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  • Feb. 1, 1866
  • Page 32
  • REPRINT OF SCARCE, OR CURIOUS, BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY.
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The Masonic Press, Feb. 1, 1866: Page 32

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    Article REPRINT OF SCARCE, OR CURIOUS, BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY. ← Page 6 of 6
Page 32

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Reprint Of Scarce, Or Curious, Books On Freemasonry.

This lady , Avhoso friendship was sincere and resolute , having promised tho queen what she demanded , Nephte from that moment endeavoured to preserve her mind in a state of tranquillit y ; but the less visible her anxieties appeared in her outward behaviour , the greater effect they had upon her mind .

In the meantime the most celebrated pthysicians of the kingdom , who wore then the priests , Avere assembled in the palace , even by order of the king ; though , that it mi ght not break in upon his pleasures , he always supposed the queen ' s distemper to be of no dangerous consequence . Egypt , the mother of arts and sciences , claimed the honour , before all others , of havinogiven birth to the medical art . iEsculapiusone of the sons of Meneshad

, , even reigned in Memphis , as Ave have already observed , Avhile his brother Mercury was king of Thebes ; and tho six volumes * which the former had compiled upon physic , added to the six-and-thirt y wherein Mercury had given the principles of all the other sciences , formed that famous treasure of learning by which the priests boasted of having been instructed by the gods themselves . Be that as it will , these physicians , truly accomplished in their art

, put in practice , with regard to the queen , Avhatever their reading , reflections , and experience could suggest . They at first treated her according to their ancient rules , which Avere enjoined them under penalty of death : for every physician , who deviated from them , was ansAverable for his patient , and in case of ill success , the death of the one surel y brought on the death of the other . This indeed often served for a pretext to treat those patients , who were indifferent to them , with negligence , and not to exceed the letter of tho law . But that concern Avith which they were

sensibly affected for tho preservation of a queen , such as Nephte , and tho lamentations of a people Avho recommended their sovereign , whom they styled their mother , soon engaged them to have recourse to new remedies . They indeed disguised them under ancient names , whereby they found means to justify themselves by some of the innumerable instances with which their books were filled . They even by turns waited at the gate of the palace to hear all who mi ght have any ad \ 'ico to offer for the queen ' s andafterwards

recovery , ^ gave their opinion of them in their consultations . For it was of importance to them in so critical a juncture , in some measure to comply Avith an ancient custom , of placing their sick before tho doors of their houses , that they might inquire of all who passed by if they knew of any remedy for the distemper in question . On the other hand , the temples of the gods were open day and nio-lit to a vast concourse of people , who continually resorted thither to supplicate the recovery of their queen . They began at the templet of Vulcan , built bv

Menes , tho common ancestor of ail the kings of Egypt , which had been pivserved _ during the space of sixteen hundred years in . all the splendour it Avas left in by the founder . From thence they Avent to those of Serapis and Venus . But it Avas in ihe temple oE Osiris , his Avif ' e Isis , and their son Horus , that they Avere the most assiduous , on account of tho remarkable relation there happened to be betAVcen those three deities and the persons of Avhom tho royal family then consisted . The successive concourse of

innumerable people continually filled not only the court , tho porch , and body of the temple , but all the parts contiguous to tho sanctuary , notwithstanding then- large extent . °

“The Masonic Press: 1866-02-01, Page 32” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msp/issues/mxr_01021866/page/32/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE PAPAL ALLOCUTION AGAINST FREEMASONRY. Article 1
MASONIC ANTIQUITIES, DOCUMENTS, &c . JERUSALEM. ENCAMPMENT, MANCHESTER. Article 17
REPRINT OF SCARCE, OR CURIOUS, BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 27
NOTES AND QUERIES FOR FREEMASONS. Article 33
THE MASONIC REPORTER. Article 34
KNIGHT TEMPLARY. Article 35
CRAFT FREEMASONRY. Article 37
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 43
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Reprint Of Scarce, Or Curious, Books On Freemasonry.

This lady , Avhoso friendship was sincere and resolute , having promised tho queen what she demanded , Nephte from that moment endeavoured to preserve her mind in a state of tranquillit y ; but the less visible her anxieties appeared in her outward behaviour , the greater effect they had upon her mind .

In the meantime the most celebrated pthysicians of the kingdom , who wore then the priests , Avere assembled in the palace , even by order of the king ; though , that it mi ght not break in upon his pleasures , he always supposed the queen ' s distemper to be of no dangerous consequence . Egypt , the mother of arts and sciences , claimed the honour , before all others , of havinogiven birth to the medical art . iEsculapiusone of the sons of Meneshad

, , even reigned in Memphis , as Ave have already observed , Avhile his brother Mercury was king of Thebes ; and tho six volumes * which the former had compiled upon physic , added to the six-and-thirt y wherein Mercury had given the principles of all the other sciences , formed that famous treasure of learning by which the priests boasted of having been instructed by the gods themselves . Be that as it will , these physicians , truly accomplished in their art

, put in practice , with regard to the queen , Avhatever their reading , reflections , and experience could suggest . They at first treated her according to their ancient rules , which Avere enjoined them under penalty of death : for every physician , who deviated from them , was ansAverable for his patient , and in case of ill success , the death of the one surel y brought on the death of the other . This indeed often served for a pretext to treat those patients , who were indifferent to them , with negligence , and not to exceed the letter of tho law . But that concern Avith which they were

sensibly affected for tho preservation of a queen , such as Nephte , and tho lamentations of a people Avho recommended their sovereign , whom they styled their mother , soon engaged them to have recourse to new remedies . They indeed disguised them under ancient names , whereby they found means to justify themselves by some of the innumerable instances with which their books were filled . They even by turns waited at the gate of the palace to hear all who mi ght have any ad \ 'ico to offer for the queen ' s andafterwards

recovery , ^ gave their opinion of them in their consultations . For it was of importance to them in so critical a juncture , in some measure to comply Avith an ancient custom , of placing their sick before tho doors of their houses , that they might inquire of all who passed by if they knew of any remedy for the distemper in question . On the other hand , the temples of the gods were open day and nio-lit to a vast concourse of people , who continually resorted thither to supplicate the recovery of their queen . They began at the templet of Vulcan , built bv

Menes , tho common ancestor of ail the kings of Egypt , which had been pivserved _ during the space of sixteen hundred years in . all the splendour it Avas left in by the founder . From thence they Avent to those of Serapis and Venus . But it Avas in ihe temple oE Osiris , his Avif ' e Isis , and their son Horus , that they Avere the most assiduous , on account of tho remarkable relation there happened to be betAVcen those three deities and the persons of Avhom tho royal family then consisted . The successive concourse of

innumerable people continually filled not only the court , tho porch , and body of the temple , but all the parts contiguous to tho sanctuary , notwithstanding then- large extent . °

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