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  • April 29, 1865
  • Page 5
  • MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 29, 1865: Page 5

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

inent of all created things and their development according to the laws of number , yes , on the very use of symbols which could alone have force to the esoteric disciple , ( aud a terrible signifieancy , indeed , has the simplest form , to a mind hasheesh-quickened to read its meaning)—on all these is the legible stamp of the

hasheesh inspiration . "It would be no hard task to prove , to a strong probability , at least , that the initiation into the Pythagorean mysteries and the progressive instruction that succeeded it , to a considerable extent , cons isted in the employment , judiciously , it we may USP the

word , of hasheesh , as giving a critical and analytic poAver to the mind which enabled the neophyte to roll up the murk and mist from beclouded truths , till they stood distiuctly seen in the splendour of their own harmonious beauty as an intuition . " One thing related of Pythagoras and ins friends

has seemed very striking to me . There is a legend , that , as he was passing over a river , its waters called up to him , in the presence of his followers , ' Hail , Pythagoras ! ' Frequently , while in the poAver of the hasheesh delirium , have I heard inanimate things sonorous Avith such voices . On every side they have

saluted me ; from rocks , aud trees , and waters , and sky ; in my happiness , filling me wifch intense exultation , as I heard them Avelcoming their master ; in my agony , heaping nameless curses on my head , as I went away into au eternal exile from all sympathy . Of this tradition of lamblichus , I feel an appreciation Avhich almost convinces me that the voice of the river was , indeed , heard , though only in the quickened mind of some hasheesh-glorified esoteric . Again , it may he

that the doctrine of the Metempsychosis was first communicated to Pythagoras by Thebau priests ; but the astonishing illustration , which hasheesh would contribute to this tenet , should not be overlooked iu our attempt to assign its first suggestion and succeeding spread to their proper causes . "A modern criticin defending the hypothesisthat

, , Pythagoras was an impostor , has triumphantly asked , ' Why did he assume the character of Apollo at the Olympic games ? why did be boast that his soul had lived in former bodies , and that he hacl been first Acthalides , the son of Mercury , the Euphorbus , then Pyrrhus of Delos , and at last Pathagoras , but that he

"might more easily impose upon the credulity of an ignorant ancl superstitious people ? ' To us these facts seem rather an evidence of his sincerity . Had he made these assertions without proof , it is difficult to see IIOAV they would not have had a precisely contrary effect from that of paving the way to a more complete

imposition upon the credulity of the people . Upon our hypothesis , it may he easily SIIOAVU , not only IIOAV he could fully haA'e helieA'ed these assertions himself , but , also , have given them a deep significance to the minds of his disciples . " Let us see . We will consider , for example , his

assumption of the character of Phrcbus afc the Olympic games . Let us suppose that Pythagoras , animated with a desire of alluring to the study of his philosophy a choice and enthusiastic number out of that host Avho , along all the radii of the civilized world , had come up to the solemn festival at Elis , had , by the talisman of hasheesh , called to his aid . the magic of a preternatural eloquence ; that , while he addressed the throng whom he hacl charmed into

Masonic Notes And Queries.

breathless attention by the weird brilliancy of his eye , the unearthl y imagery of his style , and the oracular insight of his thought , the grand impression flashed upon him from the very honour he was receiving , that he was the incarnation of some sublime deity . What wonder that he burst into the acknowledgment of hia

godship as a secret too majestic to be hoarded up ? What wonder that this sudden revelation of himself , darting forth in burning words and amid such colossal surroundings , went down with the accessories of time and place along the stream of perpetual tradition ?"

