THE MASONIC LADDER: OR THE (lilt fte S to t1rient Ireemasorg, BEING A PRACTICAL EXHIBIT, IN PROSE AND VERSE, OF THE MORAL PRECEPTS, TRADITIONS, OF THE DEGREES OF ENTERED APPRENTICE, FELLOW CRAFT, MASTER MASON, MARK MASTER, PAST MASTER, MOST EXCELLENT MASTER, ROYAL ARCH MASON, ROYAL MASTER AND SELECT MASTER, BY JOHN SHERER, Compiler of the " Masonic Carpets of Blue Lodge, Chapter and Council Masonry," and other Masonic Publications. CINCINNATI, OHIO: PUBLISHED-BY SHERER & 00. 1 866. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866, BY JOHN SHERER, In the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Ohio. TO "(A MULTITUDE, WHICH NO MAN CAN NUMBER, OF ALL NATIONS AND KINPREDS AND PEOPLE AND TONGUES; WORSHIPING A COMMON DEITY; JOINING HANDS AROUND A COMMON ALTAR; ENGAGED UPON LIKE DEEDS OF BENEFICENCE ON EARTH, AND CASTING HOPE'S STRONG ANCHOR UPON THE SAME HEAVENLY SHORE; Br*e WnaS i Xt-idev, ILLUSTRATING THE THREE GREAT SYSTEMS OF SYMBOLICAL) CAPITULAR AND CRYPTIC MASONRY, IS MOST RESPECTFULLY AND FRATERNALLY 8 OIIrtaSEE INpresenting a new volume to the Masonic Fraternity, and soliciting their patronage for it, it is incuznbent on the compiler to show wherein it differs from, and claims superiority over, other publications already in the market. The great number of Masons do not sufficiently discriminate between the doctrines, covencants and aims of the different degrees. The Three, Seven, or Nine Degrees, conferred in the variouts Mlasonic bodies, are apt to be jumbled 2p in the minds of their recipients, as though they were only so many sections of the same Degree. The more striking parts of the ceremony are remembered, while the instructions, which give the rational explanations of the emblems, are forgotten. Something, then, is needed which the brother can take home with him and read, to refresh his mind upon what is, in reality, the only practical part qf the Masonic institution. For this part the "Monitor" is used, and vi PREFACE. so far as it goes it supplies that want. Buzt the "Monitor" is not sufficiently difruse. There is not sufficient latitude given to the historical branch of the subject; nor in the -moral application of Masonry is the "Monitor" precise and distinct. Something more has been wanted by generations of lMasons, and it is strange that none of the Masonic authors have attempted to sTpply that want. "a The Masonic Ladder" has been prepared with reference to this very want. It is so arranged that the brother may, by its perusal, recall the more striking parts qf the -Degrees he has taken; may judge of the extent of his covenants; may understand what bearings the history and geography of the Holy Land have utpon the traditions that have been communicated to him; and may trace out to its ftdll extent the excellent morality taught in each Degree. At the same time that " The Lasonic Ladder" assists the brother to remount the steps he has taken, and enjoy over again the pleasant thoughts experienced when he first took them, they communicate no secrets to an outsider. Like the Bible itself; lwhich is full of Masonic secrets to the PRE FACE. vii initiated, "The Masonic Ladder" can not open the way to the arcana of the Order save to those who have once penetrated to them. Thie compiler has had able assistance in the preparation of this volume, Laal all the matter contained in it, whether original or selected, has been re-written and, adapted to-the plan upon which the book was prepared. The compiler is so well known as the author and publisher o' Sherer's "'Masonic Carpets" and "'Masonic -Degree-Books," that he will be indulged in saying that "The Masonic Ladder" is prepared in strict accordance with those well-known and popular productions. The form of the Emblems, and the order of their arrangement, were guides in comnbining "'7The Masonic Ladder," so that the two may go together. Every Lodge that has heretqofbre purchased a Carpet, or may hereafter sbp ly itself' with a -Degree-Book, can now have a volume explanatory of it. This is a desideratum long sought for by the Lodges. CINCINNATI. OHIO, JANUARY, 1866. TlHE FIRST ORDER IN FREEMASONRY. THE SYMBOLICAL DEGREES: CONSISTING OF. THE ENTERED APPRENTICE, THE FELLOW CRAFT, AND THE MASTER MASON. THESE three Degrees are conferred, according to the system adopted throughout the Masonic world, in Lodges of Symbolical Masonry. The ballot is taken in the Third or Master Mason's Degree, absolute unanimity being essential to an election. All discipline for vice, immorality, improprieties, and the violation of Masonic laws, originates in this Order of Masonry. ASK, ahd ye shall receive; SEEK, ye shall surely find;'KNocK, ye shall no resistance meet, If come with ready mind; For all that AsK, and ask aright, Are welcome to our Lodge to-night. Lay down the bow and spear; Resign the sword and shield: Forget the arts of warfare here, The arms of peace to wield; For all that SEEK, and seek aright, Are welcome to our Lodge to-night. Bring hither thoughts of peace; Bring hither words of love: Diffuse the pure and holy joy, That comneth from above; For all that KNOCK, and knock aright, Are welcome to our Lodge to-night. ASK help of Him that's high; SEEK grace of Him that's true: KNOCK patiently, the hand is nigh, Will open unto you; For all that ASK, SEEK, KNOCK aright, Are welcome to our Lodge to-night. THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. WHERE two or three assemble round In work the Lord approves, His spirit with the group is found For't is the place He loves: Be now all hearts to friendship given, For we, the Sons of Light, are seven. Bring here the Gavel and the Gauge, Those implements renowned; And from each conscience disengage The faults that there abound: Be now afar each folly driven, For we, the Sons of Light, are seven. Display the Law, the volume grace With Compass and with Square; Illume the tapers in their place, And all for work prepare: We'll please our Master well this even, For we, the Sons of Light, are seven. Spread o'er us yon rich Canopy, Set up the Ladder high, That angel-visitants may see And from their stations fly: Where Faith, Hope, Charity have striven, And we, the Sons of Light, are seven. THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. THE FIRST SECTION. THPE THEORY OF THE DEGREE OF ENTERED APPRENTICE. THE Degree of Entered Apprentice is the initial letter of the Masonic alphabet, the first round in the ladder of grades, variously numbering three, seven, nine, eleven, twenty-nine, one hundred and twenty-five, or whatever figures the fancy of modern ritualists may assume to embrace all the Degrees of Freemasonry. An Entered Apprentice is a beginner, a neophyte. All that is explained to him in the First Degree must be in the sense of laying down a foundation; for he can have no previous information or instruction upon which to base it. Yet the Entered Apprentice, in theory, is already a Mason, even before he enters the Lodge; that is, he must be already prepared in heart, for there is nothing in Masonic science that can do the work of heart-preparation. And the neophyte must have had some exoteric knowledge of Masonry as a public institution, because he is required to declare that "he has long entertained a favorable opinion- of it." The theory which makes the character of the Entered (13) 14 THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. Apprentice that of 4"a hewer of wood and drawer of water" does not militate against the fact that to his more advanced brethren he is "not now as a servant, but above a servant, a brother beloved." ASK AND RECEIVE.-The manner of application at the door of God's favor, symbolized in the Closed Door, is described in various passages. God said to Solomon: "Ask what I shall give thee." Elsewhere it is recorded: "Ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein."'"Ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full." "Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." "If any man lack wisdom, let him ask of God that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him." In close connection with the symbolism of the Closed Door is that of the Three Knocks, peculiar to the Masonic Ritual. A splendid genius, now deceased, extending the Masonic theory beyond the vale of time, figures the Grand Master of the Universe standing in the Celestial Orient upon "the appointed day," and giving the Three Knocks which shall summon the sheeted dead. At the first knock, the ground of their interment begins to heave with expectation. All nature is hushed. Earth and heaven await with trembling the consummation. At the second knock, bone comes to his fellow, flesh reclothes them; blood moves once more through the veins, and the dead are ready for the last summons. It falls, and at once the armies of the dead arise, stand erect, facing the East, and listen to the words of their Maker! RIGHT ANGLES, HORIZONTALS, AND PERPENDICULARS. Every thing in Masonic Science admits of a rational THE DAdGER. 15 explanation. In truth, Freemasonry is the perfection of reason. All its instructions conform to mathematical ideas, and the simplest drawings of right angles, horizontals, and perpendiculars form emblems of greater significance upon its trestle-board. As the architect would say that "all the parts of his edifice are tested by those three emblems, the square, the level, and the plumb, because they are the instruments by which the right angle, the horizontal, and the perpendicular are made upon his drawing," so in Freemasonry, which is but another name for moral architecture, all methods of communication known to the ancient Craft are to be subjected to the same tests, and such as fail are spurious. Thus these simple emblems, the first upon the trestle-booard, become among the most important. When two persons meet, who are able to recount similar necessities, trials, and successes, what mutual disclosures take place! What trustful communications, what tender sympathy is manifested! Then one soul gushes out and flows over into the other, and time steals rapidly on. Such is the nature of Masonic intercourse between sympathetic hearts. THE DAGGER. —- In the Master Mason's lecture, the emblem of "The Sword pointing to the naked Heart" expresses the judgment r6served to the last day for those who presumptuously sin against -God and their fellowmen. The same idea is conveyed, but in a more restricted form, by the emblem of the Dagger. It reminds us that there is an inward monitor, the conscience, which will not be silent when the heart has resolved upon sin. A person entering the Masonic institution With a view to betray its secrets and violate its covenants need not' 16 THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. think that our Order has no avenger. The'voice of God within him is our avenger, and the eternal justice of Him who has wisely permitted the existence of this Society for countless ages speaks even now through that voice to his heart, and will speak in thunder-tones to his guilty soul on the Judgment-clay. It needs not that any penalty be inflicted by the Craft upon the betrayer of secrets save the necessary discipline of expulsion. We can leave the guilty in the hands of God, who is the avenger of his own laws. Nor can the utmost treachery of evil men divulge what it is our interest as a society to preserve. Our secrets are lawful and honorable. They were intrusted in peace and honor to the Masons of ancient times, and they will be so transmitted to the ages to come. THE APRoN.-There are two prominent ideas connected with the Masonic use of the Apron: that of protecting the garments from the defilement of the materials with which the practical builders wrought, and that of the distinguishing mark or badge of the Craft. The first notice in Scripture of an Apron, is where our first parents, having their eyes opened, and seeing themselves naked, sewed together fig-leaves and made themselves aprons. But this was not worn for a purpose analogous to ours. The Masonic Apron is exhibited as a continual memento, both to himself and those around him, that he is under peculiar engagements to keep his conscience void of offense, both to God and man. But the idea, fully reviewed, becomes still more tender and affecting. The Masonic Apron is not made of material of an ordinary sort, such as is used for garments of warmth, decency, or protection. It is made of lamb THE TWENTY-FOUR-INCH GAUGE. 17 skin, and that only, and it thus incorporates into its real ordinary meaning all that pertains to that Divine emblem of innocence. This makes up one of the finest allegories in Freemasonry, and those members of the Fraternity who are Christians see in their Apron every thing taught in the Altar, the Thorny Crown, and the Cross. THE TWENTY-FOUR INCH GAUGE.-The proper division of our time involves every thing useful in our life. Our time is our life; they expire together. He who wastes the one, wastes the other. Nothing but a systematic distribution of time can accomplish the purposes for which we were placed in this world. A portion for God, a portion for needful avocations, a portion for refreshment and sleep-this is the division that Freemasonry enjoins. It were well for every member of the Craft to resolve, in his moments of prayerful reflection, that he will improve, in the best manner possible, all his leisure moments in growing in morality, and to be daily increasing his moral stature in conformity with the lessons inculcated upon the Masonic trestle-board. THE COMMON GAVEL.-The necessity of a great and radical removing of those evil things that incrust and encumber the conscience is as great as that of breaking off the outside crust and envelopments from the marble before a perfect statue can be formed. The emblem that suggests this necessity is the Gospel. How greatly the beauty of the immortal soul is disfigured, its usefulness impaired, its happiness destroyed, and the God who made it, dishonored, for want of the proper use of this simple instrument for cleansing, trimming, and lightening the soil! THE THREE GREAT LIGHTS.-The combination of the 2 18 THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. three objects, the H~oly Bible, the S9uare, and the Compass, under this denomination, is not incongruous when the" character of the instructions they convey to the Masonic mind is considered. The first guides our faith, the second our works, the third our passions. Belief, labor, spirit-these are the three ideas conjoined in this beautiful trio. It is not the reverence we bear to them as tangible objects that is considered here. The Mason reveres the Bible; he does not revere any other tangible object. But these three objects are conjoined here simply as emblems, or moral instructors, tea6hing great inward lessons by outward forms. THE THREE LESSER:IGHTS.-Pursuing the imagery employed in the last paragraph, we make the three lesser lights, or mediums through which instruction is conveyed to the Craft, to be the Sun, Moon, and Master of the Lodge. The government of the Master is analogous to that exercised over the day by the Sun, over the night by the Moon-a thought which is amplified in the lectures of the Past Master. Much care is exercised in the ritual of the Entered Apprentice to teach the respect due to the Master of the Lodge, without which, order would be lost and innovations flood the Institution. THE ALTAR.-As a support to the copy of the Holy Scriptures, which forms so essential a piece in the furniture of the Lodge, the Altar would be a highly conspicuous object, were there no other meaning conveyed by it. As an emblem, however, it calls to mind the piety of Abel, Noah, Abrahamn and other Old Testament worthies, who are recorded as the builders of altars. It more particularly suggests a sacrifice, of prayer and praise to God. PRAYER. 19 PRAYER.-The motto, "To Labor is to Pray," is most congenial to Freemasonry. Much will be said throughout this volume upon the use of prayer as an essential feature in the rituals of this ancient Institution. At first, man was permitted to converse with his Maker, face to face. But since the fall, a new, yet tender mode of communication has been divinely instituted between the soul and its Creator, and this is a fundamental landmark in Masonry. FAITM.-The first of the three principal rounds in the Masonic Ladder is denominated Faith. This is a grace of which the Holy Writings are full. It is the cheer of the sorrowing, and the life of the just. It is the credit we give to the declarations of God, or to the evidences of the facts or propositions presented us in the Bible. The faith, without which we can not please God, combines assent with reliance, belief with trust. True faith involves the forsaking of all known sin, and a cheerful and constant: obedience to God's commands. THE WISE CHOICE OF SOLOMON. The Entered Apprentice is one who, like the wise king of the line of David, chose the better part. When in the dreams of night he lay, Fancy-led through earth and air, Whispered from the heavenly way, The voice of promise met his ear; Fancy ceased his pulse to thrillGathered home each earnest thought-s And his very heart was still, Awhile the gracious words he caught. 20 THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. "Ask me whatso'er thou wilt, Fame or wealth, or royal power; Ask me, ask me, and thou shalt Such favors have as none before!" Silence through the midnight airSilence in the thoughtful breast — What of all that's bright and fair, Appeared in youth and hope the best?'T was no feeble tongue replied, While in awe his pulses stood: W ".Vealth and riches be denied,.But give me WISDooM, voice of God! Give me wisdom in the sight Of the people thou dost know; Give me of thyself the light, And all the rest I can forego." Thus, 0 Lord, in visions fair, When we hear thy promise-voice, Thus like him will we declare, That WISDOM is our dearest choice. Light of heaven, ah, priceless boon! Guiding o'er the troubled way; What is all an earthly sun, To His celestial, chosen ray? Wisdom hath her dwelling reared, Lo, the mystic pillars seven! Wisdom for her guests hath cared, And meat, and wine, and bread hath given. Turn we not, while round us cry, Tongues that speak her mystic word; They that scorn her voice shall die, But whoso hear are friends of God, LEBANON, JOPPA, AND MORIAH. 21 THE SECOND SECTION. THE Second Section of the Entered Apprentice's Lecture is explanatory of the first, being directed chiefly to showing how reasonable are all the ceremonies and- observances of initiation when properly explained. The greater part of it is esoteric, or private, and, as such, can not be explained to any save those who have regularly entered the portals of the Lodge. LEBANON, JOPPA, AND MoRIAH.