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  • Dec. 5, 1863
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 5, 1863: Page 7

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND OTJEKIE8. Page 1 of 3 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Notes And Otjekie8.

MASONIC NOTES AND OTJEKIE 8 .

JEEP . DAVIS A EllEEMASON . I should like to know if Jeff . Davis , the President of the Confederate States , is a Freemason ? Certain matters in original correspondence from the South lead me to infer that he is . Does any one know ?—!?¦ FEEELIXG . — [ He is . He was Master of a loclge at Eichmond when the war broke out . We know an American brother , now in London , who was initiated by him . General Beauregard is also a brother , and was a member of the same lodge . ]

ESOTEEK TEACHING . ( Concluded from page 399 ) . But why trace further the now obsolete ceremonies of bygone mythical ages ancl of the old world , while we can adduce to our purpose certain mystical rites of some of the aborigines of the new world , analogous to those first named , which their traditions refer to the most remote antiquity . We were ourfew

selves an eye-witness to many of these rites only a years ago , and we believe they are still practised by a portion of these Adamites , or Red Men , * notwithstanding the advances of civilisation , so-called , and of the prescriptive doctrines of Christian sectaries among them . The aborigines to whom we allude are the remnant of the Confederacy of "the Iroquois" ( Erokua ) so called by the

- French , t who still linger on the former hunting-grounds of their ancestors , the former sovereigns of the territory now embracing the state of New York . ° These five nations are , the Mohawks , the Oneidas , the Onondagas , the Cayngas , and the Sc-necas ; of which there are not now more than three thousand loft , men , women , and children , all told . In their figurative languagetheir territory was called "long house"J

symbolis-, a , ing their union in one famil y bv lineage as well as politically . This house was said to have its " eastern door at Schenectady , at which the Mohawks kept watch , and its western door near Niagara , which the Senecas sentineled . It is not unknown to many of our brethren , that a few years

ago we devoted ourselves , for a time to the prosecution of antiquarian researches among those interesting sons of the forest . A portion of the fruit of our researches , so far as they related to the Honontkah , a secret societ y that formerly existed among them , we communicated to the Freemasons' Magazine ; ancl the same was reproduced , with comments more worthy than the facts we furnished , by Bro . Kavanah , of Kentucky , and published in the Masonic Miscellany then edited bBro . Mackey

, y , of Charleston , S . C . To the little we had then to say about the esotery , or " greater mysteries " of this secret order , we have now little to add , but shall refer to the lesser mysteries , if we may so designate them , to which all their people , women as well as men , were admitted , as were the ancient Greeks to the lower mysteries of Eleusis . As we stated on a former occasion we were moved to make

the investigations we did , from an intimation in one of tho annual addresses of M . W . De Witt Clinton , when Grand Master of the Grand Loclge of the State of New York , to the effect that an aboriginal Christian missionary had communicated to him some of the particulars of this societ y , which had formerly existed among the Iroquois ]] in this State . From M . W . Morgan Lewis , late Grand Master of the said Grand Locl we also learned

ge , some facts of a similar character , that had been communicated to him by his father , a Welshman , when a prisoner among the Ohio Indians during the last century . AVe have the satisfaction to acknowledge our poetical friend ancl brother , Alfred B . Street , ? of the AV ASA-DO-DE-NO-SONNE ,

as a collaborator with us in the investigations named . We , therefore , claim a quasi joint ownership in the elucidations from , his pen , which we shall quote on this subject : this we do jn preference to using our own language , a liberty we know he will GXCUSGi He designates the Honontkah as an order answering to our Masonic Institution , that its members were bound by the closest ties , their meetings held with the profoundest secrecy , and its objects never fully made known to the world . Their mark , or sign of membership , was a stripe tatooed upon the skin .

The Irotjitois War Dance . " Of the eight totems , on each breast Displayed in blue tatoo impressed—Here crawled the tortoise , glared the " bear , The violf there lurked within his lair ; The crane on slender limb stood here , Here bowed the snipe , there leaped the deer ;

The beaver here made waddling walk , And hig h in air there soared the hatvfc , While frequently was seen the mark Of the HO-NONT-ICAH next the other , Which none deciphered bat a brother ; Order , mysterious , secret , dark ! Each making ( all save this unknown And this by only actions shown )

The otlier ' s weal or woe Ms own . The Atotarho was its head ; And through the league its members spread , The head Chiefs of the other nations Holding within next highest stations—¦ & = t & » J & ^ 5 F In the broad square a post was placed With stri of red—war ' s hue—arrayed

pes , Save in one spot where , rudely traced , Was the League's coat of arms displayed , Five Braves that in a circle stood AVith hands tight grasped in one another ' s—A heart amidst them—tribal brothers , Handed in one firm brotherhood .