THE CHEVALIEK D ' EON . I have ahvays heard there was but one lady Freemason . A brother told some of us , at lodge , recently that a Madame Deon was initiated . Is that a fact ? —A P . M . of SHIRE . —[ The Chevalier D'Eon was one of the mysteries of the last century . It is

a funny thing to write , but he was a man . For some youthful indiscretion , the King of France ordered him to assume female attire , and for many years he wore ifc both in France and England , lie also at one time resumed male clothing , but Avas so used to a woman ' s dress that he speedily discarded ifc . There

was much scandal afloat Avith respect to him , and many speculations as to which sex he belonged . When ho was dead tlie mystery Avas solved , by the medical men declariug him to be a man . Although he went by the names of Chevalier aud Madame D'Eon , adopting both as he chose—sometimes giving out that he was a man , afc other times a woman—he was initiated into Freemasonry in London , as Dermott , iu his Ahiman Sezon , tells us : — " This is still

the law of ancient Masons , though disregarded b y our brethren ( I mean our sisters ) the modern Masons , Avho ( some years ago ) admitted Signer Singsong , the eunuch , T—nd—ci" [ Tenducci , a great siuger of his time , formerly one of the Sistine chapel choir , where all the males had female voices—were , in fact , eunuchs .

For more on the point see Byron ' s Don Juan . " ] " at one of their lodges iu the Strand , London . And upon a late trial at Westminster , it appeared that they admitted a woman called' Madame D'E . " p . 29 . This note of Dermott ' s refers to the Old Constitutionsin Avhich it Avas declared that a

candi-, date " must he Avithout blemish , ancl have the full and proper use of his limbs , " or as Anderson after said , in the second edition of his Booh of Constitutions , " The men made Masons must he freehorn ( or no bondmen ) , of mature age , and of good report , hale and soundnot deformed or dismembered at the time of

, their making . But no Avoman , no eunuch . " p . 144 . For a graphic account of the Chevalier D'Eon , and his vicissitudes , see Wraxall ' s Memoirs of Bemarkalle Adventurers . " ]

l-HEEMA . SON ' EY IS THAN CIS . What has become of the Rite Ecossais lodges . Have they been amalgamated with those of the Grand Orient ?—* . —[ We hope not . Freemasonry , in France is a most tangled skeiu , which few can unravel , and we are not of the number . ]

THE MASONIC SUN AND MOON . In almost eA-ery representation of the sun and moon , connected with Masonry , it will generally be observed that the sun is filled up with eyes , nose , and mouth , making , a jolly round face of his own , while

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-04-29, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_29041865/page/5/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 1
MARK MASONRY. Article 1
CHURCH BELLS : THEIR ANTIQUITIES AND CONNECTION WITH ARCHITECTURE. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 4
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
MASONIC LAWS. Article 6
Untitled Article 7
MASONIC MEM. Article 7
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
INDIA. Article 14
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 16
Poetry. Article 16
LITERARY EXTRACTS. 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.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

inent of all created things and their development according to the laws of number , yes , on the very use of symbols which could alone have force to the esoteric disciple , ( aud a terrible signifieancy , indeed , has the simplest form , to a mind hasheesh-quickened to read its meaning)—on all these is the legible stamp of the

hasheesh inspiration . "It would be no hard task to prove , to a strong probability , at least , that the initiation into the Pythagorean mysteries and the progressive instruction that succeeded it , to a considerable extent , cons isted in the employment , judiciously , it we may USP the

word , of hasheesh , as giving a critical and analytic poAver to the mind which enabled the neophyte to roll up the murk and mist from beclouded truths , till they stood distiuctly seen in the splendour of their own harmonious beauty as an intuition . " One thing related of Pythagoras and ins friends

has seemed very striking to me . There is a legend , that , as he was passing over a river , its waters called up to him , in the presence of his followers , ' Hail , Pythagoras ! ' Frequently , while in the poAver of the hasheesh delirium , have I heard inanimate things sonorous Avith such voices . On every side they have

saluted me ; from rocks , aud trees , and waters , and sky ; in my happiness , filling me wifch intense exultation , as I heard them Avelcoming their master ; in my agony , heaping nameless curses on my head , as I went away into au eternal exile from all sympathy . Of this tradition of lamblichus , I feel an appreciation Avhich almost convinces me that the voice of the river was , indeed , heard , though only in the quickened mind of some hasheesh-glorified esoteric . Again , it may he

that the doctrine of the Metempsychosis was first communicated to Pythagoras by Thebau priests ; but the astonishing illustration , which hasheesh would contribute to this tenet , should not be overlooked iu our attempt to assign its first suggestion and succeeding spread to their proper causes . "A modern criticin defending the hypothesisthat