-These three localities in the Holy Land are closely combined in the Masonic theory: Lebanon, as the source of the great cedars used in' the construction of the Temple; Joppa, as the place of their transhipment; Moriah, on the site upon which the edifice was built. The quarries from which the stone was drawn are supposed to be those found in the northern side of the range of hills on which the city of Jerusalem stands. The following lines express the symbolism which the words in the caption suggest: Thine in the Quarry, whence the stone For mystic workmanship is drawn; On Jordan's shore, On Zarthan's plain, Though faint and weary, thine- alone. The gloomy mine knows not a ray; The heavy toil exhausts the day; But love keeps bright The weary heart, And sings, I'm thine, and thine alway. Thine on the Hill, whose cedars rear Their perfect forms and foliage fair; Each graceful. shaft, And deathless leaf, 22 THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. Of Masons' love the symbols are. Thine, when a smile pervades the heaven; Thine, when the sky's with thunder riven; Each echo swells Through answering hills., My Mason-prayer; for thee'tis given. Thine in the Temple, holy place, Where silence reigns, the type of peace; With grip and sign, And mystic line, My Mason's love I do confess. Each block I raise, my friendship grows, Cemented firmly, ne'er to loose; And when complete, The work I greet, Thine in the joy my bosom knows. Thine at the rmidnight, in the cave; Thine on the floats upon the wave; By Joppa's hill, By Kedron's rill, And thine when Sabbath rest we have. Yes, yes, dear friend, my spirit saith, I'm thine until and after death; No bounds control The Mason's soul, Cemented with a Mason's faith. THE SETTING MAUL.-AS it is one of the wonders of Divine power, and the fitness of things, that from poisonous and inodorous flowers the insect extracts the purest honey, so it is in the transforming power of Masonic symbolisms to turn this emblem, the Setting Mauls, in itself suggestive of noise and violence, into a sweet emblem of peace. "The house was built of stone, made ready before it.was brought thither, so that there was THE SHOE. 23 neither hammer, ax, nor any tool of iron heard in the house while it was in building." The analogy between operative and speculative architecture seizes with avidity upon this sublime thought, and peace reigns through all the chambers of the Temple of Freemasonry. "I will give peace in the land," promised Jehovah to his people, while yet in the wilderness, " and none shall make you afraid." " Behold I give unto him my covenant of peace." "' There is peace to thee, and no hurt." "' The Lord will bless his people with peace." "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace." Such are the thoughts suggested by the Setting Mauls. At the period of the temple-building, universal peace reigned throughout the earth, and thus the materials for building and adorning, which were brought from the utmost parts of the world, were readily collected. It is only in a time of peace that Freemasonry can flourish. THE SHoE.-The Shoe was ever an emblem of significance in Freemasonry. To remove the Shoe, as Moses was commanded to do before the Burning Bush, and as Joshua was commanded before Jericho, was a token of reverence. The High-Priest in the Temple went barefoot, as a mark of Divine respect. The removal of the Shoe was also a token of humiliation and subjection, as when David fled before Absalom, and Isaiah walked barefoot for three years, and Ezekiel walked barefoot upon a certain occasion. Hence, the expression in Psalm cviii, "Over Edom will I cast out my shoe," imports the subjugation of the country over which the shoe is cast. All these ideas are embraced, to a greater or less degree, in the Masonic use of the Shoe as an emblem. 24 - THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. The plucking off one's shoe, and giving it to another,.was a significant token of a surrendered right of privilege, and this is more directly the Masonic idea. It is this which is expressed in the following lines: Take this ptedge; it is a token Of that truth which ne'er.was brokenTruth, which binds the mystic tie Under the All-seeing Eye. Take this pledge; the ancient brother By this type bound every other, Fondly, firmly; death alone Rends the bond that makes us one. Take this pledge; the type so lowly Is, of all our symbols, holy;'T is Divine; it tells of One, Gives the raindrops and the sun. Take this pledge; the token sealeth All the Judgment-day revealeth; Honor, truth, fraternal grace In thy hands with this we place. THE CABLE-TOW. —The explanation of this emblem is that of the covenant or tie that binds Masons to each other and to the institution. That this tie must be one of much strength, is evidenced'by the great antiquity of the Masonic Order, and the firmness with which its members, in all ages, have resisted every allurement to betray their trust. Scriptural quotations convey the spirit of this emblem: "Draw me not away with the wicked." "Draw me, and we will run after thee." "No man can come to me, except the Father, which hath sent me, draw THE DAGGER. 25him.'7" "-If any man. draw back, my' soul shall have no' pleasure in him.."''We are not of themi who draw back unto perdition." T-he extent or reach of the Masonic' covenants, represented. by the Cable-Tow, is well. expressed in, the monitoral explanation of the extent of:the Lodye. It reaches~ as far as to heaven, suggesting our duty to God; as far as the: utmostr bounds: of the' habitable earth, suggesting our' dutyo t o our- fellow-mein;a as far as. the: inmost recesses: of our' O own hearts, suggesting: our- duty to ourThere is- a; c~ord of length., There is a chain of sfrength — Ar6ound: youi each I see the- sacredt coil:; How: long, ah, well I know; How strong, your deeds do show The while you labor in the sacred toil. TI:tE DAGIGER. —Our remarks" uipon a preceding emblii, the' SETTING MAULS, are partly applicable here. Aithoigh the DIagger is a warlike weapon,. yet, as a Masonid emblem, it has- its application, in a gentle and pacific dcharacter. It' suggests the quiet conscience, which results from a sense of Masonic: cov-enants kept and' duties done. This: inward: monitor, the: co'nscience, whic;is the terror of the wicked, isis the sweetest companion of the virtuous mind. Paul- wrote to his con,verts,''Ours rejoicing is in this, the testimony of our conscienrce-;" and, again, "We trust we have a- good conscience in all things, willing to live- hoiestly." In an address he} says,'"Herein. do I exercise myself to: have always a good conscience, void of offense toward God and toward': en.'"'"They' being convicted- ly their 26 THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. own conscience, went out one by one," is the description of a scene in which the Scribes and Pharisees of olden time figured. Cain, after the cruel blow fell which deprived him of his brother, was convicted by the voice of his own conscience. The further application of this emblem may be seen under the same head upon a preceding page. THE -JOINED HANDS.-This is an emblem of Fidelity, an ingredient in the Masonic cement without which the walls of the institution would speedily crumble and fall. As an emblem, it was well known to the first painters and sculptors of antiquity. Jonathan and David exemplified this principle in a remarkable degree. He alone who is capable of genuine friendship can appreciate the happiness of reciprocating tokens of fidelity with those who are deserving of confidence. The right hand, which is the instrument of mechanical activity and of strength, is also the seat of Fidelity. "Thy right hand, O( God," saith the Prophet of Abarim, "is become glorious in power." "From the Lord's right hand went a fiery law for them." "Thy right hand," says the Psalmist, "hath holden me up. Save with thy right hand, O Lord!" The use of the right hand, through all the grades of Freemasonry, is peculiarly impressive. It combines the idea of strength with that of love. Taking the candidate by the right hand is an assurance of protection, of brotherly guidance, of brotherly affection. It, in effect, says to him, that the security of the Craft is around him, the banded strength of the Lodge defends him, and the esteem and love of all hearts are secured unto him, so long as he remains faithful to his trust. FRIENDLY AXVICE. 27 THE LAM1B.-In our paragraph upon the Apron, in a preceding page, we remarked that the most tender and beautiful thought connected with its symbolism is, that the Masonic Apron is made of lamb-skin alone. This emblem of innocence is so peculiarly appropriate, that even the Messiah himself condescended to represent his own spotless nature under the figure of a Lamb. One of the older prophets prefigures his death in the words, "He was led like a lamb to the slaughter." There is no passage in the Bible more affecting than this. In contemplating the Masonic emblem, the Lamb, the mind is suspended in solemn rapture between earth and heaven. A pacific temperament steals over the soul, and while we admire the tender and submissive nature of this gentle tenant of the field, we are taught what must be our own character if we would attain to that perfection of which Freemasonry teaches. Thus the very clothing of the Freemason, like the symbolical garments which covered the Priest under the typical law, is suggestive of the highest graces and virtues of our profession. FRIENDLY ADVICE.-An old author proffers some advice to gentlemen who may be inclined to become Masons, of which the following is a synopsis: "When you intend to become a Freemason, go with youi friend to the hall where the Lodge is held, and examine the Charter or Warrant under which the Lodge is held. See that it is written or printed on parchment, signed by some Grand Master, Deputy Grand Master, Grand Wardens, and Grand Secretary, and sealed with the Grand Lodge Seal; appointing certain persons named therein, with their successors, to be Master and Wardens; authorizing them to congregate and hold a Lodge, and therein make 28 THE EBNTEREDI APPRENTICE. and admit Freemasons according to. ancient cust6m. Then. call for the By-Laws, and having. seriously perused them,, consider whether your natural disposition will incline you to be conformable. to them.. Next call for the: List of Members,. where you may find the names of some of your most intimate and esteemed: friends, and perhaps the: names of some you would not wish. to associate with. If these, researches prove agreeable, you. may then venture to sign a petition for initiation, lay down your de — posit-money, and. await- wi-th patience the result." THR' TtRCD7 SECTIONm. THi Thirdi Section of the-. Enteretd Apprentice's Lece. tulre presents full details of the' organization,. fitting up, and history of the Lodge. The: greater part of: it. is, exoteric,; and as. such, may be explained- to any inquirer, though eveni those passages that. seem to have the: least m;ystery' about, them are parts, of the' unwritten history of the Order, and can only be: perfectly understood b.y the': initiated.: CONSTITUTION OF THE LODG.E:. -To- avoid those irregularitiesi which- would,- result upon. the indiscriminate meetings; of Masons, and the unrestricted, working up of materials into the Lodge, it. has: been, wisely ordained' that: no: assemblage of the'Craft can, be: opened: with Masonic form,: unless the presidi'ng officer shall be furnis'hed- with, a- charter or' warrant from the- Grad Lodge possessing ju-risdiction,- empowering such an act. This. is. the source. of temporali authority, and, suggests: a careful: attention to: forms.. In a.ddition:: to this, there: must likaeise be. a: copy of the' oly Scriptures... This is the ,CENT MEETINGTPLA. 29.source of Divine autwhority, and suggests a careful ttention to principles. With this copy,:there must be the essential accompaniments of the Square and Compass, admonishing the circle'of laborers of;the necessity!of squaring their actions:and circumscribing.their -passions. This suggests a careful attention to seVf-disci2plne, without which the workings of Freemasonry were as a sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal. Not less than seven members constitute a Lodge in this degree, and any assemblage not in accordance with all the requirements upon this page, that ventures:to open a Lodge in Masonic -form, is clandestine, and comes under the'ban of the Craft universal. ANCIENT MEETING-PLACES. —.In days of old, the'meetings of the Masonic Craft were held upon the summits of hills, or in crypts at their bases. This was for purposes of seclusion, which is essential to the Masonic work. Hills and dales were'accounted sacred places; men thought themselves nearer God there than elsewhere. The law was given to Moses upon a mountain summit, nine thousand feet high. Some of the most affecting scenes between King Solomon and his builders occurred in the crypts beneath Mounts!Moriah and Sion. The great sacrifice for:sin, which terminated the Mosaic dispensation of rites'and ceremonies, occurred upon Calvary, which is a part of the mountain range on which the city of Jerusalem stands. In modern times an attempt is made to express this symbolism by holding Lodge-meetings in the highest apartments of an edifice. Then there is nothing intervenes between the covering of the Lodge —on which heavenly bodies are depictured-and'the great canopy 80 THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. alluded to below, in which the heavenly bodies shine. No eyes look down upon the Mason-work but the eyes of angels deputed as ministering spirits to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation, and the All-seeing Eye, which pervades the inmost recesses of the human heart. EXTENT OF THE LODGE.-The limits of the mystical Lodge are the cardinal points; nothing less will satisfy the expansive nature of the principles inculcated in this system. The apartment in which Masons assemble is symbolical of the universe, illimitable on every side, the proper temple of Deity, whose center is every-where, whose circumference is nowhere. To an entering Mason, it is the world in miniature. Wherever man is tracing The weary ways of care,'Midst arid deserts pacing, Or land of balmy air, We surely know each other; And with our words of cheer, The Brother hails his Brother, And hope wings lightly there. Wherever tears are falling, The soul's December rainOr heavy sighs are calling To human hearts in vain; Wherever prayer is spoken, In earnestness of faith, And we perceive the token That tells our Master's death; Wherever man is lying, Unnoticed and unknown, Uncared-for in his dying, Unheard in cry and groan, SUPPORTS OF THE LODGE. 31 We surely know each other; And with our-words of cheer, The Brother hails his Brother, And hope wings lightly there. SUPPORTS OF THE LODGE.-The three foundation-stones upon which the structure of speculative Masonry was originally laid were entitled Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty. These were well named: for there was Wisdom to conceive the plan above all others practical; there was Strength to execute the plan above all others complicated and laborious; and there was Beauty to adorn the plan above all others capable of receiving the elegancies of thought. It were almost superfluous to comment upon these three words, Wisdom, Strength,'and Beauty. "Happy," said the wisest of men, "is the man that findeth wisdom-better than silver and gold, more precious than rubies. Length of days is in her right hand, and in her left hand riches and honor. Hier ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace." "In Gibeon the Lord appeared to Solomon and said, Ask what I shall give thee; and Solomon said, Give thy servant an understanding heart." Let those who deny that Wisdom is evinced in the structure of Freemasonry, explain, if they can, the exceeding Strength with which it has defied the influences of time and the oppositions of evil men. Let them explain the Beauty with which it stands before the world, the most perfect specimen of moral architecture extant, the most popular institution, the most highly respected in its membership, and the only esoterical system upon earth that has not yielded to the prying eyes of an inquisitive age. X2 raITHE ENTERED APPREN TICE. COVERING OF THE LODGE. — In a preceding paragraph allusion is made to the fact that Lodges seek an upper chamber for their places of assemblage, so that there may be nothing interposed between them and the celestial concave, save their oown ceiling, upon which are figured;the heavenly bodies. In the symbolisms of the Masonic in-:stitution, the covering of the Lodge is the starry-decked canopy, (the nea-rest representation of the heavenly home beyond hich is afforded in this life. Every object in a Mason's Lodge points to this. The hopes, wwatered and fed by the inculcations of the lectures, will have their Fruition only in this. To the happy land, veiled by the resplendent curtain above, he strives to approach by a Ladder, seen by the sleeper upon Bethel's pillar, when in his lonely slumber God vouchsafed to -him a vision. The assent by grades agrees with our own consciousness of weakness. There are e many steps, intentionally made short and easy, to conform to human weakness, ad every meeting of the Lodge alffords us new encouragement to advance along the ascending way. Three of the steps, Faith, HIope, and Charity, are more distinctly marked than the others; and happy the:man who places his feet successively upon them. Firmly planted upon the third, the canopy of heaven is not far distant, which being drawn aside by an angel's hand, the flight is ended, the aspirant has his reward! FURNITURE OF THE LODGE. —In subsequent pages of this volume, much space is devoted to the Furniture of the Sanctuary in the wilderness and that of the Temple of Solomon. These were elaborate, costly, and emblematical of all the purposes of the Mosaic dispensation. The Furniture of the Masonic Lodge is more simple, yet -OR.NAENTS 0F'.HE:LODGE 8E. equ.ally texpressive-it is the Holy Bible, Square, and Compass. In the first section of this Lecture these objects are merely described as emblems, but in the present connection they have a higher meaning. The precept and examples contained in the volume:thus used to furnish the Lodge are held in highest -veneration. He who esteems them not, is ignorant and unworthy of our companionship. It is at once a guide -through the present world and a passport to hat which is to come. A terrible denunciation has been threatened to him who shall add to or diminish from the matter which the finger..of God has placed there. It is dedicated to God in -the threefold division of the Masonic Furniture. The Square will have ample elucidation in other por-.tions of this volume; and it only needs here to say, -that, in the proper distribution of the Lodge Furniture, it is dedicated to the Master of the Lodge, as the:Compass is to the Members: the Square teaching official responsibility, the Compass individual regulation of desires and due circumspection of passions. ORNAMENTS OF THE LoDGE. -As one of the three principal supports of the Lodge is termed Beauty, it is analogous to this that there should be Ornaments of the.Lodge. These are the Mosaic Pavement, the Indented Skirting that surrounds the Pavement, and the Star in its center. These, like all other Masonic objects, are emblematical of moral and religious instructions. It has already been said that the apartment in which Masons assemble represents the moral universe; the very floor of it suggests the course of human life, checkered with good and evil. One who enters it is reminded, in that epitome of his own career, of the vicisstudes that:re 3 34 THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. both before him and behind him. If he is in a condition of distress, he derives comfort from the reflection that he is surrounded with white squares; if in a condition of prosperity, he is taught to be humble, in view of the darker passages of life, to which his very next step may expose him. The Border, or Skirting, is an emblem full of hope to those who trust, as all Masons profess to do, in God; it prefigures the blessings that are derived from a steady dependence upon Divine Providence, which has its reference in the Star that gleams in the center. To such of the Craft as blend their hopes of bliss in Jesus, the Son of God, this combination of emblems suggests the sublimest aspirations. LIGHTS OF THE LODGE. —The emblems representing the sources of Masonic light, or rather the mediums through which Masonic instruction is directly conveyed to the membership, are called Lights. They represent the Master and the two Wardens, who are the windows through which the lights of tradition, revelation, and the Grand Lodge having jurisdiction, can reach the minds of the Craft. This is but an extended reference of the thought conveyed in our elucidation of the Lesser Lights in a preceding page. The situation of these lights corresponding with those of the principal officers of the Lodge, refers the mind to traditions of the Tabernacle and the Temple, which are esoteric; also to the course of the sun through the heavens. JEWELS OF THE LODGE.