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  • Dec. 24, 1859
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  • ON THE ORIGIN AND OBSERVANCE OF CHRISTMAS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 24, 1859: Page 8

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On The Origin And Observance Of Christmas.

that clandestine or anonymous gifts are great favourites throughout Fatherland . To return from this digression , and to take up Bede ' s derivation of yide from " Avheel , " will require in the reader some practise in the use of a strong gutteral intonation ; for quickly pronounced and strongly gutturalizedboth words

, are identical in sound , Avith a . strong presumption therefore of identity of meaning . It is a case in point that the present learned head of , I believe , Trinity College , Cambridge , Dr . Whewell , has his name pronounced in a manner that may stand either for yule or " Avheel : in fact , in all three the only , letter of distinct enunciation is the final

liquid I . All tho other vowels or semivowels are of such infinite niceties of sound as to be undistinguishable to the ear in their numerous intonations . But Ave have other reasons to believe in the agreement of both " yah" and " wheel" besides their verbal assonances . The orbit of the sun , taken as a circle , was fitly and

best represented by a wheel or ring ; and in this view Ave have the best derivation of the Latin annus , tho year , the sun ' s rotation ; when Ave refer to its diminutive annulus , the little ring ; so that we may pretty safely conclude that the original word had primarily the same meaning . Virgil brings the adjective anmm-n pretty nearly to this sense . ( Mi . v . 46 . )

"Anmms exactis completur men . sibns orbis . " To complete these conformities of the denominations of the sun ' s annual orbit with a wheel , our year offers some jioints of contact . It is . identical Avith the German Jahr , which Adelvmg well derives from the Swedish CEr , the harvest or recurrence of seedtime bmereldropping the

; y y initial semivoAvel y Ave gain ear , which it is well knoAvn , Avhen taken as a noun participle , " earing , " means the harvest . Shakespeare uses it in this sense ( Antony and Cleoptatrai . 2 . ) " 0 then we brimr forth weeds

" When our quick minds lie still ; and our ills told us Is as our carnaj- " But the same sense is more clearly expressed in Gen xiA . 6 , of the authorised A-orsion : — "For these two years there hath been famine in the laud ; and there are yet five years in thc which there shall be neither caring harvest

nor . " To those for whom verbal agreements are not satisfactory , Ave can , however , adduce the strong evidence of wheels used as symbols of the Yule feast , both at home and in other countries . In north Germany in particularit is customary at

Christ-, mas to take a common cart Avheel , and to bind it round the spokes and felloes , as AVCII as the nave , Arith straw bands , so that no portion of the wood is visible ; the straAv is then set fire to , and the wheel from an eminence rolled down into the , plain or river , as is done into the Moselle at Konz , a small place in the vicinity of Trier , Avhose

Roman origin is evidenced by tho remains of a Roman imperial palace of Avhich a considerable extent AVUS visible in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries ( see "Panorama von Trier , " p . 214 ) , though the . idea there expressed , that it Avas built b y Constantiiie , Avho certainly resided some time in Trier , has no other . foundation than the place ' s name , Avhich seems more

probably to have arisen from the confluence and junction of Sarre and Moselle , like the con'lttentia ( Coblonz ) of Moselle and Rhine , and another Coblenz at the flowing of the Swiss Aar into the Rhine , with many others . ( Grimm ' s ' - ' . Deutsche Mythologie , " p . /> S 7 . ) Sometimes the celebration by this symbolic wheel is transferred to

the secondary solstice at the feast of St . John Baptist , and is thus described by Naogeorgus in Barnaby Googo ' s translation : — ' Sonic others get a rotten wheel all worn and cast aside , Winch round about with straw and tow they closely hide ; And carried to aome mountain top being ail with fire a light , ' ! hey hurlc it down with violence when dark appears the night ,

Resembling much the sun that from the heavens down should fall , A strange and monstrous sight itseemes and fearful to them all , But they suppose their mischiefs are likewise thrown into hell , And that from harmes and dangers now in safetie here they dwell . "

However comfortable it might be in later times for the exhibitors of this burning wheel to look upon it as a scapegoat of their sins , that certainly was not the original intention . But the Romish priesthood would naturally look upon this heathen token with dislike , and in their Ruustocks , or early calendars , against those days that wore reputed

ominous or ill fated , they sot the mark of a Avheel , allegorically to express them . In the Beaufoy coins of the London municipality , No . 1009 is one Avith the legend " Tho . Aldridge at the Catorn Wheel in West Smithfield , " where is the usual symbol of St . Catharine ' s martyrdom , a Avheel armed with scythe blades ( see A . Durev ' s beautiful folio

