3, 1860
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  • FREEMASONEY AND ITS INSTITUTES.—IV.
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Freemasoney And Its Institutes.—Iv.

FREEMASONEY AND ITS INSTITUTES . —IV .

{ Continued from page Hi ) . IN the life of every man , no matter what his station , or how circumscribed his sphere of action , there is some one event which causes an indelible impression on his mind ; and as with men so it is with nations , the old mythologies , says Hugh Miller , are filled with shadoivy traditions of this kind

—shadow's of the world ' s grey fathers—ivhich , like those shadoivs seen reflected on clouds by travellers who ascend lofty mountains , are exaggerated into the most gigantic proportions , and bear radiant glories around thei / heads . The tradition ivhich seems universal and more deeply impressed upon mankind than any other , is that of tlie Deluge . Humboldt says , "The belief in a great deluge is , not confined to one nation singly , it makes part of a system of historical tradition . When the Tamaiiacs are asked IIOAV the human race

survived this great deluge , the age of water of the Mexicans , they say a man and woman saved themselves on a high mountain called Tamanacn , situated ou the banks of the Asivern , and casting behind them , over their heads , tho fruit of the Mauritia palm tree , they saw the seeds contained in these fruits produce men and women who repeopled the

earth . Thus , " he adds , " wo find in all simplicity among nations now in a savage state , a tradition which the Greeks embellished with all the charms of imagination . " In all parts of the known world there are certain records and traditions of the flood ; ive find that the Americans have the tradition of itthe Chinese acknowledifcwho are the most

, ge , distant nation of Asia ; several nations of Africa tell various stories about it ; the story of the flood of Deucalion is coincident with that oli Noah . So that , says Stackhouse ,- we may trace the deluge quite round the globe ; and what is more remarkable still , every one of these people has a tale fco tellsome one waysome anotherconcerning the

resto-, , , ration of mankind . Part of the ceremony in most of the ancient mysteries consisted in carrying about a kind of ship or boat , which related to the Deluge and the Ark . The Ark , says Bryant , ( note to Ucrod , 2 cxlv ., ) according to the tradition of the Gentile world , was prophetic , and was looked upon as a kind of temple or place of residence ofthe Deity .

In the compass of ei ght persons is comprehended all mankind , who were thought so hi ghly favoured by heaven that they were looked up to by their posterity with such reverence that they ivere ultimately reputed deities . Hence , in the ancient mythology of Egypt , there were precisely eight gods . This shi p of Isis was called Bavis , which is remarkable

very , as it is , according to Nicolas Damascenus , the vory name of the mountain on ' which Noah ' s ark rested . The resemblance between the Egyptian , the Indians , and the Chinese , in many points is most striking , not only in respect to reli gion , but also in manners and customs . ' The early settlement of Egypt , before the tribes of men were widel

y separated , was probably the reason why the Egyptians had so much in common with the Indians , who are not supposed to have been the children of Ham . Among both , for example , prevailed the same permanence ' of manners , they were alike remarkable for the respect entertained by children to their parentsthey were averse to warthey weredivided

, , ; into castes , in the most ancient times they used hiero - glyphics , the E gyptians had a solemn festival called the feast of lights , the Chinese have their feast of lanterns , and the Greeks also had their Xaa-ahjfopm , or torch bearing , as Herodotus calls it ; the origin ' of these ; games must be sought iu the worshi p of the Titan Prometheus . Tho action of

carrying an unextinguished torch from the Cera miens to the Acropolis is a livel y symbol of the benefit conferred by tho Titan upon man , when he bore fire from the habitation of the gods ancl bestowed it upon man . At first , however , it appear , * , says Smith ( Bid . Gr . anil Horn . Ant . ) , to hay ,, been a symbolic representation in honour of the gods who gave and taught men the use of material moulding fire

Other writers , in their anxiety to get a common signification for all the times ancl modes of the . Lampacleforia , have endeavoured to prove that all who were honoured by it were connected with the heavenly bodies ; others that it always had an inner signification , alluding to the inward fire by which Prometheus put life iuto man . The real fact , howeverseems to be that ifc was both commemorative and

sym-, bolical , as indeed ivere all the ceremonies practised in the ancient mysteries , the commemorative being for the exoteric , the symbolical for the esoteric portion of the worshippers , their true signification being confided only to the esoteric or initiated . M . Bailly has , from a review of the manners , customsand reliions of the IndiansPersiansChinese ,