-By the term Jewel, we imply whatever is esteemed most precious among us, and displayed as such to represent the abounding wealth of the Institution. Morality, Equality, and Rectitude of Life, JEWELS OF THE LODGE. 35 for instance, are three moral treasures, which have their emblems in the Square, the Level, and the Plumb. The rude material in the quarry of human life, though incrusted with many excrescences, is yet precious as affording us objects for our moral work, and this is represented by the Rough Ashlar. The same material, when fitted by Divine Grace and the practice of all virtues for the Temple above, is typified by the Perfect Ashlar; while the Book of God, read in nature and revelation, from which we derive all necessary degree instruction while upon earth, is represented by the Trestle-board. These three symbols are happily selected and happily named Jewels. Who wears THE SQUARE upon his breast, Does in the eye of God attest, And in the face of man, That all his actions do compare With the Divine, th' unerring SquareThat squares great virtue's plan: That he erects his Edifice By this design, and this, and this I Who wears THE LEVEL, says that pride Does not within his soul abide, Nor foolish vanity; That man has but a common doom, And from the cradle to the tomb, A common destiny: That he erects his Edifice By this design, and this, and this /, WYho wears THE G; ah, type divine I &bhors the atmosphere of sin, And trusts in God alone; T!,NT I EPD APPRENTICE. His Father,:Maker, Friend, he knowsHe vows, and pays to God his vows, As by th' Eternal throne: And he erects his Edifice By this design, and this, and this! Who wears TaHE PUMB, -behold how true His words, his walk! and could we view The chambers of his soul,'Each thought enshrined, so pure, so good,' By the stern line of rectitude, Points truly to the goal:.And he erects his:Edifice By this design, and this, and this,! Thus life and beauty come to view, In -each design our fathers drew, So glorious- so sublime; Each breathes an odor from the bloom Of gardens bright beyond the tomb, Beyond the flight of time: And bids us build on this and this, The walls of God's own Edifice I SITUATION OF THE LoDGE.-The Lodge is situated due east and west. All knowledge emanated from the east. Mankind originally emigrated from the east. The Hebrews used the word East to describe all the countries or provinces lying aroundnd d beyond the rivers Tigris.and Euphrates, or east or north-east of Judea. The expression in Genesis, "from the east," denotes the country east or south-east of Mount Ararat. In traveling from the foot of that mountain to the plain of Shinar, the descendants of Noah would pass southerly on the eastern side of the mountains of Media till:they came opposite DEDICATIOT Of THE LOW: E. 8. t6 Shinar, ort to: a point north-east of Babylon, from: whichh, by a, direct western course, they would pass into Assyria and the plain of Shinar.- This is said to be thi: usual caravan route to. this day. The: Tabernacle; in the, Wilderness was set east-, andwest; so was the Temple of Solomon.: The walls- for — meily inclosing that, edifice are proofs of this, corresponding in their, present direction with the cardinal points. The: miraculous blast by which the Red Sea was opeiied before the: feet of the Israelitish; host, blew from thte east,. The bodies: of the Masonic dead: are burieddue east: and — west. DDcIcATION OF ToHE LoDGE. —While the central figure: in t'he- Lodge, the: Holy Scriptures, is dedicated: to Him, from whom it: came, the Lodge itself, with all its: furni-. tuire, surroundings,d and labors, i:s: dedicated to oe: of two -Sainted Patrons of Ma-sonry,r men. who in their' day exem-plified, the- higher graces' taught. in the lectures — Saint John: the; Baptist and! Saint John the Evangelist. The elder of these: was- sent from- God to announce the coming of Jesus Christ. The: other was: called, by, the co:mmanding' voice- of Jesuas, to leave: the humble a-vocation- in, whick he had- been rteared, and go: out into the iwortld- as an evangelist.: Whatever virtues of courage, perseverance, obedience; to G-od's Words and: unswerving fidelity that either of thesg Masonic patrons displayed, is; adopted! among- the: treasures of, the Lodge. It matters not whether the- apocryphal statements.which malke these- men to have beeni Masons are true or false, it is enoug'h to know that: their moral labors were our moral labors, their victories' over sin. were" our, victories,: and the bright world gained by their'perseverance: in ai good: 88 THE ENTERED APPRENTICE. cause is the same wherever the Supreme Architect pre. sides, and where there are "many mansions" remaining for us. In the mean time, it is safe to aver that no deed whose character would have prevented either of these two men from engaging in it, is suitable to us, who have dedicated our Lodge and its labors to them. TENETS OF MASONRY.-IIt is but the summing up of what has already been repeatedly intimated in these pages, to say that the tenets of Masonry are Brotherly Love, Relief, and Truth. Being so great a family of men, of all countries and conditions, there is no cement would hold together such a band save that of Love. Being mutually interested in each other's welfare, it requires no law to compel us to look after the wants of such of the band as are sick, solitary, or in. distress. The grand aim of the institution is best expressed in the charge given to the members, "to soothe the unhappy, sympathize with their misfortunes, compassionate their miseries, and, as far as in us lies, restore peace to their troubled minds." Our friendships are formed and our connections established upon this basis. The first and greatest lesson communicated to each initiate is Truth, to be a good man and true; true to God, true to the institution, true to his country, true to himself. Hypocrisy and deceit are abhorrent to the good Mason. The volume upon our altar is the Book of Truth. One reason for the peculiarly strong engagements under which the initiate is placed to preserve the essential merits of Freemasonry is, that by his fidelity in this lesser trust, the brethren may judge of his ability to hold fast the truth in all the greater relations of life and of eternity. CARDINAL VIRTUES OF MASONRY. 39 CARDINAL VIRTUES OF MASONRY.-The distinction between the tenets and the virtues of Masonry is barely sufficient to make an easy grade in the moral assent. Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence, and Justice are judicious selections from those classes of merits so abundantly developed in the Scriptures. It is both our duty and: our happiness, our labor and our reward, to cultivate Temperance; the want of it unfits the initiate for usefulness and honor among the Craft, and renders him liable to the worst indiscretions. That mental stability which sustains with manly composure the evils of life, and enables a man to resist every proposal to do wrong, is Fortitude. Prudence stands at the helm, while Fortitude buffets the tempest, and thus the voyage is made secure. " If thou faint in the day of adversity," said our First Grand Master, "thy strength is small; the prudent man dealeth with knowledge, but the fool layeth open his folly." One of the most earnest of Evangelists said, "Every man that striveth for the mastery is temperate in all things." As the three virtues above named relate to our self-government, and the usefulness accruing therefrom, Justice, the last of the four, advises us in our dealings with others. The Lord, speaking through Moses, admonished his people in the wilderness: "That which is altogether just shalt thou follow, that thou mayest live;" and he promises that "the just shall live by faith." MASONIC SERVICE.-The manner of Masonic service is finely represented by the emblems of chalk, charcoal, and clay, the last in this section. From the lessons of antiquity we derive instruction in every step up the mystic Ladder. At this point we may know that the char 4" - TH" E ENTERED' APPRENTICE. acteristics of our ancient' brethren in- their relations to their Masters were freedom, fervency, and zeal. Their freecdom of service: was manifest: by night as by diay, and they gave off their good, works as generously as the- roseleaf its odor. Their fervency of service was like that of the. meridian sun: itself. Their zeal- emulated that of the fertile soil, which in the most inclement season is preparing itself, through the hidden- agencies of nature, for the:work of production. Without such- manner of service the great Temple: could not have- been completed in oneordinary generation..It was because heart and soulwere thrown- into the handiwork, that, such a piece of perfection; was: begun- and. finished, within the lifetime of a child,. God- was honored, not only in; th:e work, bu;t irin the- manner of it, and for- thousands of years the story of the greai;t Temple has perpetuated. the freedom, fervency, and zeal of its builders. CONCLU:DImNG' RE'MARKS UPON THE- SCRI-PTURES.- The Valu:e of the- Scriptures- and the duty of perusing them: appear -from m any considerations. We may estimate the: characeter and tendency of Divine revelation by contrasti-ng the condition of countries where its: true light shineth with that- of other countries to; whicli its beams- have inot extended. The heathen world is large enough, surely, for' experiment. In many of its territories the riclhest blessin'gs: of sun and soil are. enjoyed in- aibundance, andthere external nature presents itself in its stateliest annd loveliest forms.;. but where are the. beau'ties' of holiness? where: the fruits and. flowers: of moral- culture? Or if these. are disparaged in comparison with intellectual stature: and;- idolized genius, where: are the distinguishedphiloso-phers- and orators, historians and poets 6f pagaX n CONCLUDING REMARKS ON THE SCRIPTURES. 41 communities? Amidst numberless diversities of condition, they seem to have only this in common to explain their wretchedness, that they want those oracles of God which have been committed unto us; and the conclusions appear fairly deducible that it is, in the absence of the Scriptures, the people are there destroyed for lack of knowledge; that spiritual ignorance, in addition to its proper maladies, has there entailed civil and mental prostration; and that scoffers in our native land owe to the emancipating influence of God's Word that very freedom of thinking which, with ungrateful and impious hand, they wield for the overthrow of its doctrines and institutions. If we confine our attention to those countries which possess the Word of God, a comparison between that portion of the community by whom the Scriptures are perused, and that portion by whom they are neglected, will conduct us to a like conclusion. No doubt external propriety may, in many instances, be promoted by the simple circumstance of dwelling among Christians who are "living epistles of Jesus Christ, known and read of all men;" and it is not less certain that many may consult the records of truth, and yet hold the truth in unrighteousness. But these apparent exceptions do not invalidate the general and incontestible fact that the classes most conversant with God's Word are most distinguished for the graces which it inculcates; while they who consort with thieves, and partake with adulterers, who give their mouth to evil, and frame deceit with their tongue, are the wicked, who hate instruction and cast God's Word behind them. These thoughts, from the pen of a learned divine, are ai~~42. ~E;ITHE ENTERED APPRENTICE. applicable to Masonry, a system founded upon the Bible and dependent upon the revealed Word of God for all its virtuous principles and inculcations. The effects marked above, as resulting upon the free spread of the Scriptures, are also manifest upon the operations of Freemasonry. Wherever a well-conducted Lodge is planted, its membership being chosen by the autihaonary landmarks of the institution, and governed by its morial and spiritual code of laWs, a general improvement is visible throughout the -community. The vices of theft, debauchery, intemperance, p-rofanity, Sabbathbrea kintg, and irreligion are much lessened, while the positive virtues of charity, self-control, and attention to religi'us -duties are proportionally advanced. This phenomienon is not apparent up'oh the operations of any other societyj within our knowledge, outside of the Church; and were there no other evidences:of the merits of this ancient institution, this, that it pro'duces many of the best fruits of the Bible, would be sufficient t:'comm end it to all thoughtful persons. THE FELLOW CRAFT. THE FELLOW CRAFT. THIS LODGE OF FIVE from Tyre came, Their leader one of matchless fame; All through the toiling seasons seven, Their time upon this work was given. THIS LODGE OF FIVE from Joppa's shore To Sion's hill have journeyed o'er; The quarry's inmost crypt have traced, Whence many a stone the wall has graced. THIS LODGE OF FIVE have reared the shaft That on the eastward hails the Craft; And well they know each mystic line That sanctifies the great Design. THIS LODGE OF FIVE with faith obey The holy Law and holy Day, And humbly bow when'er they see The emblem of the Deity. THIS LODGE OF FIVE, for honest toil, Good wages have, Corn, Wine, and Oil; And should a brother be in want, They ne'er forget the covenant THIS LODGE OF FIVE have nearly done' The glorious work so long begun, And homeward-bound they soon will see The MASTER in eternity. THE FELLOW CRAFT. THlE FIRST SECTION. THE THEORY OF THE DEGREE OF FELLOW CRAFT. THE Degree of Fellow Craft represents the Entered Apprentice complete. It is not merely the second grade in the series; all that is to follow does not express so great an advance from the Degree of Fellow Craft, as that of the Fellow Craft is from the EnterediApprentice. The candidate is no longer a beginner, working without wages, forbidden to look into the plans and drawings of the work, excluded from consultations, without a foundation, but a Fellow-workman with the best; paid an honest stipend, invited to give counsel upon questions of architectural difficulty, and assisted to build up a reputation, in which all the Craft will take a brotherly interest. As, therefore, large privileges are conferred upon the Fellow Craft, so heavier responsibilities accumulate upon him. Covenants of power restrain him, duties are enjoined upon him, which require' industrious application of-the best lessons learned in the preceding grade; and, (45) 46 THE FELLOW CRAFT. above all, he is taught to reverence the name of Him from-whom cometh every good and every perfect gift. THE ALTAR.-The name of the Altar erected by Moses to commemorate his victory over the Amalekites at Rephidim, was Jehovah-nissi, signifying "the Lord, my Banner." This title is equally appropriate to the Masonic Altar.'The Lord is the banner,j' or standard, of the institution in a peculiar sense; and the Altar, which is the most conspicuous object in the Lodge, is used to uphold His Word before the eyes of the Craft. According to the Mosaic code, "whatsoever touched the Altar must be holy;" and this, again, applies with great force to the Masonic system, whose offerings are the most sound gifts in the power of man to bestow. The poet says: "Upon the sacred Altar lies, Ah! many a precious sacrifice, Made by these working -men;'The passions curbed, the lusts estraiired, And hatnds with human gore uns'tained, -And hearts from envy clean." A11 contained in the Masonic covenants, whether affirmiative or negative, Whether in the nature of duties or restrictions, are -so many sacrifices made for God and in the name of God, He alone who can communicate.saving efficacy to any meains of doing good, has commanded his blessing from on high upon the sacrifices made on the Masonic Altar,, and so -may he ever do! PAYER, —The view -of the Masonic Altar always suggests Prayer as well -as sacrifice. The introduction of Prayr as -an essential portion of the Masonic drama -is so geneira, that the Verbal Landmnark deelares- "IN PRAYER. 47 man should ever enter upon any great and important undertaking withbut first invoking the blessings of Deity." Prayer, as understood in the Masonic theory, is the application of want to Him who only can relieve it; the voice of sin to Him who only can pardon it. It is the urgency of poverty, the prostration of humility, the fervency of penitence, the confidence of trust. It is not eloquence, but earnestness; hot the definition of helplessn'ess, but the feeling of it; not figures of speech, buat compunction of soul. It is the "Lord save us, we perish," of Pete r —the cry of faith to the ear -of mercy. Adoration is the noblest employment of created beings; confession the natuural language of guilty creatures; grat-'itude the spontaneous expression of pardoned sinners. Prayer is de-sire, It i t i a conception iof the mihnd nor a mere effort of the intellect, nor an act of the memory; but an elevation of the soul toward its Maker, a pressing sense of our own ignorance and infirmity, a consciousness of the perfection of God, of his readiness to h ear, of his power to help, of his willingneiss to save. It is not an emotion produced in the senses, nor an effort wrought in the imagination; but a determination of the will, an effusion of the heart. Prayer is the guide to self-knowledge, by prompting us to look after our sins, in order to pray against them; a motive to vigilance, by teaching us to guard against those sins which, through self-examination, we have been enabled to detect. Prayer is an act both of the understanding and of the heart. -The understanding must apply itself to the knowledge of the divine perfections, or the heart will not be led'to the adoirati'on of -them. It would not b' 48 THE FELLOW CRAFT. a reasonable service were the mind excluded. It must be rational worship, or the human worshiper would not bring to the service the distinguishing faculty of his nature, which is reason. It must be spiritual worship, or it would want the distinctive quality to make it acceptable to Him who has declared that he will be worshiped in spirit and in truth. Prayer is a privilege with which God has favored us, and a necessary part of that obedience which he has required of us to "pray without ceasing; in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving, letting our requests be made known unto God." THE SQUARE. —In all languages, the idea Masonically conveyed by this emblem has an expression. The poet has done for the Masonic Order what was desired, in the following lines: We meet upon the Level and we part upon the Square; What words of precious meaning those words Masonic are Come, let us contemplate them, they are worthy of a thought, In the very soul of Masonry those precious words are wrought. We meet upon the Level, though from every station come, The rich man from his mansion, and the poor man from his home: For the one must leave his greatness outside the Mason's door, While the other finds his level upon the checkered floor. We part upon the Square, for the world must have its due; We mingle with the multitude, a faithful band and true, But the influence of our gatherings in Masonry is green; And we long upon the Level to renew the happy scene. There's a world where all are equal; we are hurrying toward it fast: We shall meet upon the Level there, when the gates of death are pass'd; We shall stand before the Orient, and our Master will be there, To try the blocks we offer with his own unerring Square. PRAYER. 