CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY THIS BOOK IS ONE OF A COLLECTION MADE BY BENNO LOEWY 1854-1919 AND BEQUEATHED TO CORNELL UNIVERSITY Cornell University Library ,. 3 1924 031 411 733 olrn,anx The original of tiiis book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924031411733 C' f ;•! AHBJ.t>'l" J^na :^l'v Affititch2.e /^f?^- (^ (^^//'//^/^^^-ii-, NEW AND REVISED EDITION. AN ENCYCLOPiEDIA OP FEEEMASONRY AND ITS KINDRED SOIENOES: COMPRISING THE WHOLE RANGE OF ARTS, SCIENCES AND LITERATURE AS CONNECTED WITH THE INSTITUTION. BY ALBERT G. MACKEY, M.D., AUTHOR OP " LEXICON OP PEEEMASOJfET," " A TEXT-BOOK OP MASONIC JURISPEUDENOE," " STMBOLISM OP PEBBMASOHET," ETC., ETC. CONTAINING ALSO AN ADDENDUM, GIVING THE RESULTS OP SUBSEQUENT STUDY, RESEARCH AND DISCOVERT TO THE PRESENT TIME. BY CHARLES T. McCLENACHAN, AUTHOR OP "THE BOOK OP THE ANCIENT ACCEPTED SCOTTISH EITE OP PREEMASONRY,' "forms and OEEBMONIBS," ETC. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS. " Nature indeed inspires devotion. The air is full of signs, the sky of tokens, the ground of memo- randa and signatures; every object is covered with hints that speak intelligibly to the intelligent." PHILADELPHIA: L. H. EVERTS & CO., 1884. Copyright, 1873 and 1878, by Mos,s & Co. and A. G. Maokky. REVISED EDITION, WITH ADDENDUM. Copyright, 1884, by L. H. Etkbts & Co. PREFACE. T ONCE delivered an address before a Lodge on tlie subject of the external -*■ changes which Freemasonry had undergone since the period of its revival in the commencement of the eighteenth century. The proper treatment of the topic required a reference to German, to French, and to English authorities, with some of which I am afraid that many of my auditors were not familiar. At the close of the address, a young and intelligent brother inquired of me how he could obtain access to the works which I had cited, and of many of which he confessed, as well as of the facts that they detailed, he now heard for the first time. It is probable that my reply was not altogether satisfactory ; for I told him that I knew of no course that he could adopt to attain that knowledge except the one that had been pursued by myself, namely, to spend his means in the purchase of Masonic books and his time in reading them. But there are few men who have the means, the time, and the inclination for the purchase of numerous books, some of them costly and difficult to be obtained, and for the close and attentive reading of them which is necessary to master any given subject. It was this thought that, just ten years ago, suggested to me the task of collecting materials for a work which, under one cover, would furnish every Mason who might consult its pages the means of acquiring a knowledge of all matters connected with the science, the philosophy, and the history of his Order. But I was also led to the prosecution of this work by a higher consideration. I had myself learned, from the experience of my early Masonic life, that the character of the Institution was elevated in every one's opinion just in proportion to the amount of knowledge that he had acquired of its symbolism, philosophy, and history. If Freemasonry was not at one time patronized by the learned, it was because the depths of its symbolic science and philosophy had not been sounded. If it is now becoming elevated and popular in the estimation of scholars, it owes that elevation and that popularity to the labors of those who have studied its Intel- vi PREFACE. lectual system and given the result of their studies to the world. The scholar will rise from the perusal of Webb's MoniUyr, or the Hieroglyphic Chart of Cross, with no very exalted appreciation of the literary character of the Institution of which such works profess to be au exponent. But should he have met with even Hutchinson's Spirit of Masonry, or Town's SpecukUive Masonry, which are among the earlier products of Masonic literature, he will be conscious that the system which could aflTord material for such works must be worthy of investigation. Oliver is not alone in the belief that the higher elevation of the Order is to be attributed " almost solely to the judicious publications on the subject of Freema- sonry which have appeared during the present and the end of the last century." It is the press that is elevating the Order ; it is the labor of its scholars that is placing it in the rank of sciences. The more that is published by scholarly pens on its principles, the more will other scholars be attracted to its investigation. At no time, indeed, has its intellectual character been more justly appreciated than at the present day. At no time have its membei"s generally cultivated its science with more assiduity. At no time have they been more zealous in the endeavor to obtain a due enlightenment on all the topics which its system comprehends. It was the desire to give my contribution towards the elevation of the Order, by aiding in the dissemination of some of that light and knowledge which are not so easy of access, that impelled me ten yeai-s ago to commence the preparation of this work — a task which I have steadily toiled to accomplish, and at which, for the last three years, I have wrought with unintermitted labor that has per- mitted but little time for other occupation, and none for recreation. And now I present to my bretliren the result not only of tliose years of toil, but of more than thirty years of study and research — a work which will, I trust, or at least I hope, supply them with the materials for acquiring a knowledge of much that is required to make a Masonic scholar. Encyclopsedic learning is not usually considered as more than elementary. But knowing that but few Masons can afford time to become learned scholars in our art by au entire devotion to its study, I have in important articles endeavored to treat the subject exhaustively, and iu all to give that amount of information that must make future ignorance altogether the result of disinclination to learn. I do not present this work as perfect, for I well know that the culminating point of perfection can never be attained by human effort. But, under many adverse circumstances, I have sought to make it as perfect as I could. Encyclopcedias are, for the most part, the result of the conjoined labor of many writers. In this work I have had no help. Every article was written by myself. I say this not to excuse my errors — for I hold that no author should wilfully permit an error to PREFACE, vii pollute his pages — but rather to account for those that may exist. I have endeavored to commit none. Doubtless there are some. If I knew them, I would correct them ; but let him who discovers them remember that they have been unwittingly committed in the course of an exhaustive and unaided task. One of the inevitable results of preparing a work containing so great a variety and so large a number of articles arranged in alphabetical order is the omission of a few from their proper places. These, however, have been added in a Sup- plement; and where any article is not found in the body of the work, the inspector is requested to refer to the Supplement, where it will probably be discovered. For twelve months, too, of the time in which I have been occupied upon this work, I suffered from an affection of the sight, which forbade all use of the eyes for purposes of study. During that period, now happily passed, all authorities were consulted under my direction by the willing eyes of my daughters — all writing was done under my dictation by their hands. I realized for a time the picture so often painted of the blind bard dictating his sublime verses to his daughters. It was a time of sorrow for the student who could not labor with his own organs in his vocation ; but it was a time of gladness to the father who felt that he had those who, with willing hearts, could come to his assistance. To the world this is of no import ; but I could not conscientiously close this prefatory address without referring to this circumstance so gratifying to a parent's heart. Were I to dedicate this work at all, my dedication should be — To Filial Affection. Albeet G. Mackey, M. D. 1440 M Street, Washington, D. C, January 1, 1874. AAEON A. ABBKEVIATIONS Aaron. Hebrew pnx, Aharon, a word of doubtful etymology, but generally sup- posed to signify a mountaineer. He was the brother of Moses, and the first high priest under the Mosaic dispensation, whence the priesthood established by that lawgiver is known as the " Aaronic." He is alluded to in the English lectures of the second degree, in reference to a certain sign which is said to have taken its origin from the fact that Aaron and Hur were present on the hill from which Moses surveyed the battle which Joshua was waging with the Amale- kites, when these two supported the weary arms of Moses in an upright posture, be- cause upon his uplifted hands the fate of the battle depended. (See Exodus xvii. 10- 12.) Aaron is also referred to in the latter section of the Eoyal Arch degree in connec- tion with the memorials that were deposited in the ark of the covenant. In the degree of " Chief of the Tabernacle," which is the 23d of the Ancient and Accepted Eite, the presiding officer represents Aaron, and is styled " Most Excellent High Priest." In the 24th degree of the same Kite, or " Prince of the Tabernacle," the second oflScer or Senior Warden also personates Aaron. Aaron's Rod. The method by which Moses caused a miraculous judgment as to which tribe should be invested with the priesthood, is detailed in the Book of Num- bers (ch. xvii.). He directed that twelve rods should be laid up in the Holy of Holies of the Tabernacle, one for each tribe ; that of Aaron of course represented the tribe of Levi. On the next day these rods were brought out and exhibited to the people, and while all the rest remained dry and withered, that of Aaron alone budded and blossomed and yielded fruit. There is no mention in the Pentateuch of this rod hav- ing been placed in the ark, but only that it was put before it. But as St. Paul, or the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews, asserts that the rod and the pot of manna were both within the ark, Eoyal Arch Masons have followed this later authority. Hence the rod of Aaron is found in the ark ; but its import is only historical, as if to iden- tify the substitute ark as a true copy of the original, which had been lost. No symbol- ical instruction accompanies its discovery. Ab. 3N. 1. The 11th month of the Hebrew civil year and corresponding to the months July and August, beginning with the new moon of the former. 2. It is also a Hebrew word, signifying/aiAer, and will be readily recognized by every Mason as a com- ponent part of the name Hiram Abif, which literally means Hiram his father. See Abif. Abacus. A term which has been lately, but erroneously, used in this country to designate the oflBcial stafl' of the Grand Mas- ter of the Templars. The word has no such meaning ; for an abacus is either a table used for facilitating arithmetical calculations, or is in architecture the crowning plate of a column and its capital. The Grand Mas- ter's staff was a haeulus, which see. Abaddon. A Hebrew word jnax, signifying destruction. By the Eabbins it is interpreted as the place of destruction, and is the second of the seven names given by them to the region of the dead. In the Apocalypse it is rendered by the Greek word 'AnoTilviM, Apollyon, and means the destroyer. In this sense it is used as a sig- nificant word in the high degrees. AbbreTlations. Abbreviations of technical terms or of official titles are of very extensive use in Masonry. They were, 1 ABBREVIATIONS ABBREVIATIONS however, but rarely employed in the earlier Masonic publications. For instance, not one is to oe found in the first edition of Anderson's Oonsti'tviioiis. ^Vithin a com- paratively recent period they have greatly increased, especially among French writers, and a familiarity with them is therefore essentially necessary to the Masonic stu- dent. Frequently, among English and al- ways among French authors, a Masonic ab- breviation is distinguished by three points, .•., in a triangular form following the letter, which peculiar mark was first used, accord- ing to Ragon, on the 12th of August, 1774, by the Grand Orient of France, in an ad- dress to its subordinates. No authoritative explanation of the meaning of these points has been given, but they may be supposed to refer to the three lights around the altar, or perhaps more generally to the number three, and to the triangle, both important symbols in the Masonic system. Before proceeding to give a list of the principal abbreviations, it may be observed that the doubling of a letter is intended to express the plural of that word of which the single letter is the abbreviation. Thus, in French, F.: signifies " Frfere," or " Broth- er," and FF.-. " Frferes," or " Brothers." And in English, L.". is sometimes used to denote " Lodge," and LL.\ to denote " Lodges." This remark is made once for all, because I have not deemed it necessary to augment the size of the list of abbrevia- tions Toy inserting these plurals. If the in- spector finds S.". G.". I.", to signify "Sover- eign Grand Inspector," he will be at no loss to know that SS.". GG.\ II.". must denote " Sovereign Grand Inspectors." A.'. Dep.". Anno DeposUionis. In the Year of the Deposite. The date used by Royal and Select Masters. A.", and A.'. Ancient and Accepted. A.". F.'. M.\ Ancient Freemasons. A.'. F.'. and A.". M.'. Ancient Free and Accepted Mason. A.'. Inv.'. Anno Inventionis. In the Year of the Discovery. The date used by Royal Arch Mason. A.'. h.\ Anno Luck. In the Year of Light. The date used by Ancient Craft Masons. A.-. L.-. G.-. D.-. G.-. A.-. D.-. L'U.'. A la Oloire du Qrand ArchUecte de V Univers. To the Glory of the Grand Architect of the Universe. (French.) The usual caption of French Masonic documents. A.-. L'O.-. A r Orient. At the East. (French.) The seat of the Lodge. A.', M.'. Anno Mundi. In Uie Year of the World. The date used in the Ancient and Accepted Rite. A.'. O.'. Anno Ordinis. In the Year of the Order. The date used by Knights Templars. A.-. Y.-. M.-. Ancient York Mason. B.'. A.-. Buisson Anicnie. Burning Bush. B.". B.'. Burning Bush. C.-. C". Celestial Canopy. C.-. H.-. Captain of the Host D.\ Deputv. D.'. G.-. 6.: U.: P.-. Deputy General Grand High Priest. D.-. G.-. H.-. v.: Deputy Grand High Priest. D.-. G.-. M.-. Deputy Grand Master. D.-. D.-. G.-. M.-. District Deputy Grand Master. E.\ Eminent ; Excellent. E.". A.". Entered Apprentice. Ec.". Ecossake. (French.) Scottish; be- longing to the Scottish Rite. E.". G.'. C". Eminent Grand Commander. E.-. V.'. Ere Vulgaire. (French.) Vul- gar Era ; Year of the Lord. F.\ Frere. Brother. (French.) F.-. C.-. Fellow Craft. F.-. M.-. Free Mason. Old Style. G.-. Grand. G.-. A.-. 0.-. T.-.TJ.-. Grand Architect of the Universe. G.'. C.\ Grand Chapter; Grand Council. G.\ Com.". Grand Commandery ; Grand Commander. G.". E.". Grand Encampment; Grand East. G.". G.". C". General Grand Chapter. G.". G.'. H.-. P.". General Grand High G.-. H.". P.". Grand High Priest. G.". L.'. Grand Lodge. G.". M.-. Grand Master. G.". O.-. Grand Orient." G.". R.". A.". C". Grand Royal Arch Chapter. H.". A.". B.-. Hiram Abif. H.". E.". Holy Empire. 111.". Illustrious. I.". N.". R.". I.'. lems Nazarenus, Rex ludceorum. (Latin.) Jesus of Nazai-eth, King of the Jews. I.-. T.". N.". O.". T.". G.". A.-. O.-. T.". U.". In the Name of the Grand Architect of the Universe. Often forming the caption of Masonic documents. J.". W.". Junior Warden. K.". King. K — H.". Kadosh, Knight of Kadosh, K.". M.". Knight of Malta. K.-. T.". Knight Templar. L.". Lodge. LL.". Lodges. M.". Mason. M.". C". Middle Chamber. M.-. E.-. Most Eminent; Most Excellent. M.'. E.". G.". H.". P.". Most Excellent Grand High Priest. M.". E.-. G.-. M.", Most Eminent Grand Mastei", (of Knights Templars.) ABDA ABIF M.". L.