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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Aug. 19, 1865
  • Page 3
  • TEUTONIC LEGAL ANTIQUITIES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 19, 1865: Page 3

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    Article TEUTONIC LEGAL ANTIQUITIES. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article TEUTONIC LEGAL ANTIQUITIES. Page 2 of 2
    Article MASONIC CHARITY. Page 1 of 1
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Teutonic Legal Antiquities.

vonian peasant , with a hunter ' s wallet containing bread , cheese , and agricultural implements ( small ones , Ave hope ) , carrying a crook in his hand , and having a black steer , and a lean cart-horse on either side , approaches the marble seat , led by

two noblemen of the province , and followed by all the rest of the nobility and chivalry in the most splendid festal array , Avith the flags and banners of the duchy . As soon as the procession comes near enough for the peasant to discover

the prince , he asks in the Sclavonic dialect spoken in Carinthia , " Who comes hither in such state ?" The croAvd answer , " The Prince of the country . " The peasant resumes , " Is he a just judge ? Does the good of the country touch his heart ? Is he of

free and Christian birth ? " An unanimous shout of " He is ! he will be ! " resounds from the assembled multitude . '' Then I ask , by AA'hat right he will remove me from this seat ? " again questions the peasant ; aud the Count of Gorz

replies , " He will buy it of thee for sixty pence ; these draught cattle shall be thine , as Avell as the prince ' s clothes ; thy house shall be free , and thou

shalt pay neither tithe nor rent . The peasant UOAV gives the prince a slight box on the ear , admonishes him to be just , and descending from the marble seat , takes possession of the horse and steer . The new duke ascends the

vacated throne , ancl sAvinging his draAvn sAvord in every direction , promises right and justice to the people ; after Avhich , in proof of his moderation , he takes a draught of Avater out of his hat . The procession then goes to St . Peter ' s Church to hear

mass . The duke exchanges his rustic dress for princely attire , and holds a magnificent banquet Avith his knights and nobles . After dinner the company repair to the side of a hill , Avhere stands

a seat dmded into two by a partition Avail . The duke sits on the side fronting the east , and swears , bare-headed , and . vith uplifted fingers , to maintain the laAvs and rights of the duchy . Thereupon he receives the homage , the oaths of

allegiance of his vassals , and grants the investiture of fiefs . On the opposite side sits the Count of Gorz , and grants the fiefs depending mediately upon him , as hereditary Count Palatine of Carinthia . So long as the duke sits upon this seat granting fiefs , it is

the prescriptive privilege of the race of Gradneckers to appropriate to themselves as much grass as they can moAV , unless it bo ransomed by the OAvners ; Avhilst robbers enjoy the yet more rnaz--vellous privilege of robbing the Portendorfers ,

Teutonic Legal Antiquities.

and after them the Mordaxters , that of burning the property of Avhosoever will not compound Avith them , ( by the payment of black mail ) . These extraordinary ceremonies Avere observed at every accession of a Duke of Carinthia during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries : in the fifteenth fchej disapriear .

Masonic Charity.

MASONIC CHARITY .

Masonry is an institution established for mutual improvement and mutual benefit , and to attain this end ib is necessary that there should exist mutual good feeling and undisguised interchange of sentiments . But this cannot be accomplished

unless there is charity with each other . The three greatprinciplesof Masonry are brotherly love , relief , and truth , Avhile the three cardinal virtues which form the principal steps of Jacob ' s ladder are faith , hope , and charity . But this charity does not simply

mean that charity Avhich Avould lead us to give relief to a fellow creature in tho hour of distress , but charitv in its broadest and most exalted sense .

lo trace this sublime principle to its source Ave must look beyond the bounds of time , Ave must penetrate the heaven of heavens , and Ave will there find it in the happy society of angels , —the bond of peace aud all virtues , and when the Avorld shall

have passed aivay—Avhen the Great Architect of the Universe shall descend from heaven Avith a shout and Avith the A oice of au archangel . Masonic charity will continue to illumine those blest abodes Avhere the just live to all eternity . All other

virtues are mortal , but charity is immortal . Masonic charity is that Avhich . is so eloquently described by St . Paul , the charity Avhich suflereth long and is kind , Avhich vaunteth not itself , is not

puffed up , doth not behaA ^ e itself unseemly , and Avhich never faileth . The charity of the heart is the Masonic characteristic . Freemasonry is built upon it , and had its foundation been on the sand it Avould have vanished centuries ago . A moral

responsibility rests upon every Freemason—it is for him to show the opponents of the Order that Masonry is real , that there is that bond of union , that brotherly love , that sublime charity , Avhich is not to be found in any other society of men .

