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  • Aug. 25, 1860
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 25, 1860: Page 3

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    Article CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXX. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article MASONIC JOTTINGS FROM ABROAD. Page 1 of 2 →
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Classical Theology.—Xxx.

idea of expressing a duality of bodies . These were worshipped , especially amongst the Egyptians ; yet , even by them separately , for we deny that they gave this property to a closer hermaphrodical extent , to these or any other of their deities . Lunus and Lunai were differentl y held in reverence ; those who worshiped the binary god ivere thought to be superior in natureas

, under the governance of a male deity—but those ivho worshiped the lunary goddess were thought to be inferior to the masculine sex , as subject to the woman , or under the influence of a female deity . Further , perhaps for the balance of natural power or love , the men who sacrificed to Venus under the name of Luna , dressed themselves in

women ' s atire , while the women clothed themselves in men ' s garments . The fable of the loves of Luna and her Endyinion has been often written , both in prose and poetry , and never more beautifully than by Keats . According to Apollonius the poetand the historian Plinius Secundus

, , it would appear that Endyinion was the son of iEthlius and one of the shepherd chiefs or kings of Caria , in Asia Minor , who , having entertained Jupiter visiting the earth , was taken by the god into heaven , where it happened that he became so much bewildered by the brightness and enamoured with the beauty of its queenthe celestial Juno

, , as to lose himself in the clouds and even to mistake a cloud for the divinity herself . The king of heaven , incensed at the conduct of the presumptuous mortal , banished him his kingdom , and condemned him to a perpetual sleep . Strictly adhering to our authority we should rather say that he was thrown out of heaven ; of what his bones

were made is beyond conjecture , as he seems , in this fall , to have escaped all fractures or other bodily injury—otherwise , as a natural consequence , we might have dealt with the" perpetual sleep , " and have made an equivocal point of the proverb Endi / mionis somnum dormire . Meanwhile , Luna , liaving gazed night after ni ght upon the sleeping youthwas at last overcome with a violent

, passion for him , insomuch that she descended from her sphere in the heavens , to give him love kisses and embraces , as he lay on the mountain Latmus , or Lathynius . The impassioned tenderness of so fair and pure a goddess might well in itself , without surpassing wonder have been sufficient to break the spell of a man ' s eternal slumber .

At all events , Endymion ' s eyes opened . He saw in reality and in no dream , the body , form , and face of immortality beside him , and with delicious rapture they mutually exchanged their avowed affections . She led him to a cave in the mountain to hide him from Jupiter and from all other eyes but her own . Here she

contrived nightly to visit and converse with him , without occasioning any perceptible disorganisation of the harmonious course and music of the spheres . In simple fact Endyinion was afamous ancient astronomer , supposed to be the first who discovered the motions and circles of the moonand because he made Mount Latmusin Caria

, , , the constant place of his p lanetary contemplations , the ignorant peasants considered it to be his dormitory . They thoughtthat he . was always sleeping there because they observed him stretched on his back on the hill's loftiest slopes , no unusual way , in his time , of studying and reading the starry heavens .

Toousn PEESEXIS TO TE . Puns-en 01 ? AA AM-S . —A Nova-Scotian , a dealer in grindstones , prepared a specimen of his -wares for presentation to the Prince of AVales ! One side of the stone hears this pregnant legend : " For the Prince of AVales , our Hopeful King , 1860 . " On the other side is the business card of the donor . ^ If this sort of thing is to he persevered in the Prince's visit -will he a bore to him . AA e notice in Canada a few persons are preparing to make fools of themselves in the same way . "We ivould advise them to desist . —Toronto Leader .

Masonic Jottings From Abroad.

MASONIC JOTTINGS FROM ABROAD .

The quiet earnest spirit which the German carries into all his learned and social pursuits , receive no better illustration than in the zeal manifested of our Brethren in that country in the support and extension of Masonry . Thej * go to work with a cpiiet enthusiasm on their mission of peace and good-will , and scarcely one of their organs reaches usbut we find some new proof of progress ,