49 We shall meet upon the Level there, but never thence depart; There's a Mansion —'tis all ready for each trusting, faithful heart; There's a Mansion and a welcome, and a multitude is there, Who have met upon the Level, and been tried upon the Square. Let us meet upon the Level, then, while laboring patient here; Let us meet and let us labor, though the labor be severe; Already in the western sky the signs bid us prepare To gather up our Working Tools, and part upon the Square. Hands round, ye faithful Masons, in the bright, fraternal chain; We part upon the Square below to meet in heaven again; 0 what words of precious meaning those words Masonic areWe meet upon the Level, and we part upon the Square l The ways of science are beautiful. Knowledge is attained by degrees. Wisdom dwells with contemplation. There are we to seek her. Though the passage be difficult, the further we proceed the easier it will come. If we are united, our society will flourish. Let all things give place to peace and good fellowship. Uniting in the grand design, let us be happy in ourselves, and endeavor to contribute to the happiness of others. Let us promote the useful arts, and by them mark our superiority and distinction. Let us cultivate the moral virtues, and improve in all that is good and amiable. Let the genius of Masonry preside over our conduct, and under its sovereign sway let us act with becoming dignity. Let our recreations be innocent and pursued with moderation. Never let us expose our character to derision. Thus shall we act in conformity with our precepts, and support the name we have always borne, of being a reputable, a regular, and a uniform society. TH{E LEVEL.-The pride of birth, talent, and circum4 50 THE FELLOW CRAFT~. stances which so powerfully affect the mind of their possessors forms the most serious obstacle with which the Masonic laborer has to contend. To assist him in a task in which so many fail, the Level is presented to him, and its emblematical meaning expounded. He is admonished that our entrance upon earth, as well as our exit, is humble; that the inclemencies of life equally afflict us; that the baleful passions of human nature know no distinctions of rank; that sorrow, sickness, disease, and mental afflictions are equally distributed; that, in truth, all mankind do "stand upon a Level," so far as their relations to the Author of their being is concerned. These thoughts are calculated to level our pride with the plane on which God has designed us to move. In the burial service of Masonry the reference to the Level is exceedingly appropriate. In the installation ceremonies it is said: "The Level demonstrates that we are descended from the same stock, partake of the same nature, and share the same hope; because a time will come, and the wisest know not how soon, when all distinctions but that of goodness will cease, and Death, the grand leveler of human greatness, reduce us to the same state." The remarks made upon the emblem of "the right angle, horizontal, and perpendicular," upon a preceding page, may be used here. The qualifications necessary to form a worthy member of our Order are a wise philanthropy, pure morality, inviolable secrecy, and a taste for the polite arts. I. Our Philanth-ropy.-An ancient maxim was that the whole world is, in effect, a great republic, of which every nation is a family, and every particular person a child.- To revive and spread abroad this maxim, drawn THE LEVEL. 61 from the nature of man, is one of the ends of our establishment. We wish to unite all men of an agreeale humor and enlightened understanding, not only by the love of the polite arts, but still more by the great principles of virtue. From such a union the interests of the Fraternity become the interests of all mankind. From such every nation may draw solid knowledge, and all the subjects of different kingdoms may unite without jealousy, live without disorder, and mutually love one another without renouncing their country. Freemasonry instructs in our duty to the Supreme Architect of the universe, to our neighbors, and to ourselves. It instructs us to be peaceable citizens to the civil powers, and never to be concerned in plots and conspiracies against the well-being of the nations. It teaches truth, peace, and concord. It bids us open our ears to the cries of the unfortunate, and to extend our hands to them with the cup of consolation. It unites men of all nations in one affectionate band of brotherhood. It shows us that we are all upon a level,- and that merit is the only just distinction. It orders us to live within compass, and always to act upon the square with the world and with one another. It is not gloomy, but cheerful. It forbids intemperance, but encourages rational mirth and innocent pleasure. In short, it is a superstructure fixed with solid firmness on the broad basis of moral and social virtue. II. Our. Morality.-Sound morality is the second disposition required in our society. Let a man's religion or mode of it be what it will; we do not exclude him from the benefits and advantages of our Order, provided he believes in the glorious Architect of heaven and earth, 52 THE FELLOW CRAFT. and practices the sacred duties of morality. We are directed to expand our hearts with the most generous sentiments, to root out bigotry, and stop the cruel hand of persecution. We are bid to unite with virtuous men of the most distant countries and opposite opinions; to unite with them in the firm and pleasing bond of fraternal love; to regard them with the truest affection. As a severe, cruel, gloomy, and unsociable philosophy disgusts men with virtue, we are desirous of rendering it amiable by the allurements of innocent pleasures, agreeable music, pure joy, and rational gayety. Our sentiments are not what the profane world and ignorant vulgar imagine them to be; all the vices of the heart are banished from them, as well as irreligion, libertinism, excess and debauchery. We banish from our Lodge every dispute which may tend to alter the tranquillity of the mind and gentleness of the manner, or to destroy those sentiments of friendship and that perfect harmony to be found only in the retrenching all indecent excesses and discordant passions. The obligations that are laid upon us are to protect our brethren by our authority, to enlighten them by our understanding, to edify them by our virtues, to sacrifice every personal resentment toward them, and diligently to seek for every thing that will best contribute to the peace, concord, and credit of our society. HIf. Our Seerecy.-We have secrets among us. They compose a language sometimes mute and sometimes very eloquent, to be communicated at the greatest distance, and to know our brethren by, let their country or their language be what it may. What has scarcely happened THE LEVEL. 56 to any other society has happened, to us. Our Lodges have been established in and are now spread over all polite nations, and yet among so great a multitude of men, no brother has ever yet betrayed our secrets. Dispositions the most volatile, the most indiscreet, and the least trained up to secrecy, learn this great science as soon as they enter amnong us. So great an empire over the mind has this idea of brotherly union! This inviolable secrecy powerfully contributes to link together the subjects of different kingdoms, and to facilitate and render mutual between them the communication of benefits. We have many examples in the annals of our Order of brethren traveling into foreign parts,! and, finding themselves distressed, have made themselves known to our Lodges and received all needful assistance. We are connected by solemn promises: if any one should fail in the solemn promises that connect us, there is no greater punishment than the remorse of conscience, the infamy of perfidy, and expulsion from our society. To prevent the abuses that befell the fraternities of Greece and Egypt, women are excluded from our Order. It is not that we do not pay a natural and due regard to that most beauteous part of the creation, or that we are unjust enough to look upon them as incapable of secrecy, but because their presence might insensibly alter the purity of our maxims and our manners. We are afraid that Love would enter with them, and draw us to his flowery, tempting paths, where Jealousy would diffuse his venom through our hearts, and from affectionate brethren transform us into implacable rivals. IV. Our Taste for the Polite Arts. —The fourth qualification necessary to enter into our Order is a taste for 54 THE FELLOW CRAFT. useful science and liberal arts of every kind. These improve the heart as much as the understanding. They moderate the selfish affections, sweeten and harmonize the temper, and the better fit men for social happiness, that happiness which Frcemasonry most zealously endeavors to promote. THE PLUMB.-It only needs a glance at a "bowed and tottering wall," or a building inclining sensibly from the perpendicular, or, what is more common and far more painful, a human being of either sex, wandering from the paths of rectitude, to learn the lesson of this emblem. The Plumb-line seems designed by the Author of virtue to teach us what safety there is in truth. Who wears the Plumb, behold how true HIis words and walkl and could we view The chambers of his soul, Each thought enshrined, so pure, so good, By the stern line of rectitude, Points upward to the goal. The Plumb admonishes us to walk uprightly in our several stations; to hold the scale of justice in equal poise; to observe the just medium between intemperance and pleasure, and to make our passions and prejudices coincide with the line of our duty. It is the interior of moral rectitude, teaching us to avoid dissimulation in conversation and action, and to direct our paths to the path which leads to immortality. Read here the remarks upon a previous page relative to the emblem of "the right angle, the horizontal, and the perpendicular." RECEPTION ON THE SQUARE.-As we remarked on a preceding page, under the head "Theory of the Fellow THE ATTENTIVE. EAR, ETC. 55 Craft," this degree is in strictness the working degree of the institution. All its analogies relate to labor and pilgrimage. The Fellow Crafts came from Phoenicia to erect the temples and other stately edifices of Solomon; we engage to erect more stately edifices for our King -"the King of kings and Lord of lords." No effort is spared to impress upon the Fellow Crafts that "they should eat no man's bread for naught;" and among the methods employed is the application of the Square. To try the works of every Mason, the Square is presented as the probation of his life, proving whether his works are regular and uniform or not. Who wears the Square upon his breast, Does in the sight of God attest, And in the face of man, That all his actions will compare With the Divine, the unerring Square, That squares great virtue's plan. Masons should be of one principle and one rank without the distinctions of pride and pageantry; intimating that from high to low the minds of Masons should be inclined to good works, above which no man stands exalted by his fortune. THE ATTENTIVE EAR, THE INSTRUCTIVE TONGUE, THE FAITHFUL BREAST.-The use of these three emblems is so natural as scarcely to require comment. Information upon all the inculcations of Masonry is chiefly acquired through the attentive ear, both the eye and the hand being subordinate to that. Ignorance is the secret of indolence in Masonry: the idle relish not, because they know not. Though the mine is rich, they have never pene .56 THE FELLOW CRAFT, trated to its bed of golden treasures. Strange that any men, too careless to moralize, or too stupid to discern, should enter the porch of Masonry only to fall asleep in the arms of indolence and dullness. It is a marked truth in the operations of Masonry, that he who has the instructive tongue is ever ready to communicate the science to those entitled to receive it. The genius that conducted him through the mystic temple inspired him with all the virtues of the institution. The annals of the Order are full of the names of those whose ready and silvery tongue found no subjects more wbrthy to be expatiated upon than those connected with Freemasonry. The third of this splendid trio is the faithful breast. Of all societies, this has been the most distinguished for the inviolable secrecy which its members have preserved. Neither the thunders of the Vatican, nor the tortures of the Inquisition, nor the fierce demands of a depraved public opinion, have succeeded in extorting from the faithful breast those things so solemnly deposited there. HoPE.-We have in no author so good a definition of this emblem as that by the Apostle Paul, in his declaration " that by two immutable things, in which it was impossible for God to lie, [referring to his promise and his oath,] we might have a strong consolation, who have fled for refuge, to lay hold of the hope set before us, which hope we have, as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast, and which entereth into that within the veil." The same eloquent writer in another passage declares: "We are saved by hope; if we hope for that which we see not, then do we with patience wait for it." The Psalmist has declared, "Happy is he whose hope is in the JACHIN AND BOAZ. 57 Lord his God." His son, the wise King, adds: "The righteous hath hope in his death." The Prophet Joel avers s" the Lord will be the hope of his people, and the strength of the children of Israel." As we sit in our respective places in the Lodge, and look upon the open Word in the midst, we may deem that there isa treasury of hopes contained in that book, both for this world and that which is to come. The dealings of God with his ancient people afford a sure foundation that he who is unchangeable in justice, goodness, and mercy, can not fail to render to those who, by patient continuance in well-doing, shall merit his favor, all needed blessings. These are the inculcations of the emblem of Hope. JACEIN AND BOAZ.-It can not be doubted that the most striking and attractive objects to a person approaching the Temple up Mount Moriah were the brazen Pillars upon the east. Whether to the stranger, who only considered them as architectural ornaments, or to the informed Israelite, who read in their names, dimensions, cavities, and ornaments many of the most useful inculcations in his religious code, these Pillars were the first to catch the eye and the last to fade upon the memory. The height of these transcendent spires is variously given at eighteen and thirty-five cubits: the latter is the more likely, whether we estimate the due proportion between the diameter four cubits, or the magnitude of the great building before which they stood. Nothing less than thirty-five cubits will answer the requirements of the Fellow Craft's lecture, which sets the proportions between the heights and diameters of pillars at seven, eight, nine, ten, and ten for the Tuscan, Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, 58 THE FELLOW CRAFT. and Composite Orders respectively. As the particular order of architecture used in these Pillars is not given, we can not designate the exact proportion applicable; but to none of them will a height of eighteen cubits apply. The names of these grand and awe-inspiring objects are full of meaning to a Freemason. The right Pillarthat is, the one on the south side of the door of entrancewas called "Jachin;" literally, "Ile will establish." The left Pillar-that is, the one on the north side of the door of entrance —was called " Boaz;" literally, "In it -is power." Uniting the two definitions into one, the allusion is to the Divine promise that in strength God would perpetually establish the kingdom of Israel in the family of David. This, in the Masonic system, -implies the endurance and strength of our institution, which at the end of its three thousand years of history stands more firmly upon its basis than ever before. The cavity and ornaments of the Pillars are equally emblematical. Upon the chapiters were nets of checkerwork, wreaths of chain-work, seven upon each chapiter, also lily-work, and two hundred pomegranates in rows, upon each. To the instructed Israelite passing between the Pillars, these symbols betokened the great lessons of unity, peace, and plenty, and taught him that the spirit of unity produces peace, and that the combination of unity and peace is divinely blessed to plenty. The globes or pommels upon the chapiters, with their proper scientific teachings, conveyed also the Masonic meaning, expressed upon a previous page, that the charities of Freemasons should be as boundless as the spheres. THEr. ANGLE OF 900. —The application of the right ENTRANCE TO THE - CHAMBER. 