-. Mire Loge. (French.) Mother Lodge. M.'. M.'. Master Mason. M.". M.'. Mois Magonnique. (French.) Masonic Month. March is the first Masonic month among French Masons. M.-. W.-. Most Worshipful. O.-. Orient. OB.-. Obligation. P.-. M.-. Past Master. P.'. S.'. Principal Sojourner. E.". A.". Eoyal Arch. R.*. 0.'. or E.-. f.-. Eose Croix. Appended to the signature of one having that degree. E.'. E.'. Eight Eminent. E.'. F.'. Bespectabk Frtre. (French.) Worshipful Brother. , R.". Li.\ or E.'. cm .". Respectable Loge. (French.) Worshipful Lodge. E.-. W.-. Eight Worshipful. S.-. Scribe. S.'. C.'. Supreme Council. S.'. G.*. 1.'. G.\ Sovereign Grand In- spector General. S.-. P.-. E.-. S.-. Sublime Prince of the Eoyal Secret. 8.'. S.'. Sanctum Sanctorum or Holy of Holies. S.-. 8.-. S.-- Troisfois Salut. (French.) Thrice greeting. A common caption to French Masonic circulars or letters. 8.'. W.'. Senior Warden. T.-. C.-. F.-. Trh Chere Frire. (French.) Very Dear Brother. T.-. G.-. A.-. O.-. T.-. U.-. The Grand Architect of the Universe. V.\ or Ven.'. Venerable. (French.) Wor- shipful. V.'. L.'. Vraie lumUre. (French.) True light. v.". W.'. Very Worshipful. W.'. M.". Worshipful Master. 1 I .•. Lodge. f-g il .•. Lodges. Ji Prefixed to the signature of a Knight J Templar or a member of the A. and A. Scottish Eite below the 33d degree. J^ Prefixed to the signature of a Grand 7y or Past Grand Commander of ^"^ Knights Templars or a Mason of the 33d degree in the Scottish Eite. f^ Prefixed to the signature of a > f^ * Grand or Past Grand Master of 'r Knights Templars and the Grand Commander of the Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Eite. Abda. A word used in some of the high degrees. He was the father of Adoni- ram. (See 1 Kings iv. 6.) Lenning is wrong in saying that he is represented by one of the officers in the degree of Master in Israel. He has confounded Abda with his son. (Ikcyo, der Freimaur.) Abdaiuon. The name of the orator in the 14th degree of the Eite of Perfection, or the Sacred Vault of James VI. It means a servant, from abad, "to serve," although somewhat corrupted in its transmission into the rituals. Lenning says it is the Hebrew Habdamon, " a servant ; " but there is no such word in Hebrew. Abelites. A secret Order which ex- isted about the middle of the 18th century in Germany, called also "the Order of Abel." The organization was in possession of peculiar signs, words, and ceremonies of initiation, but, according to Gadicke [Frei- maurer Lexicon), it had no connection with Freemasonry. Abibalk. In the Elu of the French Eite, the name of the chief of the three assassins. Derived most probably from the Hebrew obi and balah, 'JX and j^'ja, which raean father of destruction. Lenning, following the Thuileur de I'Fcossisme of Delaunay, makes it signify from the same roots, but in defiance of the rules of He- brew construction, " he who destroys the father." Abide by. See Stand to and abide by. Abif. An epithet which has been ap- plied in Scripture to that celebrated builder who was sent to Jerusalem by King Hiram, of Tyre, to superintend the construction of the Temple. The word, which in the origi- nal Hebrew is V2Ni ^"^ which may be pronounced Abiv or Abif, is compounded of the noun in the construct-state ^^H, Abi, meaning " father," and the pronomi- nal suflSx 1, which, with the preceding vowel sound, is to be sounded as iv or if, and which means " his ; " so that the word thus compounded Abif literally and grammatically signifies "his father." The word is found in 2 Chronicles iv. 16, in the following sentence : " The pots also, and the shovels, and the flesh hooks, and all their instruments did Huram his father make to King Solomon." The latter -part of this verse is in the original as follows : Shelomoh lumelech Abif Huram gnasah Luther has been more literal in his ver- sion of this passage than the English trans- lators, and appearing to suppose that the word Abif is to be considered simply as an appellative or surname, he preserves the Hebrew form, his translation being as fol- lows : " Machte Huram Abif dem Konige Salomo." The Swedish version is equally exact, and, instead of " Hiram his father," gives us " Hyram Abiv." In the Latin Vul- gate, as in the English version, the words are rendered " Hiram pater ejus." I have little doubt that Luther and the Swedish ABIF ABLE translator were correct in treating the word Abi/sLS an appellative. In Hebrew, the word ab, or " fether," is often used, honoris causa, as a title of respect, and may then signify friend, counseilor, wise man, or something else of equivalent character. Thus, Dr. Clarke, commenting on the word abrtch, in Grenesis xli. 43, says : " Father seems to have been a name of oflSce, and probably father of the Jtiityor father of Pharaoh might signify the same as the kinfs minister among us." And on the very passage in which this word Abif is used, he says: " Diii fatJier, is often used in Hebrew to signiiy master, inventor, chief operator." Gresenius, the distinguished Hebrew lexi- cographer, gives to this word similar signi- fications, such as benefactor, master, teacher, and says that in the Arabic and the Ethi- opic it ia spoken of one who excels in any- thing. This idiomatic custom was pursued by the later Hebrews, for Buxtorf tells us, in his Talmudic Lexicon, that " among the Talmudists abba, father, was always a title of honor," and he quotes the following re- marks from a treatise of the celebrated Maimonides, who, when speaking of the grades or ranks into which the Rabbinical doctors were divided, says : " The first class consists of those each of whom bears his own name, without any title of honor ; the second of those who are called Jiabbanim ; and the third of those who are called Rabbi, and the men of this class also receive the cognomen of Abba, Father." Again, in 2 Chronicles ii, 13, Hiram, the king of Tyre, referring to the same Hiram, the widow's son, who is spoken of subse- quently in reference to King Solomon as " his father," or Abif in the passage already cited, writes to Solomon : " And now I have sent a cunning man, endued with understanding, of Huram my father's." The only diflSculty in this sentence is to be found in the prefixing of the letter lamed S, before Huram, which has caused our translators, by a strange blunder, to render the words V Huram abi, as meaning "of Huram my father's," * instead of " Huram my father." Luther has again taken the correct view of this subject, and translates the word as an appellative : " So sonde ich nun einen weisen Mann, der Berstand hat, Huram Abif; " that is, " So now I send you a wise man who has understanding, Huram Abif." The truth I suspect is, although it has escaped all the commentators, that the lamed in this passage is a Chaldaism which is sometimes used by the later Hebrew writers, who incorrectly employ S, the sign * It may be remarked tliat this could not be the true meaning, for the father of King Hiram was not another Hiram, but Abibaal. of the dative for the accusative after transi- tive verbs. Thus, in Jeremiah (xl. 2), we have such a construction : rai/akach nib tabachim riremijahii : that is, literally, "and the captain of the guards took for Jere- miah," where the h, I, or for, is a Chaldaism and redundant, the true rendering being, " and tlie captain of the gu.-irds took Jere- miah." Other similar jiassages are to be found in Lamentations iv. 5, Job v. 2, etc. In like manner I suppose the S before Huram, which the English translators have rendered by the preposition " of," to be redundant and a Chaldaic form, and then the sentence should be read thus ; " I have sent a cunning man, endued with under- standing, Huram my father ; " or if con- sidered as an appellative, as it should be, " Huram Abi." From all this I conclude that the word Ab, with its diflerent suffixes, is always used in the Books of Kings and Chronicles, in reference to Hiram tiie builder, as a title of respect. When King Hiram spe4iks of him he calls him " my father Hiram," Hiram Abi; and when the writer of the Book of Chronicles is speaking of him and King Solomon in the same passage, he calls him "Solomon's father" — "his father," Hiram Ab\f. The only difference is made by the different appellation of the pronouns my and his in Heorew. To both the kings of Tyre and of Judah he bore the honorable re'lation of Ab, or " father," equivalent to friend, counsellor, or minister. He was " Father Hiram." The Masons are there- fore perfectly correct in refusing to adopt the translation of the English version, and in preserving, after the example of Luther, the word Abif as an appellative, surname, or title of honor and distinction bestowed upon the chief builder of the 'Temple. Ablraui. One of the traitorous crafts- men, whose act of perfidy forms so impor- tant a part of the third degree, receives iu some of the high degrees tiie name of Abi- ram AMrop. These words certainly have a Hebrew look ; but the significant words of Masonry have, in the lapse of time and in their transmission through ignorant teach- ers, become so corrupted in form that it is almost impossible to trace them to any in- telligent root. They may be Hebrew or they may be anagraminatized (see Ana- gram) ; but it is only chance that can give us the true meaning which they undoubt- edly have. Able. There is an archaic use of the word able to signify suitable. Thus, Chaucer says of a monk that " he was able to ben an abbot," that is, suitable to be an abbot. In this sense the old manuscript Constitu- tions constantly employ the word, as when they say that the apprentice should be ABLUTION ABRAHAM "able of birth and limbs as he ought to be," that is, that he should be of birth suitable for a member of the Craft, and of limbs suitable to perform the labors of a craftsman. Ablution. A ceremonial purification by washing, much used in the Ancient Mysteries and under the Mosaic dispensa- tion. It is also employed in some of the high degrees of Masonry. The better technical term for this ceremony is lustra- tion, which see. Abnet. The band or apron, made of fine linen, variously wrought, and worn by the Jewish priesthood. It seems to have been borrowed directly from the Egyptians, upon the representations of all of whose gods is to be found a similar girdle. Like the zennaar, or sacred cord of the Brah- mins, and the white shield of the Scandi- navians, it ia the analogue of the Masonic apron. Aborigines. A secret society which existed in England about the year 1783, and of whose ceremony of initiation the following account is contained in the Brit- ish Magazine of that date. The presiding officer, who was styled the Original, thus addressed the candidate : Original. Have you faith enough to be made an Original? Candidate. I have. Original. Will you be conformable to all honest rules which may support steadily the honor, reputation, welfare, and dignity of our ancient undertaking? Candidate. I will. Original. Then, friend, promise me that you will never stray from the paths of Honor, Freedom, Honesty, Sincerity, Pru- dence, Modesty, Reputation, Sobriety, and True Friendship. Candidate. I do. Which done, the crier of the court com- manded silence, and the new member, being uncovered, and dropping on his right knee, had the following oath administered to him by the servant, the new member laying his right hand on the Cap of Honor, and Nim- rod holding a staff over his head : " You swear by the Gap of Honor, by the Collar of Freedom, by the Coat of Honesty, by the Jacket of Sincerity, by the shirt of Prudence, by the Breeches of Modesty, by the Garters of Keputation, by the Stockings of Sobriety, and by the Steps of True Friendship, never to depart from these laws." Then rising, with the staff resting on his head, he received a copy of the laws from the hands of the Grand Original, with these words, " Enjoy the benefits hereof." He then delivered the copy of the laws to the care of the servant, after which the word was given by the secretary to the new member, viz. : JEden, signifying the garden where Adam, the great aboriginal, was formed. Then the secretary invested him with the sign, viz. : resting his right hand on his left side, signifying the first conjunction of harmony. It had no connection with Freemasonry, but was simply one of those numerous imi- tative societies to which that Institution has given rise. Abrac. In the Leland MS. it is said that the Masons conceal "the wey of wyn- ninge the facultye of Abrac." Mr. Locke (if it was he who wrote a commentary on the manuscript) says, " Here I am utterly in the dark." It means simply " the way of acquiring the science of Abrac." The science of Abrac is the knowledge of the power and use of the mystical abraxas^ which see. Abracadabra. A term of incanta- tion which was formerly worn about the neck as an amulet against several diseases, especially the tertian ague. It was to be written on a triangular piece of parchment in the following form : ABRACADABRA ABRACADABR ABRACADAB ABRACADA ABRAOAD ABRACA ABRAC ABRA ABR AB A It is said that it first occurs in the Car- men de Morbis et Remediis of Q. Serenus Sammonicus, a favorite of the Emperor Severus in the 2d and 3d centuries, and is generally supposed to be derived from the word abraxas. Higgins, (Celt. DnCids, p. 246,) who is never in want of an etymology, derives it from the Irish aAra, " god," and cad, "holy," and makes abra-cad-abra, therefore, signify abra — the holy — abra. Abrabam. The founder of the He- brew nation. The patriarch Abraham is personated in the degree or Order of High Priesthood, which refers in some of its cer- emonies to an interesting incident in his life. After the amicable separation of Lot and Abraham, when the former was dwell- ing in the plain in which Sodom and ita neighboring towns were situated, and the latter in the valley of Mamre near Hebron, a king from beyond the Euphrates, whose name was Chedorlaomer, invaded lower Palestine, and brought several of the ABRAHAM ABRAXAS smaller states into a tributary condition. Among these were the five cities of the plain, to which Lot had retired. As the yoke was borne with impatience by these cities, Chedorlaomer, accompanied by four other kings, who were probably his tribu- taries, attacked and defeated the kings of the plain, plundered their towns, and car- ried their people away as slaves. Among those who suffered on this occasion was Lot. As soon as Abraham heard of these events, he armed three hundred and eigh- teen of his slaves, and, with the assistance of Aner, Eshcol, and Mamre, three Amo- ritish chieis, he pursued the retiring in- vaders, and having attacked them near the Jordan, put them to flight, and then re- turned with all the men and goods that had been recovered from the enemy. On his way back he was met by Melchizedek, the king of that place, and who was, like Abraham, a worshipper of the true God. Melchizedek refreshed Abraham and his people with bread and wine; and while consenting to receive back the persons who had been liberated from captivity, he re- quested Abraham to retain the goods. But Abraham positively reAised to retain any of the spoils, although, by the customs of the age, he was entitled to them, and de- clared that he had sworn that he would not take " from a thread even to a shoelatchet." Although the conduct of Abraham in this whole transaction was of the most honor- able and conscientious character, the inci- dents do not appear to have been introduced into the ritual of the High Priesthood for any other reason except that of their con- nection with Melchizedek, who was the founder of an Order of Priesthood. Abraham, Aiitolne Firmln. A Mason who made himself notorious at Paris, in the beginning of the present century, by the manufacture and sale of false Masonic diplomas and by trading in the higher de- grees, from which traffic he reaped tor some time a plentiful harvest. Tue Supreme Council of France declared, in 1811, all his diplomas and charters void and deceptive. He is the author