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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 3, 1869
  • Page 3
  • MASONIC CELESTIAL MYSTERIES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 3, 1869: Page 3

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    Article EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA. Page 3 of 3
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Page 3

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

Ears Of Wheat From A Cornucopia.

Provincial Grand Lodge of Ayrshire was the scene of this eccentric encounter upon the question of Mother Kilwinning ' s rights and privileges . A Provincial Grand Communication had been summoned for April , 1860 . On its becoming known

that neither the Master of Mother Kilwinning ( ex-officio P . G . M ., ) nor any properly-commissioned depute , would be present , the Senior Warden , as pro tempore Master of the Lodge of Kilwinning , claimed the right to preside , and forthwith took

possession of the chair . Objections to this course were offered on behalf of the R . W . M . whose right it was to hold the Orient , which post the Kilwinning Warden declined to relinquish . The matter having

been brought under the notice of Grand Committee , that body decided " that , in the Provincial Grand Lodge of Ayrshire , the Senior Warden of Mother Kilwinning , as such , can claim no precedence over any R . W . M ' s of Lodges present . "

This decision , which in August , 1860 , was confirmed by the Grand Lodge , has , in conjunction with the adoption of a more liberal policy than had hitherto prevailed at Kilwinning , proved efficacious in dispelling the indefinite notions ,

entertained by west-country craftsmen , regarding what of right pertains to the Mother Lodge in contradistinction to the privileges enjoyed by all other Scotch Lodges .

A . UTOGEAPH OP THE EAEL OF KlLMAENOCK . In the excellent paper upon " A ritual of three degrees used by Frederick the Great of Prussia , " of which Bro . George Lambert is the author , referring to the introduction of certain high grades

into Germany ( about the year 1743 , ) it is stated that in Paris " Baron Hunde Avas duly admitted to all the degrees , and his Masonic patent , now in Berlin , is signed by Kilmarnock as ' George . '" We present a fac-simile of the autograph of William Earl of Kilmarnock , taken from a letter

Ears Of Wheat From A Cornucopia.

signed by the same hand under an assumed name , may serve to test the genuineness of the latter . It may appear somewhat singular that although for several years before his execution ( Aug . 1746 ) Lord Kilmarnock was closely connected with the

Lodge of Kilwinning , and with its Master when , in November , 1742 , he became also head of the Grand Lodge of Scotland , he never sought to introduce the High Degrees into either of the then existing Scottish centres of Speculative

Masonry . He must either , at the period referred to , have been himself ignorant of any degreebeyond those of St . John , or have been too well aware of his countrymen ' s aversion to the Stuarts and their policy , to attempt to enlighten them upon the subject of Jacobite Masonry .

Masonic Celestial Mysteries.

MASONIC CELESTIAL MYSTERIES .

By HENHY MELVILLE . PAPEB 2 . —OMNIA VINCIT VEEITAS . It has been explained that the box ark of Noah and the Royal Arch of Masons both apply to the

same " point" in the heavens . Gaprieomus has been variously symbolised ; in the Zodiacs of Esne and Dendera , it is a monster with the forequarters and feet of a goat with upright horns , and the hinder part consisting of a straight fish *

As shewn Capricornus is the sign Pan , and Pan is pictured with goats upright horns , and the tail and feet of the same animal , and this grotesque figure is considered to be the devil who claims the lower regions . The Budhists call the sign

"Merkere , " with them it is pictured as a sea monster , and they say it is the house of Saturn ( Satan ) , and it is their cavernous or hell sign in which certain celestial objects owing to precessional motion are concealed and punished at mid winter . Europeans call Capricornus the sea goat

Q ^ fjr / m ^

on Masonic business which in 1734 was addressed by his Lordship to the Master of Mother Kilwinning . A comparison of this signature with that attached to the patent believed to have been

inasmuch as the symbol is part goat and part fish , but there is a better definition . The type - ^ of

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1869-04-03, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_03041869/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA. Article 1
MASONIC CELESTIAL MYSTERIES. Article 3
FREEMASONRY AND CHRISTIANITY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
"THE IRISH CHURCH FROM A MASONIC POINT OF VIEW." Article 10
P.M.'S AND THE WORKING BRETHREN OF LODGES. Article 10
MASONIC ARCHÆOLOGY . — BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 11
Untitled Article 12
MASONIC MEMS. Article 12
MASONIC ARCHÆOLOG ICAL INSTITUTE. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 15
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
SCOTLAND. Article 18
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 19
DEDICATION OF THE METHAM MASONIC HALL AT PLYMOUTH. Article 19
MASONIC LIFEBOAT FUND. Article 19
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 19
MEETINGS OF THE LEARNED SOCIETIES. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ears Of Wheat From A Cornucopia.

