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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 7, 1863: Page 9

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 9

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

ILLUSTRIOUS BRETHREN . An old non-Masonic print says , — " Wellington an d Nelson were of our fraternity , and so were Sir John Moore and the first Napoleon . " Where Avas Sir John Moore made ?—V . M .

REASONS FOR BEING A SEASON . I have often been asked why I am a Mason P No doubt the same question is addressed to many brethren , but it may be of use to the younger ones if I tell them hoAV I answer it . I find in all the authors of Masonic writings thafc they agree that our institution is a good one . Ifc prepares the mindby a course of strict discipline

, , aud by storing it with the most useful science , to vigorously prosecute those schemes which have for their object the promotion of its best interests and the increase of the general stock of social enjoyment . By an intercourse with society the faculties of the mind become expanded , the understanding improved , and the taste and judgment refined .

THE ALLEGORY OE THE CUBE . Will you give me some insight into the Masonic allegory of the cube ?—JUSTICE . —[ Take the following from an old charge . Ifc does appertain to all degrees , but does not go so far as some do in its esoteric sense . "The square and cube are both important and significant symbols . As an emblem of rectitude of conduct in all the

duties and requirements of life , as typical of moral worth , stands the square ; while , in combination with solidity or the cube , it is further typical of that firmness of purpose and immovable [ determination in well doing Avbich belongs to the upright , perfect man . Nor Avas this symbolic interpretation coniiued to the Masonic Order alone . The poetic and imaginative Greeks equally adopted it . With them , as with us , religion was truth . The cube was its perfect emblem ; and hence

Hermes or Mercury , their divine embodiment cf this profound principle , Avas always represented as a cube . Indeed , in their more primitive days , all their gods were represented thus , and Aristotle has said that " lie who valiantly sustains the shocks of adverse fortune , demeaning himself uprightly , is truly good and of a square posture , Avithout reproof ; and he who would assume a . square posture should often subject himself to the perfectly square tests of justice and integrity . ' Butas I have

, already said , there is equally a symbolism in the placing ot this " corner-stone' in the north-east angle of tho building . As the sun , which , rising from the East , sheds its golden rays over the darksome earth , thus awakening to material life and light the night clad nature of this nether world— ever onward , Westward

—so , in the rich imagery of Orientalism , typical of intellectual advancement , is that point of the compass justly looked upon as the cradle whence sprung religion , art , science , and civilisation . And thus , mindful of the world debt which we owe , one of the perfect faces of this ' square ' looks to the source of all those rich inheritances through which man ' s nature has been taught to knoAV and bless the gifts of God . But tbe other of these outward faces looks to the North—the region least

touched by tbe meridian ray—ancl thus typically considered the place of intellectual and moral darkness , Fit juxtaposition ; for , as light , with her truth-revealing beams , dispels the huge phantasma of uncertain night , so is it ever the work of religion , wisdom , and civilisation to shed their mild yet strong and vivifying rays over the blighting influences of ignorance and superstition . And so , beyond the general aptness of this allegorical instructionthe neophte of our Order justlfind

, y may y in this stone , ancl in its position , a lesson of wisdom and of worth . Placed within tho bright circle of these intellectual influences , yet in close contact with the outer world , he may not hold himself aloof from those less fortunate than ; himself ; but , on the contrary , should find a wide field upon which to exercise the virtues of temperance , fortitude , prudence , and justice . The sublime truths which have dispelled the boreal

darkness of his own soul , tell him as well-that upon that heartstone within him , squared to justice , fair dealing and honourable purposes , cubed to the beauty of that solid worth which wisdom gives him in her lessons of self-discipline and charitable forbearance , plumbed to the upright action , and polished to all

the amenities of life , he is to build that self-temple Avherein shall be enshrined , as in the temple of old , the skeldnah of ineffable effulgence . " ' ] BKO . ns . ANDERSON ' S DEFENCE ou MASONRY . In Bro . Dr . Oliver ' s Bevelations of a Bqitcure , is the annexed sentence : — " Dr Anderson wrote his celebrated Defence of Masonry , in