of " L'Art du Tuileur, dedie k tous les Maqons des deux hemi- spheres," a small volume of 20 pages 8vo, printed at Paris in 1803, and published from 1800 to 1808 a periodical work en- titled " Le Miroir de la vferite, dedi6 k tous les Majons," 3 vols., 8vo. This contains many interesting details concerning the history of Masonrv in France. In 1811 there was published at Paris a " Circulaire du Supreme Conseil du 33e degr6, etc., rela- tive k la vente, par le Sieur Abraham de grades et cahiers MaQonniques," (8vo, 16 pp.,) from which it is evident that Abraham was nothing else but a Masonic charlatan. Abraxas. Ba.silides, the head of the Egyptian sect of Gnostics, taught that there were seven emanations, or a^ons, from the Supreme God; that these emanations engendered the angels of the highest order ; that these angels formed a heaven for their habitation, and brought forth other angels of a nature inferior to their own ; that in time other heavens were formed and other angels created, until the whole number of angels and their respective heavens amounted to 365, which were thus equal to the number of days in a year ; and, finally, that over all these" an omnipotent lord — in- ferior, however, to the Supreme Qod — pre- sided, whose name was Abraxas. Now this word Abraxas, in the numerical force of its letters when written in Greek, ABPAEA2, amounts to 365, the number of words in the Basilidean system, as well as the number of days in the year, thus: A, 1.., B, 2.., P, 100.., A, 1.., S, 60.., A, 1.., L 200 = 365. The . god Abraxas was therefore a type or sym- bol of the year, or of the revolution of the earth around the sun. This mystical refer- ence of the name of a god to the annual period was familiar to the ancients, and is to be found in at least two other instances. Thus among the Persians the letters of the name of the god Mithras, and of Belenus among the Gauls, amounted each to 365. M= 40 B= 2 E = 5 H= 8 I = 10 A= 30 8=9 E= 5 P =100 N= 50 A = 1 = 70 S = 200 = 365 X =200 365 The word Abraxas, therefore from this mystical value of the letters of which it was composed, became talismanic, and was fre- quently inscribed, sometimes with and sometimes without other superstitious in- scriptions, on stones or gems as amulets, many of which have been preserved or are continually being discovered, and are to be found in |he cabinets of the curious. There have been many conjectures among the learned as to the derivation of the word Abraxas. Beausobre (HUtoire du Maniche- isme, vol. ii.) derives it from the Greek, Aj30pf Saw, signifying "the magnificent Saviour, he who heals and preserves." Bel- lermann, (Essay on the Clems qf the An- dents) supposed it to be compounded of three Coptic words signifying "the holv word of Dliss." Pignorius and Vandelih think it is composed of four Hebrew and three Greek letters, whose numerical value is 365, and which are the initials of the sentence : " saving men by wood, t. e. the cross." Abraxas Stoues. Stones on which ABSENCE ACACIA the word Abraxas and other devices are engraved, and which were used by the Egyptian Gnostics as amulets. Absence. Attendance on the com- munications of his Lodge, on all convenient occasions, Is considered as one of the duties of every Mason, and hence the old charges of 1722 (ch. iii.) say that " in ancient times no Master or Fellow could be absent from it [the Lodge], without incurring a severe cen- sure, until it appeared to the Master and Wardens that pure necessity hindered him." Fines have by some Lodges been inflicted for non-attendance^ but a pecuni- ary penalty is clearly an unmasonic punish- ment, (see Fines;) and even that usage is now discontinued, so that attendance on ordinary communications is no longer en- forced by any sanction of law. It is a duty the discharge of which must be left to the conscientious convictions of each Mason. In the case, however, of a positive sum- mons for any express purpose, such as to stand trial, to show cause, etc., the neglect or refusal to attend might be construed into a contempt, to be dealt with according to its magnitude or character in each par- ticular case. Acacia. An interesting and important symbol in Freemasonry. Botanically, it is the acacia vera of Tournetbrt, and the mi- Tfiosa nilotica of Linnaeus. It grew abun- dantly in the vicinity of Jerusalem, where it is still to be found, and is familiar in its modern use as the tree from which the gum arable of commerce is derived. Oliver, it is true, says that " there is not the smallest trace of any tree of the kind growingso far north as Jerusalem," [Landm. ii. 149 ;) but this statement is refuted by the authority of Lieutenant Lynch, who saw it growing in great abundance in Jeri- cho, and still farther north. {Exped. to Dead Sea, p. 262.) The Rabbi Joseph Schwarz, who is excellent authority, says : " The Acacia (Shittim) tree, Al Sunt, is found in Palestine of different varieties ; it looks like the Mulberry tree, attains a great height, and has a hard wood. The gum which is obtained from it is the gum arabic." [De- scriptive Geography and Jffistorical Sketch of Palestine, p. 308, Leeser's translation. Phila., 1850.) Schwarz was for sixteen years a resident of Palestine, and wrote from per- sonal observation. The testimony of Lynch and Schwarz should, therefore, forever settle the question of the existence of the acacia in Palestine. The acacia, which, in Scripture, is always called Shittah, and in the plural Shittim, was esteemed a sacred wood among the He- brews. Of it Moses was ordered to make the tabernacle, the ark of the covenant, the table for the shewbread, and the rest of the sacred furniture. Isaiah, in recounting the promises of God's mercy to the Israelites on their return from the captivity, tells them that, among other things, he will plant in the wilderness, for their relief and refreshment, the cedar, the acacia, (or, as it is rendered in our common version, the shittah,) the fir, and other trees. The first thing, then, that we notice in this symbol of the acacia, is that it had been always consecrated from among the other trees of the forest by the sacred pur- poses to which it was devoted. By the Jew, the tree from whose wood the sanc- tuary of the tabernacle and the holy ark had been constructed would ever be viewed as more sacred than ordinary trees. The early Masons, therefore, very naturally ap- propriated this hallowed plant to the equally sacred purpose of a symbol, which was to teach an important divine truth in all ages to come. Having thus briefly disposed of the natu- ral history of this plant, we may now pro- ceed to examine it in its symbolic relations. First. The acacia, in the mythic system of Freemasonry, is preeminently the sym- bol of the IMMORTALITY OF THE SODL — that important doctrine which it is the great design of the Institution to teach. As the evanescent nature of the flower, which " Cometh forth and is cut down," reminds us of the transitory nature of human life, so the perpetual renovation of the evergreen plant, which uninterruptedly presents the appearance of youth and vigor, is aptly compared to that spiritual life in which the soul, freed from the corruptible companionship of the body, shall enjoy an eternal spring and an immortal youth. Hence, in the impressive funeral service of our Order, it is said that " this evergreen is an emblem of our faith in the immortal- ity of the soul. By this we are reminded that we have an immortal part within us, which shall survive the grave, and which shall never, never, never die." And again, in the closing sentences of the monitorial lecture of the third degree, the same senti- ment is repeated, and we are told that by " the ever-green and ever-living sprig " the Mason is strengthened " with confidence and composure to look forward to a blessed immortality." Such an interpretation of the symbol is an easy and a natural one; it suggests itself at once to the least reflec- tive mind; and consequently, in some one form or another, is to be found existing in all ages and nations. It was an ancient custom, — which is not, even now, alto- gether disused, — for mourners to carry in their hands at funerals a sprig of some ever- green, generally the cedar or the cypress, and to deposit it in the grave of the deceased. 8 ACACIA ACACIA Accorfing to Dalcho * the Hebrews always planted a sprig of the acacia at the head of the grave of a departed friend. Potter tells us" that the ancient Greeks " had a custom of bedecking tombs with herbs and flowers." t All sorts of purple and white flowers were acceptable to the dead, but principally the amaranth and the myrtle. The very name of the former of these plants, which signifies "never fading," would seem to indicate the true symbolic meaning of the usage, although archaeolo- gists have generally supposed it to be sim- ply an exhibition of love on the part of the survivors. Ragon says, that the an- cients substituted the acacia for all other plants because they believed it to be incor- ruptible, and not liable to injury from the attacks of any kind of insect or other ani- mal — thus symbolizing the incorruptible nature of the soul. Hence we see the propriety of placing the sprig of acacia, as an emblem of im- mortality, among the symbols of that de- gree, all of whose ceremonies are intended to teach us the great truth that " the life of man, regulateia by morality, &ith, and justice, will be rewarded at its closing hour by the prospect of Eternal Bliss." | So, therefore, says Dr. Oliver, when the Master JIason exclaims " my name is Aca- cia," it is equivalent to saying, " I have been in the grave — I have triumphed over it by rising from the dead — and being re- generated in the process, I have a claim to life everlasting." The sprig of acacia, then, in its most ordinary signification, presents itself to the Master Mason as a symbol of the immor- tality of the soul, being intended to remind him, by its evergreen and unchanging na- * " This oustom among the Hebrews arose from this circumstance. AgreeabJy to their laws, no dead bodies were allowed to be interred within the walls of the city ; and as the Cohens, or Priests, were prohibited from crossing a grave, it was necessary to place marks thereon, that they might avoid them. For this purpose the acacia was used." (Dalcho, OrcUion,p. 27, itote.) I object to the reason assigned by Dalcho, but of the existence of tlie custom there can be no question, notwithstanding the denial or doubt of Dr. Oliver. Blount {Trauc/s in the Levant, p. Iii7,) says, speaking of the Jewish burial cus- toms, "tliose who bestow a marble stone over any [grave] have a hole a yard long and a foot broad, in which they plant an evergreen, which seems to grow from the body and is carefully watched." Hasselquist {Travels, p. 28,) confirms his testimony. I borrow the citations from Brown, (Ant^gaities of the Jei.cs, vol. ii., p. 856,) but have verified the reference to Hasselquist. The work of Blount I have not been enabled to consult. t Antiquities of Greece, p. 669. X Dr. Crucefix, MS. quoted by Oliver. Land- marks, ii. 2. ture, of that better and spiritual part with- in us, which, as an emanation from the Grand Architect of the Uuivei-se. can never die. And as this is the most ordinary, the most generally accepted signification, so also is it the most important ; for thus, as the peculiar symbol of immortality, it be- comes the most appropriate to an Order all of whose teachings are intended to in- culcate the great lesson that " life rises out of the grave." But incidental to this the acacia has two other interpretations which are well worthy of investigation. Secondly, then, the acacia is a symbol of INNOCENCE. The symbolism here is of a peculiar and unusual character, depending not on any real analogy in the form or use of the symbol to tlie idea symbolized, but simply on a double or compound meaning of the word. For axoKia, in the Greek lan- guage, signifies both the plant in question and the moral quality of innocence or purity of life. In this sense the symbol refers, primarily, to him over whose soli- tary grave the acacia was planted, and whose virtuous conduct, whose integrity of life and fidelity to his ti-usts have ever been presented as patterns to the craft, and con- sequently to all Master Masons, who, by this interpretation of the symbol, are in- vited to emulate his example. Hutchinson, indulging in his favorite theory of Christianizing Masonry, when he comes to this signification of tlie symbol, thus enlarges on the interpretation : " We Masons, describing the deplorable estate of religion under the Jewish law, speak in figures: — 'Her tomb was in the rubbish and filth cast forth of the temple, and Aca- cia wove its branches over her monument ; ' akakia being the Greek word for innocence, or being free from sin; implying that the sins and corruptions of the old law and devotees of the Jewish altar had hid reli- gion from those who sought her, and she was only to be found where iimocaitt sur- vived, and under the banner of the divine Lamb ; and as to ourselves, profotising that we were to be distinguished by our Acaey, or as true Acacians in our religious faith and tenets."* But, lastly, the acacia is to be considered as the symbol of initiation. This is by far the most interesting of its interpreta- tions, and was, we have every reason to believe, the primary and original; the others being but incidental. It leads us at once to the investigation of the significant tact that in all the ancient initiations and religious mysteries there was some plant peculiar to each, which was consecrated by Its own esoteric meaning, and which occu- * Hutchinson's Spirit of Masonry, Leot. IX., p. 99- ACACIAN ACADEMY 9 pied an important position in the celebra- tion of the rites, so that the plant, what- ever it might be, from its constant and prominent use in the ceremonies of initia- tion, came at length to be adopted as the symbol of that initiation. Thus, the lettuce was the sacred plant which assumed the place of the acacia in the mysteries of Adonis. (See Lettuce.) The lotus was that of the Brahminical rites of India, and from them adopted by the Egyptians. (See Lotus.) The Egyptians also revered the erica or heath ; and the mistletoe was a mystical plant among the Druids. (See Uri^a and Mistletoe.) And, lastly, the myrtle performed the same office of symbolism in the mysteries of Greece that the lotus did in Egypt or the mistle- toe among the Druids. See Myrtle. In all of these ancient mysteries, while the sacred plant was a symbol of initiation, the initiation itself was symbolic of the resurrection to a future life, and of the im- mortality of the soul. In this view, Free- masonry is to us now in the place of the ancient initiations, and the acacia is sub- stituted for the lotus, the erica, the ivy, the mistletoe, and the myrtle. The lesson of wisdom is the same — the medium of im- parting it is all that has been changed. Eeturning, then, to the acacia, we find that it is capable of three explanations. It is a symbol of immortality, of innocence, and of initiation. But these three signifi- cations are closely connected, and that connection must be observed, if we desire to obtain a just interpretation of the sym- bol. Thus, in this one symbol, we are taught that in the initiation of life, of which the initiation in the third degree is simply emblematic, innocence must for a time lie in the grave, at length, however, to be called, by the word of the Grand Master of the Universe, to a blissful im- mortality. Combine with this the recol- lection of the place where the sprig of aca- cia was planted, — Mount Calvary, — the place of sepulture of him who " brought life and immortality to light," and who, in Christian Masonry, is designated, as he is in Scripture, as " the lion of the tribe of Judah;" and remember, too, that in the mystery of his death, the wood of the cross takes the place of the acacia, and in this little and apparently insignificant symbol, but