59 angle to the center of the earth illustrates the sphere of the: Mason's duty and the restraints which he should impose upon the inclinations of his heart, not to wander beyond the angular limits of Masonic propriety. Upon the Angle of 900 the Fellow Craft, metaphorically, is tried, and happy he whose life and conduct shall bear so rigid a test. A very small deviation from this angle, though it may not be perceptible to man, is distinctly so to God, who is our Divine Master, and is to reward us not merely according to the amount of our works, but according to the accuracy with which they adapt themselves to the angle he has traced out for us. It may be that the heathen and the uncultivated denizens of the isles are not prescribed by an Angle so broad as that which is presented to us. God is merciful, and will not place upon any person more responsibilities than he has moral strength to bear; but to us who, in addition to the-light of civilization, the Bible and Christianity have the brilliancy of Freemasonry shining within our souls, it is hard to see what excuse we can present our Heavenly Master in the Judgement-day for a deficiency in the angular propriety of our lives. The Angle of 900 is emphatically one of the working tools of our profession; let us see that it is not less so of our practice. THE SECOND SECTION. THE Second Section of the Fellow Craft's Lecture treats of the entrance into the Middle Chamber of the Temple; the objects that attract the candidate's attention there; the duty of a reasonable observance of the Sabbath-day; the numerous and valuable studies recom 60 THE FELLOW CRAFT. mended to his mind; the rich and ample wages secured him for his labor, and the solemn reverence due from Masons unto the name of God. Properly delivered, this is the most dramatic and beautiful ceremony yet treated upon in this volume. It fully justifies us in claiming for this grade of Masonry that it; particularizes circumstances of great importance to the Fraternity, and confirms many of our traditional tenets and customs by sacred and profane record. There is a, store of valuable knowledge developed from this lecture, founded on reason, tradition, and the Sacred Record, both entertaining and instructive. OPERATIVE AND SPECULATIVE MASONRY. -The frequent use in this volume of the terms "Operative" and "Speculative" requires an explanation. To the members of this institution was anciently given the erection of all great edifices. The secrets of architecture: were then parts of the secrets of Freemasonry, and none could undertake a temple, a palace, or other grand erection, until he had passed the portals of the Masonic Lodge and acquired the scientific knowledge there treasured up. Then Operative and Speculative Masonry were blended; those who built the actual temple also built the moral one. But through the lapse of ages, the secrets of operative architecture have been given out to the world, leaving only the mysteries of the moral building. Speculative Masonry, therefore, contemplates in theory what the operative builder reduces to practice, and the tools of the workmen are only used as emblems in the construction of "the house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens." In this thought the following lines are conceived: THE SEVENTH DAY OF THE WEEK. 61 Darkly hid beneath the quarry, Masons, many a true block lies; Hands must shape and hands must carry, Ere the stone the Master prize. Seek for it, measure it, Fashion it, polish it, Then the Overseer will prize. What though shapeless rough, and heavy, Think ye God his work will lose? Raise the block, the strength he gave ye, Fit it for. the Master's use. S-eek for it, measure it, Fashion it, polish it, Then the Overseer will use.'T was for this our fathers banded; Through life's quarries they did roam, Faithful-hearted, skillful-handed, Bearing many a true block home: Noticing, measuring, Fashioning, polishing, For their glorious Temple-home. THE SEVENTH DAiY OF — THE WEEK. -As the Creator of all things has put it on record that he would have his creatures give the seventh day of each week wholly to him and his service, thus commemorating the great fact of the creation, this has been adopted among the landmarks of our institution. It is the oldest of all observances, this day being consecrated in the first division of time after the creation. The Almighty Maker selected it for his own period of refreshment and rest after the completion of his labors, and we in like manner give the hours to bodily rest and the refreshment of the soul. No Lodge may lawfully meet to work upon the Sabbath 62 ITHE FELLOW CRAFT. day, and no brother give of its sacred time to his ordinary pursuits.The title given to the Jewish day of rest was "the Sabbath;" it is from a Hebrew word signifying rest. Since the Christian era, the day of rest is called the Lord's Day, because it is now commemorative of Christ's resurrection from the dead; and there is thus connected with it an affectionate remembrance of the whole character and offices of Him to whose service and glory it is to be devoted. Sunday was the name given by the heathens to the first day of the week, because it was the day on which they worshiped the sun, and this name, together with those of the other days of the week, has been continued to our times. The sanctification of one-seventh portion of time by man is regarded throughout the whole of the Old Testament Scriptures as a fundamental principle of duty, and no sin, except perhaps idolatry, is threatened with heavier penalties than Sabbath-breaking. The Divine commandment which stands the fourth in the Decalogue, "Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it holy," is founded on the fact that the seventh day was blessed and hallowed by God himself, and that he requires his creatures to keep it holy to him. This commandment is of universal and perpetual obligation. The object to be accomplished by the institution is general, and applies to all people every-where with like force. Wherever there is a human creature capable of contemplating the character of the Supreme Being, of studying his revealed will, and of considering his own immortal destiny, this commandment requires him to consecrate at least one-seventh part of his time to these holy pur THREFi fIVRj AND SEVEN. 63 poses. The terms of the commandment do not fix the precise day in order, except that it is to be every seventh day. In other words, it simply requires that after six days of labor, one day is to be given to rest. There is abundant evidence from history that the seventh day of the week has been observed from the earliest times as a day of rest; and the change from the seventh to the first day does not in any degree change or impair the obligation to. sanctify a seventh portion of our time. So far from it, the sacredness and glory of the day are much increased by its association with that great event on which our hope of life and immortality entirely depends. It seems to be admitted, by intelligent men of every class and profession, that the observance of a weekly day of rest is as essential to our intellectual and physical as to our moral and spiritual nature. The simple rule as to the mode of observing the day seems to be this: that there should be a cheerful resting all the day-from such worldly employments and recreations as may be lawful on other days, and the spending the whole time in the public or private worship of God, except so much as may be occupied by works of necessity or mercy. To test the propriety of any act or pursuit on that day, it is only needful to inquire whether the doing of it will tend to advance us in holy exercises and affection, and in preparation for the heavenly rest, or whether it is an act of necessity which can not be postponed without serious injury. THREE, FIVE, AND SEVEN.-Mystical numbers form important parts in the symbolisms of Freemasonry. The numbers three, five, and seven are the'most.suggestive 64 THE FELLOW CRAFT. of these.. Scriptural history shows how frequently they were introduced in sacred events. "There are three that bear record in heaven: the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost, and these three are one." This passage expresses the whole theory of the Masonic trinity. The three principal officers of the Lodge, corresponding with the three original degrees in Masonry, are examples of the uses to which this number is applied. The number five is not less suggestive in the Masonic rituals. There are five orders in architecture that are recognized among Freemasons: the Tuscan, Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, and Composite, of which the three central ones are most highly esteemed in speculative Masonry. There are five senses in human nature: hearing, seeing, touching, smelling, and tasting, of which the first three are so highly estimated in the Masonic system, that no person who has lost any one of them can lawfully be made a Mason. Among the furniture of the sanctuary and the temple, there were five golden candlesticks on either side of the oracle. The number seven has even more numerous allusions in the rituals. There are seven liberal arts and sciences inculcated in the Masonic system; viz.: grammar, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy, of which the fifth, generally, is most highly estimated. There are seven days in the week; the seventh year was anciently directed to be a sabbath of rest for all things, and the-law was directed to be read to the people. A person was commanded to forgive his offending brother seven times, which our Savior extended to seventy times seven. In the sacrificial service the blood was THEE EAR OF COiN. 65 sprinkled seven times before the altar. Solomon, in his allegory of the house of wisdom, says that it has seven pillars. Seven resurrections are enumerated in Scripture. The series of celestial worlds is said to consist of seven, of which the highest is the most beatific. The book of Revelations, the most symbolical series of writings extant, embodies nearly all its mysteries under the number seven-as seven churches, seven golden-candlesticks, seven stars, seven lamps representing the seven spirits, the book with seven seals, the seven kings, seven thunders, the dragon with seven heads and seven crowns, seven angels bringing seven plagues, and seven vials of wrath. In our lectures, perfection is likened to gold seven times purified in the fire. In the application of these numbers in the Fellow Craft's ritual, lengthy and beautiful discourses upon the Order in architecture and the seven liberal arts and sciences are delivered, which, being found in the Monitor,: need' no repetition here. THE EAR OF CoRN.-Much may be said of the expressiveness of this emblem, suspended, in all well-arranged Lodges, over the Junior Warden's chair. As the contiguity of a fall of water to a field of standing corn gives vigor to the plant, so the igraces of the Divine Spirit give nourishment to the good man's piety, and make it fruitful. The Scriptural light thrown upon this emblem is that in the eleventh chapter of Judges. Fiftyone years after the celebrated exploit of Gideon at the well IHarod, the Ammonites came out of their deserts eastward, and invaded Palestine in great numbers. A part of them came up into Gilead and encamped at Aroer. Jephthah, whose residence was at Mizpeh, near 5) 66 THE FELLOW CRAFT. by, collected together an army from the surrounding tribes, attacked the Ammonites, achieved a great victory, and rescued twenty cities from their hands which they had taken. By this heroic deed the country was rid of its oppressors. On Jephthah's return home occurred that pathetic tragedy which has made the name of Jephthah's daughter immortal in prose and song. Shortly afterward the Ephraimites, whose tribe was located on the opposite side of the river westward, taking bitter offense at Jephthah for slighting them in his call for soldiers, or, what is more likely, angry that they were omitted in the distribution of the spoils, crossed the river with a great army and threatened his destruction. Jephthah was in -no whit intimidated, but at once recalled his warriors from their homes, and defeated the Ephraimites. Resolved to punish them for their unprovoked assault, he sent portions of his army to the fords in their rear, and intercepting them, slew all who attempted to pass, to the number of forty-two thousand. This was a blow Which that haughty tribe never forgot. As a measure for identifying the Ephraimites at the fords, an ear of corn was hung upon a branch and each traveler was requested to give its name. The proper word in Hebrew for an ear of corn is "Shibboleth," so pronounced in the pure language. But the Ephraimites, having a patois of their own, were unable thus to express the first syllable. They called it "Sibboleth," just as the Arabs pronounce the same word to the present day. Their defect of utterance was fatal to them, for every man who thus named the ear of corn was summarily dispatched. In relation to this singular transaction, which in the THE LETTER G. 67 rituals of the Fellow Craft plays a prominent part, a celebrated English writer of the last century says: "The application which is made of certain words among Masons is as a testimony of their retaining their original one uninfringed, and their first faith with the brotherhood uncorrupted. And to render their words and phrases more abstruse and secure, they selected such as by acceptation in the Scriptures or otherwise might puzzle the ignorant by a double implication. Thus,' Shibboleth,' should we have adopted the Eleusonian mysteries, would answer as an avowal of our profession, the word implying'ears of corn.' But taking its derivative from the Greek tongue, it is equivalent to'Colo lapidem,' implying that we retain and keep inviolate our obligations as the'Jurimentum per jovem lapidem,' the most obligatory oath held among the heathens." THE LETTER G.-A brother entering the Lodge while at work, has his attention turned first to the emblems upon the Altar, of which one is the immortal Word of God, and next to an object suspended over the Master's Chair, an emblem of the letter G. This is the initial letter of the name of Deity, that Being before whom Masons of every degree bow and adore. The full bearing of this emblem is conveyed in the following lines: That Name! I heard it at my mother's knee, When looking up, the dear, remembered face Beaming on mine, so fond, so tenderly, She prayed that GOD her little son would bless. That Name! I spoke it when I entered here, And bowed the knee, as man in worship must; From my heart's center, with sincerity, I cried aloud, "In GOD is all my trust." 6:8 THE FELLOW CRAFT. That Namel I saw it o'er the Master's chair, The " Hieroglyphic bright," and bending low, Paid solemn homage to the symbol there That speaks of GoD, before whom all should bow. That Name! I whispered at the Altar here, When dangers thickened, and when death was nigh; In solemn silence, and with soul sincere, I prayed, " O GOD be with me, if I die!" That Name I the last upon my faltering tongue, Ere death shall seal it, it shall surely be; The pass-word to the bright, angelic throng, Whose GOD is GoD to all eternity. That Name then, brothers, ever gently speak, Above all father's, mother's name, revered; What bounties from His gracious hand we take! 0, be His honor to our souls endeared. CORN, WINE, AND OIL.-The bounties of our Heavenly Father have supplied us, while we sojourn below, with all necessary comforts of food, shelter, and clothing. The: earth abundantly yields them to the industrious laborer; from our mother's breast we pass to the yielding sources of the soil. The emblem of corn, implying all: the nutritious fruits of the earth; the emblem of wine, implying all that nature affords to gladden the heart, and the emblem of oil, which to Oriental nations is quite as important as the others, represent nature's bounties, the wages of practical labor. King Solomon stipulated to pay the Temple-builders,.for their service, c" twenty thousand measures of beaten wheat and twenty thousand measures of barley, and twenty thousand baths of wine and twenty thousand baths of oil:" Thus bountifully did that large-hearted monarch provide for those who THE PERFECT ASHLARS. 69 should do him service in his erections for God. Shall we not have as-bountiful returns for our labor? Toiling in the nobler system of architecture, the building up of the human soul, and laboring under the supervision of the Supreme Architect of the Universe, let us not doubt the liberality of our Master or the certainty of ample reward. Plenty, health, and peace wait upon them that do the works of God. THE PERFECT ASHLARS.-The spirit of this whole section is conveyed in the following lines: The sunbeams from the eastern sky Flash from yon blocks exalted high, And on their polished fronts proclaim The framer and the builder's fame. Glowing beneath the fervid noon, Yon marble dares the southern sun; Yet'tells that wall of fervid flame, The framer and the builder's fame. The chastened sun adown the west, Speaks the same voice and sinks to rest; No sad defect, no flaw to shame The framer and the builder's fame. Beneath the dewy night, the sky Lights up ten thousand lamps on high; Ten thousand lamps unite to name The framer and the builder's fame. Perfect in line, exact in square, These Ashlars of the Craftsmen are; They will to coming time proclaim The framer and the builder's fame. 70 THE PERFECT ASHLARS. The best specimen of a Perfect Ashlar presented in the Masonic ranks, in this country, is George Washington. He was indeed a paragon in Freemasonry, an exemplar of its virtues and its graces. There. is no degree of moral improvement suggested by Masonic teachings to which he did not aspire, and few to which he had not attained. - His life as a citizen, a statesman, and a patriot, the world has by heart; his career as a Freemason is not less worthy of admiration and respect. In the pressure of a long and doubtful war, when his faculties were concentrated in the never-ceasing details of command, he was ever ready to turn his thoughts to the claims of a distressed, worthy brother, prompt to attend Lodge meetings, happy to respond to Masonic courtesies. The bust or portrait of Washington should be placed conspicuously in every Lodge-room. Not only should we become familiar with those majestic features at our dwellings, but, in conjunction with the emblems of the Lodge, they should appear the brightest and most significant emblem of them all. THE MASTER MASON. O DEATH, thy hand is weighty on the breast Of him who lies within thy grasp I No power can raise the captive from his rest Whom thy strong hand doth clasp. The tears of broken hearts do fall in vain: Their sighs are wasted o'er the grave; Thou laugh'st to scorn the solemn funeral strain, For there is none to save. From age to age, -mankind hath owned thy swaySubmissive bowed beneath thy hand; The hoary head, the infant of a day, The loveliest of the band. And thou hast struck the true and faithful now, The model of Masonic faith; It was a cruel and a' dastard blow, O stern, unyielding death I Yet, boastful monster, ye shall have release, Thy weighty hand, relentless power, Shall be withdrawn, and all thy mockings cease, And all thy triumphs o'er. The Lion of the Tribe of Judah comesSee in the heavenly east the sign! To rend the sepulchers, disclose the tombs, And place thee, monster, in I THE MASTER MASON. TH3E FIRST SECTION. THE THEORY OF THE DEGREE OF MASTER MASON. THE Degree of Master Mason is suggestive of government over men. The Apprentice and the Fellow Craft draw the materials from quarry and forest, shape them, remove them to the places designed for them, and raise them to the wall: this is physical labor. All this requires a designing head, a draughtsman, and a superintendent, and this is the Master Mason. The same necessity exists in Speculative or Moral Masonry. To the Master Mason were intrusted the secrets of architecture, plans, measurements, and estimates, the weight, tenacity, and durability of materials, and all that learning needful to transform rude stones and the trunks of trees into edifices that should be the wonder and delight of the earth. With such transcendent privileges there was coupled a heavy burden of covenants, and he was expected to exemplify before his fellow-laborers every virtue and grace symbolized on the Trestle-Board of the Master Builder. (73) 74 THE MASTER MASON. A late writer has elegantly said: We have seen the type of man complete in moral worth and intellectual culture. What more is left? Communion with his Maker. The mere knowledge of Deity is that of our august Cireator, whom we are to reverence and in whom alone we are to put our trust. But we have not yet seen Him walking upon the earth and holding open communion with the sons of men. Man has not been ennobled by personal contact with the All-Holy. Let us suppose three brethren, types respectively of moral, intellectual, and physical perfection, joined together in holy fellowship, which should make their very souls as one, might they not in mystic union call upon the great and sacred name of Deity and receive an answer to their prayer? That such an idea did prevail, we have sufficient proof, and it is to this, rather than to any mere utilitarian views, that we are to look for the rule which, in a purely speculative institution, so sternly demands physical as well as moral and intellectual integrity. The Degree of Master Mason is a type of the communion of man with God. Long before the incarnation of that great Being was the hope entertained of seeing Him with mortal eyes, and no exertions were deemed; too great to insure that consummation. With us these ideas are but a type, for we have that realization so longed for by the brethren of old. And yet, as a type, how interesting it is to look back upon their struggles to look forward into what is now so bright and clear! We now find man complete in morality and intelligence, with the story of religion added, to insure him of the protection of the Deity, and guard him against ever TIHE COMPASS. 