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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Dec. 20, 1862
  • Page 4
  • FROM WEST TO EAST—FROM EAST TO WEST.*
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 20, 1862: Page 4

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    Article FROM WEST TO EAST—FROM EAST TO WEST.* ← Page 3 of 3
    Article ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT ABSTRACTEDLY CONSIDERED. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 4

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

From West To East—From East To West.*

with the bright beams of revelation , and to dispel the primitive darkness of ignorance , snpestition , and error . But all these illustration , of the custom of travelling from West to East for instruction , throw no light whatever on . the anomaly of hailing from the Lodge

of St . John , which , though omitted in tbe present code of English Lectures , must not be altogether lost sight of , for it undoubtedly constituted a Landmark of Ancient Masonry , distinctly recorded in the primitive Ritual . JNow , as regards ourselves , this lodis situated in the East instead of the West ;

ge and being a place of greater traditional light and knowledge than can be found elsewhere , is very unlikely to send out its acolytes to other quarters for instruction .

In our earliest . Lectures . we nnd it recorded that every Freemason ' s Lodge was , hj dedication , a Lodge of St . John ; f and therefore to reconcile the anomaly under discussion , it will only be necessary to omit the locality , and the indefinite article . The respondent will then intelligibly state that he is travelling from a Lodge of St . John in tlie West to

another in tlie East , ia search of instruction ; for the East being the seat of Light and Wisdom , and Jerusalem the chief city of God ' s peculiar people , and the locality ivhere all the typical celebrations by which our lodges ( as antitypes of the Tabernacle and Temple ) were consummated would necessarily be a

place peculiarly adapted for Masonic instruction . I commit this conjecture to the consideration of the Craft . It is a fact corroborated by Masonic history and tradition that the privilege of hailing from Jerusalem amongst Solomon ' s Masons served as a certificate of recommendation ; and whoever possessed that testimonial was freely engaged in all the countries where

the craft might seek employment . Hence the custom might pass traditionally through successive ages till it reached the times of our primitive brethren , the Christian architects of the mediteval ages , and was adopted by them as a formula technically necessary to ensure the kind reception of a sojourner amongst strangers .

It is no valid answer to this reason that the St . John ' s have been ignored by the English system , and their place occupied by two Jews—Moses the lawgiver , and Solomon , the king of Israel—because all other existing Grand Lodges retain the landmark , and still acknowledge the two St . Johns as the patrons and

parallels of Masonry ; whose names form a substantial basis , from which all speculations on its nature and tendency ought to radiate . The Scottish Grand Lodge has raised an effectual bar to this modern innovation by denominating the Order specifically and exclusively " St . JOHN ' S MASONEX , " which is a very correct appellation ; and the observance of their ritual may be tbenee considered as the true practice of tbe genuine Ancient Craft .

Architectural Development Abstractedly Considered.

ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT ABSTRACTEDLY CONSIDERED .

( Continued from page 446 . ) "History , " says Dionysius , is " Philosophy teaching by examples , " which is a truism equally applicable to the history of Architecture . The farther we pursue our considerations , the more we are convinced of the truth , that the results of the pastin Architectureare pregnant with teaching for the

, , future ; and that they are the only sources from which to expect either a new Architecture , or even the rudiments of one . We have endeavoured , at the risk of tiring our readers' attention , to show those national , and other influences , which havo helped to shape previous developments , as well as those circumstances which have been most favourable to them . These we sntnmed up ,

under the national , intellectual , and mechanical expressions , or qualities of Architecture , and glanced at the main processes , or means , by which they are induced . We will now try to exemplify still more pur views , and in a more abstract manner . If history furnishes us with the proof of ono truth stronger than an otherit is the undeniable onethat the