which is really and truly the most im- portant and significant one in Masonic science, we have a beautiful suggestion of all the mysteries of life and death, of time and eternity, of the present and of the future. Acacian. A word introduced by Hutchinson, in his " Spirit of Masonry," to designate a Freemason in reference to B the akahia, or innocence with which he was to be distinguished, from the Greek word cKada. (See the preceding article.) The Acacians constituted an heretical Sect in the primitive Christian Church, who de- rived their name from Acacius, Bishop of Csesarea; and there was subsequently an- other sect of the same name Acacius, Patriarch of Constantinople. But it is needless to say that the Hutchinsonian application of the word Acacian to signify a Freemason has nothing to do with the theological reference of the term. Academy. The 4th degree of the Rectified Rose Croix of Schroeder. Academy of Ancients or of Se- crets. (Academie des Secrets.) A society instituted at Warsaw, in 1767, by M. Thoux de Salverte, and founded on the principles of another which bore the same name, and which had been established at Kome, about the end of the 16th century, by John Bap- tiste Porta. The object of the institution was the advancement of the natural sci- ences and their application to the occult philosophy. Academy of Sages. An order which existed in Sweden in 1770, deriving its origin from that founded in London by Elias Ashmole, on the doctrines of the New Atlantis of Bacon. A' few similar societies were subsequently founded in Russia and France, one especially noted by Thory (Act. Lat.) as having been estab- lished in 1776 by the mother Lodge of Avignon. Academy of Secrets. See Acad- emy of Ancients. Academy of Sublime Masters of tbe I^uminous Ring. Founded in France, in 1780, by Baron Blaerfindy, one of the Grand Officers of the Philo- sophic Scotch Rite. The Academy of the Luminous Ring was dedicated to the phil- osophy of Pythagoras, and was divided into three degrees. The first and second were principally occupied with the history of Freemasonry, and the last with the dogmas of the Pythagorean school, and their application to the highest grades of science. The historical hypothesis which was sought to be developed in this Acad- emy was that Pythagoras was the ibunder of Freemasonry. Academy of True Masons. Founded at Montpelier, in France, by Dom Pernetty, in 1778, and occupied with in- structions in hermetic science, which were developed in six degrees, viz. : 1. The True Mason ; 2. The True Mason in the Right Way ; 3. Knight of the Golden Key ; 4. Knight of Iris; 5. Knight of the Argo- nauts; 6. Knight of the Golden Fleece. The degrees thus conferred constituted the 10 ACADEMY Philosophic Scotch Bite, which was the system adopted by the Academy. It after- wards changed its name to that of Russo- Swedish Academy, which circumstance leads Thory to believe that it was con- nected with" the Alchemical Chapters which at that time existed in Russia and Sweden. The entirely hermetic character of the Academy of True Masons may readily be perceived in a few paragraphs cited by Clavel from a discourse by Goyer de Ju- milly at the installation of an Academy in Martinico. "To seize," says the orator, " the pencil of Hermes ; to engrave the doctrines of natural philosophy on your columns ; to call Flamel, the rhilaletes, the Cosmopolite, and our other masters to my aid for the purpase of unveiling the mysterious principles of the occult sci- ences, — these, illustrious knights, appear to be the duties imposed on me oy the cere- mony of your installation. The fountain 'of Count Trevisan, the pontifical water, the peacock's tail, are phenomena with which you are familiar," etc., etc Academy, Platonic. Founded in 1480 by Marsilius Ficinus, at Florence, under the patronage of Lorenzo de Medi- cis. It is said by the Masons of Tuscany to have been a secret society, and is sup- posed to have had a Masonic character, because in the hall where its members held their meetings, and which still remains, many Masonic symbols are to be found. Clavel supposes it to have been a society founded by some of the honorary members and patrons of the fraternity of Freema- sons who existed in the Middle Ages, and who, having abandoned the material design of the institution, confined themselves to its mystic character. If his suggestion be correct, this is one of the earliest instances of the separation of speculative from oper- ative Masonry. Acanthus. A plant, described by Dioscorides, with broad, flexible, prickly leaves, which perish in the winter and sprout a^aiu at the return of spring. It is found in the Grecian islands on the bor- ders of cultivated fields or gardens, and is common in moist, rocky situations. It is memorable for the tradition which assigns to it the origin of the foliage carved on the capitals of Corinthian and composite col- umns. Hence, in architecture, that part of the Corinthian capital is called the Acanthtis which is situated below the aba- cus, and which, having the form of a vase or bell, is surrounded by two rows of leaves of the acanthus plant. Callima- chus, who invented this ornament, is said to have had the idea suggested to him by the following incident. A Corinthian maiden, who was betrothed, fell ill, and ACCEPTED died just before the appointed time of her marriage. Her faithful and grieving nurse placed on her tomb a basket containing many of her toys and jewels, and covered it with a flat tile. It so happened that the basket was placed immediately over an acanthus root, which afterwards grew up around tlie basket and curled over under the superincumbent resistance of the tile, thus exhibiting a form of foliage which was, on its being seen by the architect, adopted as a model for the capital of a new order ; so that the story of affection was perpetuated in marble. Dudley (Na- ology, p. 1C4,) thinks the tale puerile, and supposes that the acanthus is really the lotus of tiie Indians and Egyptians, and is sym- bolic of laborious but effectual effort ap- plied to the supjjort of the world. With him, the symbolism of the acanthus and the lotus are identical. See Loiits. Accepted. A term in Freemasonry which is synonymous with " initiated " or " received into the society." Thus, we find in the Regulations of 1663, such expres- sions as these; "No person who shall hereafter be accepted a Freemason, shall be admitted into a Lodge or a-ssembly until he has brought a certificate of the time and place of his acceptation from the Lodge that accented him, unto the Master of that limit or division where such Lodge is kept." The word seems to have been first used in 1668, and in the Regulations of that year is con- stantly employed in the place of the olden term "made," as equivalent to "initiated." This is especially evident in the 6th Regu- lation, which says, " that no person shall be accepted unless he be twenty-one years old or more ; " where accepted clearly means initiated. As the word was introduced in 1663, its use seems also to have soon ceased, for it is not found in any subsequent docu- ments until 1738; neither in tlie Regula- tions of 1721, nor in the Charges approved in 1722 ; except once in the latter, where " laborers and unaccepted Masons " are spoken of as distinguished from and in- ferior to "Freemasons." In the Regula- tions of 1721, the words "made," "en- tered," or "admitted," are constantly employed in its stead. But in 1738, An- derson, who, in publishing the 2d edition of the Book of Constitutions, made many verbal alterations which seem subsequently to have been disapproved of by the Grand Lodge, (see Book of ConatituHons.) again in- troduced the word accepted. Thus, in the 5th of the Regulations of 1721, which in the edition of 1728 read as follows : " But no man can be mad« or admitted a member of a particular Lodge," etc., he changed the phraseology so as to make the article read : No man can be accepted a member of a ACCLAMATION ACHAD 11 particular Lodge," etc. And so attached does he appear to have become to this word, that he changed the very name of the Order, by altering the title of the work, which, in the edition of 1723, was "The Constitutions of the Freemasons," to that of " The Con- stitutions of the Ancient and Honorable Society of Free and Accepted Masons." Although many of the innovations of the edition of 1738 of the Book of Constitutions were subsequently repudiated by the Grand Lodge, and omitted in succeeding editions, the title of " Free and Accepted Masons " was retained, and is now more generally used than the older and simpler one of " Freemasons," to distinguish the society. (See Free and Accepted Imsons.) The word accepted, however, as a synonym of initiated, has now become obsolete. The modern idea of an accq)ted Mason is that he is one distinguished from a purely operative or stone-mason, who has not been admitted to the freedom of the company ; an idea evi- dently intended to be conveyed by the use of the word in the Charges of 1722, already quoted. Acclamation. A certain form of words used in connection with the battery. In the Scottish rite it is hoschea; in the French, vivat; and in the rite of Misraim, halklujah. In the York, it is so mote it be. Accolade. From the Latin ad and eollum, around the neck. It is generally but incorrectly supposed that the accolade means the blow given on the neck of a newly created knight with the flat of the sword. The best authorities define it to be the embrace, accompanied with the kiss of peace, by which the new knight was at his creation welcomed into the Order of Knighthood by the sovereign or lord who created him. See the word Knighthood. Accord. We get this word from the two Latin ones ad cor, to the heart, and hence it means hearty consent. Thus in Wiclif 's translation we find the phrase in Philippians, which in the Authorized Ver- sion is " with one accord," rendered " with one will, with one heart." Such is its sig- nification in the Masonic formula, "free will , and accord," that is " free will and hearty consent." See Free Will and Accord. Accusation. See Charge. Accuser. In every trial in a Lodge for an otfence against the laws and regulations or the principles of Masonry any Master Mason may be the accuser of another, but a profane cannot be permitted to prefer charges against a Mason. Yet, if circum- stances are known to a profane upon which charges ought to be predicated, a Master Mason may avail himself of that informa- tion, and out of it frame an accusation to be presented to the Lodge. And such accusation will be received and investigated, although remotely derived from one who is not a member of the Order. It is not necessary that the accuser should be a member of the same Lodge. It is sufficient if he is an affiliated Mason; but it is generally held that an unaffiliated Mason is no more competent to prefer charges than a profane. In consequence of the Junior Warden being placed over the Craft during the hours of refreshment, and of his being charged at the time of his installation to see "that none of the Craft be suffered to convert the purposes of refreshment into those of in- temperance and excess," it has been very generally supposed that it is his duty, as the prosecuting officer of the Lodge, to prefer charges against any member who, by his conduct, has made himself amenable to the penal jurisdiction of the Lodge. I know of no ancient regulation which im- poses this unpleasant duty upon the Junior Warden ; but it does seem to be a very natural deduction, from his peculiar pre- rogative as the custos morum or guardian of the conduct of the Craft, that in all cases of violation of the law he should, after due effi)rt8 towards producing a re- form, be the proper officer to bring the conduct of the offending brother to the notice of the Lodge. Aceldama, from the Syro-Chaldaic, meaning field of blood, so called because it was purchased with the blood-money which was paid to Judas Iscariot for betraying his Lord. It is situated on the slope of .the hills beyond the valley of Hinnom and to the south of Mount Zion. The earth there was believed, by early writers, to have possessed a corrosive quality, by means of which bodies deposited in it were quickly consumed ; and hence it was used by the Crusaders, then by the Knights Hospitallers, and afterwards by the Arme- nians, as a place of sepulture, and the Empress Helen is said to have built a charnel-house in its midst. Dr. Eobinson {Biblical Besearches, i., p. 524,) says that the field is not now marked by any boundary to distinguish it from the rest of the field, and the former charnel-house is now a ruin. The field of Aceldama is referred to in the ritual of the Knights Templars. Acerellos, B. S. A nom de plume assumed by Carl Koessler, a German Ma- sonic writer. See Boessler. Achad. One of the names of God. , The word inN) Achad, in Hebrew signi- fies one or unity. It has been adopted by the Masons as one of the appellations of the Deity from that passage in Deuter- onomy (vi. 4) : " Hear, O Israel, the Lord thy God is [Achad) one ; " and which the 12 ACHARON ACQUITTAL Jews wear on their phylacteries, and pro- nounce with great fervor as a confession of their faith in the unity of God. Speaking of God as Achad, the Rabbins say, " God is one [Achad) and man is one (Achad). Man, however, is not purely one, because he is made up of elements and has another like himself; but the oneness of God is a oneness that has no boundary." Acliaron Scbilton. In Hebrew \&1V |nnx, signifying the new kingdom. Significant words in some of the high degrees. Actaias. A corruption of the Hebrew Achijah, the brother of Jah; a significant wori in some of the high degrees. Achishar. Mentioned in 1 Kings (iv. 6) under the name of Ahishar, and there descHbed as being "over the household" of King Solomon. This was a situation of great importance in the East, and equiv- alent to the modern office of Chamberlain. The Steward in a Council of Select Masters is said to represent Achishar. Achtariel. AkabbalisticnameofGod belonging to the Crown or first of the ten sephiroth ; and hence signifying the Crown or God. Acknowledged. When one is ini- tiated into the degree of Most Excellent Master, he is technically said to be "re- ceived and acknowledged " as a Most Ex- cellent Master. This expression refers to the tradition of the degree which states that when the Temple had been completed and dedicated. King Solomon received and acknowledged the most expert of the crafts- men as most excellent Masters. That 'is, he received them into the exalted rank of perfect and acknowledged workmen, and acknowledged their right to that title. The verb to acknowledge here means to own or admit to belong to, as to acknowledge a son. Acousmatici. The primary class of the disciples of Pythagoras, who served a five years' probation of silence, and were hence called acousmatici or hearers. Ac- cording to Porphyry, they received only the elements of intellectual and moral in- struction, and, after the expiration of their term of probation, they were advanced to the rank of Mathematici. See Pythag- oras. Acquittal. Under this head it may be proper to discuss two questions of Ma- sonic law. 1. Can a Mason, having been • acquitted by the courts of the country of an offence with which he has been charged, be tried by his Lodge for the same offence? And, 2. Can a Mason, having been acquitted by his Lodge on insufficient evidence, be subjected, on the discovery and production of new and more complete evidence, to a second trial for the same offence? To both of these questions the correct answer would seem to be in the affirmative. 