Avoodcut ) ; but it is a question whether this Romish legend of St . Catharine , whose name in Greek signifies merely " pure , cleansed " ( mdapog ) may not have arisen from the common wheel symbols of the British or Celtic coins . On this subject Ave have a learned treatise by Levezow , in the transactions of the Berlin Academy for 1833 , p . 189 , From it Ave find that small wheels of silver and bronze had been

dug up in France , and one of terra cotta with four spokes had been found in the neighbourhood and preserved in the National Museum at Berlin , being evidently amulets suitable to the circumstances of different Avearers . The stories of fiction were less bound to circumstances , and therefore in the old lay of Wigolais , the hero makes

himself a Avheel of gold , which he afterwards wears as a crest , from which he got the name of the Knight of the Wheel , Avhom even Gildas , the monk of Bangor , denominates Mika Quadriga' . The use of the wheel at the summer solstice has also an early testimony in Durand ( Rationale Div . Offs \ 'ii . 14 . ) "In

qui-, , busdam locis in festo Johannis Baptiste rotam volvunt qua revolutione indicant quod sol in festo Johannis in . Zodiaco ad summum gradinn jam pervenerit et discedere per diem inciperetur , " & c . Among the Harleian MSS . in the British Museum , ( 2340 , art . 100 ) , is an account in Avhich the rites on St . John the

Baptist ' s CA'e are enumerated , and in them the wheel is cons ] 3 iciioiia He gives three kinds : "In vigilia beati Johannis colligunt pueri in quibusdam regionibus ossa et quasdam alia iuiniunda ( bonefircs ) ot in simnl cremant et exindo producitur f ' umus in acre . Cremant etiain braiidas ( sen fasces ) et circular ) t arva cum brandis . Tertium , de Rota quam faciunt A'olvi . "

As this MS . is believed to describe the customs round Winoh . oom . be , in Gloucestershire , it brings these practices home to ourselves and a comparatively recent date , Avhich eAreu a Arery modern usage follows , as in the newest nc- > counts of Gloucester Folk-lore AVC find that with something like a respect for the excellent produce of their daries , a cheese is substituted for the Avheel , and rolled down theirhills on the Baptist ' s anniversary , still retaining the round , form and thc rofcj-ry motion .

ITALIAN' Paoviimis . —Says Cluicoiavtlini , " Do all you can to seem good , ami the better shall it be for yon . " In another place , speaking' of gratitude in return for favours received , lie says , " Look for assistance only to tho . se who are so situated that they must needs serve you , and not to such as you have served , " & c . How infinitely higher and uobk-r is "Gianni ' s" standard of moral worth when lie says , "Goodness takes up no room ; " and bettor still" Whoso doeth good , hath goods ; " or ,

, with honest trust in his fellow creatures' gratitude , " Service kindles love "— "He that gives discreetly sells dear "— "Almsgiving never made any man poor "— " . Helpfulness never comes home without hiswages , "

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-12-24, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 27 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_24121859/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 1
BASILICA ANGLICANA—VII. Article 2
TASTE IN ARCHITECTURE GOVERNED BY. DOMESTIC MANNERS. Article 4
ON THE ORIGIN AND OBSERVANCE OF CHRISTMAS. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
Literature. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
IRELAND. Article 17
SCOTLAND. Article 17
AUSTRALIA. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO COEEESPOJSTDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On The Origin And Observance Of Christmas.

that clandestine or anonymous gifts are great favourites throughout Fatherland . To return from this digression , and to take up Bede ' s derivation of yide from " Avheel , " will require in the reader some practise in the use of a strong gutteral intonation ; for quickly pronounced and strongly gutturalizedboth words

, are identical in sound , Avith a . strong presumption therefore of identity of meaning . It is a case in point that the present learned head of , I believe , Trinity College , Cambridge , Dr . Whewell , has his name pronounced in a manner that may stand either for yule or " Avheel : in fact , in all three the only , letter of distinct enunciation is the final

liquid I . All tho other vowels or semivowels are of such infinite niceties of sound as to be undistinguishable to the ear in their numerous intonations . But Ave have other reasons to believe in the agreement of both " yah" and " wheel" besides their verbal assonances . The orbit of the sun , taken as a circle , was fitly and

best represented by a wheel or ring ; and in this view Ave have the best derivation of the Latin annus , tho year , the sun ' s rotation ; when Ave refer to its diminutive annulus , the little ring ; so that we may pretty safely conclude that the original word had primarily the same meaning . Virgil brings the adjective anmm-n pretty nearly to this sense . ( Mi . v . 46 . )

"Anmms exactis completur men . sibns orbis . " To complete these conformities of the denominations of the sun ' s annual orbit with a wheel , our year offers some jioints of contact . It is . identical Avith the German Jahr , which Adelvmg well derives from the Swedish CEr , the harvest or recurrence of seedtime bmereldropping the

; y y initial semivoAvel y Ave gain ear , which it is well knoAvn , Avhen taken as a noun participle , " earing , " means the harvest . Shakespeare uses it in this sense ( Antony and Cleoptatrai . 2 . ) " 0 then we brimr forth weeds

" When our quick minds lie still ; and our ills told us Is as our carnaj- " But the same sense is more clearly expressed in Gen xiA . 6 , of the authorised A-orsion : — "For these two years there hath been famine in the laud ; and there are yet five years in thc which there shall be neither caring harvest

nor . " To those for whom verbal agreements are not satisfactory , Ave can , however , adduce the strong evidence of wheels used as symbols of the Yule feast , both at home and in other countries . In north Germany in particularit is customary at

