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    Article CLASSICAL THEOLOGY. APOLLO AND MAY. Page 1 of 2 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Classical Theology. Apollo And May.

CLASSICAL THEOLOGY . APOLLO AND MAY .

T . 0 XD 0 . V , SATCRBAV , JULY 30 , l- «' . i .

" Inventuni medicina aieum est , opiferque , per orbem Uicor , et herbariun o . st subjects potentia nobis . "—Metam ,, i . To those ivho are conversant Avith the writings of the pouts , May is the * most lovely month of the year : Yirgil p laces tlie creation , " when first arose this world ' s all bounteous frame , " in it . Lucretius says it is "led on by Venus . " Milton goes to " Pan ,

•* Knit AVith the graces and the hours in dance , " to bring the " eternal spring . " The feelings and scenes of the spot , " Where spring its earliest visit paid , " in those seasons gone by , tlie May days of our youth , ought never to bo forgotten—like the sunshine and the shoAver in

after life their reminiscences Avill enliven the gloom of our solitude and cheer onr mourning , or enlighten or delight the little rising waves around us as we sink into the ocean of life . The month takes its name from Maia , one of the Pleiades and the beautiful mother of Hermes the gocl of rhetoric and oratory , according to the Greeks ( better knoAvn

to us by his name of Mercury ) ancl for this reason the offering of sacrifices was made to him in this month ; which , nevertheless , as it regards us here , belongs to no other than the perfect and poiverful , ever young and ever glorious Apollo himself , who was advanced for his brilliant talents and inventions to the highest honour and worship .

But we have not to consider IIOAV he became immortalized ; but rather IIOAV he AVUS made one ofthe " gods of tho nations . " We have ourselves our own liking for poetry in art as Avell as in nature ; either as seen in a sculpture , a painting , or a poem . Wherefore the personal representation of a faculty or of a likenessfor instance—an image of science or of a sageof

, , faith , or of a fate—AVO can hi ghly appreciate and value ; and in this respect AVO are often running after and courting and being enamoured ofthe heathen gods and goddesses . Indeed , in the absence ofthe fourth commandment , AVO on the Avhole might be making unto ourselves " any likeness of any thing

that is in the heaven above , or that is in the earth beneath , or that is in the water under the earth , " to boiv ourselves doAvn "to them , " aud " servo them . " Kay , like the infidel and the savage , as a people unto this day , Ave might not be forgetting to reconcile the universal great Spirit of Evil with gifts , and with supplications , and with prayers . We should

not perhaps have given it a pagoda to live in , but it ivould liave had its temple , Avei'o it not for what AVO arc about to explain . ^ In speaking of the Evil Spirit , as likcAvise of the Holy Spirit , the meaning is generally received in the singular instead of its plural sense , as if there wero only one good and one

bad spirit in the world mystified by an ubiquity , in which case there coulcl be no angels of either denomination , dark or light , which Ave believe there are ancl we wish , to make " the Truth and the Word plain . " It did not escape the observation of Erasmus , when he was in this country , that our " ancient custom of bloAving horns on the first ( old date ) of

May , " was retained from some festivals in honour of Diana ; nor did he fail to notice the ceremony of depositing a deer ' s head ( also an Ethnic observance in honour of that goddess ) , "on the altar of St . Paul ' s church , " which was built , as appears from a record in a Cottonian manuscript , "by King Ethelbert , of Kent , upon the site of a temple of Diana , in the time

of Melitus , the first bishop of London . " NOAV , Ave see—without the Almi ghty Trinity in Unityhad not the Romans subjugated tlie JBAVS—AVC should still be hearing the rebellious complaint , "We will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth out of our own mouth , to bum nieense to the queen of heaven , and to pour out drink offerings

unto her , as we liave done , we , and our fathers , our kings , and our princes , in the cities of Judah , and in the streets of J erusalem ; for then had AVO plenty of victuals , and were well , and S ; no evil . But since AVC left off to burn incense to tho queen of heaven , and to pour out drink offerings unto her , Ave have wanted all things , and have been consumed by

the sword and by the famine . " We say , we should in all likelihood , in this country , have had some Nebuchadnezzar setting up his image , and decreeing , "Whoso falleth not doAvn and worshippeth shall the same hour be east into the midst of a burning fiery furnace . " At all events , in every point of probability ( albeit we would render honour where honour is

due ) , Ave should have a Pagan priesthood consecrating the statues that aro set up m Europe , and where they are equestrian Ave should be made , or should be found fools enough , not only to worship the rider , but also the horse . This , to our thinking , is a convincing evidence of tlie necessity of Christianity , even if it had not overthrown , the falseand

, triumphed in the true religion , in Avhich is the saving of souls by redemption , and by the nevs spirit given . It may bo by tho fiery trial , but as far as the soraphimie attainment may be reached there is IIOAV no other w ay . Wc Avish every man to think for himself ) and for no man to judge botAvcen another man ' s conscience and God . Yet

AVC think we should be lauding dulnesss in not being able to foresee , in the vast strength and power and spread of Christianity , the universal religion ; and that Ave can only look to [ Freemasonry to prevent it from plunging itself ( God knoAvs where ) into Avar aiid bloodshed within its own domain .