Avhich he treated thejwork of Pritchard with great consideration . He took his stand on high ground—gave his adversary every fair and reasonable advantage , by assuming that if all he had advanced Avere correct , still Masonry would be an admirable institution , and answered his book seriatim like a gentleman and a scholar . When the Defence came out , and the subject was canvassed in the lodge , some thought he had conducted the dispute with greater mildness than the fellow deservedbut

; Bro . Anderson contended—and truly , as I thought at the time —that 'it would be giving our opponents too serious an advantage to treat their productions , how absurd soever they might be , either with flippancy or severity . ' " Where can the defence be obtained?—BOOKWORM .

FREEMASONS HALL . Will there he any objection to my proposing to clear the entire property in Great Queen Street , in a plan I intend sending in for the new buildings ?—Aw ARCHITECT . [ None in the least , but take our advice , don't do any such thing . Freemasons' Hall is looked upon Avith great pride by a very large portion of the Craft , and woe be to the unlucky Avighfc Avho would presume to make a clean sweep of it . ]

THE PRINCE OE AVALES GRAND MASTER . If the Prince of Wales is initiated , Avill he not be made Grand Master?—Fox . [ We can't tell . Remember the saying of that sly old fox , Louis Phillippe , " the pear ' s nob ripe . " ]

ORIGIN OE THE STRONG-MAN LODGE . In the work before alluded to , Bro . Dr . Oliver ' s Bevelations of a Square , is au anecdote , not very Avell knoAvn , declaring how the Strong-man Lodge came by its name . Writing of . Dr . Desaguliers , he tells us : — "The career of this worthy brother was marked : by many essential benefits to Masonry . He established several new

lodges , and based them on such sound principles that one of them at least is iu existence at this very clay . The Strong-man Lodge was numbered 68 in the lists of 173 S , 176-1 . , , and 1767 , and was established according to the former authorities , 2 nd of February , 1733 , and by the latter , February 17 th , 1734 . Its origin is somewhat extraordinary , and worth hearing . About the year 1730 , or it mig-ht be a year or two later , the attention of Bro . Desaguliers was attracted by reports of the great

strength and muscular power of a man named Thomas Topham , who kept the Red Lion public-house , nearly opposite the old hospital of St . Luke , and was called , by way of eminence , tbe Strong-man . It appears that he settled down in this locality , from its vicinity to the famous ring in Moorfields , where athletic exercises were performed , —such as boxing , wrestling ,

swordplay , - and cudgelling , under the superintendence ot Old vinegar , whom I remember well . As was his name so was his nature . A most truculent-looking fellow , with a flat nose , swelled cheeks , low forehead , broad across the back , shoulder-of-mutton fists , and the strength of a giant ; and yet Topham found no dilficulty in lowering his pride ; and he overthrew him in the ring as if he bad been made of cork , amidst the shouts and halloos of the fancy , and to the supreme delight of those whom the potency of

Olcl Vinegar had hitherto forced to succumb . The first public feat which Bro . Desaguliers saAv Topham perform for the purpose of actually testing his strength was this . A powerful ' carthorse was harnessed and placed on one side of the low Avail which then divided the upper from the lower Moorfields , and Topham on the other . Taking hold of the end of the traces , the fellow planted his feet firmly against the wall , and told the spectators to flog the horseAvhich they didwithout producing

, , any effect ; for the biped proved to be the most powerful animal of the two . He afterwards pulled against a pair of horses ; and Dr . Desaguliers was firmly persuaded that ' if placed in , a proper position , he Avould have sustained the efforts of four horses , Avithout the least inconvenience . ' ' I have witnessed several

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-03-07, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_07031863/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND THE CRAFT. Article 1
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
SCOTLAND. Article 2
ON THE ARCH AND ARCADES. Article 5
Untitled Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 11
THE BOARD OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 11
NEW MASONIC HALL FOR MANCHESTER. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
GRAND LODGE. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
CHINA. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 16
Untitled Article 16
Poetry. Article 17
NOT LOST. Article 17
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 Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

ILLUSTRIOUS BRETHREN . An old non-Masonic print says , — " Wellington an d Nelson were of our fraternity , and so were Sir John Moore and the first Napoleon . " Where Avas Sir John Moore made ?—V . M .