, philanthropy and intelligence . They do injustice to Masonry , or are ignorant of its spirit , Avho fancy that its "be all , and end all , " consists in mere ceremonial , lodgemeetings , processions , and the like . Masonry attempts and achieves something beyond this . Thus we read with leasure in the annual report of the Brunswick Lodge for

p 1859 , that the Benevolent Institution for 'Widows , and Orphans , founded in 1800 by the Brethren , is m a highly prosperous condition . It has an annual income of 1200 thalers ( £ 180 ) , counts 56 members , and relieved last year 23 widows or orphans , to the extent of £ Q each . This may appear a small sum in English eyes ;

but it must be remembered that any part of Germany is poor in comparison with England , and that the sum of £ 6 in the hands of the frugal recip ients , goes much father than amongst us . There is also a college for widows and orphans , which has existed from the same

year , 1806 , and which does a great amount of good . The Brunswick Lodge , including 16 honorary members , numbers ¦ at present 230 Brethren . Ancl yet , we must read from time to time such statements as the following in au ultramontane journal of Vienna , which stj-le itself the " Peoples' Journal " ( Volkrzeitung ) , as

to the characteristics of Masonry . "Falsehood is its principle , the extirpation of Christianity its object , its chief leader must be the devil , not only in spirit , but in person ; and as the Catholic Church may be called the good spirit , so Masonry may be called the evil spirit . Our observations in these sail times lead us to the belief

that Ereemasonry serves the Devil as a tool for making war against the Kingdom ; its founders , continuators , and leaders , inspired by the Devil , labour after his plans , and on their side it represents the great Son of Perdition Antichrist . " This is amusing in its way ; but Masonry lacks at least this much of the spirit of the Devilthat it

, does not " render for railing . " We are sorry to find too , that Alexander Dumas , in his "Memoirs of Garibaldi , " is so ignorant of the nature of Masonry that he confounds it with the secret political sects of Italy . Alexander is a most talented writer ; hut he is too fast to be always correct , or to be relied irpon .

A letter from Bro . George Treu , of Pforzherm , states , that last year in a journey to theEast , he / was present at the reception into the ( English ) Oriental Lodge , of Prince Mirza , Ali Ho Gla Khan . The business was conducted in the English and Turkish languages by the worthy Master Aznavour , who is well known in England , where he was initiated . At the closeBro . Aznavour made Bro . Treu

ob-, serve that the new Bro . was bound by the Koran , which he acknowledged as a " holy book * , " yet that it was only used symbolically as a token of reverence . The Prince was introduced , and the Avhole business conducted according to the ancient usage of England . Eor the rest the service is very uniform , and not so attractive

as in the Lodge of the "Sun" at Bayreuth . The German Brethren are not quite pleased to "to work " with the uniformity of the English system , on the other hand they consider the French Lodges too ornamented , and that ' there is too much levity in the introduction and reception , of members . Our Bro . heard it stated , that an attempt would shortly be made in the Levant to

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-08-25, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_25081860/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
NORTH RIDING OF YORK INFIRMARY. Article 1
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXX. Article 2
MASONIC JOTTINGS FROM ABROAD. Article 3
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
Literature. Article 10
Poetry. Article 12
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 13
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
NEW SOUTH WALES. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Classical Theology.—Xxx.

idea of expressing a duality of bodies . These were worshipped , especially amongst the Egyptians ; yet , even by them separately , for we deny that they gave this property to a closer hermaphrodical extent , to these or any other of their deities . Lunus and Lunai were differentl y held in reverence ; those who worshiped the binary god ivere thought to be superior in natureas

, under the governance of a male deity—but those ivho worshiped the lunary goddess were thought to be inferior to the masculine sex , as subject to the woman , or under the influence of a female deity . Further , perhaps for the balance of natural power or love , the men who sacrificed to Venus under the name of Luna , dressed themselves in

women ' s atire , while the women clothed themselves in men ' s garments . The fable of the loves of Luna and her Endyinion has been often written , both in prose and poetry , and never more beautifully than by Keats . According to Apollonius the poetand the historian Plinius Secundus

, , it would appear that Endyinion was the son of iEthlius and one of the shepherd chiefs or kings of Caria , in Asia Minor , who , having entertained Jupiter visiting the earth , was taken by the god into heaven , where it happened that he became so much bewildered by the brightness and enamoured with the beauty of its queenthe celestial Juno

, , as to lose himself in the clouds and even to mistake a cloud for the divinity herself . The king of heaven , incensed at the conduct of the presumptuous mortal , banished him his kingdom , and condemned him to a perpetual sleep . Strictly adhering to our authority we should rather say that he was thrown out of heaven ; of what his bones

were made is beyond conjecture , as he seems , in this fall , to have escaped all fractures or other bodily injury—otherwise , as a natural consequence , we might have dealt with the" perpetual sleep , " and have made an equivocal point of the proverb Endi / mionis somnum dormire . Meanwhile , Luna , liaving gazed night after ni ght upon the sleeping youthwas at last overcome with a violent

, passion for him , insomuch that she descended from her sphere in the heavens , to give him love kisses and embraces , as he lay on the mountain Latmus , or Lathynius . The impassioned tenderness of so fair and pure a goddess might well in itself , without surpassing wonder have been sufficient to break the spell of a man ' s eternal slumber .