, , Pythagoras was an impostor , has triumphantly asked , ' Why did he assume the character of Apollo at the Olympic games ? why did be boast that his soul had lived in former bodies , and that he hacl been first Acthalides , the son of Mercury , the Euphorbus , then Pyrrhus of Delos , and at last Pathagoras , but that he

"might more easily impose upon the credulity of an ignorant ancl superstitious people ? ' To us these facts seem rather an evidence of his sincerity . Had he made these assertions without proof , it is difficult to see IIOAV they would not have had a precisely contrary effect from that of paving the way to a more complete

imposition upon the credulity of the people . Upon our hypothesis , it may he easily SIIOAVU , not only IIOAV he could fully haA'e helieA'ed these assertions himself , but , also , have given them a deep significance to the minds of his disciples . " Let us see . We will consider , for example , his

assumption of the character of Phrcbus afc the Olympic games . Let us suppose that Pythagoras , animated with a desire of alluring to the study of his philosophy a choice and enthusiastic number out of that host Avho , along all the radii of the civilized world , had come up to the solemn festival at Elis , had , by the talisman of hasheesh , called to his aid . the magic of a preternatural eloquence ; that , while he addressed the throng whom he hacl charmed into

Masonic Notes And Queries.

breathless attention by the weird brilliancy of his eye , the unearthl y imagery of his style , and the oracular insight of his thought , the grand impression flashed upon him from the very honour he was receiving , that he was the incarnation of some sublime deity . What wonder that he burst into the acknowledgment of hia

godship as a secret too majestic to be hoarded up ? What wonder that this sudden revelation of himself , darting forth in burning words and amid such colossal surroundings , went down with the accessories of time and place along the stream of perpetual tradition ?"

THE CHEVALIEK D ' EON . I have ahvays heard there was but one lady Freemason . A brother told some of us , at lodge , recently that a Madame Deon was initiated . Is that a fact ? —A P . M . of SHIRE . —[ The Chevalier D'Eon was one of the mysteries of the last century . It is

a funny thing to write , but he was a man . For some youthful indiscretion , the King of France ordered him to assume female attire , and for many years he wore ifc both in France and England , lie also at one time resumed male clothing , but Avas so used to a woman ' s dress that he speedily discarded ifc . There

was much scandal afloat Avith respect to him , and many speculations as to which sex he belonged . When ho was dead tlie mystery Avas solved , by the medical men declariug him to be a man . Although he went by the names of Chevalier aud Madame D'Eon , adopting both as he chose—sometimes giving out that he was a man , afc other times a woman—he was initiated into Freemasonry in London , as Dermott , iu his Ahiman Sezon , tells us : — " This is still

the law of ancient Masons , though disregarded b y our brethren ( I mean our sisters ) the modern Masons , Avho ( some years ago ) admitted Signer Singsong , the eunuch , T—nd—ci" [ Tenducci , a great siuger of his time , formerly one of the Sistine chapel choir , where all the males had female voices—were , in fact , eunuchs .

For more on the point see Byron ' s Don Juan . " ] " at one of their lodges iu the Strand , London . And upon a late trial at Westminster , it appeared that they admitted a woman called' Madame D'E . " p . 29 . This note of Dermott ' s refers to the Old Constitutionsin Avhich it Avas declared that a

candi-, date " must he Avithout blemish , ancl have the full and proper use of his limbs , " or as Anderson after said , in the second edition of his Booh of Constitutions , " The men made Masons must he freehorn ( or no bondmen ) , of mature age , and of good report , hale and soundnot deformed or dismembered at the time of

, their making . But no Avoman , no eunuch . " p . 144 . For a graphic account of the Chevalier D'Eon , and his vicissitudes , see Wraxall ' s Memoirs of Bemarkalle Adventurers . " ]

l-HEEMA . SON ' EY IS THAN CIS . What has become of the Rite Ecossais lodges . Have they been amalgamated with those of the Grand Orient ?—* . —[ We hope not . Freemasonry , in France is a most tangled skeiu , which few can unravel , and we are not of the number . ]

THE MASONIC SUN AND MOON . In almost eA-ery representation of the sun and moon , connected with Masonry , it will generally be observed that the sun is filled up with eyes , nose , and mouth , making , a jolly round face of his own , while

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