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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • March 30, 1867
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  • THE MARQUIS OF DALHOUSIE LODGE (No. 1,049).
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 30, 1867: Page 2

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    Article THE MARQUIS OF DALHOUSIE LODGE (No. 1,049). ← Page 2 of 4 →
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The Marquis Of Dalhousie Lodge (No. 1,049).

successive degrees , until at length , found worthy to be " raised" to the supreme seat in the 'Council . 2 . That tracing our descent from the earliest "builders—some enthusiasts claiming the erection

of the Tower of Babel as a Masonic work —( a "boast I cannot recognise , seeing that its purpose was to defy the Most High)—others , more moderate in their pretensions , deducing our origin . from the " Diosyniacs of Asia Minor , " AVIIO , Ave

are told by an anti-Masonic writer , though himself a Mason , " ivere , undoubtedly , an association of architects and engineers , who had the exclusive privilege of building temples , stadia , and theatres , under the mysterious tutelage of Bacchus , and were distinguished from the uninitiated or profane

inhabitants by the science which they possessed , and by many private signs and tokens by Avhich they recognised each other . " " This association , " we are further told , " came into Ionia from Syria , into Avhich country it had come from Persia , along

with that style of architecture that Ave call Grecian . We are also certain that there was a similar trading association during the dark ages in Christian Europe , Avhich monopolised the building of great churches and castles , Avorking under the

patronage and protection of the sovereigns and princes of Europe , and possessing many privileges . Circumstances , ivhieh it Avould be tedious to enumerate and discuss , continued this association later in Britain than on the Continent . " There is undoubted evidence of this association mm ' ntm ' nino "

an active existence in 1648 , in which year the Antiquary , Elias Ashmole , was initiated in a lodge at Warrington , and equally authentic evidence of its existence in 1717 , in ivhieh year four lodges in London united in forming that Grand Lodo-e from

which the present Grand Lodge of England most unquestionably descend , and AA'hich must , therefore , be taken as adopting this second—denominated the " Guild Theory "—as the origin of that system , to assist in perpetuating the teaching and

practice of which this lodge is to-day consecrated . Whether this latter theory or that to Avhich less prominent allusion has been made , be the most ¦ correct—of this there can be no doubt—on this there can be no question—ive are no longer

engaged in that Masonry ivhieh is " the art of hewing , squaring , and moulding stones , and fitting and setting them together by the aid of cement , -or damps of metal , so as to form buildings adapted for habitation , instruction , amusement , worship ,

and various other uses ; requiring for its exercise a knoivledge of mathematics and geometry . " Equally Avithout doubt or question is it , that having doffed the garb of the Operative and Free , and having donned the badge of the Accepted

Mason , Ave are called upon , and that emphatically , to make our moral works as conspicuous as did they of old their material works . Theij erected temples to God , ancl castles for the maintenance of authority and the preservation of life and

property ( too often it must be confessed perverted to other and contrary uses ) , and were fostered and cherished on account of the produce of the labour of their hands .

The tools , instruments , and terms m use in operative Masonry have been taken aud applied by us as emblems ancl illustrations of the various duties and lessons inculcated and taught in speculative Masonry , AA'hich , more justly than the

former , may be denominated a science , inasmuch it not only requires in its members a knowledge of the liberal arts and sciences , but the practice of every social ancl moral virtue . " TFe devote ourselves to works of as great nobleness and usefulness—the mental adornment

of temples not made with hands—the cultivation of youth , the support of age . In the pursuit of these works social amenities are not forgotten ; and a certain amount of regulated convivial enjoyment is both enjoined and practised . And

for this , those AVIIO know us not seek grounds of accusation ancl cause for reviling , and by them Ave are neither cherished nor honoured . Repudiate their censure , ancl they inquire , " What is Freemasonry ? " Let us give a feAV moments to a

consideration of this question , and I am not sure that its elucidation will not best be found by stating "What Freemasonry is not . " It is not a merely

convivial society ! It is not a benefit society It is not a merely secret society ! And yet , paradoxical as it may appear , Freemasonry is a society social , charitable , ancl secret . It eminently cultivates the social virtues , ancl affords

ample opportunities for their exercise in the hours of relaxation and refreshment . I care not for the taunts of those not of our Order , Avho are opposed to—nor have I any sympathy with those within our pale AVIIO ivould dispense Avith—the social

enjoyments attached to our meetings , AA'hich , agreeable in themselves , tend , by the amenities they encourage , to reconcile animosities and smooth asperities which may have arisen , and ivhieh I