At all events , Endymion ' s eyes opened . He saw in reality and in no dream , the body , form , and face of immortality beside him , and with delicious rapture they mutually exchanged their avowed affections . She led him to a cave in the mountain to hide him from Jupiter and from all other eyes but her own . Here she

contrived nightly to visit and converse with him , without occasioning any perceptible disorganisation of the harmonious course and music of the spheres . In simple fact Endyinion was afamous ancient astronomer , supposed to be the first who discovered the motions and circles of the moonand because he made Mount Latmusin Caria

, , , the constant place of his p lanetary contemplations , the ignorant peasants considered it to be his dormitory . They thoughtthat he . was always sleeping there because they observed him stretched on his back on the hill's loftiest slopes , no unusual way , in his time , of studying and reading the starry heavens .

Toousn PEESEXIS TO TE . Puns-en 01 ? AA AM-S . —A Nova-Scotian , a dealer in grindstones , prepared a specimen of his -wares for presentation to the Prince of AVales ! One side of the stone hears this pregnant legend : " For the Prince of AVales , our Hopeful King , 1860 . " On the other side is the business card of the donor . ^ If this sort of thing is to he persevered in the Prince's visit -will he a bore to him . AA e notice in Canada a few persons are preparing to make fools of themselves in the same way . "We ivould advise them to desist . —Toronto Leader .

Masonic Jottings From Abroad.

MASONIC JOTTINGS FROM ABROAD .

The quiet earnest spirit which the German carries into all his learned and social pursuits , receive no better illustration than in the zeal manifested of our Brethren in that country in the support and extension of Masonry . Thej * go to work with a cpiiet enthusiasm on their mission of peace and good-will , and scarcely one of their organs reaches usbut we find some new proof of progress ,

, philanthropy and intelligence . They do injustice to Masonry , or are ignorant of its spirit , Avho fancy that its "be all , and end all , " consists in mere ceremonial , lodgemeetings , processions , and the like . Masonry attempts and achieves something beyond this . Thus we read with leasure in the annual report of the Brunswick Lodge for

p 1859 , that the Benevolent Institution for 'Widows , and Orphans , founded in 1800 by the Brethren , is m a highly prosperous condition . It has an annual income of 1200 thalers ( £ 180 ) , counts 56 members , and relieved last year 23 widows or orphans , to the extent of £ Q each . This may appear a small sum in English eyes ;

but it must be remembered that any part of Germany is poor in comparison with England , and that the sum of £ 6 in the hands of the frugal recip ients , goes much father than amongst us . There is also a college for widows and orphans , which has existed from the same

year , 1806 , and which does a great amount of good . The Brunswick Lodge , including 16 honorary members , numbers ¦ at present 230 Brethren . Ancl yet , we must read from time to time such statements as the following in au ultramontane journal of Vienna , which stj-le itself the " Peoples' Journal " ( Volkrzeitung ) , as

to the characteristics of Masonry . "Falsehood is its principle , the extirpation of Christianity its object , its chief leader must be the devil , not only in spirit , but in person ; and as the Catholic Church may be called the good spirit , so Masonry may be called the evil spirit . Our observations in these sail times lead us to the belief

that Ereemasonry serves the Devil as a tool for making war against the Kingdom ; its founders , continuators , and leaders , inspired by the Devil , labour after his plans , and on their side it represents the great Son of Perdition Antichrist . " This is amusing in its way ; but Masonry lacks at least this much of the spirit of the Devilthat it

, does not " render for railing . " We are sorry to find too , that Alexander Dumas , in his "Memoirs of Garibaldi , " is so ignorant of the nature of Masonry that he confounds it with the secret political sects of Italy . Alexander is a most talented writer ; hut he is too fast to be always correct , or to be relied irpon .

A letter from Bro . George Treu , of Pforzherm , states , that last year in a journey to theEast , he / was present at the reception into the ( English ) Oriental Lodge , of Prince Mirza , Ali Ho Gla Khan . The business was conducted in the English and Turkish languages by the worthy Master Aznavour , who is well known in England , where he was initiated . At the closeBro . Aznavour made Bro . Treu

ob-, serve that the new Bro . was bound by the Koran , which he acknowledged as a " holy book * , " yet that it was only used symbolically as a token of reverence . The Prince was introduced , and the Avhole business conducted according to the ancient usage of England . Eor the rest the service is very uniform , and not so attractive

as in the Lodge of the "Sun" at Bayreuth . The German Brethren are not quite pleased to "to work " with the uniformity of the English system , on the other hand they consider the French Lodges too ornamented , and that ' there is too much levity in the introduction and reception , of members . Our Bro . heard it stated , that an attempt would shortly be made in the Levant to

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