1. An acquittal of a crime by a temporal court does not relieve a Mason from an inquisition into the same offence by his Lodge ; for acquittals may be the result of some technicality of law, or other cause, where, although the party is relieved from legal punishment, his guilt is still manifest in the eyes of the community; and if the Order were to be controlled by the action of the courts, the character of the Institu- tion might be injuriously affected by its permitting a man, who had escaped without honor from the punishment of the law, to remain a member of the Fraternity. In the language of the Grand Lodge of Texas, " an acquittal by a jury, while it may, and should, in some circumstances, have its in- fluence in deciding on the course to be pursued, yet has no binding force in Ma- sonry. We decide on our own rules, and our own view of the facts." (Proc. G. L. Tex., vol. ii., p. 273.) 2. To come to a correct apprehension of the second question, we must remember that it is a long-settled principle of Ma- sonic law, that every offence which a Mason commits is an injury to the whole Frater- nity, inasmuch as that the bad conduct of a single member reflects discredit on the whole Institution. This is a very old and well-established principle of the Institu- tion; and hence we find the old Gothic Constitutions declaring that "a Mason shall harbor no thief or thief's retainer," and assigning as a reason, " lest the Craft should come to shame." The safety of the Insti- tution requires that no evil-disposed mem- ber should be tolerated with impunity in bringing disgrace on the Craft. And, there- fore, although it is a well-known maxim of the common law — nemo debet bis puniri pro uno delicto — that is, "that no one should be twice placed in peril of punish- ment for the same crime ; " yet we must also remember that other and fundamental maxim — salus jaopuli suprema lex — which may, in its application to Masonry, be well translated: "the well-being of the Order is the first great law." To this everything else must yield ; and, therefore, if a mem- ber, having been accused of a heinous of- fence and tried, shall, on his trial, for want of sufficient evidence, be acquitted, or, being convicted, shall, for the same reason, be punished by an inadequate penalty — and if he shall thus be permitted to remain in the Institution with the stigma of the crimeupon him, " whereby the Craft comes to shame ; " then, if new and more suffi- cient evidence shall be subsequently dis- covered, it is just and right that a new ACTA ADAM 13 trial shall be had, so that he may, on this newer evidence, receive that punishment which will vindicate the reputation of the Order. No technicalities of law, no plea of autrefois acquit, nor mere verbal excep- tion, should be allowed for the escape of a guiltj' member ; for so long as he lives in the Order, every man is subject to its disci- pline. A hundred wrongful acquittals of a bad member, who still bears with him the reproach of his evil life, can never dis- charge the Order from its paramount duty of protecting its own good fame and re- moving the delinquent member from its fold. To this great duty all private and individual rights and privileges must suc- cumb, for the well-being of the Order is the first great law in Masonry. Acta liatomorHm, ou Chronologie de I'histoire de la Franche-Maqonnerie franqaise et etrangere, etc. That is: "The Acts of the Freemasons, or a chrono- logical history of French and Foreign Freemasonry, etc." This work, written or compiled by Claude Antoine Thory, was published at Paris, in 2 vols., 8vo, in 1815. It contains the most remarkable facts in the history of the Institution from obscure times to the year 1814 ; the succession of Grand Masters, a nomenclature of rites, degrees, and secret associations in all the countries of the world, and a bibliography of the principal works on Freemasonry publislied since 1723, with a supplement in which the author has collected a variety of rare and important Masonic documents. Of this work, which has never been trans- lated into English, Lenning says, [Enayol. der Freimaurerei) that it is, without dis- pute, the most scientific work on Freema- sonry that French literature has ever pro- duced. It must, however, be confessed that in the historical portion Thory has committed many errors in respect to Eng- lish and American Freemasonry, and there- fore, if ever translated, the work will re- quire much emendation. See Thory. Acting Grand Master. The Duke of Cumberland having in April, 1752, been elected Grand Master of England, it was resolved by the Grand Lodge, in compli- ment to him, that he should have the privi- lege of nominating a peer of the realm as Acting Grand Master, who should be em- powered to superintend the Society in his absence; and that at any future period, when the fraternity should have a prince of the blood at their head, the same privi- lege should be granted. The officer thus provided to be appointed is now called, in the Constitutions of England, the Pro Grand Master. In the American system, the officer who performs the duties of Grand Master in case of the removal, death, or inability of that officer, is known as the Acting Grand Master. For the regulations which pre- scribe the proper person to perform tnese duties see the words Succession to Office. Active liOdge. A Lodge is said to be active when it is neither dormant nor suspended, but regularly meets and is occu- pied in the labors of Masonry. Active Member. An active mem- ber of a Lodge is one who, in contradis- tinction to an honorary member, assumes all the burdens of membership, such as contributions, arrears, and participation in its labors, and is invested with all the rights of membership, such as speaking, voting, and holding office. * Actual Past Masters. Those who receive the degree of Past Master in sym- bolic Lodges, as a part of the installation service, when elected to preside, are called "Actual Past Masters," to distinguish them from those who pass through the ceremony in a Chapter, as simply preparatory to taking the Eoyal Arch, and who are dis- tinguished as " Virtual Past Masters." See Past Master. Adad. The name of the principal god among the Syrians, and who, as represent- ing the sun, had, according to Macrobius, (Saturnal., i. 23,) an image surrounded by rays. Macrobius, however, is wrong, as Selden has shown (Be Diis Syria, i. 6), in confounding Adad with the Hebrew Achad, or one — a name, from its signification of unity, applied to the Grand Architect of the Universe. The error of Macrobius, however, has been perpetuated by the in- ventors of the high degrees of Masonry, who have incorporated Adad, as a name of God, among their significant words. Adam. The name of the first man. The Hebrew word DTK, ADaM, signifies man in a generic sense, the human species collectively, and is said to be derived from j^J3~(J^, ADaMaH, the ground, because the first man was made out of the dust of the earth, or from ADaM, to be red, in reference to his ruddy complexion. It is most probably in this collective sense, as the representative of the whole human race, and, therefore, the type of humanity, that the presiding officer in a Council of Knights of the Sun, the 28th degree of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Eite, is called Father Adam, and is occupied in the investigation of the great truths which so much concern the interests of the race. Adam, in that degree, is man seeking after divine truth. The Kabbalists and Talraudists have invented many things concerning the first Adam, none of which are, however, worthy of preservation. See Knight of the Sun. 14 ADAMS ADDRESSES Adams, Jobn Qnincy, the sixth President of the United States, who served from 1825 to 1829. Mr. Adams, who has been very properly described as " a man of strong points and weak ones, of vast read- ing and wonderful memory, of great cre- dulity and strong prejudices," became noto- rious in the latter years of his life for his virulent opposition to Freemasonry. The writer already quoted, and who had an ex- cellent opportunity of seeing intimately the workings of the spirit of anti-Masonry, says of Mr. Adams : " He hated Freema- sonry, as he did many other things, not from any harm that he had received from it or personally knew respecting it, but bec&use his credulity had been wrought upon and his prejudices excited against it by dishonest and selfish politicians, who were anxious, at any sacrifice to him, to avail themselves of the influence of his commanding talents and position in public life to sustain them in the disreputable work in which they were enlisted. In his weakness, he lent himself to them. He united his energies to theirs in an imprac- ticable and unworthy cause." (C. W. Moore, FresTnaaon's Mag., vol. vii., p. 314.) The re- sult was a series of letters abusive of Free- masonry, directed to leading politicians, and published in the public journals from 1831 to 1833. A year before his death they were collected and published under the title of "Letters on the Masonic Institu- tion, by John Quincy Adams." Boston, 1847, 8vo, pp. 284. Some explanation of the cause of the vitulence with which Mr. Adams attacked the Masonic Insti- tution in these letters may be found in the following paragraph contained in an anti-Masonic work written by one Henry Gassett, and afiSxed to his "Catalogue of Books on the Masonic Institution." (Bos- ton, 1852.) "It had been asserted in a newspaper in Boston, edited by a Masonic dignitary, that John Q. Adams was a Ma- son. In answer to an inquiry from a per- son in New York State, whether he was so, Mr. Adams replied that 'he was not, and never should be.' These few words, undoubtedly, prevented his election a second term as JPresuIent of the United States. JBis competitor, Andrew Jackson, a Freemason, was elected." Whether the statement con- tained in the italicized words be true or not, is not the question, It is sufficient that Mr. Adams was led to believe it, and hence his ill-will to an association which had, as he supposed, inflicted this political evil on him, and baffled his ambitious views. Adar. Hebrew, "nX; the sixth month of the civil and the twelfth of the ecclesi- astical year of the Jews. It corresponds to a part of February and of March. Adarel. Angel of Fire. Eeferred to in the Hermetic degree of Knight of the Sun. Probably from ^^S«, Adr, .splendor, and Sx, El, God, i. e. the splendor of God or Divine splendor. Addresses, Masonic. Dr. Oliver, speaking of the Masonic discourses which began to be published soon after the re- organization of Masonry, in the commence- ment of the eighteenth century, and which he thinks were instigated by the attacks made on the Order, to which they were in- tended to be replies, says : " Charges and addresses were therefore delivered by breth- ren in authority on the fundamental prin- ciples of the Order, and they were printed to show that its morality was sound, and not in the slightest degree repugnant to the precepts of our most holy religion. These were of sufficient merit to insure a wide circulation among the Fraternity, from whence they spread into the world at large, and proved decisive in fixing the credit of the Institution for solemnities of character and a taste for serious and profitable inves- tigations." There can be no doubt that these ad- dresses, periodically delivered and widely published, have continued to exert an ex- cellent effect in behalf of the Institution, by explaining and defending the principles on which it is founded. The first Masonic address of wjiich we have any notice was delivered on the 24th of June, 1719, before the Grand Lodge of England, by the celebrated John Theophi- lus Desaguliers, LL. D. and F. R. S. The Book of Constitutions, under that date, says " Bro. Desaguliers made an eloquent oration about Masons and Masonry." Dr. Oliver states that this address was issued in a printed form, but no copy of it now remains — at least it has escaped the re- searches of the most diligent Masonic bibliographers. On the 20th of May, 1725, Martin Folkes, then Deputy Grand Master, de- livered an address before the Grand Lodge of England, which is cited in the Free- mason's Pocket Companion for 1759, but no entire copy of the address is now extant. The third Masonic address of which we have any knowledge is one entitled, "A Speech delivered to the Worshipful and Ancient Society of Free and Accepted Ma- sons, at a Grand Lodge held at Merchants' Hall, in the city of York, on St. John's Day, Dec. 27, 1726, the Right Worshipful Charles Bathurst, Esq., Grand Master. By the Junior Grand Warden. Olim meminisse juvabit. York : Printed by Thomas G«nt, for the benefit of the Lodge." It was again published at London in 1729, in ADDRESSES ADEPT 15 Benj. Cole's edition of the Ancient Consti- tutions, and has been subsequently re- printed in 1858 in the London Freemason's Magazine, from which it was copied in C. W. Moore's Freemason's Magazine, pub- lished at Boston, Mass. This is, therefore, the earliest Masonic address to which we have access. It contains a brief sketch of the history of Masonry, written as Masonic history was then written. It is, however, remarkable for advancing the claim of the Grand Lodge of York to a superiority over that of London. The fourth Masonic address of whose existence we have any knowledge is "A Speech delivered at a Lodge held at the Carpenters' Arms the 31st of December, 1728, by Edw. Oakley, late Provincial Senior Grand Warden in Carmarthen." This speech was reprinted by Cole at Lon- don in 1751. America has the honor of presenting the next attempt at Masonic oratory. The fifth address, and the first American, which is extant, is one delivered in Boston, Mass., on June 24th, 1734. It is entitled "A. Dis- sertation upon Masonry, delivered to a Lodge in America, June 24th, 1734. Christ's Eegm." It was discovered by Bro. 0. W. Moore in the archives of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts, and published by him in his magazine in 1849. This address is well written, and of a symbolic character, as the author allegorizes the Lodge as a type of heaven. And, sixthly, we have "An Address made to the body of Free and Accepted Masons assembled at a Quarterly Communication, held near Temple Bar, December 11, 1785, by Martin Clare, Junior Grand Warden." Martin Clare was distinguished in his times as a Mason. He had been authorized by the Grand Lodge to revise the lectures, which task he performed with great satis- faction to the Craft. This address, which Dr. Oliver has inserted in his Qolden Re- mains, has been considered of value enough to be translated into the French and Ger- man languages. After this period. Masonic addresses rapidly multiplied, so that it would be im- possible to record their titles or even the names of their authors. What Martial says of his own epigrams, that some were good, some bad, and a great many middling, may, with equal propriety and justice, be said of Masonic addresses. Of the thousands that have been delivered, many have been worth neither printing nor preservation. One thing, however, is to be remarked : that within a few years the literary char- acter of these productions has greatly im- proved. Formerly, a Masonic address on some festival occasion of the Order was little more than a homily on brotherly love or some other Masonic virtue. Often the orator was a clergyman, selected by the Lodge on account of his moral character or his professional ability. These clergy- men were frequently among the youngest members of the Lodge, and men who had no opportunity to study the esoteric con- struction of Masonry. In such cases we will find that the addresses were generally neither more nor less than sermons under another name. They contain excellent general axioms of conduct, and sometimes encomiums on the laudable design of our Institution. But we look in vain in them for any ideas which refer to the history or to the occult philosophy of Masonry. They accept the definition that " Freemasonry is a science of morality, veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols," only in part. They expatiate on the science of morality, but they say nothing of the symbols or the allegories. But, as I have already said, there has been an evident improvement within a few years, in