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1867-03-30, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_30031867/page/2/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE MARQUIS OF DALHOUSIE LODGE (No. 1,049). Article 1
ADDRESS TO THE OFFICERS AND BRETHREN OF THE LODGE OF ANTIQUITY, MONTREAL. Article 4
THE NEMESIS: A TALE OF THE DAYS OF TRAJAN. Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
MASONIC MEMS. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 14
TURKEY. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
Obituary. Article 15
Poetry. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Marquis Of Dalhousie Lodge (No. 1,049).

successive degrees , until at length , found worthy to be " raised" to the supreme seat in the 'Council . 2 . That tracing our descent from the earliest "builders—some enthusiasts claiming the erection

of the Tower of Babel as a Masonic work —( a "boast I cannot recognise , seeing that its purpose was to defy the Most High)—others , more moderate in their pretensions , deducing our origin . from the " Diosyniacs of Asia Minor , " AVIIO , Ave

are told by an anti-Masonic writer , though himself a Mason , " ivere , undoubtedly , an association of architects and engineers , who had the exclusive privilege of building temples , stadia , and theatres , under the mysterious tutelage of Bacchus , and were distinguished from the uninitiated or profane

inhabitants by the science which they possessed , and by many private signs and tokens by Avhich they recognised each other . " " This association , " we are further told , " came into Ionia from Syria , into Avhich country it had come from Persia , along

with that style of architecture that Ave call Grecian . We are also certain that there was a similar trading association during the dark ages in Christian Europe , Avhich monopolised the building of great churches and castles , Avorking under the

patronage and protection of the sovereigns and princes of Europe , and possessing many privileges . Circumstances , ivhieh it Avould be tedious to enumerate and discuss , continued this association later in Britain than on the Continent . " There is undoubted evidence of this association mm ' ntm ' nino "

an active existence in 1648 , in which year the Antiquary , Elias Ashmole , was initiated in a lodge at Warrington , and equally authentic evidence of its existence in 1717 , in ivhieh year four lodges in London united in forming that Grand Lodo-e from

which the present Grand Lodge of England most unquestionably descend , and AA'hich must , therefore , be taken as adopting this second—denominated the " Guild Theory "—as the origin of that system , to assist in perpetuating the teaching and

practice of which this lodge is to-day consecrated . Whether this latter theory or that to Avhich less prominent allusion has been made , be the most ¦ correct—of this there can be no doubt—on this there can be no question—ive are no longer

engaged in that Masonry ivhieh is " the art of hewing , squaring , and moulding stones , and fitting and setting them together by the aid of cement , -or damps of metal , so as to form buildings adapted for habitation , instruction , amusement , worship ,

and various other uses ; requiring for its exercise a knoivledge of mathematics and geometry . " Equally Avithout doubt or question is it , that having doffed the garb of the Operative and Free , and having donned the badge of the Accepted

Mason , Ave are called upon , and that emphatically , to make our moral works as conspicuous as did they of old their material works . Theij erected temples to God , ancl castles for the maintenance of authority and the preservation of life and

property ( too often it must be confessed perverted to other and contrary uses ) , and were fostered and cherished on account of the produce of the labour of their hands .

The tools , instruments , and terms m use in operative Masonry have been taken aud applied by us as emblems ancl illustrations of the various duties and lessons inculcated and taught in speculative Masonry , AA'hich , more justly than the

former , may be denominated a science , inasmuch it not only requires in its members a knowledge of the liberal arts and sciences , but the practice of every social ancl moral virtue . " TFe devote ourselves to works of as great nobleness and usefulness—the mental adornment

of temples not made with hands—the cultivation of youth , the support of age . In the pursuit of these works social amenities are not forgotten ; and a certain amount of regulated convivial enjoyment is both enjoined and practised . And

for this , those AVIIO know us not seek grounds of accusation ancl cause for reviling , and by them Ave are neither cherished nor honoured . Repudiate their censure , ancl they inquire , " What is Freemasonry ? " Let us give a feAV moments to a

consideration of this question , and I am not sure that its elucidation will not best be found by stating "What Freemasonry is not . " It is not a merely

convivial society ! It is not a benefit society It is not a merely secret society ! And yet , paradoxical as it may appear , Freemasonry is a society social , charitable , ancl secret . It eminently cultivates the social virtues , ancl affords

ample opportunities for their exercise in the hours of relaxation and refreshment . I care not for the taunts of those not of our Order , Avho are opposed to—nor have I any sympathy with those within our pale AVIIO ivould dispense Avith—the social

enjoyments attached to our meetings , AA'hich , agreeable in themselves , tend , by the amenities they encourage , to reconcile animosities and smooth asperities which may have arisen , and ivhieh I

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