REASONS FOR BEING A SEASON . I have often been asked why I am a Mason P No doubt the same question is addressed to many brethren , but it may be of use to the younger ones if I tell them hoAV I answer it . I find in all the authors of Masonic writings thafc they agree that our institution is a good one . Ifc prepares the mindby a course of strict discipline

, , aud by storing it with the most useful science , to vigorously prosecute those schemes which have for their object the promotion of its best interests and the increase of the general stock of social enjoyment . By an intercourse with society the faculties of the mind become expanded , the understanding improved , and the taste and judgment refined .

THE ALLEGORY OE THE CUBE . Will you give me some insight into the Masonic allegory of the cube ?—JUSTICE . —[ Take the following from an old charge . Ifc does appertain to all degrees , but does not go so far as some do in its esoteric sense . "The square and cube are both important and significant symbols . As an emblem of rectitude of conduct in all the

duties and requirements of life , as typical of moral worth , stands the square ; while , in combination with solidity or the cube , it is further typical of that firmness of purpose and immovable [ determination in well doing Avbich belongs to the upright , perfect man . Nor Avas this symbolic interpretation coniiued to the Masonic Order alone . The poetic and imaginative Greeks equally adopted it . With them , as with us , religion was truth . The cube was its perfect emblem ; and hence

Hermes or Mercury , their divine embodiment cf this profound principle , Avas always represented as a cube . Indeed , in their more primitive days , all their gods were represented thus , and Aristotle has said that " lie who valiantly sustains the shocks of adverse fortune , demeaning himself uprightly , is truly good and of a square posture , Avithout reproof ; and he who would assume a . square posture should often subject himself to the perfectly square tests of justice and integrity . ' Butas I have

, already said , there is equally a symbolism in the placing ot this " corner-stone' in the north-east angle of tho building . As the sun , which , rising from the East , sheds its golden rays over the darksome earth , thus awakening to material life and light the night clad nature of this nether world— ever onward , Westward

—so , in the rich imagery of Orientalism , typical of intellectual advancement , is that point of the compass justly looked upon as the cradle whence sprung religion , art , science , and civilisation . And thus , mindful of the world debt which we owe , one of the perfect faces of this ' square ' looks to the source of all those rich inheritances through which man ' s nature has been taught to knoAV and bless the gifts of God . But tbe other of these outward faces looks to the North—the region least

touched by tbe meridian ray—ancl thus typically considered the place of intellectual and moral darkness , Fit juxtaposition ; for , as light , with her truth-revealing beams , dispels the huge phantasma of uncertain night , so is it ever the work of religion , wisdom , and civilisation to shed their mild yet strong and vivifying rays over the blighting influences of ignorance and superstition . And so , beyond the general aptness of this allegorical instructionthe neophte of our Order justlfind

, y may y in this stone , ancl in its position , a lesson of wisdom and of worth . Placed within tho bright circle of these intellectual influences , yet in close contact with the outer world , he may not hold himself aloof from those less fortunate than ; himself ; but , on the contrary , should find a wide field upon which to exercise the virtues of temperance , fortitude , prudence , and justice . The sublime truths which have dispelled the boreal

darkness of his own soul , tell him as well-that upon that heartstone within him , squared to justice , fair dealing and honourable purposes , cubed to the beauty of that solid worth which wisdom gives him in her lessons of self-discipline and charitable forbearance , plumbed to the upright action , and polished to all

the amenities of life , he is to build that self-temple Avherein shall be enshrined , as in the temple of old , the skeldnah of ineffable effulgence . " ' ] BKO . ns . ANDERSON ' S DEFENCE ou MASONRY . In Bro . Dr . Oliver ' s Bevelations of a Bqitcure , is the annexed sentence : — " Dr Anderson wrote his celebrated Defence of Masonry , in