Christ-, mas to take a common cart Avheel , and to bind it round the spokes and felloes , as AVCII as the nave , Arith straw bands , so that no portion of the wood is visible ; the straAv is then set fire to , and the wheel from an eminence rolled down into the , plain or river , as is done into the Moselle at Konz , a small place in the vicinity of Trier , Avhose

Roman origin is evidenced by tho remains of a Roman imperial palace of Avhich a considerable extent AVUS visible in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries ( see "Panorama von Trier , " p . 214 ) , though the . idea there expressed , that it Avas built b y Constantiiie , Avho certainly resided some time in Trier , has no other . foundation than the place ' s name , Avhich seems more

probably to have arisen from the confluence and junction of Sarre and Moselle , like the con'lttentia ( Coblonz ) of Moselle and Rhine , and another Coblenz at the flowing of the Swiss Aar into the Rhine , with many others . ( Grimm ' s ' - ' . Deutsche Mythologie , " p . /> S 7 . ) Sometimes the celebration by this symbolic wheel is transferred to

the secondary solstice at the feast of St . John Baptist , and is thus described by Naogeorgus in Barnaby Googo ' s translation : — ' Sonic others get a rotten wheel all worn and cast aside , Winch round about with straw and tow they closely hide ; And carried to aome mountain top being ail with fire a light , ' ! hey hurlc it down with violence when dark appears the night ,

Resembling much the sun that from the heavens down should fall , A strange and monstrous sight itseemes and fearful to them all , But they suppose their mischiefs are likewise thrown into hell , And that from harmes and dangers now in safetie here they dwell . "

However comfortable it might be in later times for the exhibitors of this burning wheel to look upon it as a scapegoat of their sins , that certainly was not the original intention . But the Romish priesthood would naturally look upon this heathen token with dislike , and in their Ruustocks , or early calendars , against those days that wore reputed

ominous or ill fated , they sot the mark of a Avheel , allegorically to express them . In the Beaufoy coins of the London municipality , No . 1009 is one Avith the legend " Tho . Aldridge at the Catorn Wheel in West Smithfield , " where is the usual symbol of St . Catharine ' s martyrdom , a Avheel armed with scythe blades ( see A . Durev ' s beautiful folio

Avoodcut ) ; but it is a question whether this Romish legend of St . Catharine , whose name in Greek signifies merely " pure , cleansed " ( mdapog ) may not have arisen from the common wheel symbols of the British or Celtic coins . On this subject Ave have a learned treatise by Levezow , in the transactions of the Berlin Academy for 1833 , p . 189 , From it Ave find that small wheels of silver and bronze had been

dug up in France , and one of terra cotta with four spokes had been found in the neighbourhood and preserved in the National Museum at Berlin , being evidently amulets suitable to the circumstances of different Avearers . The stories of fiction were less bound to circumstances , and therefore in the old lay of Wigolais , the hero makes

himself a Avheel of gold , which he afterwards wears as a crest , from which he got the name of the Knight of the Wheel , Avhom even Gildas , the monk of Bangor , denominates Mika Quadriga' . The use of the wheel at the summer solstice has also an early testimony in Durand ( Rationale Div . Offs \ 'ii . 14 . ) "In

qui-, , busdam locis in festo Johannis Baptiste rotam volvunt qua revolutione indicant quod sol in festo Johannis in . Zodiaco ad summum gradinn jam pervenerit et discedere per diem inciperetur , " & c . Among the Harleian MSS . in the British Museum , ( 2340 , art . 100 ) , is an account in Avhich the rites on St . John the

Baptist ' s CA'e are enumerated , and in them the wheel is cons ] 3 iciioiia He gives three kinds : "In vigilia beati Johannis colligunt pueri in quibusdam regionibus ossa et quasdam alia iuiniunda ( bonefircs ) ot in simnl cremant et exindo producitur f ' umus in acre . Cremant etiain braiidas ( sen fasces ) et circular ) t arva cum brandis . Tertium , de Rota quam faciunt A'olvi . "

As this MS . is believed to describe the customs round Winoh . oom . be , in Gloucestershire , it brings these practices home to ourselves and a comparatively recent date , Avhich eAreu a Arery modern usage follows , as in the newest nc- > counts of Gloucester Folk-lore AVC find that with something like a respect for the excellent produce of their daries , a cheese is substituted for the Avheel , and rolled down theirhills on the Baptist ' s anniversary , still retaining the round , form and thc rofcj-ry motion .

ITALIAN' Paoviimis . —Says Cluicoiavtlini , " Do all you can to seem good , ami the better shall it be for yon . " In another place , speaking' of gratitude in return for favours received , lie says , " Look for assistance only to tho . se who are so situated that they must needs serve you , and not to such as you have served , " & c . How infinitely higher and uobk-r is "Gianni ' s" standard of moral worth when lie says , "Goodness takes up no room ; " and bettor still" Whoso doeth good , hath goods ; " or ,

, with honest trust in his fellow creatures' gratitude , " Service kindles love "— "He that gives discreetly sells dear "— "Almsgiving never made any man poor "— " . Helpfulness never comes home without hiswages , "

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