Provincial Grand Lodge of Ayrshire was the scene of this eccentric encounter upon the question of Mother Kilwinning ' s rights and privileges . A Provincial Grand Communication had been summoned for April , 1860 . On its becoming known

that neither the Master of Mother Kilwinning ( ex-officio P . G . M ., ) nor any properly-commissioned depute , would be present , the Senior Warden , as pro tempore Master of the Lodge of Kilwinning , claimed the right to preside , and forthwith took

possession of the chair . Objections to this course were offered on behalf of the R . W . M . whose right it was to hold the Orient , which post the Kilwinning Warden declined to relinquish . The matter having

been brought under the notice of Grand Committee , that body decided " that , in the Provincial Grand Lodge of Ayrshire , the Senior Warden of Mother Kilwinning , as such , can claim no precedence over any R . W . M ' s of Lodges present . "

This decision , which in August , 1860 , was confirmed by the Grand Lodge , has , in conjunction with the adoption of a more liberal policy than had hitherto prevailed at Kilwinning , proved efficacious in dispelling the indefinite notions ,

entertained by west-country craftsmen , regarding what of right pertains to the Mother Lodge in contradistinction to the privileges enjoyed by all other Scotch Lodges .

A . UTOGEAPH OP THE EAEL OF KlLMAENOCK . In the excellent paper upon " A ritual of three degrees used by Frederick the Great of Prussia , " of which Bro . George Lambert is the author , referring to the introduction of certain high grades

into Germany ( about the year 1743 , ) it is stated that in Paris " Baron Hunde Avas duly admitted to all the degrees , and his Masonic patent , now in Berlin , is signed by Kilmarnock as ' George . '" We present a fac-simile of the autograph of William Earl of Kilmarnock , taken from a letter

Ears Of Wheat From A Cornucopia.

signed by the same hand under an assumed name , may serve to test the genuineness of the latter . It may appear somewhat singular that although for several years before his execution ( Aug . 1746 ) Lord Kilmarnock was closely connected with the

Lodge of Kilwinning , and with its Master when , in November , 1742 , he became also head of the Grand Lodge of Scotland , he never sought to introduce the High Degrees into either of the then existing Scottish centres of Speculative

Masonry . He must either , at the period referred to , have been himself ignorant of any degreebeyond those of St . John , or have been too well aware of his countrymen ' s aversion to the Stuarts and their policy , to attempt to enlighten them upon the subject of Jacobite Masonry .

Masonic Celestial Mysteries.

MASONIC CELESTIAL MYSTERIES .

By HENHY MELVILLE . PAPEB 2 . —OMNIA VINCIT VEEITAS . It has been explained that the box ark of Noah and the Royal Arch of Masons both apply to the

same " point" in the heavens . Gaprieomus has been variously symbolised ; in the Zodiacs of Esne and Dendera , it is a monster with the forequarters and feet of a goat with upright horns , and the hinder part consisting of a straight fish *

As shewn Capricornus is the sign Pan , and Pan is pictured with goats upright horns , and the tail and feet of the same animal , and this grotesque figure is considered to be the devil who claims the lower regions . The Budhists call the sign

"Merkere , " with them it is pictured as a sea monster , and they say it is the house of Saturn ( Satan ) , and it is their cavernous or hell sign in which certain celestial objects owing to precessional motion are concealed and punished at mid winter . Europeans call Capricornus the sea goat

Q ^ fjr / m ^

on Masonic business which in 1734 was addressed by his Lordship to the Master of Mother Kilwinning . A comparison of this signature with that attached to the patent believed to have been

inasmuch as the symbol is part goat and part fish , but there is a better definition . The type - ^ of

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