75 going astray. These three degrees thus form a perfect and harmonious whole. THE COMPASS.-The use of the Compass, whose beautiful allegory was explained in a preceding grade, is peculiarly adapted to the present Degree. Within its extreme points, when properly extended, are found the grand principles of Friendship, Morality, and Brotherly Love. No subject can more properly engage the attention than the humane and generous feelings planted by nature in the human breast. Friendship is traced through the circle of private connections to the grand system of universal philanthropy, but the Brotherly Love so well known to the Masonic family is one of the purest emanations of earthly friendship. A community of sentiment and feeling creates a community of interest, cultivated and cherished by every brother. Morality is practical virtue, of which so much is said in the preceding degrees. It is the journey of Wisdom, pursuing and disseminating happiness. It is no cold speculation, but a living principle. Saint John, himself one of the purest exemplars of these three virtues, has left it on record, that if a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar; for he that lolveth not his brother, whom he hath' seen, how can he love God, whom he hath not seen? Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love one another; and thifs commandment have we from Him, That he who loveth God, love his brother also. So sings the Masonic lyrist: By one God created, by one Savior saved, By one Spirit lighted, with one markl engraved, We learn through the wisdom our spirits approve, To cherish the spirit of Brotherly Love. 76 TIlE MASTER MASON. In th-e land, of the stranger we Masons. abidle, In forest, in quarry, on Lebanon's'side;: Yon Teimple we build it, its plan is from above, And we labor supported by Brotherly Love. Though the service be hard., and the wages. be scant, If the. Master accept it,, our hearts are content;. The prize that we toil' for, we'll have it above, When the Temple's completed, in Brotherly Love. Yes, yes, though the week may be long, it. will end;, Thoughi tile Temple be lofty, the key-stone will stand;: And the Sabbathll, blest dlay, every thought will remove, Save the- memnory fraternal: of Brotherly Love. THE ALTAR.-The sacrifices made upon the Masonic Altar are the bloodless offerings of the soul. David describes them when he says, "The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise." These may be individualized as sacrifices of our own will, of feelings of contempt, anger, and hatred; of tale-bearing and indiscretion; of selfishness and the indulgence of our passions. Such are the offerings made upon the open Law and in front of the emblem of the letter G. Friendship, on wing etherial flying round, Stretches her arm to bless the hallowed-ground; Humanity, well pleased, here. takes her stand, Holding her daughter, Pity, by the hand; Hiere Charity, which soothed the widow's sigh, And wipes the dew-drop from the orphan's eye; Here stands Benevolence, whose large embrace Unicircumscribed takes in the human race; She sees each: narrow tie, each private end, Indignant, Virtue's universal friend; Sco.rnin. each frantic zealot, bigot tool, She stamps on Masons' breasts her Golden Ru;l:e. THE TROWEL..77 THE TROWEL.-The Master Mason is not restricted to a single implement, or set of implements, for his mystic work; but the most appropriate tool in his department is the Trowel —the emblem of peace-used to spread the cement of brotherly love and affection; that cement which unites us into one sacred band or society of friends and brothers, amongst whom no contention should ever exist save that noble contention, or rather emulation, of who best can workl and best agree. The parts of a building can not be united without proper cement; no more can the social compact be maintained without the binding influence of love. CHARITY.-SO much has been said in other pages of this. volume upon Charity, or more properly Love, that it would be superfluous to enlarge further upon this subject. No one has so clearly defined it as the Apostle who so thoroughly experienced it, the Evangelist John. His soul was filled with this divine- emanation when he wrote, "IHe that loveth his brother abideth in the light, and there is none occasion of stumbling in him." "We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren."."Let us not love in word, neither in tongue, but in deed and truth."'"Brethren, let us love one another, for love is.of God, and every one that loveth is born of God and honoreth God. He that loveth not, honoreth not God, for God is love." "Brethren, if God so loved us, we ought also to love one another." Under the term "Charity," the Apostle Paul, in a masterly summing-up of the subject, writes: "Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and though I have the gift of prophesy, and understand all mysteries 78 THE MASTER MASON. and all knowledge, and though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing. And now abideth Faith, Hope, Charity, these three; but the greatest of these is Charity." PRAYER.-The posture of bended knees is often alluded to in Scripture. Solomon kneeled down upon his knees before the congregation of Israel, and spread forth his hands toward heaven. Ezra says, "I fell on my knees, and spread out my hands unto the Lord my God." Daniel kneeled on his knees three times a day and prayed. Paul says, "I bow my knees unto the Father." As an appropriate form of Lodge prayer, in which Masons of all persuasions can unite without compromise of religious principle, the one entitled the Lord's Prayer is the most perfect: "Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever. Amen." THE FOUNDATION-STONE. When the Spirit came to Jephthah, Animating his great heart, He arose, put on his armor, Girt his loins about to part; Bowed the knee, implored a blessing, Gave an earnest of his faith, Then, divinely-strung, departed, Set for victory or death. THE FIVE' POINTS OF FELLOWSHIP. 79 If a rude, uncultured soldier Thus drew wisdom from above, How should we, enlightened laborers, Children of the Sire of LoveHow should we, who know "the wisdom, Gentle, pure, and peaceable," Make a prayerful preparation, That our work be square and full I Lo, the future! One can read it! He its darkest chance can bend. Lo, our wants! how great, how many! He abundant means can lend. Raise your hearts, then, laborers, boldly, Build and journey in his trust; Square your deeds by precepts holy, And the end is surely blest. Vainly will the Builders labor If the Overseer is gone; Vainly gate and wall are guarded -- If the Allseeing is withdrawn: Only is successful ending When the work's begun with care; Lay your blocks, then, laborers, strongly, On the Eternal Rock of Prayer! T3CHE SECOND SECTION. THE Second Section is' devoted to that combination of duties implied under the figure of "The Five Points of Fellowship;" likewise to the most expressive arrangement of Masonic emblems, " The Broken Column." These two subjects, inserted in the the center of the Master's lecture, form in truth the very heart of the matter, and no Mason can be esteemed well instructed who does not familiarize 80 THE MASTER MASON. himself with them. This section recites the historical tradition of the Order, and presents to view a picture of great moral sublimity. It recites the legend, the symbolical interpretation of which testifies our faith in the resurrection of the body and the immortality of the soul; while it also exemplifies an instance of integrity and firmness seldom equaled, and never surpassed. THE FIVE POINTS OF FELLOwsHIP.-The old records succinctly declare that the Master Mason should not withdraw his hand from a sinking brother; that his foot should never halt in the pursuit of duty; that his prayers should unceasingly ascend for the distressed; that his faithful heart should equally conceal the secrets and the faults of a brother; and that approaching evil should be e averted by a friendly admonition. The same thought is more elaborately conveyed in the following, from an author of the last generation: I. When the necessities of a brother call for my aid and support, I will be ever ready to lend him such assistance, to save him from sinking, as may not be detrimental to myself or connection, if I find him worthy thereof. II. Indolence shall not cause my footsteps to halt nor wrath turn them aside; but, forgetting every selfish consideration, I will be swift of foot to serve, help, and execute benevolence to a fellow-creature in distress, and more particularly to a brother Mason. III. When I offer up my ejaculations to Almighty God, I will remember a brother's welfare as my own; for as the voice of babes and sucklings ascends to the Throne of Grace, so most assuredly: will the breathings of a fervent heart arise to the mansions of bliss, as our prayers are certainly required of one another. THE FIVE POINTS OF FELLOWSHIP. 81 IV. A brother's secrets, delivered to me as such, I will keep as I would my own; as betraying that trust might be doing him the greatest injury he could sustain in this mortal life. Nay, it would be like the villainy of an assassin who lurks in darkness to stab his adversary when unarmed and least prepared to meet an enemy. V. A brother's character I will support in his absence as I would in his presence. I will not wrongfully revile him myself, nor will I suffer it to be done by others, if in my power to prevent it. Thus by the Five Points of Fellowship are we linked together in an indivisible chain of sincere affection, brotherly love, relief, and truth. Another and even more beautiful comment upon the Five Points of Fellowship is the following: I. When the calamities of our brother call for our aid, we should not withdraw the hand that might sustain him from sinking, but should render him those services which, while they do not encumber or injure our families or fortunes, charity and religion may dictate for the saving of our fellow-creature. II. From which purpose indolence should not persuade the foot to halt, or wrath turn our steps out of the way; but, forgetting injuries and selfish feelings, and remembering that man was born for the aid ofhis generation and not for his own enjoyments only, but to do that which is good, we should be swift to have mercy, to save, to strengthen, and execute benevolence. III. As the good things of this life are partially dispensed, and some persons are opulent while others are in distress, such principles always enjoin a Mason, be he ever- so poor, to testify his good-will toward his brother. 6 82 THE MASTER MASON. Riches alone do not allow the means of doing good. Virtue and benevolence are not confined to the walls of opulence. The rich man from his many talents is required to make extensive works, under the principles of virtue. And yet poverty is no excuse for an omission of that exercise; for, as the cry of innocence ascendeth up to heaven, as the voice of babes and sucklings reaches the throne of God, and as the breathings of a contrite heart are heard in heaven, so a Mason's prayers for the welfare of his brother are required of him. IV. The fourth principle is, never to injure the confidence of your brother by revealing his secrets, for perhaps that were to rob him of the guard that protects his property or his life. The tongue of a Mason should be without guile and void of offense, speaking truth with discretion, and keeping itself within the rule of judgment, maintaining a heart free of uncharitable. ness, locking up secrets, and communing in charity and love. V. As much is required of a Mason in the way of gifts as discretion may limit. Charity begins at home, but, like a fruitful olive-tree planted by the side of a fountain whose boughs overshoot the wall, so is charity. It spreads its arms abroad from the strength and opulence of its station, and lendeth its shade for the repose and relief of those who are gathered under its branches. Charity, when given with imprudence, is no longer a virtue; but when flowing from abundance, it is glorious as the beams of morning, in whose beauty thousands rejoice. When donations extorted by piety are detrimental to a man's family, they become sacrifices to superstition, and, like incense to idols, are disapproved by Heaven. THE BROKEN COLUMN. 83 TiE BROKEN COLUMN.-The Broken Column supporting the volume of Divine inspiration; a virgin, of matchless beauty, weeping, supporting in her left hand a funeral urn, commemorative of the departed, and in her right hand a sprig of evergreen; Time, the great leveler and restorer, entwining her disheveled locks in his fingers-this is the array of symbols now presented to the admiring eyes of the candidate. They are calculated to awaken every sentiment of respect, veneration, and fraternal tenderness on the one hand, and on the other to remind us, that although time may lay all earthly grandeur in ruins and deface the loveliness of all terrestrial beauty, yet there is imperishable grandeur joined to unfading beauty and eternal happiness in the world beyond the grave.'T is done-the dark decree is said, That called our friend away; Submissive bow the sorrowing head, And bend the lowly knee. We will not ask why God has broke Our Pillar from its stone, But humbly yield us to the stroke, And say " His will be done." At last the weary head has sought In earth its long repose; And weeping freres have hither brought Their chieftain to his close. We held his hand, we filled his heart, While heart and hand could move, Nor will we from his grave depart But with the rites of love. This grave shall be a garner, where We'll heap our golden corn; 84 THE MASTER MASON. And here, in heart, we'll oft repair, To think of him that's gone; To speak of all he did and said, That's wise, and good, and pure, And covenant o'er the hopeful dead, In vows that will endure. O Brother, bright and loving frere, O spirit free and pure, Breathe us one gush of spirit air, From off the Heavenly shore; And say, when these hard toils are done, And the Grand Master -calls, Is there for every weary one Place in the heavenly halls! THE UmINISHED TEMPLE.-The Temple of Masonry is ever in course of construction, ever unfinished. Into its walls successive generations of the wise and good are built; and while time lasts, and the end of all things is delayed, the moral structure is incomplete. But we need not fear its walls. will crumble, or that the work will ever cease: The other societies of this world, empires, kingdoms, and commonwealths, being of less perfect constitutions, have been of less permanent duration. Although men have busied themselves through all ages in forming and reforming them, in casting down and building up, yet still their labors have been vain. The reason was hear it and be wise, ye builders of the present day!-they daubed with untempered mortar; they admitted into their structures the base, discordant, heterogeneous materials of pride, ambition, selfishness, malice, guile, hypocrisies, envious and evil speaking, which Freemasonry rejects. Hence their fabrics, unable to support themselves, tumbled to the foundation through THE UNFINISHED TEMPLE. 85 inherent weakness, or were shaken to pieces by external violence. The Egyptian, the Babylonian, the Assyrian, the Persian Empires, the commonwealths of Athens, Sparta, and Rome, with many more of later date, where are they now? "Fallen, fallen, fallen," the weeping voice of history replies. The meteors of our age, the gaze of the world, they rose, they blazed awhile on high, they burst and sunk beneath the horizon, to that place of oblivion where the pale ghosts of departed grandeur fly about in sad lamentations for their former glory. Such have been the changes and revolutions which, as a Fraternity, we -have seen. From the bosom of the Lodge, seated upon an eminence, its foundations reaching the center and its summits the sky, we have beheld, as upon a turbulent ocean at qn immense distance beneath us, the states of this world alternately mounted up and cast down, as they have regarded or neglected the principles described above, while, supported by them, the sublime fabric of our constitution has remained unshaken through ages. And thus supported it shall remain while the sun opens the day to gild its cloud-capped towers, or the moon leads- in the night to checker its starry canopy. The current of things may roll along its basis, the tide of chance and time may beat against its walls, the stormy gusts of malice may assault its lofty battlements, and the heavy rains of calumny may descend upon its spacious roof, but all in vain. A building thus constructed and supported is impregnable from without, and can then only be dissolved when the pillars of the universe shall be shakenj and "the great globe itself, yea, all which we inherit, shall, like the 86 THE I MASTER MASON. baseless fabric of a vision," pass away at the fiat of the Master Architect; MONODY OF THE GRAND MASTER. DEADI and where now those earnest, loving eyes, Which kindled in so many eyes the light? Have they departed from our earthly skies, And'left no rays to illuminate the night? Dead I and where now that hand of sympathy That welled, and yearned, and with true love o'erflowed? 