Avhich he treated thejwork of Pritchard with great consideration . He took his stand on high ground—gave his adversary every fair and reasonable advantage , by assuming that if all he had advanced Avere correct , still Masonry would be an admirable institution , and answered his book seriatim like a gentleman and a scholar . When the Defence came out , and the subject was canvassed in the lodge , some thought he had conducted the dispute with greater mildness than the fellow deservedbut

; Bro . Anderson contended—and truly , as I thought at the time —that 'it would be giving our opponents too serious an advantage to treat their productions , how absurd soever they might be , either with flippancy or severity . ' " Where can the defence be obtained?—BOOKWORM .

FREEMASONS HALL . Will there he any objection to my proposing to clear the entire property in Great Queen Street , in a plan I intend sending in for the new buildings ?—Aw ARCHITECT . [ None in the least , but take our advice , don't do any such thing . Freemasons' Hall is looked upon Avith great pride by a very large portion of the Craft , and woe be to the unlucky Avighfc Avho would presume to make a clean sweep of it . ]

THE PRINCE OE AVALES GRAND MASTER . If the Prince of Wales is initiated , Avill he not be made Grand Master?—Fox . [ We can't tell . Remember the saying of that sly old fox , Louis Phillippe , " the pear ' s nob ripe . " ]

ORIGIN OE THE STRONG-MAN LODGE . In the work before alluded to , Bro . Dr . Oliver ' s Bevelations of a Square , is au anecdote , not very Avell knoAvn , declaring how the Strong-man Lodge came by its name . Writing of . Dr . Desaguliers , he tells us : — "The career of this worthy brother was marked : by many essential benefits to Masonry . He established several new

lodges , and based them on such sound principles that one of them at least is iu existence at this very clay . The Strong-man Lodge was numbered 68 in the lists of 173 S , 176-1 . , , and 1767 , and was established according to the former authorities , 2 nd of February , 1733 , and by the latter , February 17 th , 1734 . Its origin is somewhat extraordinary , and worth hearing . About the year 1730 , or it mig-ht be a year or two later , the attention of Bro . Desaguliers was attracted by reports of the great

strength and muscular power of a man named Thomas Topham , who kept the Red Lion public-house , nearly opposite the old hospital of St . Luke , and was called , by way of eminence , tbe Strong-man . It appears that he settled down in this locality , from its vicinity to the famous ring in Moorfields , where athletic exercises were performed , —such as boxing , wrestling ,

swordplay , - and cudgelling , under the superintendence ot Old vinegar , whom I remember well . As was his name so was his nature . A most truculent-looking fellow , with a flat nose , swelled cheeks , low forehead , broad across the back , shoulder-of-mutton fists , and the strength of a giant ; and yet Topham found no dilficulty in lowering his pride ; and he overthrew him in the ring as if he bad been made of cork , amidst the shouts and halloos of the fancy , and to the supreme delight of those whom the potency of

Olcl Vinegar had hitherto forced to succumb . The first public feat which Bro . Desaguliers saAv Topham perform for the purpose of actually testing his strength was this . A powerful ' carthorse was harnessed and placed on one side of the low Avail which then divided the upper from the lower Moorfields , and Topham on the other . Taking hold of the end of the traces , the fellow planted his feet firmly against the wall , and told the spectators to flog the horseAvhich they didwithout producing

, , any effect ; for the biped proved to be the most powerful animal of the two . He afterwards pulled against a pair of horses ; and Dr . Desaguliers was firmly persuaded that ' if placed in , a proper position , he Avould have sustained the efforts of four horses , Avithout the least inconvenience . ' ' I have witnessed several

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