Let him SIIOAV this , and opponents will be feAver and the candidates for admission more numerous . Let him never forget there is no position more dangerous than a house divided against itself . — Masonic Record of Western India .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-08-19, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_19081865/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
BRO. JOHN CUNNINGHAM. Article 1
TEUTONIC LEGAL ANTIQUITIES. Article 2
MASONIC CHARITY. Article 3
CYCLOPEAN MASONRY, AND THE BUILDINGS OF JERUSALEM. Article 4
Untitled Article 6
RESTORATION OF CHURCHES IN ROME. Article 7
IRISH GIANTS. Article 9
Untitled Article 10
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 11
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 11
COLONIAL. Article 12
INDIA. Article 13
CHINA. Article 14
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 15
Poetry. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
THE CREATION. Article 16
LITERARY EXTRACTS. Article 16
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 16
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Teutonic Legal Antiquities.

vonian peasant , with a hunter ' s wallet containing bread , cheese , and agricultural implements ( small ones , Ave hope ) , carrying a crook in his hand , and having a black steer , and a lean cart-horse on either side , approaches the marble seat , led by

two noblemen of the province , and followed by all the rest of the nobility and chivalry in the most splendid festal array , Avith the flags and banners of the duchy . As soon as the procession comes near enough for the peasant to discover

the prince , he asks in the Sclavonic dialect spoken in Carinthia , " Who comes hither in such state ?" The croAvd answer , " The Prince of the country . " The peasant resumes , " Is he a just judge ? Does the good of the country touch his heart ? Is he of

free and Christian birth ? " An unanimous shout of " He is ! he will be ! " resounds from the assembled multitude . '' Then I ask , by AA'hat right he will remove me from this seat ? " again questions the peasant ; aud the Count of Gorz

replies , " He will buy it of thee for sixty pence ; these draught cattle shall be thine , as Avell as the prince ' s clothes ; thy house shall be free , and thou

shalt pay neither tithe nor rent . The peasant UOAV gives the prince a slight box on the ear , admonishes him to be just , and descending from the marble seat , takes possession of the horse and steer . The new duke ascends the

vacated throne , ancl sAvinging his draAvn sAvord in every direction , promises right and justice to the people ; after Avhich , in proof of his moderation , he takes a draught of Avater out of his hat . The procession then goes to St . Peter ' s Church to hear

mass . The duke exchanges his rustic dress for princely attire , and holds a magnificent banquet Avith his knights and nobles . After dinner the company repair to the side of a hill , Avhere stands

a seat dmded into two by a partition Avail . The duke sits on the side fronting the east , and swears , bare-headed , and . vith uplifted fingers , to maintain the laAvs and rights of the duchy . Thereupon he receives the homage , the oaths of

allegiance of his vassals , and grants the investiture of fiefs . On the opposite side sits the Count of Gorz , and grants the fiefs depending mediately upon him , as hereditary Count Palatine of Carinthia . So long as the duke sits upon this seat granting fiefs , it is

the prescriptive privilege of the race of Gradneckers to appropriate to themselves as much grass as they can moAV , unless it bo ransomed by the OAvners ; Avhilst robbers enjoy the yet more rnaz--vellous privilege of robbing the Portendorfers ,

Teutonic Legal Antiquities.

and after them the Mordaxters , that of burning the property of Avhosoever will not compound Avith them , ( by the payment of black mail ) . These extraordinary ceremonies Avere observed at every accession of a Duke of Carinthia during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries : in the fifteenth fchej disapriear .

Masonic Charity.

MASONIC CHARITY .

Masonry is an institution established for mutual improvement and mutual benefit , and to attain this end ib is necessary that there should exist mutual good feeling and undisguised interchange of sentiments . But this cannot be accomplished

unless there is charity with each other . The three greatprinciplesof Masonry are brotherly love , relief , and truth , Avhile the three cardinal virtues which form the principal steps of Jacob ' s ladder are faith , hope , and charity . But this charity does not simply

mean that charity Avhich Avould lead us to give relief to a fellow creature in tho hour of distress , but charitv in its broadest and most exalted sense .

lo trace this sublime principle to its source Ave must look beyond the bounds of time , Ave must penetrate the heaven of heavens , and Ave will there find it in the happy society of angels , —the bond of peace aud all virtues , and when the Avorld shall

have passed aivay—Avhen the Great Architect of the Universe shall descend from heaven Avith a shout and Avith the A oice of au archangel . Masonic charity will continue to illumine those blest abodes Avhere the just live to all eternity . All other

virtues are mortal , but charity is immortal . Masonic charity is that Avhich . is so eloquently described by St . Paul , the charity Avhich suflereth long and is kind , Avhich vaunteth not itself , is not

puffed up , doth not behaA ^ e itself unseemly , and Avhich never faileth . The charity of the heart is the Masonic characteristic . Freemasonry is built upon it , and had its foundation been on the sand it Avould have vanished centuries ago . A moral

responsibility rests upon every Freemason—it is for him to show the opponents of the Order that Masonry is real , that there is that bond of union , that brotherly love , that sublime charity , Avhich is not to be found in any other society of men .

Let him SIIOAV this , and opponents will be feAver and the candidates for admission more numerous . Let him never forget there is no position more dangerous than a house divided against itself . — Masonic Record of Western India .

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