this country especi- ally, for the reform has not equally ex- tended to England. Many of the addresses now delivered are of a higher order of Ma- sonic literature. The subjects of Masonic history, of the origin of the Institution, of its gradual development from an operative art to a speculative science, of its symbols, and of its peculiar features which distin- guish it from all other associations, have been ably discussed in many recent Ma- sonic addresses, and thus have the efibrts to entertain an audience for an hour become notonly the means of interesting instruction to the hearers, but also valuable contribu- tions to the literature of Freemasonry. It is in this way that Masonic addresses should be written. All platitudes and old truisms should be avoided; sermonizing, which is good, in its place, is out of place here. No one should undertake to deliver a Masonic address unless he knows some- thing of the subject on which he is about to speak, and unless he is capable of say- ing what will make every Mason who hears him a wiser as well as a better man, or at least what will afford him the opportunity of becoming so. Adelpb. Greek for a Brother. The fourth degree of the order of the Palladium. Eeghellini says that there exists in the Masonic archives of Douai the ritual of a Masonic Society, called Adelpha, which has been communicated to the Grand Orient, but which he thinks is the same as the Primitive Eite of Narbonne. Adept. One fully skilled or well versed in any art ; from the Latin word "Adeptus," having obtained, because the 16 ADEPT ADJOURNMENT Adept claimed to be in the possession of all the secrets of his peculiar mystery. The Alchemists or Hermetic philosophers as- sumed the title of Adepts. (See Alchemy.) Of the Hermetic Adepts, who were also sometimes called Kosicrucians, Spencethus writes, in 1740, to his mother : " Have you ever heard of the people called Adepts? They are a set of philosophers superior to whatever appeared among the Greeks and Romans. The three great points they drive at, is to be free from poverty, distem- pers, and death ; and, if you believe them, they have found out one secret that ia ca- pable of freeing them from all three. There are never more than twelve of these men in the whole world at a time ; and we have the happiness of having one of the twelve at this time in Turin. I am very well ac- quainted with him, and have often talked with him of their secrets, as far as he is allowed to talk to a common mortal of them." {Spence's Letter to his Mother, in Singer's Anecdotes, p. 403.1 In a similar allusion to the possession oi abstruse knowl- edge, the word is applied to some of the high degrees of Masonry. Adept, Prince. One of the names of the 28th degree of the Ancient and Ac- cepted Rite. (See Knight of the Sun.) It was the 23d degree of the System of the Chapter of Emperors of the East and West of Clermont. Adept, tbe. A hermetic degree of the collection of A. Viany. It is also the 4th degree of the Rite of Relaxed Observ- ance, and the Ist of the high degrees of the Rite of Electa of Truth. " It has much analogy," says Thory, "with the degree of Knight of the Sun in the Ancient and Ac- cepted Rite." It ia also called " Chaos dis- entangled." Adeptiis Adoptatiis. The 7th de- gree of the Rite of Zinnendorf, consisting of a kind of chemical and pharmaceutical in- struction. Adeptus Coronatus. Called also Templar Master- of the Key. The 7th degree of the Swedish Rite, (which see.) Adeptns IIxemptuB. The 7th de- gree of the system adopted by those Ger- man Rosicrucians who were known as the "Gold-und Rosenkreutzer," or the Gold and Rosy Cross, and whom Leaning sup- poses to have been the first who engrafted Rosicrucianism on Masonry. Adhering Mason. Those Masons who, during the anti-Masonic excitement in this country, on account of the supposed abduction of Morgan, refused to leave their Lodges and renounce Masonry, were so called. They embraced among their num- ber some of the wisest, best, and most in- fluential men of the country. Adjonrumcnt. C. W. Moore (JFWe- masons' Mag., xii., p. 290,) says : " We sup- pose it to be generally conceded that Lodges cannot properly be adjourned. It has been so decided by a large proportion of the Grand Lodges in this country, and tacitly, at least, concurred in by all. We are not aware that there is a dissenting voice among them. It is, therefore, safe to assume that the settled policy is against adjournment," The reason which he assigns for this rule, is that adjournment is a method used only in deliberative bodies, such as legislatures and courts, and as Lodges do not partake of the character of either of these, adjourn- ments are not applicable to them. The rule which Bro. Moore lays down is un- doubtedly correct, but the reason which he assigns tor it ia not sufficient. If a Lodge were permitted to adjourn by the vote of a majority of its members, the control of the labor would be placed in their hands. But according to the whole spirit of the Masonic svstem, the Master alone controls and directs the hours of labor. lu the 5th of the Old Charges, approved in 1722, it is declared that " All Masons employed shall meekly receive their wages without mur- muring or mutiny, and not desert tlie Master till the work is finished." Now as the Master alone can know when " the work is fin- ished," the selection of the time of closing must be vested in him. He is the sole judge of the proper period at which the labors of the Lodge should be terminated, and he may suspend business even in the middle of a debate, if he supposes that it is expedient to close the Lodge. Hence no motion for adjournment can ever be ad- mitted in a Masonic Lodge. Such a motion would be an interference with the preroga- tive of the Master, and could not tuerefore be entertained. This prerogative of opening and closing his Lodge is necessarily vested in the Mas- ter, because, by the nature of our Institu- tion, he is responsible to the Grand Lodge for the good conduct of the body over which he presides. He is charged, in those questions to which he is required to give his assent at his installation, to hold the Land- marks in veneration, and to conform to every edict of the Grand Lodge; and for any violation of the one or disooedience of the other by the Lodge, in his presence, he would be answerable to the supreme Ma- sonic authority. Hence the necessity that an arbitrary power should be conferred upon him, by the exercise of which he may at any time be enabled to prevent the adop- tion of resolutions, or the commission of any act which would be sub versi ve of, or contrary to, those ancient laws and usages which he has aworu to maintain and preserve. ADMIRATION ADONAI 17 Admiration, Sign of. A mode of recognition alluded to in the Most Excel- lent Master's degree, or the Gth of the Amer- ican Rite. Its introduction in that place is referred to a Masonic legend in connection with the visit of the Queen of Sheba to King Solomon, and. which states that, moved by the wide-spread reputation of the Israelitish monarch, she had repaired to Jerusalem to inspect the magnificent works of which she had heard so many encomiums. Upon arriving there, and be- holding for the first time the Temple, which glittered with gold, and which was so ac- curately adjusted in all its parts as to seem to be composed of but a single piece of marble, she raised her hands and eyes to heaven in an attitude of admiration, and at the same time exclaimed, "Rabbonil" equivalent to saying, " A most excellent master hath done this ! " This action has since been perpetuated in the ceremonies of the degree of Most Excellent Master. The legend is, however, no doubt apocry- phal, and is really to be considered only as allesorical, like so many other of the le- genSs of Masonry. See Sheba, Queen of. Admission. Although the Old Charges, approved in 1722, use the word admitted as applicable to those who are initiated into the mysteries of Freema- sonry, yet the General Regulations of 1721 employ the term admission in a sense dif- ferent from that oiinitiation. By the word makiny they imply the reception of a pro- fane into the Order, but by admission they designate the election of a Mason into a Lodge. Thus we find such expressions as these clearly indicating a difference in the meaning of the two words. In Reg. v. — "No man can be made or admitted a Ma- son of a particular Lodge." In Reg. vi. — " But no man can be entered a brother in any particular Lodge, or admitted to be a member thereof." And more distinctly in Reg. viii. — " No set or number of brethren shall withdraw or separate themselves from the Lodge in which they were made breth- ren or were afterwards admitted members." This distinction has not always been rig- idly preserved by recent writers ; but it is evident that, correctly speaking, we should always say of a profane who has been ini- tiated that he has been made a Mason, and of a Mason who has been afiiliated with a Lodge, that he has been admitted a mem- ber. The true definition of admission is, then, the reception of an unaffiliated bro- ther into membership. See Affiliation. Admonition. According to the ethics of Freemasonry, it is made a duty obliga- tory upon every member of the Order to conceal the faults of a brother, — that is, not to blazon forth his errors and infirmi- C 2 ties, — to let them be learned by the world from some other tongue than his, and to admonish him of them in private. So there is another but a like duty of obliga- tion, which instructs him to whisper good counsel in his brother's ear and to warn him of approaching danger. And this refers not more to the danger that is with- out and around him than to that which is within him ; not more to the peril that springs from the concealed foe who would waylay him and covertly injure him, than to that deeper peril of those faults and in- firmities which lie within his own heart, and which, if not timely crushed by good and earnest resolution of amendment, will, like the ungrateful serpent in the fable, become warm with life only to sting the bosom that has nourished them. Admonition of a brother's fault is, then, the duty of every mason, and no true one will, for either fear or favor, neglect its performance. But as the duty is Masonic, so is there a Masonic way in which that duty should be discharged. We must ad- monish not with self-sufficient pride in our own reputed goodness — not in imperious tones, as though we looked down in scorn upon the degraded offender — not in lan- guage that, by its harshness, will wound rather than win, will irritate more than it will reform ; but with that persuasive gen- tleness that gains the heart — with the all-subduing influences of " mercy unre- strained" — with the magic might of love — with the language and the accents of affection, which mingle grave displeasure for the offence with grief and pity for the offender. This, and this alone, is Masonic admo- nition. I am not to rebuke my brother in anger, for I too have my faults, and I dare not draw around me the folds of my gar- ment lest they should be polluted by my neighbor's touch ; but I am to admonish in private, not before the world, for that would degrade him ; and I am to warn him, perhaps from my own example, how vice ever snould be followed by sorrow, for that goodly sorrow leads to repentance, and re- pentance to amendment, and amendment to joy. Adonai. In Hebrew 'JIX. ^eing the plural of excellence for Adon, and signify- ing the Lord. The Jews, who reverently avoided the pronunciation of the sacred name Jehovah, were accustomed, when- ever that name occurred, to substitute for it the word Adonai in reading. As to the use of the plural form instead of the sin- gular, the Rabbins say, " Every word indic- ative of dominion, though singular in meaning, is made plural in form." This is called the "pluralis excellentiae." The 18 ADONHIRAM ADONHIRAMITE Talmudists also say, (Buxtroff, Lex. Thfm.,) that the telragruininaton is called Shem hamphorash, the name that is explained, because it is explained, uttered, and set forth by the word Adonai. (See Jehovah and Shem Hamphorash.) Adonai is used as a significant word in several of the high degrees of Masonry, and may almost always be considered as allusive to or symbolic of the True Word. Atloiiliirain. This has been adopted by the disciples of Adonhiramite Masonry as the spelling of the name of the persoa known in Scripture and in other Masonic systems as Adoniram, (which see.) They correctly derive the word from the Hebrew Adon and hiram, signifying the master who is exalted, which is the true meaning of Adoniram, the p| or A being omitted in the Hebrew by the coalescence of the two words. Hiram Abif has also sometimes been called Adonhiram, the Adon having been bestowed on him by Solomon, it is said, as a title of honor. Adonhiramite Masonry. Of the numerous controversies which arose from the middle to near the end of the 18th cen- tury on the continent of Europe, and espe- cially in France, among the students of Masonic philosophy, and which so fre- quently resulted m the invention of new degrees and the establishment of new rites, not the least prominent was that which re- lated to the person and character of the Temple builder. The question. Who was the architect of King Solomon's Temple? was answered differently by different the- orists, and each answer gave rise to a new system, a fact by no means surprising in those times, so fertile in the production of new Masonic systems. The general theory was then, as it is now, that this architect was Hiram Abif, the widow's son, who had been sent to King Solomon by Hiram, King of Tyre, as a precious gift, and " a curious and cunning workman."' This theory was sustained by the statements of the Jewish Scriptures, so far as they threw any light on the Masonic legend. It was the theory of the English Masons from the earliest times ; was enunciated as historically cor- rect in the first edition of the Book of Con- stitutions, published in 1723 ; has continued ever since to be the opinion of all EngliHh and American Masons ; and is, at this day, the only theory entertained by any Mason in the two countries who has a theory at all on the subject. This, therefore, is the ortho- dox faith of Masonry. But such was not the case, in the last century, on the continent of Europe. At first, the controversy arose not as to the man himself, but as to his proper appella- tion. All parties agreed that tue arcnitect of the Temple was that Hiram, the widow's son, who is described in the first Book of Kings, chapter vii., verses 18 and 14, and in the second Book of Chronicles, chapter ii., verses Vi and 14, as having come out of Tyre with the other workmen of the Temple who had been sent by King Hiram to Solo- mon. But one party called him Hiram Abif, and the other, admitting that his orig- inal name was Hiram, supposed that, in consequence of the skill he had displayed in the construction of the Temple, he had re- ceived the honorable afiix oi' Adori, signify- ing Lord or Afaster, whence his name became Adonhiram. There was, however, at the Temple an- other Adoniram, of whom it will be neces- sary in passing to say a few words, for the better understanding of the present sub- ject. The first notice that we have of this Adoniram in Scripture is in the 2d Book of Samuel, chapter xx., verse 24, where, in the abbreviated form of his name, Adoram, he is said to have been "over the tribute" in the house of David; or, as Gesenius translates it, " prefect over the tribute ser- vice," or, as we might say in modern phrase, principal collector of the taxes. Seven years afterwards, we find him ex- ercising the same office in the household of Solomon ; for it is said in 1 Kings iv. 6, that Adoniram, " the son of Abdu, was oyer the tribute." And lastly, we hear of him still occupying the same station in the household of King Eehoboam, the succes- sor of Solomon. Forty-seven years after he is first mentioned in the