Apollo is represented in his statue , holding sometimes a shield Avith one hand , and the Graces AA'ith the other . Howover , he is usually painted Avith his harp , and a shield , and his boiv and arrows j to signify , niythologically , his threefold power—in heaven , AA'here he is called Sol , on earth , where ho is named Liber Pater , and in hell , where he is styled Apollo

( Apollyon)—in Avhich way , Avith idolatrous nations , under different names , Ave can trace him up to this hour . His harp typifies that lie keeps all things in a state of deli ghtful harmony in heaven his shield SIIOAVS that he is mindfiil of the health lie gives to the creatures of earth , that he protects them against many ills , and that he maintains them in safety j

his bow aud arroAVS indicate his ability to strike from afar , and that whomsoever he smites he sends into hell , or , as hero meant , the place of judgment and purgatory , the abode of tho souls of tho dead . Something of this is typified in the lines AA'hich stand at the head of this article , taken from Ovid , who further states : —

' - —•— Per me concordant carnuna nervis ; Ccrta quiclem nostra est , nostra tamen una sagitta Certior , in vacuo qua ; vulnera pectore fecit , " Spenser in his " Faery Queen" presents us to" fair May , the fairest maid on ground , Decked all ivith dainties of her season ' s pride , And throAving floivers out of her lap around ;—"

as borne on the shoulders of the " Twins of Leda ; " iu allusion , Ave presume , to the sun entering Gemini ; but , under a hypercritical reservation and reversion , we conjecture it ought to be ' ofLatona . ' Cicero says , " Although there were many Apollos , all that they did is ascribed to one of them only—to him ivho was

bora of Jupiter and Latona , " the tivin brother of Diana . He is called Cynthius from the mountain C'yiiihus , in tho island of Delos , from whence Diana is also called Cynthia— . and Delias , from the same island , because he was born there , as it is related , under a palm or an olive tree , when his mother was pursued by the serpent Pythonwhom the

in-, censed Juno had sent and set against her to persecute her all OA - CI - the world , after having cast her out of heaven , and obliged the earth , by an oath , to give her no habitation wherein she could be delivered in safety . Tlie island , afc this time , was a floating isle , or lay beneath the sea , but emerged

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-07-30, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_30071859/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY. APOLLO AND MAY. Article 1
BIRTH OF THE STEAM ENGINE. Article 2
OPERATIVE MASONRY AND FREEMASONRY. Article 4
UNIFORMITY OF WORKING. Article 6
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 7
NEW MUSIC. Article 9
Poetry. Article 9
IZAAK WALTON. Article 9
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
AMERICA. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Classical Theology. Apollo And May.

CLASSICAL THEOLOGY . APOLLO AND MAY .

T . 0 XD 0 . V , SATCRBAV , JULY 30 , l- «' . i .

" Inventuni medicina aieum est , opiferque , per orbem Uicor , et herbariun o . st subjects potentia nobis . "—Metam ,, i . To those ivho are conversant Avith the writings of the pouts , May is the * most lovely month of the year : Yirgil p laces tlie creation , " when first arose this world ' s all bounteous frame , " in it . Lucretius says it is "led on by Venus . " Milton goes to " Pan ,

•* Knit AVith the graces and the hours in dance , " to bring the " eternal spring . " The feelings and scenes of the spot , " Where spring its earliest visit paid , " in those seasons gone by , tlie May days of our youth , ought never to bo forgotten—like the sunshine and the shoAver in

after life their reminiscences Avill enliven the gloom of our solitude and cheer onr mourning , or enlighten or delight the little rising waves around us as we sink into the ocean of life . The month takes its name from Maia , one of the Pleiades and the beautiful mother of Hermes the gocl of rhetoric and oratory , according to the Greeks ( better knoAvn

to us by his name of Mercury ) ancl for this reason the offering of sacrifices was made to him in this month ; which , nevertheless , as it regards us here , belongs to no other than the perfect and poiverful , ever young and ever glorious Apollo himself , who was advanced for his brilliant talents and inventions to the highest honour and worship .

But we have not to consider IIOAV he became immortalized ; but rather IIOAV he AVUS made one ofthe " gods of tho nations . " We have ourselves our own liking for poetry in art as Avell as in nature ; either as seen in a sculpture , a painting , or a poem . Wherefore the personal representation of a faculty or of a likenessfor instance—an image of science or of a sageof