0 heart of love, is the rich treasure dry? Forever sealed what once such gifts bestowed? Dead I and where now that generous, nervous hand, That thrilled each nerve within its generous clasp? Will it no more enlink the Mystic band, Hallowing and strengthening all within its grasp? Heart, eyes, and hand to dust are all consigned; It was his lot, for he was born of earth: But the rich treasures of his Master-mind Abide in heaven, for there they had their birth. Abide in heaven! 0, the enkindling trust! The record of his deeds remaineth here: The Acacia blooms beside his silent dust, And points unerringly the brighter sphere. Then, though the Shattered Column mark his fate, And Weeping Virgin weep the Unfinished Fane, Not altogether are we desolate: For O, beloved Friend, we meet againl WitSDoM, S~itrSdf, AND BEAUTY. 87 THE THIRD SECTION. TilIs Section is chiefly devoted to the explanation of the hieroglyphical emblems peculiar to this Degree. As usually given, it presents many useful particulars relative to King Solomon's Temple, a portion of which, in the present volume, are, for convenience sake, transferred to other pages. In the richness of its imagery, this Section resembles the Third Section of the Degree of Entered Apprentice, WISDOM, STRENGTH, AND BEAtTTY.-The emblem of the three Pillars in this section alludes to the three immortal artists who contrived, strengthened, and adorned the sacred Fane. Solomon, King of Israel, first in wisdom, in wealth, in favor with God and man, stands as the Pillar of Wisdom. "His wisdom excelled," says the inspired historian, "the wisdom of all the children of the east country and all the wisdom of Egypt. For he was wiser than all men; than Ethan the Ezrahite, and Heman and Chalcor and Darda, the sons of Mahal. He spoke three thousand proverbs, and his songs were a thousand and five, and he spoke of trees from the cedar tree, that is in Lebanon, even unto the hyssop that springeth out of the wall; he spoke also of beasts and of fowls and of creeping things and of fishes." This is all summed up in this passage: "God gave Solomon wisdom and understanding exceeding much, and largeness of heart even as the sand that is upon the seashore." This was our Pillar of Wisdom. Our Pillar of Strength was Hiram, KIing of Phoenicia, a nation of architects and mariners, whose furnishing of skillful builders and choice materials gave to King Solomon all the support necessary for his undertaking. 88 THE MASTER MASON. Our Pillar of Beauty was Hiram Abiff, whose singular proficiency in all the works of the goldsmith, the brassfounder, the dyer and weaver, the lapidary and the jeweler, gave the desired impetus to the adorning of the edifice. THE COLUMNS AND PILASTERS. -Our monitorial instructor gives the due number of these outward parts of the edifice, by which the visitor from foreign nations, who was not permitted to approach the Temple nearer than the outer courts, could form an idea of the magnitude and splendor of the interior. Of columns proper there were 1,453; of pilasters, 2,906. Upon other pages of this volume a description of the porch and the courts is given, from which we deduce the necessity of so many columns and pilasters in the building. In the same connection, the lectures of the Master's Degree compute the numbers of the workmen as follows:Grand Masters, 3; Masters, or overseers of the work, 3,300; Fellow Crafts, 80,000; Entered Apprentices, or bearers of burdens, 70,000. These were all classed and arranged by the wisdom of Solomon, that neither envy, discord, nor confusion were suffered to interrupt that universal peace and tranquillity which pervaded the world at this important period. The materials that made up this band were the virtuous and laborious; its masterbuilders the Enochs, the Noahs, the Abrahams, the Moses, the Joshuas of the age. There was not a signal connected with it which did not point either to man's extremity or to God's opportunity; not a grip which did not speak of human relations demanding human sympathies; not a word that did not tell of power, permanency, or wisdom as the result of active, thorough devotion; LODGE COMBINATIONS. 89 not a ceremony which was not full of instruction upon the great divisions of human knowledge. LODGE CoMBINATIONS.-The number of members essential to the legal opening and working of a Lodge of Entered Apprentices is seven or more, of whom one at least must be a Master Mason. Where two or three assemble round. In work the Lord approves, His spirit with the grasp is found, For't is the place he loves: Be now all hearts to friendship given, For we, the Sons of Light, are seven. The number of members essential to the legal opening and working of a Lodge of Fellow Crafts is five or more, of whom, at least, two must be Master Masons, the other three being Fellow Crafts. This Lodge of Five from Tyre came, Their leader one of inatchless fame; All through the toiling seasons seven, Their time upon this work was given. The number of members essential to the legal opening and working of a Lodge of Master Masons is three or more, all of that Degree. A Lodge attempting to operate in violation of these landmarks, breaks the unity of the sacred numbers three, five, and seven; the Master who permits it violates in an especial manner his own covenants, and the Lodge so offending forfeits the Charter or Warrant under which it works, and which in itself embodies an injunction to adhere to the ancient landmarks. THE THREE STEPS.-This is an emblem recalling the 90 THE MASTER MASON. various. illustrations of the number Three, and this additional one, that human life has three principal stagesyouth, manhood, and old age. The first is symbolical of the Entered Apprentice, as suggested under the head of " Theory of the First Degree," on a preceding page. Masons of that grade are therefore exhorted industriously to occupy their minds in the attainment of useful knowledge. The second step is beautifully emblematical of the Fellow Craft, who is exhorted in the lectures of his Degree to apply the knowledge which he acquired as an Entered Apprentice to the discharge of his respective duties to God, his neighbor, and himself. The third step is emblematical of the Master Mason, who, in the enjoyment of those happy reflections consequent upon a well-spent life, prepares his mind for a blissful hereafter. Corresponding with this emblem the being of man has three periods-time, death, and eternity. Upon one of these steps every member of our widely-spread Order is now standing. IIe who writes this and he who reads it stands upon the first; but who can anticipate the period of his stay? Upon the second hundreds are standing, gasping, tottering, perhaps dreading the illimitable profound that opens before them, while in the unknown existence of the third is the great mass of those who, like ourselves, have " Met upon the Level, to part upon the Square." THE POT OF INCENSE.-This is an emblem of a pure heart, and as such is peculiarly expressive. There is a state of perfection at which the good man may arrive by the influence of vital religion, and such is typified by -H-E BEE-HIVE. 91 this emblem. A pure heart perpetually ascends in perfumes of gratitude, like the cloud of celestial white that filled the Temple, and like the heaven-descended flame that burned day and night within the sanctum sacnctorum. Such is the offering of prayer, the most acceptable incense the human heart can raise. Incense for the service of the Sanctuary was ordered to be made of frankincense and other gums and spices, the materials and manufacture of which are particularly described in the Divine Law. It was the business of the priest to offer it up, morning and evening, upon an altar especially erected for this purpose, and this was called the Altar of Incense. The preparation of it for common use was positively forbidden; neither could any other composition be offered as incense upon this altar, nor could this be offered by any but the priest. The Incense approved by God under the present dispensation is more fragrant, more costly, and more acceptable than the richest gums of Arabia. The service and the time of offering is in the option of every man. Whenever a Freemason looks upon the emblem, he should be reminded to make at least'one ejaculation of thanksgiving, praise, or confession to Him who ever heareth. THE BEE-HIVE.-This emblem of industry has peculiar meaning to the members of a society based upon a working model. The slothful inactivity of the rational drone is severely reproved by it. The industrious bee rises early to the labors of the summer day, gathering from the variegated carpet of nature an ample supply of food for the winter of his year. Man, in imitation of this example,. might enjoy all the necessaries and even the luxuries of life, while he would avoid vice and temptation 92 THE MASTER MASON. and merit the respect of mankind. On the contrary, idleness is the parent of poverty and immorality. Such are the lessons taught by all the working tools-the Gauge and Gavel, the Square, Level and Plumb, and the Trowel-of the Craft. Every day of the six properly devoted to labor should be so divided that while a share may be given to works of charity and devotion, and a share to refreshment and sleep, one measured part may be given to the avocations of life, those callings upon which the interests of society depend. The.proverbs of the wise king abound in rebukes upon indolence and admonition to industry: " Go to the ant, thou sluggard: consider her ways and be wise; which provided her meat in the summer and gathereth her food in the harvest. How long wilt thou sleep, 0 sluggard? Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep: so shall thy poverty come as one that traveleth, and thy want as an armed man." THE BOOK OF CONSTITUTIONS GUARDED BY THE TYLER'S SWORD.-SO much has been said in this volume upon the importance of secrecy as a Masonic virtue, that the application of this emblem will be easy. The Book of Constitutions, as an emblem, represents all the instruction, esoteric and exoteric, connected with the Masonic ritual. The Tyler of the Lodge, whose emblem, badge, and im-,plement are the Sword, is the guardian of those assemblages held for the purpose of lawfully communicating the secrets of Masonry. Thus the Sword guarding the Book recalls to the memory of the initiate all the instructions communicated to him upon this subject. This emblem will-convince the Mason of the policy of preserving THE SWORD POINTING TO THE NAKED HEART. 93 inviolably the important secrets which are committed to his breast. Various passages from the Holy Scriptures are appended to enforce these lessons: "Be ye afraid of the sword, for wrath bringeth the punishments of the sword that ye may know there is a judgment." "Even a fool when he holdeth his peace is counted wise, and he that shutteth his lips is esteemed a man of understanding." "Whoso keepeth his mouth and his tongue, keepeth his soul from troubles. As he that bindeth a stone -in a sling, so is he that giveth honor to a fool." "Discretion shall preserve thee understanding shall keep thee." It will be observed, however, that with us the Sword is but a symbol. There is no punishment in Masonry for the highest crimes, beyond expulsion from the Order. THE SWORD POINTING TO THE NAKED HEART.-This emblem is the complement of the last. The punishments of Masonry, at the greatest, are but exclusion from the Order. But- although Mercy delays the descending stroke of Justice, there is a day appointed in which Justice will be amply avenged, unless Mercy shall secure us in the ark of her retreat. The sword of Almighty vengeance is drawn to reward iniquity, and pointed steadily toward the sinful heart. Were it not for this belief in retributive justice, how painful would be our observations of human life! All history is full of instances of the, tyranny of the strong over the weak. How much sin against God and humanity is done privily, of which there is no disclosure in this life! Yet there is a righteous God, and He does not look upon these things without abhorrence. His Law declares: "The 94 THE MASTER MASON. ungodly shall not stand in the judgment, nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous." "If I speak of strength, lo, he is strong; and if of judgment, who shall set me a time to plead? for he is not a man as I am, that I should consider him. I will say unto God, do not condemn me." These are the lessons taught by this emblem. As surely as Masonry encourages us to hope for a, reward to the righteous in the world to come, so certainly does it inculcate the doctrine that there is a punishment there for the -evil-doer. THE ALL-SEEINGF EYE.-This emblem implies that all the ways of man are before the eyes of the Lord, and he pondereth all his goings; that the eyes of the Lord are in every place beholding the evil and the good, and especially upon, them that fear him and hope in his mercy. There is an Eye through blackest night A vigil ever keeps; A vision of unerring light O'er lowly vale and giddy height — The; Eye that never sleeps. Midst poverty and sickness lain The lowly sufferer weeps; What marks the face convulsed with pain? What marks the softened look again? The Eye that never sleeps. Above the far meridian sun, Below profoundest deeps, Where dewy day his course begun, Where scarlet marks his labor doneThe Eve that never sleeps. THE ANCHOR AND THE ARK. 95 No limit bounds the Eternal sight, No misty cloud o'ersweeps; The depths of hell confess the light, Eternity itself is brightThe Eye that never sleeps. Then rest we calm, though round our head The life-storm fiercely sweeps; What fear is in the blast? What dread To us has death? an Eye's o'erheadThe Eye that never sleeps. THE ANCHOR AND THE ARK.-Under the emblem of Hope, on a previous page, we explained the manner in which this first of the three theological virtues is inculcated to Freemasons. The Ark, an emblem of that which survived the flood, reminds us of that ark of safety which will waft us securely over this sea of troubles; and when arrived in a celestial harbor, the anchor of a well-grounded hope will moor us forever to that peaceful shore " where the wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at rest." This grace is e'qually important and pleasing in this world of uncertainty and change. The present moment is sure to possess some ingredient to embitter the chalice of mortal enjoyment, and how effectually are we relieved by the soothing hope that the deficiencies qf the present day shall be supplied by to-morrow! The Anchor, which is connected with this emblem, is an emblem of security. When the visions of hope are real and rational, as when we hope in the promises of God, in a future state of happiness to the good, and the like, her anchor is sure and steadfast in the harbor of a celestial country. To this country hope 96 THE MASTER MASON. points as the future residence of the virtuous and the good; thither all good Masons hope to arrive. Green, but far greener is the Faith That gives us victory over death; Fragrant, more fragrant far the Eope That buoys our dying spirits up; Enduring, but the Charity That Masons teach will never die. THE FORTY-SEVENTH PROBLEM.-The history of this problem is much confused; some writers attributing its discovery, to one person, some to another. Even the period of its discovery is doubtful; but so many of the most practical operations of architecture and surveying depend upon it, that it is difficult to believe its discovery bears date later than the erection of the Egyptian pyramids. Its adoption into Freemasonry implies that the members of this Order should be lovers of the arts and sciences. THIE HOUR-GLASS. LIFE'S sands are dropping, dropping, Each grain a moment dies, No stay has time, no stopping; Behold, how swift he flies I He bears away our rarest, They smile and disappear, The cold grave wraps our fairest; Each falling grain's a tear. Life's sands are softly falling, Death's foot is light as- snow;'Tis fearful,'t is appalling To see how swift they flow: THE SCYTHE. 97 To read the fatal warning The sands so plainly tell To feel there's no returning From death's dark shadowy dale. Life's sands give admonition To use its moments well; Each grain bears holy mission, And this the tale they tell; " Let zeal than time run faster, Each grain some good afford, Then at the last the Master Shall double our reward." THE SCYTHE. -This emblem is trite: as the mower cuts the grass in its season, Death, the grim leveler, sweeps away the human race at the appointed time. Behold, what havoc the Scythe of Time has made in the generations of man! If by chance we should escape the numerous evils incident to childhood and youth, and with health and vigor, to the years of manhood, yet, withal, we must soon be cut down by the all-devouring Scythe of Time, and be gathered into the land where our fathers have gone before us. THE EMBLEMS OF MORTALITY.-At first view these emblems, the Setting-Maul, the Spade, the Coffin, the Open Grave, and the Sprig of Evergreen at its head, seem but to add shades of gloom to those that have just been moralized upon, the Hour-glass and the Scythe. Alas! who -can look within an Open Grave without a sensation of profoundest melancholy? Is it for us, we mournfully ask, to resign our manhood and court the companionship of the worm? Must our eyes, trained to enjoy the charms of nature and of art, be blinded with -7 98 THE MASTER MASON. these clods, our tongues silenced in this narrow receptacle? Yes, such will be our doom. A flowing river or a standing lake May their dry banks and naked shores forsake; Their waters may exhale and upward move, Their channel leave, to roll in clouds above: But the returning winter will restore What in the summer they had lost before; But if, 0 man, thy vital streams desert Their purple channels and defraud the heart, With fresh recruits they ne'er can be supplied, Nor feel their leaping life's returning tide. And such are all the lessons of human life. We walk from grave to grave, as one may walk over a hard-fought battle-field, and find no place for his foot save upon the image of his kind. The emblems before us demand the tear.of fraternal sympathy, and we can not refuse to weep. The frosts of death have palsied his mortal tenement. "There is hope of a tree if it be cut down that it may sprout again: but man dieth and wasteth away; yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where is he?" As Freemasonry, in its three degrees, is an epitome of human life, so one who passes through its impressive ceremonial remains at the last under deep impressions of the certainty of death and the loathsomeness of the grave. But here steps in the qualified instructor of the Lodge, the Master, and the sad symbology opens out a brighter lesson. It opens out the brightest, clearest, most hopeful lesson of all; for it tells us what in the olden time was a Masonic secret; but now, "since light and immortality have been brought to light in the Gospel," is preached to every man, that, as this world is to CITARITY. 99 the good nan but the tiling-room of heaven, so the grave is the door of the Celestial Lodge where our GRAND MASTER and the multitude of the faithful who have entered before us are waiting to receive us with tokens of affection and songs of transport. The soul remains unaffected, flourishing in immortality. Yea, though the body may decay into dust, and the dust be scattered to the four winds; though our name and our memory may fade from the minds of men, yet there is One pledged to remember us; to awaken us when the morning hour shall come; to reach forth His strong hand and to assist us to arise from our long sleep. The Lion of the Tribe of Judah hath prevailed! The Omnipotent is the All-merciful. We shall rise again. Tuba mirum spargens sonum, Per sepulchra regionum Coget omnes ante Thronum. CHARITY.