As the sky kindled to the moon ' s rich flame , AVithin the area throngs of warriors came ; Around the post in mazy file they wound , Then couched in rings successive on the ground . AVithin , two gaunt and withered figures sat , With drum and rattle each upon his mat , Whilst upward streamed in one high ruddy spire Beside the post the usual war-dance ^ re .

The dusky ring wore looks of fixed repose , Until at last a tall young warrior rose , AVith hatchet , knife and war-club armed was he , A snowy mantle falling to his knee . Upon his breast the totem of the BEAE , The Ho-nontJcah stripe , too , placed conspicuous there , Midst records of his deeds , one crimson blaze ; Dress worn alone on most momentous clays !

'Twas the young Atotarho ! slow and grave He reached the fire , and then one whoop he gave , And as his brow grew dark , and wild his glance , He broke into the stamping , swinging dance : From right to left he went , tho hollow beat Of the ga-nu-jah echoing to his feet , Chanting in measure to his rocking frame , Whilst from the two old forms a ceaseless droning came .

The Iroquois Strawberry Dance . " Now must the Council Square's expanse Echo the usual Strawberry Dance , And thanks each bosom render there To Fire and Water , Forth and Air . The file , the Council House around Was ranged : # * # *

First , Yu-we-lon-doh bowed his head To tvhere the sun its splendour shed , Then waved Ids arm—the drum awoke , The rattle into clatterings broke ; And forward , with his rocking feet , The Chief began the ground to beat , Swelling his guttural anthem strain , Followed by all the stamping train ,

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-12-05, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_05121863/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
MOTHER KILWINNING. Article 1
MANCHESTER MASONIC RELIEF COMMITTEE. Article 4
ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED FREEMASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 4
OLD DUNDEE LODGE (No. 18). Article 6
Untitled Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND OTJEKIE8. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
MASONIC CHARITY. Article 10
LODGE OF HARMONY (No. 600). Article 11
THE ANTIQUITY OF MASONIC DEGREES. Article 11
THE SUSPENSIONS IN JERSEY. Article 11
WESTERN INDIA. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 16
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
Untitled Article 17
SCOTLAND. Article 18
IRELAND. Article 18
ASIA MINOR. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Notes And Otjekie8.

MASONIC NOTES AND OTJEKIE 8 .

JEEP . DAVIS A EllEEMASON . I should like to know if Jeff . Davis , the President of the Confederate States , is a Freemason ? Certain matters in original correspondence from the South lead me to infer that he is . Does any one know ?—!?¦ FEEELIXG . — [ He is . He was Master of a loclge at Eichmond when the war broke out . We know an American brother , now in London , who was initiated by him . General Beauregard is also a brother , and was a member of the same lodge . ]

ESOTEEK TEACHING . ( Concluded from page 399 ) . But why trace further the now obsolete ceremonies of bygone mythical ages ancl of the old world , while we can adduce to our purpose certain mystical rites of some of the aborigines of the new world , analogous to those first named , which their traditions refer to the most remote antiquity . We were ourfew

selves an eye-witness to many of these rites only a years ago , and we believe they are still practised by a portion of these Adamites , or Red Men , * notwithstanding the advances of civilisation , so-called , and of the prescriptive doctrines of Christian sectaries among them . The aborigines to whom we allude are the remnant of the Confederacy of "the Iroquois" ( Erokua ) so called by the

- French , t who still linger on the former hunting-grounds of their ancestors , the former sovereigns of the territory now embracing the state of New York . ° These five nations are , the Mohawks , the Oneidas , the Onondagas , the Cayngas , and the Sc-necas ; of which there are not now more than three thousand loft , men , women , and children , all told . In their figurative languagetheir territory was called "long house"J

symbolis-, a , ing their union in one famil y bv lineage as well as politically . This house was said to have its " eastern door at Schenectady , at which the Mohawks kept watch , and its western door near Niagara , which the Senecas sentineled . It is not unknown to many of our brethren , that a few years

ago we devoted ourselves , for a time to the prosecution of antiquarian researches among those interesting sons of the forest . A portion of the fruit of our researches , so far as they related to the Honontkah , a secret societ y that formerly existed among them , we communicated to the Freemasons' Magazine ; ancl the same was reproduced , with comments more worthy than the facts we furnished , by Bro . Kavanah , of Kentucky , and published in the Masonic Miscellany then edited bBro . Mackey