, , faith , or of a fate—AVO can hi ghly appreciate and value ; and in this respect AVO are often running after and courting and being enamoured ofthe heathen gods and goddesses . Indeed , in the absence ofthe fourth commandment , AVO on the Avhole might be making unto ourselves " any likeness of any thing

that is in the heaven above , or that is in the earth beneath , or that is in the water under the earth , " to boiv ourselves doAvn "to them , " aud " servo them . " Kay , like the infidel and the savage , as a people unto this day , Ave might not be forgetting to reconcile the universal great Spirit of Evil with gifts , and with supplications , and with prayers . We should

not perhaps have given it a pagoda to live in , but it ivould liave had its temple , Avei'o it not for what AVO arc about to explain . ^ In speaking of the Evil Spirit , as likcAvise of the Holy Spirit , the meaning is generally received in the singular instead of its plural sense , as if there wero only one good and one

bad spirit in the world mystified by an ubiquity , in which case there coulcl be no angels of either denomination , dark or light , which Ave believe there are ancl we wish , to make " the Truth and the Word plain . " It did not escape the observation of Erasmus , when he was in this country , that our " ancient custom of bloAving horns on the first ( old date ) of

May , " was retained from some festivals in honour of Diana ; nor did he fail to notice the ceremony of depositing a deer ' s head ( also an Ethnic observance in honour of that goddess ) , "on the altar of St . Paul ' s church , " which was built , as appears from a record in a Cottonian manuscript , "by King Ethelbert , of Kent , upon the site of a temple of Diana , in the time

of Melitus , the first bishop of London . " NOAV , Ave see—without the Almi ghty Trinity in Unityhad not the Romans subjugated tlie JBAVS—AVC should still be hearing the rebellious complaint , "We will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth out of our own mouth , to bum nieense to the queen of heaven , and to pour out drink offerings

unto her , as we liave done , we , and our fathers , our kings , and our princes , in the cities of Judah , and in the streets of J erusalem ; for then had AVO plenty of victuals , and were well , and S ; no evil . But since AVC left off to burn incense to tho queen of heaven , and to pour out drink offerings unto her , Ave have wanted all things , and have been consumed by

the sword and by the famine . " We say , we should in all likelihood , in this country , have had some Nebuchadnezzar setting up his image , and decreeing , "Whoso falleth not doAvn and worshippeth shall the same hour be east into the midst of a burning fiery furnace . " At all events , in every point of probability ( albeit we would render honour where honour is

due ) , Ave should have a Pagan priesthood consecrating the statues that aro set up m Europe , and where they are equestrian Ave should be made , or should be found fools enough , not only to worship the rider , but also the horse . This , to our thinking , is a convincing evidence of tlie necessity of Christianity , even if it had not overthrown , the falseand

, triumphed in the true religion , in Avhich is the saving of souls by redemption , and by the nevs spirit given . It may bo by tho fiery trial , but as far as the soraphimie attainment may be reached there is IIOAV no other w ay . Wc Avish every man to think for himself ) and for no man to judge botAvcen another man ' s conscience and God . Yet

AVC think we should be lauding dulnesss in not being able to foresee , in the vast strength and power and spread of Christianity , the universal religion ; and that Ave can only look to [ Freemasonry to prevent it from plunging itself ( God knoAvs where ) into Avar aiid bloodshed within its own domain .

Apollo is represented in his statue , holding sometimes a shield Avith one hand , and the Graces AA'ith the other . Howover , he is usually painted Avith his harp , and a shield , and his boiv and arrows j to signify , niythologically , his threefold power—in heaven , AA'here he is called Sol , on earth , where ho is named Liber Pater , and in hell , where he is styled Apollo

( Apollyon)—in Avhich way , Avith idolatrous nations , under different names , Ave can trace him up to this hour . His harp typifies that lie keeps all things in a state of deli ghtful harmony in heaven his shield SIIOAVS that he is mindfiil of the health lie gives to the creatures of earth , that he protects them against many ills , and that he maintains them in safety j

his bow aud arroAVS indicate his ability to strike from afar , and that whomsoever he smites he sends into hell , or , as hero meant , the place of judgment and purgatory , the abode of tho souls of tho dead . Something of this is typified in the lines AA'hich stand at the head of this article , taken from Ovid , who further states : —

' - —•— Per me concordant carnuna nervis ; Ccrta quiclem nostra est , nostra tamen una sagitta Certior , in vacuo qua ; vulnera pectore fecit , " Spenser in his " Faery Queen" presents us to" fair May , the fairest maid on ground , Decked all ivith dainties of her season ' s pride , And throAving floivers out of her lap around ;—"

as borne on the shoulders of the " Twins of Leda ; " iu allusion , Ave presume , to the sun entering Gemini ; but , under a hypercritical reservation and reversion , we conjecture it ought to be ' ofLatona . ' Cicero says , " Although there were many Apollos , all that they did is ascribed to one of them only—to him ivho was

bora of Jupiter and Latona , " the tivin brother of Diana . He is called Cynthius from the mountain C'yiiihus , in tho island of Delos , from whence Diana is also called Cynthia— . and Delias , from the same island , because he was born there , as it is related , under a palm or an olive tree , when his mother was pursued by the serpent Pythonwhom the

in-, censed Juno had sent and set against her to persecute her all OA - CI - the world , after having cast her out of heaven , and obliged the earth , by an oath , to give her no habitation wherein she could be delivered in safety . Tlie island , afc this time , was a floating isle , or lay beneath the sea , but emerged

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