-The shining virtue of Charity, so honorable to our nature and so frequently enjoined in the Holy Volume upon our altars, will appropriately close this chapter. There are none of the characteristics of the ancient Craft so much valued as this; their earliest records and their perpetual practice coincide in this particular. Charity includes a supreme love to God and an ardent affection for the rational beings of his creation. This humane, generous, heaven-inspired principle is diametrically opposed- to the prime ingredient of human nature, which looks only to self; not until this latter passion is supplanted by the former, will the soul of man be purified and fitted for the society of heaven. The feelings of the heart, guided by reason, should direct the hand of charity. 100 THE MASTER MASON. The true objects of relief are merit in distress, virtue in temptation, innocence in tears,. industrious men borne down by affliction, acts of providence, widows left dependent and desolate, and orphans thrown in tender years upon the frigid charities of the world. Thus we close our comments upon the symbolical degrees. Every step in this part of the Masonic Ladder will lift up the initiate further above the sordid level of humanity, and nearer to the celestial world, whose light, shining upon him through the first great light of the Order, wins him toward itself. Glorious system, which, while it the better fits a man for living in this world, so perfectly fits him for the world to come; and, dying late and honored, justifies us in pronouncing over his remains such a eulogy as this: So falls the last of the old forest trees, Within whose shades we wandered with delight; Moss-grown, and hoary, yet the birds of heaven Loved in its boughs to linger and to sing; The summer winds made sweetest music there; The'soft, spring showers hung their brightest drops, Glistening and cheerful on the mossy spray, And to the last, that vigorous, ancient oak Teemed with ripe fruitage! Now the builders mourn Through Temple-chamlbers their Grand Master fallen; The clear intelligence, the genial soul, The lips replete with wisdom, gone, all gone; The ruffian Death has met and struck his prey, And from the Quarry to the Mount all mourn. Bind up with asphodel the mystic tools And Jewels of the Work: bind up, ye Crafts, CLOSING THOUGHTS ON THIS DEGREE. 101 The Square; it marked the fullness of his life; To virtue's angle all his deeds were true; The Level, lo! it leads us to the grave, Thrice-honored, where our aged Father sleeps; The Plumb, it points the home his soul has found; He ever walked by this unerring line, Let down, suggestive from the hand of God: Bind up, in mourning dark and comfortless The Gauge, he gave one part to God, and God, In blest exchange, gave him eternity: The Trowel, in his brotherly hand it spread Sweet concord, joining long-estranged hearts; The Hour-glass, whence his vital sands have fled, And every grain denoting one good deed: The Gavel in his master-hand it swayed For three-score years the moral architects, Quelling all strife, directing every hand, And pointing all to the great Builder, God! Bind these with asphodel; enshroud these Tools And Jewels of the Work; let bitterest tears Flow for the man who wielded them so well, But, overborne with Death, hath, in ripe age, His labor fully done, passed from our sight! CLOSING THOUGHTS ON THIS DEGREE.-A Lodge pursuing its work upon the design, and in the spirit of the foregoing lessons, will realize the virtue expressed by the poet in the following lines: Where hearts are warm with kindred fire, And love beams free from answering eyes, Bright spirits hover always there And that's the home the Masons prize. The Mason's Home; ah, peaceful home The Home of love and light and joy; How gladly does the Mason come To share his tender, sweet employ. 102 CLOSING THOUGHTS ON THIS DEGREE. All round the world, by land, by sea, Where summers burn or winters chill, The exiled Mason turns to thee, And yearns to share the joys we feel. The lMason's Home; ah, happy home t The home of light and love and joy; There's not an hour but I would come And share this tender, sweet employ. A weary task, a dreary round, Is all benighted man may know; But here a brighter scene is found, The brightest scene that's found below. The Mason's Home; ah, blissfill home! Glad center of unmingled joy; Long as I live, I'll gladly come And share this tender, sweet employ. And when the hour of death shall come And darkness seal my closing eye, May hands fraternal bear me home, The home where weary Masons lie. The Mason's Home; ah, heavenly home, To faithful hearts eternal joy: How blest to find beyond the tomb The end of all our sweet employ I THE SECOND ORDER IN FREEMASONRY. THE CAPITULAR DEGREES: CONSISTING OF THE. MARK MASTER, THE PAST MASTER, THE MOST EXCELLENT MASTER, AND THE ROYAL ARCH MASON. THIESE four Degrees are conferred, according to the American system, in Lodges and a Chiapter of Capitular Masonry. The ballot is taken in the Fourth or Royal Arch Degree, the same rules of balloting being observed as in the Symbolical Lodge. All discipline exercised by a Lodge requiring suspension and expulsion, is indorsed by the Chapter without inquiry. The Chapter has also its own code of discipline for offenses against its laws. Not less than nine members can open, work, or close a Royal Arch Chapter. THE MARK MASTER. THE MARE MASTER GLORIFIED. GOD trusts to each a portion of his plan, And doth for honest labor wages give; Wisdom and time he granteth every man, And will not idleness and sloth forgive. The week is waning fast —art thou prepared, 0 laborer, for the Overseer's award? Mast thou been waiting in the market here, Because no man hath hired-thee? Rise and go: The sun on the Meridian doth appearThe Master calls thee to his service now; Rise up, and go wherever duty calls, And build with fervency the Temple-walls. I see, within the heavenly home above, One who hath done his life-tasks faithfully; In the dark quarries all the week he strove, And bore the heat and burden of the day; So, when life's sun passed downward to the west, Richest refreshment was his lot, and rest. So shall it be with thee, 0 toiling one! However hard thine earthly lot may seem; It is not long until the set of sun, And then the past will be a pleasing dream. The Sabbath-to.the faithful laborer given, Is blest companionship, and rest, and heaven. THE MARK MASTER. THE THEORY OF THE DEGREE OF MARK MASTER. IN entering upon a new system of Masonry, the chapitral or capitular, distinct in almost every particular from the ancient or symbolical system, a different style of elucidation must be adopted. We can not any longer look to emblems or symbols as our guides, because there are few characters of this sort applicable to these Degrees. Such designs as ingenious ritualists of the present day have introduced are inconvenient for reference, and will be thoroughly explained within these pages, but they can not, in a Masonic sense, be styled symbols or emblems. The distinction between Symbolical Masonry, or the Masonry of the Ancient Craft Degrees, and this, which forms the subject-matter of the present and subsequent pages, is, that the one is fixed and bounded by ancient devices called symbols, mostly of an architectural character, so definite in their character that it is impossible to innovate greatly upon them without detection; the other is controlled only by traditions, more or less apocryphal, which receive new forms, as the fancy of modern ritualists may treat them. Thus it follows that while the Ancient Craft Degrees are essentially uniform through124i 108 THE MARK MASTER. Out the world, the Degrees conferred in the Chapters and Councils in the United States are essentially different from those which, under similar names, are worked in foreign countries. But with all this confusion of working, liability to innovation, and want of antiquity, there is something so beautiful in the drama of the following Degrees, the covenants are so impressive and humane, and the lessons inculcated in the various Lectures so fragrant with the spirit of the Divine Word, that it need not be wondered at if, in the United States at least, where the reverence for antiquity is less than in older countries, they are prized equally with the ancient and world-wide system. Almost every Master Mason in this country is, or intends to become, a Royal Arch Mason, and a Mason of the Cryptic Rite. What we have said in general terms of the six following Degrees, (the Mark Master, the Past Master, the Most Excellent Master, the Royal Arch Mason, the Royal Master, and the Select Master,) we affirm with peculiar emphasis of the Degree of MARK MASTER. Its drama is exquisitely beautiful, exhibiting the work of the scholar, the Christian, the Biblical student, and the genius, who, had he turned his mind to dramatic writings, might even have emulated a Shakspeare. Its covenants are benevolent in an eminent degree, being admirably designed for the furtherance of that social and charitable intercourse between, brethren which this Degree particularly enjoins. Its lessons, as the following pages will show, are wisely culled from the great treasury of the Divine Word. In brief, so practical is the MARK MASTER'S DEGREE in its character, as conferred in the United States, that its principal device, THE KEY-STONE, is publicly worn, bearing the same MARKC MASTER'S LODGE AND JEWELS. 109 relation to the so-called b' Higher Degrees" which the symbol of the SQUARE AND COMPASS bears to the "Lower Degrees." In theory, the Degree of MARK MASTER is appendant to that of Fellow Craft, and, could its traditions be historically established, might, with propriety, be conferred upon Fellow Crafts as the complement of that grade. Its original members were merely Fellow Crafts its lectures describe the manner in which Fellow Crafts were classified, governed, and paid; its covenants have direct application to Fellow Crafts alone. But, by general consent, the Degree in this country is confined to Master Masons alone, and a new system of Lodges is framed to accommodate it. The title of the organization in which the Degrees of Mark Master, Past Master, Most Excellent Master, and Royal Arch Mason are conferred, is Royal Arch Chapter. In a Chapter, not less than nine members can open or work. The government of Chapters is intrusted to Grand Chapters of Capitular or Chapitral Masonry, of which there is one in every State in the Union. MARK MASTER'S LODGE AND JEWELS. THE ALTAR. —The central design in this,- as in all preceding Lodges, is the Altar, surmounted with God's revealed Law, crowned with the Masonic implements — the Square and Compass. To an observing eye, this constant recurrence of sacred emblems must be highly suggestive. Can an institution be evil in tendency that seeks the blessing of God through every grade of its advancement? Can the secrecy of which the enemies of 110 THE MARK MASTER. Freemasonry make a handle, be of an improper character when, whatever else is shut out of the hall, God is not shut out? There is a prayer unsaid — No lips its accents move;'T is uttered by the pleading eye, And registered above. Each mystic Sign is prayer, By hand of Mason given; Each gesture pleads or imprecates, And is observed in heaven. The deeds that mercy prompts Are prayers in sweet disguise; Though unobserved by any here, They're witnessed in the skies. Then at the Altar kneelIn silence make thy prayer; And He whose very name is love, The plea will surely hear. The darkest road is lightWe shun the dangerous snare, When heavenly hand conducts the way, Responsive to our prayer. THE KEY-STONE.-The use of the key-stone as a symbolical device is peculiar to the MARK MASTER. Originally connected with a pleasing tradition, upon which the Degree is principally founded, it'has become the distinctive emblem of the grade; and the members are impress-ively instructed to mark well its figurative explanation. Upon its front are engraven, within two concentric circles, certain cryptographic characters, known only to the MARK MASTER'S LObiGE AND JEWELS. 111 initiated, but bearing a general allusion to that "hieroglyphic bright" on the Fellow Crafts' tracing board, which, in the language of the poet-brother, Burns, "None but craftsmen ever saw." Within the inmost circle is a space left for the private "Mark" of the member who displays the badge. - This is some device selected by himself, having reference to his avocation in life, his heraldic bearings, or such figure as is dictated by his fancy. According to the general rule of Mark Masters' Lodges, every member is required to choose a "Mark" within a specified time after entrance upon the grade. Such "Mark" must not conflict with one previously chosen by a member of the same Lodge; and, being once recorded in the "Mark Book," can nof afterward be changed, save by consent of the Lodge. The use of this "Mark" in those dispensations of benevolence which form so striking a feature in this system of Masonry, is exceedingly significant. Its perversion is carefully guarded against: no MARK MASTER may pledge his "'Mark" the second time until it has been redeemed from its former pledge; and the plea of distress made by a MARK MASTER, when accompanied by his "Mark," can not be refused by a member of this grade without violating the covenant of the Degree. Fairest and foremost of the train that wait On man's most dignified and happy state, Whether we name thee Charity or Love, Chief grace below, and all in all above — O, never seen but in thy blest effects, Or felt but in the soul that Heaven selects; Who seeks to praise thee, and to make thee known To other hearts, must have thee in his own. 112 THE MARK MASTER. Teach me to feel another's woeTo hide the faults I see; That mercy I to others show, That mercy show to me. No works shall find acceptance in that day When all disguises shall be rent away, That square not truly with the Scripture plan, Nor spring from love to God or love to man. THE THREE SQUARES.-In the Degree of Fellow Craft, of which this of the MARK MASTER is but the complement, the Masonic application of the Square is explained. As applied to the person of a candidate for Masonic light, the Square expresses that he must be physically, mentally, and morally perfect, to be able to pass the strict ordeal of Ancient Craft Masonry. The three squares used in the Lodge of MARK MASTERS have the same general reference, but in a more extended and threefold sense. Here the works of each member are considered as applied to the squares of the Divine Law in the three dispensations: the Patriarchal, the Mosaic, and the Christian. The grand trial bf humanity to be had at the last day, when God " Shall try the blocks we offer with his own unerring square," is forcibly expressed, and an inimitable moral drawn. There is impressed upon every member the duty of being circumspect in all his words and actions, and of discountenancing immorality in others, as well as of keeping his own white apron untarnished by a single stain. It was written by the pen of inspiration, under the dictation of the unerring wisdom of the Most High, that virtue exalteth a nation; and it is equally true that vice or immorality, THE HAPPY HOUR. 113 unrestrained, is not only a reproach on any institution where it is allowed to exist, but will, sooner or later, destroy the peace and happiness of the members of that institution. MARK MASTERS, therefore, are taught so to conduct themselves, in their intercourse with each other "as brethren, as well as in their dealings with the world without, that they may not bring discredit upon themselves or the institution of Masonry to which they belong. THE HAPPY HOUR' O, happy hour when Masons meeti 0, rarest joys when Masons greetl Each interwoven with the other, And brother truly joined with brother In intercourse that none can dauntLinked by the ties of covenant. See, ranged about the Holy Word, The Craftsmen praise their common Lord! See in each eye a love well proven, Around each heart a faith well wovenl Feel in each hand-grip what a tie Is this that men call Masonry! Blest bond! when broken, we would fain Unite the severed links again; Would urge the tardy hours along, To spend the wealth of light and song, That makes the Lodge a sacred spot. O, be the season ne'er forgot, That takes us from the world of care To happy halls where Masons are 1 4 THE MARK MASTER. THE CEDARS OF LEBANON. Palestine, as a territory, is destitute of forests suitable for building material. When, therefore, King David projected a grand edifice which should be the crowning glory of the reign of his son Solomon, and an evidence of the national devotion to God, he made application to Hiram, the Phoenician monarch, whose possessions included the powerful mountain ranges of Lebanon, for a supply of the cedars which grew there in unparalleled abundance. The Tyrian king, between whom and King David there existed a inmoie than royal friendship, readily acceded to his request; and thus the work of preparation for building was expedited. So large was the supply of this material furnished to King Solomon, that, after the completion of the edifice upon M ount Moriah, which occupied seven years and upward, King Solomon erected, upon the contiguous hill westward, a palace for his own use, in which, so abundantly did the cedar enter, that it was entitled "the House of Lebanon." On Lebanon's majestic brow The grand and lofty cedars grew That, shipped in floats to Joppa's port, Up to Jerusalem were brought. The principal groves of cedar were found about one hundred and fifty miles north-west of Jerusalem, and not far from the sea-coast on which the cities of Sidon, Sarepta, and Tyre stood. This suggests the mode of transhipment, which is described in the Scriptures: The trunks of trees were rudely shaped, made into floats or rafts, and brought down the coast by Phoenician mar THE CEDARS OF LEBANON. 115 iners, the'most skillful sailors of the age, about one hundred miles to the port of Joppa, the only seaport oppo-'site Jerusalem, from which it was distant but thirty-five miles. here they were adapted, by the tools of the workmen, to the exact places they were to occupy in the Temple, and then carried by land to the Sacred Hill. Being incorruptible to atmospheric influences, the cedar beam-s and:planks thus used might have remained to this day, the ornaments of Moriah and Sion, and the tokens.of the brotherly covenants that connected the monarchs of Israel. and Phoenicia, but for the destructive influences of invasion. The Temple, having stood four hundred and sixteen years, was burned by Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, who was the instrument in God's hand to chastise a rebellious and idolatrous people. - The number of cedars remaining upon Lebanon is very /smadlI —ess, it is said,, than one hundred.; but these are grand:specimens of the, Creator's power, towering in sub