, g , , Chakte-ins and Egyptians , discovered many similarities between all these nations , and has thence formed the conclusion that the knoivledge common to the whole of those nations has been derived from the same original source . The custom of libation was common to the Tartars and Chinese , as ivell as the Greeks and Bomans . The tradition of the

deluge is common to them all . All the Asiatic nations had festivals of the nature of the Soman Saturnalia . They all placed their temples fronting the east , to receive the first rays of the sun which they worshipped ; their system of astronomy was tho same ; the long measure of the ancient nations had all one common origin . Purity in design and

accuracy in execution seem to characterize the genius of all fche orienfcalnations . Dr . Eussell , hilrisllistory of Ancient Europe , i . 117 , says , " The genius of the Egyptians was acute and steady , rather than liberal and elevated . They prosecuted works of expense and ingenuity with singular perseverance

and upon principles purely mathematical ; but they were totally destitute of taste , and never acquired a distinguished rank among the cultivators of the fine arts . Their architecture attempted to supply greatness of design by immensity of fabric , substituting altitude for sublimity , and ponderous solidity for stability . Their statuary , like their architecture ,

delighted in huge masses of stone nicely chiselled , but displaying neither elegance of figure , animation of expression , nor grace in altitude . Their painting , if we except brilliancy and durability of colouring , was devoid of every cxecllenc 3 belonging to that captivating art . They were totally ignorant ofthe magical effects of light and shade . "

In this picture we cannot but recognize the Indian , as well as the Egyptian genius , and also that of the Chinese at the present day ; aud if the stupendous monuments of antiquity seen at Elora , in the caves of Elephanta and Salsette , as well as the modern pagodas of Ch ilium brum and Seriugha-m , be compared with the ruins of Thebes , of Nineveh , the Sp hinx , and other celebrated monuments and marbles of ancient Egypt , the resemblance befciveeu the nations will appear most striking . It appears then that the religion and

mysteries ivere essentially the same among all nations , although perhaps in some , from difference of climate and situation , they slightly differed in some minute particulars . Among them all the ceremony of initiation was practised ; all these ceremonies were of a funereal character , they celebrated the death and resurrection of some cherished being , cither the object of esteem as a hero and benefactoror of

, devotion as a god . The candidates for initiation were not only expected to be of a clear unblemished character , but their future lives wore to bo examples of piety and virtue . " . "Remain , afar oflj ye workers of iniquity , " ivas the cry of the herald priest when the ceremony was about to be conferred . The degrees wore subordinate and the candidate subjected to

trials and probations proportionate to each ; the rites were practised in gloom and darkness , in caves and forests , on the summits of mountains and iu the depths of valleys ; and tho supreme knoivledge was not attained until the aspirant , after years of patient trial and preparation , had reached the place of wisdom and light . The system , of idolatry w .-u , founded upon the belief both of present and future rewards and punishments as dispensed

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-03-03, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 7 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_03031860/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 1
ANCIENT SYMBOLISM ILLUSTRATED. Article 2
FREEMASONEY AND ITS INSTITUTES.—IV. Article 4
THE JEWISH TEMPLE AND PRIESTHOOD. Article 6
ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 7
THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF BRITISH ART. Article 7
THE SPIRITUAL NATURE. Article 10
THE LAW OF KINDNESS. Article 10
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 12
WBitty Article 13
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 13
BRO. DISTIN. Article 13
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 15
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
FRANCE. Article 16
GERMANY. Article 16
INDIA. Article 17
CHINA. Article 17
AMERICA. Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 17
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORBESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasoney And Its Institutes.—Iv.

FREEMASONEY AND ITS INSTITUTES . —IV .

{ Continued from page Hi ) . IN the life of every man , no matter what his station , or how circumscribed his sphere of action , there is some one event which causes an indelible impression on his mind ; and as with men so it is with nations , the old mythologies , says Hugh Miller , are filled with shadoivy traditions of this kind

—shadow's of the world ' s grey fathers—ivhich , like those shadoivs seen reflected on clouds by travellers who ascend lofty mountains , are exaggerated into the most gigantic proportions , and bear radiant glories around thei / heads . The tradition ivhich seems universal and more deeply impressed upon mankind than any other , is that of tlie Deluge . Humboldt says , "The belief in a great deluge is , not confined to one nation singly , it makes part of a system of historical tradition . When the Tamaiiacs are asked IIOAV the human race

survived this great deluge , the age of water of the Mexicans , they say a man and woman saved themselves on a high mountain called Tamanacn , situated ou the banks of the Asivern , and casting behind them , over their heads , tho fruit of the Mauritia palm tree , they saw the seeds contained in these fruits produce men and women who repeopled the

earth . Thus , " he adds , " wo find in all simplicity among nations now in a savage state , a tradition which the Greeks embellished with all the charms of imagination . " In all parts of the known world there are certain records and traditions of the flood ; ive find that the Americans have the tradition of itthe Chinese acknowledifcwho are the most

, ge , distant nation of Asia ; several nations of Africa tell various stories about it ; the story of the flood of Deucalion is coincident with that oli Noah . So that , says Stackhouse ,- we may trace the deluge quite round the globe ; and what is more remarkable still , every one of these people has a tale fco tellsome one waysome anotherconcerning the

resto-, , , ration of mankind . Part of the ceremony in most of the ancient mysteries consisted in carrying about a kind of ship or boat , which related to the Deluge and the Ark . The Ark , says Bryant , ( note to Ucrod , 2 cxlv ., ) according to the tradition of the Gentile world , was prophetic , and was looked upon as a kind of temple or place of residence ofthe Deity .