Book of Samuel, he is stated (1 Kings xii. 18) to have been stoned to death, while in the discharge of his duty, by the people, who were justly in- dignant at the oppressions of his master. Although commentators have been at a loss to decide whether the tax-receiver under David, under Solomon, and under Eeho- boam was the same person, there seems to be no reason to doubt it ; for, as Kitto says, (Encye. Bib.,) "it appears very unlikely that even two persons of the same name should successively bear the same office, in an age when no example occurs of the father's name being given to his son. We find also that not more than forty-seven years elapse between the first and last- mentioned of the Adoniram who was 'over the tribute ; ' and as this, although a long term of service, is not too long for one lile, and as the person who held the office in the beginning of Rehoboam's reign had served in it long enough to make himself odious to the people, it appears on the whole most probable that one and the same person is intended throughout." The legends and traditions of Masonry ADONHIKAMITE ADONHIRAMITE 19 ■which connect this Adoniram with the Temple at Jerusalem derive their support from a single passage in the first Book of Kings (chapter v. 14), where it is said that Solomon made a levy of thirty thousand workmen from among the Israelites; that he sent these in courses of ten thousand a month to labor on Mount Lebanon, and that he placed Adoniram over these as their superintendent. The ritual-makers of France, who were not all Hebrew scholars, nor well versed in Biblical history, seem, at times, to have confounded two important personages, and to have lost all distinction between Hiram the builder, who had been sent from the court of the king of Tyre, and Adoniram, who had always been an officer in the court of King Solomon. And this error was ex- tended and facilitated when they had pre- fixed the title Adon, that is to say, lord or master, to the name of the former, making him Adon Hiram, or the Lord Hiram. Thus, in the year 1744, one Louis Tra- venol published at Paris, under the pseu- donym of Leonard Gabanon, a work entitled, Catechume des Franc- Maqons, precede d'une abrege de Phistoire d'Adoram, etc., et d'une explication des ceremoniea qui a'observant a lareception des Maltres, etc. In this work the author says: "Besides the cedars of Lebanon, Hiram made a much more valuable gift to Solomon, in the per- son of Adonhirara, of his own race, the son of a widow of the tribe of Naphtali. His father, who was named Hur, was an excel- lent architect and worker in metals. Solo- mon, knowing his virtues, his merit, and his talents, distinguished him by the most eminent position, intrusting to him the construction of the Temple and the super- intendence of all the workmen." From the language of this extract, and from the reference in the title of the book to Adoram, which we know was one of the names of Solomon's tax-collector, it is evi- dent that the author of the catechism has confounded Jliram Abif, who came out of Tyre, with Adoniram, the son of Abda, who had always lived at Jerusalem; that is to say, with unpardonable ignorance of Scrip- ture history and Masonic tradition, he has supposed the two to be one and the same person. Notwithstanding this literary blun- der, the catechism became popular with many Masons of that day, and thus arose the first schism or error in relation to the legend of the third degree. At length, other ritualists, seeing the in- consistency of referring the character of Hiram, the widow's son, to Adoniram, the receiver of taxes, and the impossibility of reconciling the discordant facts in the'life of both, resolved to cut the Gordian knot by refusing any Masonic position to the former, and making the latter, alone, the architect of the Temple. It cannot be denied that Josephus states that Adoniram, or, as he calls him, Adoram, was, at the very be- ginning of the labor, placed over the work- men who prepared the materials on Mount Lebanon, and that he speaks of Hiram, the widow's son, simply as a skilful artisan, especially in metals, who had only made all the mechanical works about the Temple according to the will of Solomon. This apparent color of authority for their oprn- ious was readily claimed by the Adoniram- ites, and hence one of their most prominent ritualists, Guillemain de St. Victor, [Bee. Free.,) propoundstheir theory thus: " Weall agree that the Master's degree is founded on the architect of the temple. Now, Scripture says very positively, in the 4th verse of the 6th chapter of the Book of Kings, that the person was Adonhiram. Josephus and all the sacred writers say the same thing, and undoubtedly distinguish him from Hiram the Tyrian, the worker in metals. So that it is Adonhiram, then, whom we are bound to honor." There were, therefore, in the eighteenth century, from about the middle to near the end of it, three schools among the Masonic ritualists, the members of which were di- vided in opinion as to the proper identity of this Temple builder: 1 . Those who supposed him to be Hiram, the son of a widow of the tribe of Naph- tali, whom the king of Tyre had sent to King Solomon, and whom they designated as Hiram Abif. This was the original and most popular school, and which we now suppose to have been the orthodox one. 2. Those who believed this Hiram that came out of Tyre to have been the archi- tect, but who supposed that, in consequence of his excellence of character, Solomon had bestowed upon him the appellation of Adon, "Lord" or "Master," calling him Adonhiram. As this theory was wholly unsustained by Scripture history or pre- vious Masonic tradition, the school which supported it never became prominent or popular, and soon ceased to exist, although the error on which it is based is rijjpeated at intervals in the blunder of some modern French ritualists. 3. Those who, treating this Hiram, the widow's son, as a subordinate and unimpor- tant character, entirely ignored him in their ritual, and asserted that Adoram, or Adoni- ram, or Adonhiram, as the name was spelled by these ritualists, the son of Abda, the collector of tribute and the superintendent of the levy on Mount Lebanon, was the true architect of the Temple, and the one to whom all the legendary incidents of the 20 ADONHIEAMITE ADONHIRAMITE third degree of Masonry were to be re- ferred. This scliool, in consequence of the boldness with which, unlike the second school, it refused all compromise with the orthodox party and assumed a wholly inde- pendent theory, became, for a time, a prom- inent schism in Masonry. Its disciples bestowed upon the believers in Hiram Abif the na,me. of JUramite Masons, adopted as their own distinctive appellation that of Adonhiramitea, and, having developed the system which they practised into a pe- culiar rite, called it Adonhiramite Masonry. Who was the original founder of the rite of Adonhiramite Masonry, and at what precise time it was first established, are questions that cannot now be answered with any certainty. Thory does not at- tempt to reply to either in his Nomencla- ture of Rites, where, if anything was known on the subject, we would be most likely to find it. Kagon, it is true, in his Ortlw- doxie Magonnique, attributes the rite to the B;iron de Tschoudy. But as he also as- signs the authorship of the Reoeuil Pre- cieux (a work of which I shall directly speak more fully) to the same person, in which statement he is known to be mis- taken, there can be but little doubt that he is wrong in the former as well as in the latter opinion. The Chevalier de Lussy, better known as the Baron de Tschoudy, was, it is true, a distinguished ritualist. He founded the Order of the Blazing Star, and took an active part in the operations of the Council of Emperors of the East and West; but I have met with no evi- dence, outside of Eagon's assertion, that he established or had anything to do with the Adonhiramite rite. I am disposed to attribute the develop- ment into a settled system, if not the actual creation, of the rile of Adonhiramite Ma- sonry to Louis Guillemain de St. Victor, who published at Paris, in the year 1781, a work entitled Receuil Precisux de la Ma- gonnerie Adonhiramite, etc. As this volume contained only the ritual of the first four degrees, it was followed, in 1785, by another, which embraced the higher degrees of the rite. No one who peruses these volumes can fail to perceive that the author writes like one who has invented, or, at least, materially modified the rite which is the subject of his labors. At all events, this work furnishes the only authentic account that we possess of the organization of the Adonhiramite system of Masonry. The rite of Adonhiramite Masonry con- sisted of twelve degrees, which were as follows, the names being given in French as well as in English : 1 . Apprentice — Apprente, 2. Fellow-Craft — Compagnon. 3. Master Mason — Maitre. 4. Perfect Master — Maitre Parfait. 6. Elect of Nine— jE/tt dea Neuf. 6. Elect of Perignan — Elu de Perignan. 7. Elect of Fifteen — Elu rfe» Quinze. 8. Minor Architect — Petit Architecte. 9. Grand Architect, or Scottish Fellow- Craft — Grand Architecte, on Compagnon Ecossais. 10. Scottish Master — Maitre Ecoaaait. 11. Knight of the Sword, Knight of the East, or of the Eagle — Chevalier de I'JSpee, Chevalier de V Orient, ou de UAigle. 12. Knight of Kose Croix — Chevalier Rose Croix. This is the entire list of Adonhiramite degrees. Thory and Eagon have both erred in giving a thirteenth degree, namely, the Noachite, or Prussian Knight. They have fallen into this mistake because Guil- lemain has inserted this degree at the end of his second volume, but simply as a Ma- sonic curiosity, having been translated, as he says, from the German by M. de Beraye. It has no connection with the preceding series of degrees, and Guillemain posi- tively declares that the Eose Croix is the ne plus ultra, the summit and termination, of his rite. Of these twelve degrees, the first ten are occupied with the transactions of the first Temple; the eleventh with matters relating to the construction of the second Temple; and the twelfth with that Christian sym- bolism of Freemasonry which is peculiar to the Eose Croix of every rite. All of the degrees have been borrowed from the Ancient and Accepted Eite, with slight modifications, which have seldom improved their character. On the whole, the extinc- tion of the Adonhiramite Eite can scarcely be considered as a loss to Masonry. Before concluding, a few words may be said on the orthography of the title. As the rite derives its peculiar characteristic from the fact that it founds the third de- gree on the assumed legend that Adonirara, the son of Abda and the receiver of tribute, was the true architect of the Temple, and not Hiram the widow's son, it should prop- erly have been styled the Adoniramite Eite, and not the Adonhiramite; and so it would probably have been called if Guillemain, who gave it form, had been acquainted with the Hebrew language, for he would then have known that the name of his hero was Adoniram and not Adonhiram. The term Adonhiramite Masons should really have been applied to the second school de- scribed in this article, whose disciples ad- mitted that Hiram Abif was the architect of the Temple, but who supposed that Sol- omon had bestowed the prefix Adon upon ADONIKAM ADONIS 21 him as a mark of honor, calling him Adon- hiram. But Guillemain having committed the blunder in the name of his Rite, it con- tinued to be repeated by his successors, and it would perhaps now be inconvenient to correct the error. Ragon, however, and a few other recent writers, have ventured to take this step, and in their works the sys- tem is called Adoniraraite Masonry. Adonirani. The first notice that we have of Adoniram in Scripture is in the 2d Book of Samuel (xx. 24), where, in the abbreviated form of his name Adoram, he is said to have been " over the tribute," in the house of David, or, as Gesenius trans- lates it, " prefect over the tribute service, tribute master," that is to say, in modern phrase, he was the chief receiver of the taxes. Clarke calls him " Chancellor of the Exchequer." Seven years afterwards we find him exercising the same office in the household of Solomon, for it is said (L Kings iv. 6) that "Adoniram the son of Abda was over the tribute." And lastly, we hear of him still occupying the same station in the household of King Reho- boam, the successor of Solomon. Forty- seven years after he is first mentioned in the Book of Samuel, he is stated (1 Kings xii. 18) to have been stoned to death, while in the discharge of his duty, by the people, who were justly indignant at the oppres- sions of his master. Although commenta- tors have been at a loss to determine whether the tax- receiver under David, under Solomon, and under Rehoboam was the same person, there seems to be no reason to doubt it; for, as Kitto says, "It appears very unlikely that even two per- sons of the same name should successively bear the same office, in an age when no example occurs of the father's name being given to his son. We find, also, that not more than forty-seven years elapse between the first and last mention of the Adoniram who was ' over the tribute ; ' and as this, although a long term of service, is not too long for one life, and as the person who held the office in the beginning of Reho- boam's reign had served in it long enough to make himself odious to the people, it appears, on the whole, most probable that one and the same person is intended throughout." {Ehcyc. Bib. Lit.) Adoniram plays an important r6le in the Masonic system, especially in the high degrees, but the time of action in which he appears is confined to the period occu- pied in the construction of -the Temple. The legends and traditions which connect him with that edifice derive their support from a single passage in the 1st Book of Kings (v. 14), where it is said that Solo- mon made a levy of thirty thousand work- men from among the Israelites ; that he sent these in courses of ten thousand a month to labor on Mount Lebanon, and that he placed Adoniram over these as their superintendent. From this brief statement the Adoniramite Masons have deduced the theory, as may be seen in the preceding article, that Adoniram was the architect of the Temple; while the Hiram- ites, assigning this important office to Hi- ram Abif, still believe that Adoniram oc- cupied an important part in the construction of that edifice. He has been called " the first of the Fellow Crafts ; " is said in one tradition to have been the brother-in-law of Hiram Abif, the latter having demanded of Solomon the hand of Adoniram's sister in marriage; and that the nuptials were honored by the kings of Israel and Tyre with a public celebration ; and another tra- dition, preserved in the Royal Master's degree, informs us that he was the one to whom the three Grand Masters had in- tended first to communicate that knowledge which they had reserved as a fitting reward to be bestowed upon all meritorious crafts- men at the completion of the Temple. It is scarcely necessary to say that these and many other Adoniramic legends, often fan- ciful, and without any historical authority, are but the outward clothing of abstruse symbols, some of which have been pre- served, and others lost in the lapse of time and the ignorance and corruptions of mod- ern ritualists. Adoniram, in, Hebrew, DTJIX, com- pounded of px, ADON, Lord, and Din, HiRaM, altitude, signifies the Lord of alti- tude. It is a word of great importance, and frequently used among the sacred words of the high degrees in all the Rites. Adoniramite Masonry. See Adonhiramite Masonry. Adonis, Mysteries of. An investi- gation of the mysteries of Adonis peculi- arly claims the attention of the Masonic student: first, because, in their symbolism and in their esoteric doctrine, the religious object for which they were instituted, and the mode in which that object is