, , growth of Architecture has always been the result of the growth of nations ; that it has always kept pace with the nationalities and habits of different civilisations , and become their exponent . Styles of art may be considered the fashions , which successive nations shaped ; each style the creation of various circumstances combined ; never the offspring of

one or two creative imaginations , however gifted . A style must be developed by degrees , out of previous elements , by the soil which surrounds it ; by external and internal influences ; and it must , as we have before said , spontaneously , or voluntarily , consent , or yield , to these influences , never be forced suddenly by them , still less by individual efforts . It must either be the result of some developing principle , of the capabilities or

susceptibilities of the elements of a previous style ; or otherwise it must be derived from the combination or adaptation of some new principle of construction , as in the Roman and Early Pointed styles . Of both these instances , introduced features were the origin ; in the case of the Pointed arch , the introduction was by slow degrees , and in many of the earliest specimens of Early

English the transition from the Norman was so susceptible as to be hardly noticed . ( See Temple Church ; Earring-don , Berkshire ; St . Cross , Hampshire . ) The generalities of previous styles have always been thought of , and the salient or common features of them known , before new principles were grafted on them . The two great primeval civilisations- —the E tian

gyp and the Assyrian—which contemporaneously used the beam construction , may be said to have worked out this sy stem ( independently . There can be little doubt , however , —whether the Egyptians in the 13 th dynasty ever held Assyria in subjection for some centuries , or not , —that the remains we have belonging to the period , from Ninus about the 14 th

century B . C . to the time of Alexander the Great , or the 4 th century cn ., show unmistakeable traces of Egyptian features ; the most brilliant age of this long period , being towards the latter end of the Assyrian Empire , or from the time of Arbaces 821 B . C ., to the taking of Nineveh , by Nebuchadnezzar 600 B . C . The ruins of the palaces of Nineveh and Babylon , the palaces of Khorsabad by

Sargon , and Niinrood by Essorhaddon , the remains at Passargadae , the remains of the halls and palaces of Darius and Xerxes at Persepolis—though the full-grown examples of a mature development—manifest more or less Egyptian peculiarities , though the later Persian examples are tinctured by Grecian and Eoman taste . The tumuli , and Lyeian tombs of Asia Minor , the latter evidencing a wooden origin , were contemporary with Persian architecture , and however much Persian influence

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-12-20, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_20121862/page/4/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 1
FROM WEST TO EAST—FROM EAST TO WEST.* Article 2
ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT ABSTRACTEDLY CONSIDERED. Article 4
OUR PUBLIC STATUES AND MEMORIALS. Article 6
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 15
Poetry. Article 16
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 17
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.

From West To East—From East To West.*

with the bright beams of revelation , and to dispel the primitive darkness of ignorance , snpestition , and error . But all these illustration , of the custom of travelling from West to East for instruction , throw no light whatever on . the anomaly of hailing from the Lodge

of St . John , which , though omitted in tbe present code of English Lectures , must not be altogether lost sight of , for it undoubtedly constituted a Landmark of Ancient Masonry , distinctly recorded in the primitive Ritual . JNow , as regards ourselves , this lodis situated in the East instead of the West ;

ge and being a place of greater traditional light and knowledge than can be found elsewhere , is very unlikely to send out its acolytes to other quarters for instruction .

In our earliest . Lectures . we nnd it recorded that every Freemason ' s Lodge was , hj dedication , a Lodge of St . John ; f and therefore to reconcile the anomaly under discussion , it will only be necessary to omit the locality , and the indefinite article . The respondent will then intelligibly state that he is travelling from a Lodge of St . John in tlie West to

another in tlie East , ia search of instruction ; for the East being the seat of Light and Wisdom , and Jerusalem the chief city of God ' s peculiar people , and the locality ivhere all the typical celebrations by which our lodges ( as antitypes of the Tabernacle and Temple ) were consummated would necessarily be a

place peculiarly adapted for Masonic instruction . I commit this conjecture to the consideration of the Craft . It is a fact corroborated by Masonic history and tradition that the privilege of hailing from Jerusalem amongst Solomon ' s Masons served as a certificate of recommendation ; and whoever possessed that testimonial was freely engaged in all the countries where

the craft might seek employment . Hence the custom might pass traditionally through successive ages till it reached the times of our primitive brethren , the Christian architects of the mediteval ages , and was adopted by them as a formula technically necessary to ensure the kind reception of a sojourner amongst strangers .