, y , of Charleston , S . C . To the little we had then to say about the esotery , or " greater mysteries " of this secret order , we have now little to add , but shall refer to the lesser mysteries , if we may so designate them , to which all their people , women as well as men , were admitted , as were the ancient Greeks to the lower mysteries of Eleusis . As we stated on a former occasion we were moved to make

the investigations we did , from an intimation in one of tho annual addresses of M . W . De Witt Clinton , when Grand Master of the Grand Loclge of the State of New York , to the effect that an aboriginal Christian missionary had communicated to him some of the particulars of this societ y , which had formerly existed among the Iroquois ]] in this State . From M . W . Morgan Lewis , late Grand Master of the said Grand Locl we also learned

ge , some facts of a similar character , that had been communicated to him by his father , a Welshman , when a prisoner among the Ohio Indians during the last century . AVe have the satisfaction to acknowledge our poetical friend ancl brother , Alfred B . Street , ? of the AV ASA-DO-DE-NO-SONNE ,

as a collaborator with us in the investigations named . We , therefore , claim a quasi joint ownership in the elucidations from , his pen , which we shall quote on this subject : this we do jn preference to using our own language , a liberty we know he will GXCUSGi He designates the Honontkah as an order answering to our Masonic Institution , that its members were bound by the closest ties , their meetings held with the profoundest secrecy , and its objects never fully made known to the world . Their mark , or sign of membership , was a stripe tatooed upon the skin .

The Irotjitois War Dance . " Of the eight totems , on each breast Displayed in blue tatoo impressed—Here crawled the tortoise , glared the " bear , The violf there lurked within his lair ; The crane on slender limb stood here , Here bowed the snipe , there leaped the deer ;

The beaver here made waddling walk , And hig h in air there soared the hatvfc , While frequently was seen the mark Of the HO-NONT-ICAH next the other , Which none deciphered bat a brother ; Order , mysterious , secret , dark ! Each making ( all save this unknown And this by only actions shown )

The otlier ' s weal or woe Ms own . The Atotarho was its head ; And through the league its members spread , The head Chiefs of the other nations Holding within next highest stations—¦ & = t & » J & ^ 5 F In the broad square a post was placed With stri of red—war ' s hue—arrayed

pes , Save in one spot where , rudely traced , Was the League's coat of arms displayed , Five Braves that in a circle stood AVith hands tight grasped in one another ' s—A heart amidst them—tribal brothers , Handed in one firm brotherhood .

As the sky kindled to the moon ' s rich flame , AVithin the area throngs of warriors came ; Around the post in mazy file they wound , Then couched in rings successive on the ground . AVithin , two gaunt and withered figures sat , With drum and rattle each upon his mat , Whilst upward streamed in one high ruddy spire Beside the post the usual war-dance ^ re .

The dusky ring wore looks of fixed repose , Until at last a tall young warrior rose , AVith hatchet , knife and war-club armed was he , A snowy mantle falling to his knee . Upon his breast the totem of the BEAE , The Ho-nontJcah stripe , too , placed conspicuous there , Midst records of his deeds , one crimson blaze ; Dress worn alone on most momentous clays !

'Twas the young Atotarho ! slow and grave He reached the fire , and then one whoop he gave , And as his brow grew dark , and wild his glance , He broke into the stamping , swinging dance : From right to left he went , tho hollow beat Of the ga-nu-jah echoing to his feet , Chanting in measure to his rocking frame , Whilst from the two old forms a ceaseless droning came .

The Iroquois Strawberry Dance . " Now must the Council Square's expanse Echo the usual Strawberry Dance , And thanks each bosom render there To Fire and Water , Forth and Air . The file , the Council House around Was ranged : # * # *

First , Yu-we-lon-doh bowed his head To tvhere the sun its splendour shed , Then waved Ids arm—the drum awoke , The rattle into clatterings broke ; And forward , with his rocking feet , The Chief began the ground to beat , Swelling his guttural anthem strain , Followed by all the stamping train ,

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