In the compass of ei ght persons is comprehended all mankind , who were thought so hi ghly favoured by heaven that they were looked up to by their posterity with such reverence that they ivere ultimately reputed deities . Hence , in the ancient mythology of Egypt , there were precisely eight gods . This shi p of Isis was called Bavis , which is remarkable

very , as it is , according to Nicolas Damascenus , the vory name of the mountain on ' which Noah ' s ark rested . The resemblance between the Egyptian , the Indians , and the Chinese , in many points is most striking , not only in respect to reli gion , but also in manners and customs . ' The early settlement of Egypt , before the tribes of men were widel

y separated , was probably the reason why the Egyptians had so much in common with the Indians , who are not supposed to have been the children of Ham . Among both , for example , prevailed the same permanence ' of manners , they were alike remarkable for the respect entertained by children to their parentsthey were averse to warthey weredivided

, , ; into castes , in the most ancient times they used hiero - glyphics , the E gyptians had a solemn festival called the feast of lights , the Chinese have their feast of lanterns , and the Greeks also had their Xaa-ahjfopm , or torch bearing , as Herodotus calls it ; the origin ' of these ; games must be sought iu the worshi p of the Titan Prometheus . Tho action of

carrying an unextinguished torch from the Cera miens to the Acropolis is a livel y symbol of the benefit conferred by tho Titan upon man , when he bore fire from the habitation of the gods ancl bestowed it upon man . At first , however , it appear , * , says Smith ( Bid . Gr . anil Horn . Ant . ) , to hay ,, been a symbolic representation in honour of the gods who gave and taught men the use of material moulding fire

Other writers , in their anxiety to get a common signification for all the times ancl modes of the . Lampacleforia , have endeavoured to prove that all who were honoured by it were connected with the heavenly bodies ; others that it always had an inner signification , alluding to the inward fire by which Prometheus put life iuto man . The real fact , howeverseems to be that ifc was both commemorative and

sym-, bolical , as indeed ivere all the ceremonies practised in the ancient mysteries , the commemorative being for the exoteric , the symbolical for the esoteric portion of the worshippers , their true signification being confided only to the esoteric or initiated . M . Bailly has , from a review of the manners , customsand reliions of the IndiansPersiansChinese ,

, g , , Chakte-ins and Egyptians , discovered many similarities between all these nations , and has thence formed the conclusion that the knoivledge common to the whole of those nations has been derived from the same original source . The custom of libation was common to the Tartars and Chinese , as ivell as the Greeks and Bomans . The tradition of the

deluge is common to them all . All the Asiatic nations had festivals of the nature of the Soman Saturnalia . They all placed their temples fronting the east , to receive the first rays of the sun which they worshipped ; their system of astronomy was tho same ; the long measure of the ancient nations had all one common origin . Purity in design and

accuracy in execution seem to characterize the genius of all fche orienfcalnations . Dr . Eussell , hilrisllistory of Ancient Europe , i . 117 , says , " The genius of the Egyptians was acute and steady , rather than liberal and elevated . They prosecuted works of expense and ingenuity with singular perseverance

and upon principles purely mathematical ; but they were totally destitute of taste , and never acquired a distinguished rank among the cultivators of the fine arts . Their architecture attempted to supply greatness of design by immensity of fabric , substituting altitude for sublimity , and ponderous solidity for stability . Their statuary , like their architecture ,

delighted in huge masses of stone nicely chiselled , but displaying neither elegance of figure , animation of expression , nor grace in altitude . Their painting , if we except brilliancy and durability of colouring , was devoid of every cxecllenc 3 belonging to that captivating art . They were totally ignorant ofthe magical effects of light and shade . "

In this picture we cannot but recognize the Indian , as well as the Egyptian genius , and also that of the Chinese at the present day ; aud if the stupendous monuments of antiquity seen at Elora , in the caves of Elephanta and Salsette , as well as the modern pagodas of Ch ilium brum and Seriugha-m , be compared with the ruins of Thebes , of Nineveh , the Sp hinx , and other celebrated monuments and marbles of ancient Egypt , the resemblance befciveeu the nations will appear most striking . It appears then that the religion and

mysteries ivere essentially the same among all nations , although perhaps in some , from difference of climate and situation , they slightly differed in some minute particulars . Among them all the ceremony of initiation was practised ; all these ceremonies were of a funereal character , they celebrated the death and resurrection of some cherished being , cither the object of esteem as a hero and benefactoror of

, devotion as a god . The candidates for initiation were not only expected to be of a clear unblemished character , but their future lives wore to bo examples of piety and virtue . " . "Remain , afar oflj ye workers of iniquity , " ivas the cry of the herald priest when the ceremony was about to be conferred . The degrees wore subordinate and the candidate subjected to

trials and probations proportionate to each ; the rites were practised in gloom and darkness , in caves and forests , on the summits of mountains and iu the depths of valleys ; and tho supreme knoivledge was not attained until the aspirant , after years of patient trial and preparation , had reached the place of wisdom and light . The system , of idolatry w .-u , founded upon the belief both of present and future rewards and punishments as dispensed

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