attained, they bear a nearer analogical resemblance to the Institution of Freemasonry than do any of the other mysteries or systems of initiation of the ancient world ; and, secondly, because their chief locality brings them into a very close connection with the early history and reputed origin of Free- masonry. For they were principally cele- brated at Byblos, a city of Phoenicia, whose scriptural name was Gebal, and whose inhabitants were the Giblites or Giblemites, who are referred to in the 1st Book of Kings (chap. v. 18) as being the " stone-squarers " employed by King Solo- 22 ADONIS ADONIS mon in building the Temple. Hence there must have evidently been a very intimate connection, or at least certainly a very fre- quent intercommunication, between the workmen of the first Temple and the in- habitants of Byblos, the seat of the Adoni- sian mysteries, and the place whence the worshippers of that rite were disseminated over other regions of country. These historical circumstances invite us to an examination of the system of initia- tion which was practised at Byblos, because we may find in it something that was probably suggestive of the symbolic system of instruction which was subsequently so prominent a feature in the system of Free- masonry. Let us first examine the myth on which the Adonisiac initiation was founded. The mythological legend of Adonis is, that he was the son of Myrrha and Cinyras, King of Cyprus. Adonis was possessed of such surpassing beauty, that Venus became enamored with him, and adopted him as her favorite. Subsequently Adonis, who was a great hunter, died from a wound in- flicted oy a wild boar on Mount Lebanon. Venus flew to the succor of her favorite, but she came too late. Adonis was dead. On his descent to the infernal regions, Pro- serpine became, like Venus, so attracted by his beauty, that, notwithstanding the en- treaties of the goddess of love, she refused to restore him to earth. At length the jlrayers of the desponding Venus were listened to with favor by Jupiter, who reconciled the dispute between the two goddesses, and by whose decree Proserpine was compelled to consent that Adonis should spend six months of each year alternately with herself and Venus. This is the story on which the Greek l)oet Bion founded his exquisite idyll en- titled the Epitaph of Adonis, the beginning of which has been thus rather inefiiciently "done into English." " I and the Loves Adonis dead deplore : The beautiful Adouis is indeed Departed, parted from us. Sleep no more In purple, Cypris I but in watcliet weed. All wretched I beat thv breast and all aread— 'Adonis is no more.' iPhe Loves and I Lament him. 'Oh I her grief to sec liim bleed, Smitten by white tooth on whiter thigh Out-breathing life's faint sigh upon th . tain high.' " sigh upon the moun- It is evident that Bion referred the contest of Venus and Proserpine for Adonis to a period subsequent to his death, from the concluding lines, in which he says: " The Muses, too, lament the son of Ciny- ras, and invoke him in their song; but he does not heed them, not because he does not wish, but because Proserpine will not release him." This was, indeed, the favor- ite form of the myth, and on it was framed the symbolism of the ancient mystery. But there are other Grecian mythologues that relate the tale of Adonis differently. According to these, he was the product of the incestuous connection of Cinyras and Myrrha. Cinyras subsequently, on discov- ering the crime of his daughter, pursued her with a drawn sword, intending to kill her. Myrrha entreated the gods to make her invisible, and they changed her into a myrrh tree. Ten months after the myrrh tree opened, and the young Adonis was born. This is the form of the myth that has been adopted by Ovid, who gives it with all its moral horrors in the tenth book (298-524) of his Metamorphoses. Venus, who was delighted with the ex- traordinary beauty of the boy, put him in , a coffer, unknown to all the gods, and gave him to Proserpine to keep and to nurture in the under world. But Proserpine had no sooner beheld him than she became enamored with him and refiised, when Venus applied for him, to surrender him to her rival. The subject was then referred to Jupiter, who decreed that Adonis should have one-third of the year to himself, should be another third with Venus, and the remainder of the time with Proserpine. Adonis gave his own portion to Venus, and lived happily with her till, having offended Diana, he was killed by a wild boar. The mythographer Pharnutus gives a still different story, and says that Adonis was the grandson of Cinyras, and fled with his father, Ammon, into Egypt, whose people he civilized, taught them agricul- ture, and enacted many wise laws for their government. He subsequently passed over into Syria, and was wounded in the thigh by a wild boar while hunting on Mount Lebanon. His wife, Isis, or Astarte, and the_ people of Phoenicia and Egypt, sup- posing that the wound was mortal, pro- foundly deplored his death. But he after- wards recovered, and their grief was re- placed by transports of joy. AH the myths. It will be seen, agree in his actual or sup- posed death by violence, in the grief lor liia loss, in his recovery or restoration to life, and in the consequent joy thereon. And on these facts, are founded the Adonisian mysteries which were established in his honor. Of these mysteries we are now to speak. The mysteries of Adonis are said to have been first established at Babylon, and thence to have passed over into Syria, their princi- pal seat being at the city of Byblos in that country. The legend on which the mys- teries was founded contained a recital of his ADONIS ADONIS 23 tragic death and his subsequent restoration to life, as has just been related. The mys- teries were celebrated in a vast temple at Byblos. The ceremonies commenced about the season of the year when the river Adonis began to be swollen by the floods at its source. The Adonis, now called Nahr el Ibrahim, or Abraham's river, is a small river of Syria, which, rising in Mount Lebanon, enters the Mediterranean a few miles south of Byblos. Maundrell, the great traveller, records the fact which he himself witnessed, that after a sudden fall of rain the river, descending in floods, is tinged with a deep red by the soil of the hills in which it takes its rise, and imparts this color to the sea, into which it is discharged, for a consider- able distance. The worshippers of Adonis were readily led to believe that this reddish discoloration of the water of the river was a symbol of his blood. To this Milton alludes when speaking of Thamrauz, which was the name given by the idolatrous Israelites to the Syrian god : " Tharamuz came next behind. Whose aiiiinal wound in Lebanon allured The Syrian damsels to lament his fete, In am'rous ditties, all a summer's day; While smootli Adonis, from his native rook, Ran purple to the sea, suffused with blood Of Tnammuz yearly wounded." — i'aradise Lost. Whether the worship of Thammuz among the idolatrous and apostate Jews was or was not identical with that of Adonis among the Syrians' has been a topic of much discussion among the learned. The only reference to Thammuz in the Scriptures is in the Book of Ezekiel, ( viii. 14.) The prophet there represents that he was transported in spirit, or in a vision, to the Temple at Jerusalem, and that, being led " to the door of tlie gate of the house of Jehovah, which was towards the north, he beheld there women sitting weeping for Thammuz." The Vulgate has translated Thammuz by Adonis : " EX, ecee ibi midieres ledebant, plangentes Adonidem; " i. e., " And heboid women were sitting there, mourning for Adonis." St. Jerome, in his commen- tary on this passage, says that since, accord- ing to the heathen fiible, Adonis had been slain in the month of June, the Syrians gave the name of Thammuz to this month, when they annually celebrated a solemnity, in which he is lamented by the women as dead, and his subsequent restoration to life is celebrated with songs and praises. And in a passage of another work he laments that Bethlehem was overshadowed by a grave of Thammuz, and that " in the cave where the in&nt Christ once cried the lover of Venus was bewailed," thus evidently making Thammuz and Adonis identical. The story of Thammuz, as related in the ancient work of Ibn Wahshik on The Agri- culture of the Nabatheana, and quoted at length by Maimonides in his Mweh Nevoch- im, describes Thammuz as a false prophet, who was put to death for his idolatrous practices, but nothing in that fable connects him in any way with Adonis. But in the Apology of St. Melito, of which the Syriac translation remains, we have the oldest Christian version of the myth. Mr. W. A. Wright, of Trinity College, Cambridge, gives, iu Smith's Dictionary of the Bible, the following liberal rendering of the Syriac: " The sons of Phoenicia worshipped Balthi, the queen of Cyprus. For she loved Tamuzo, the son of Cuthar, the king of the Phoenicians, and forsook her kingdom, and came and dwelt in Grebal, a fortress of the Phoenicians, and at that time she made all the villages subject to Cuthar, the king. For before Tamuzo she had loved Ares, and committed adultery with him, and Hephaes- tus, her husband, caught her and was jeal- ous of her ; and he (t. e.. Ares,) came and slew Tamuzo on Lebanon, while he made a hunting among the wild boars. And from that time Balthi remained in Gebal, and died in the city of Apatha, where Tamuzo was buried." This is nothing more than the Syrian myth of Adonis; and, as St. Melito lived in the second century, it was doubtless on his authority that Jerome adopted the opinion that the Thammuz of "alienated Judah" was the same as the Adonis of Syria; an opinion which, al- though controverted by some, has been gen- erally adopted by subsequent commenta- tors. The sacred rites of the Adonisian mys- teries began with mourning, and the days which were consecrated to the celebration of the death of Adonis were passed in lugu- brious cries and wailings, the celebrants often scourging themselves. On the last of the days of mourning, funereal rites were performed in honor of the god. On the following day the restoration of Adonis to life was announced, and was received with the most enthusiastic demonstrations of joy- Duncan, in a very well written work on The Religions of Profane Antiquity, (p. 350,) gives a similar description of these rites: "The objects represented were the grief of Venus and the death and resurrec- tion of Adonis. An entire week was con- sumed in these ceremonies ; all the houses were covered with crape or black linen ; funeral processions traversed the streets; while the devotees scourged themselves, uttering frantic cries. The orgies were then commenced, in which the mystery of the 24 ADONIS ADONIS death of Adonis was depicted. During the next twenty -four hours all the people fasted ; at the expiration of which time the priests announced the resurrection of the god. Joy now prevailed, and music and dancing con- cluded the festival." Movers, who is of high authority among scholars, says, in his Phonizier, (vol. i., p. 200,) that " the celebration of the Adon- isian mysteries began with the disappear- ance of Adonis, after which follows the search for him by the women. The myth represents this by the search of the goddess after her beloved, which is analogous to the search of Persephone in the Eleusinia ; of Harmonia at Samothrace; of lo in Antioch. In autumn, when the rains washed the red earth on its banlcs, the river Adonis was of a blood-red color, which was the signal for the inhabitants of Byblos to begin the lament. Then they said that Adonis was killed by Mars or the boar, and that his blood, running in the river, colored the water." Julius Fermicius Maternus, an ecclesi- astical writer of the fourth century, thus describes the funereal ceremonies and the resurrection of Adonis in his treatise De Errore Profanarum Religionum, dedicated to the Emperors Constantius and Constans : " On a certain night an image is laid out upon a bed and bewailed in mournful strains. At length, when all have suffi- ciently expressed their feigned lamentation, light is introduced, and the priest, having first anointed the lips of those who had been weeping, whispers with a gentle mur- mur the following formula, which in the original is in the form of a Greek distich : Have courage, ye initiate) .' The god having been preserved out of grief, salvation will arise to us." This annunciation of the recovery or resurrection of Adonis was made, says Sainte-Oroix, in his Mysteres du Paganisme, (t. ii., p. 106,) by the inhabitants of Alexan- dria to those of Byblos. The letter which was to carry the news was placed in an earthen vessel and intrusted to the sea, which floated it to Byblos, where Phoeni- cian women were waiting on the shore to receive it. Lucian says, in his treatise on The Syrian Goddess, that a head was every year transported from Egypt to By- blos by some supernatural means. Both stories are probably apocryplial, or at least the act was, if performed at all, the result of the cunning invention of the priests. Sainte-Croix describes, from Lucian's treatise on The Syrian Goddess, the magnifi- cence of the temple at Hierapolis; but he certainly found no authority in that writer for stating that the mysteriesof Adoni.s were there celebrated. The Rites practised at Hierapolis seem rather to have had some connection with the arkite worship, which prevailed so extensively in the pagan world of antiquity. The magnificent temple, which in after times the Roman Crassus plundered, and the treasures of which it took several days to weigh and examine, was dedicated to Astarte, the goddess who presided over the elements of nature and the productive seeds of things, and who was in fact the mythological personification of the passive powers of Nature. The mythological legend, which has been detailed in the beginning of this article, was but the exoteric story, intended for tho uninitiated. There was also — as there was in all these mystical initiations of the an- cients, an esoteric meaning — a sacred and secret symboliami, which constituted the arcana of the mysteries, and which was communicated only to the initiated. Adonis, which is derived from the He- brew px, Adon — lord or master — was one of the titles given to the sun ; and hence the worship of Adonis formed one of the modifications of that once most ex- tensive system of religion — sun worship. Godwyn, in his Moses and Aaron, (1. iv., c. 2,) says: "Concerning Adonis, whom sometimes ancient authors call Osiris, there are two things remarkable : aphanis- mos, the death or loss of Adonis ; and heuresis, the finding of him again. By the death or loss of Adonis we are to under- stand the departure of the sun ; by his finding again we are to understand his return." Macrobius, in his Saturnalia, more fully explains the allegory thus: "Philoso- phers have given the name of Venus to the superior or northern hemisphere, of which we occupy a part, and that of Pro- serpine to the interior or southern. Hence, among the Assyrians and Phoenicians, Ve- nus is said to be in tears when the sun, in his annual course through the twelve signs of the zodiac, passes over to our antipodes; for of these twelve signs six are said to be sujjerior and six inferior. When the sun is in the inferior signs, and the days are consequently short, the goddess is supposed to wee{) for the temporary death or priva- tion of the sun, detained by Proserpine, whom we regard as the divinity of the southern or antipodal regions. And Adonis is said to be restored to Venus when the sun, having traversed the six inferior signs, enters those of our hemisphere, bringing with it an increase of light and lengthened days. The boar, which is supposed to have killed Adonis, is an emblem of win- ter; for this animal, covered with rough bristles, delights in cold, wet, and miry sit- uations, and his favorite