It is no valid answer to this reason that the St . John ' s have been ignored by the English system , and their place occupied by two Jews—Moses the lawgiver , and Solomon , the king of Israel—because all other existing Grand Lodges retain the landmark , and still acknowledge the two St . Johns as the patrons and

parallels of Masonry ; whose names form a substantial basis , from which all speculations on its nature and tendency ought to radiate . The Scottish Grand Lodge has raised an effectual bar to this modern innovation by denominating the Order specifically and exclusively " St . JOHN ' S MASONEX , " which is a very correct appellation ; and the observance of their ritual may be tbenee considered as the true practice of tbe genuine Ancient Craft .

Architectural Development Abstractedly Considered.

ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT ABSTRACTEDLY CONSIDERED .

( Continued from page 446 . ) "History , " says Dionysius , is " Philosophy teaching by examples , " which is a truism equally applicable to the history of Architecture . The farther we pursue our considerations , the more we are convinced of the truth , that the results of the pastin Architectureare pregnant with teaching for the

, , future ; and that they are the only sources from which to expect either a new Architecture , or even the rudiments of one . We have endeavoured , at the risk of tiring our readers' attention , to show those national , and other influences , which havo helped to shape previous developments , as well as those circumstances which have been most favourable to them . These we sntnmed up ,

under the national , intellectual , and mechanical expressions , or qualities of Architecture , and glanced at the main processes , or means , by which they are induced . We will now try to exemplify still more pur views , and in a more abstract manner . If history furnishes us with the proof of ono truth stronger than an otherit is the undeniable onethat the

, , growth of Architecture has always been the result of the growth of nations ; that it has always kept pace with the nationalities and habits of different civilisations , and become their exponent . Styles of art may be considered the fashions , which successive nations shaped ; each style the creation of various circumstances combined ; never the offspring of

one or two creative imaginations , however gifted . A style must be developed by degrees , out of previous elements , by the soil which surrounds it ; by external and internal influences ; and it must , as we have before said , spontaneously , or voluntarily , consent , or yield , to these influences , never be forced suddenly by them , still less by individual efforts . It must either be the result of some developing principle , of the capabilities or

susceptibilities of the elements of a previous style ; or otherwise it must be derived from the combination or adaptation of some new principle of construction , as in the Roman and Early Pointed styles . Of both these instances , introduced features were the origin ; in the case of the Pointed arch , the introduction was by slow degrees , and in many of the earliest specimens of Early

English the transition from the Norman was so susceptible as to be hardly noticed . ( See Temple Church ; Earring-don , Berkshire ; St . Cross , Hampshire . ) The generalities of previous styles have always been thought of , and the salient or common features of them known , before new principles were grafted on them . The two great primeval civilisations- —the E tian

gyp and the Assyrian—which contemporaneously used the beam construction , may be said to have worked out this sy stem ( independently . There can be little doubt , however , —whether the Egyptians in the 13 th dynasty ever held Assyria in subjection for some centuries , or not , —that the remains we have belonging to the period , from Ninus about the 14 th

century B . C . to the time of Alexander the Great , or the 4 th century cn ., show unmistakeable traces of Egyptian features ; the most brilliant age of this long period , being towards the latter end of the Assyrian Empire , or from the time of Arbaces 821 B . C ., to the taking of Nineveh , by Nebuchadnezzar 600 B . C . The ruins of the palaces of Nineveh and Babylon , the palaces of Khorsabad by

Sargon , and Niinrood by Essorhaddon , the remains at Passargadae , the remains of the halls and palaces of Darius and Xerxes at Persepolis—though the full-grown examples of a mature development—manifest more or less Egyptian peculiarities , though the later Persian examples are tinctured by Grecian and Eoman taste . The tumuli , and Lyeian tombs of Asia Minor , the latter evidencing a wooden origin , were contemporary with Persian architecture , and however much Persian influence

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