XIX. GRAND PONTIFF.
The true Mason labors for the benefit of those who
are to come
after him, and for the advancement and improvement
of his race.
That is a poor ambition which contents itself within
the limits of
a single life. All men who deserve to live, desire
to survive their
funerals, and to live afterward in the good that
they have done
mankind, rather than in the fading characters written
in men's
memories. Most men desire to leave some work behind
them that
may outlast their own day and brief generation.
That is an in-
stinctive impulse, given by God, and often found
in the rudest
human heart; the surest proof of the soul's immortality,
and of
the fundamental difference between man and the wisest
brutes.
To plant the trees that, after we are dead, shall
shelter our chil-
dren, is as natural as to love the shade of those
our fathers planted.
The rudest unlettered husbandman, painfully conscious
of his own
inferiority, the poorest widowed mother, giving
her life-blood to
those who pay only for the work of her needle, will
toil and stint
themselves to educate their child, that he may take
a higher sta-
tion in the world than they;--and of such are the
world's greatest
benefactors.
In his influences that survive him, man becomes
immortal, be-
fore the general resurrection. The Spartan mother,
who, giving
her son his shield, said, "WITH IT, OR UPON IT!"
afterward shared
the government of Lacedaemon with the legislation
of Lycurgus;
for she too made a law, that lived after her; and
she inspired the
Spartan soldiery that afterward demolished the walls
of Athens,
and aided Alexander to conquer the Orient. The widow
who gave
Marion the fiery arrows to burn her own house, that
it might no
longer shelter the enemies of her infant country,
the house where
she had lain upon her husband's bosom, and where
her children
had been born, legislated more effectually for her
State than Locke
or Shaftesbury, or than many a Legislature has done,
since that
State won its freedom.
It was of slight importance to the Kings of Egypt
and the
Monarchs of Assyria and Phcenicia, that the son
of a Jewish
woman, a foundling, adopted by the daughter of Sesostris
Ramses,
slew an Egyptian that oppressed a Hebrew slave,
and fled into the
desert, to remain there forty years. But Moses,
who might other-
wise have become Regent of Lower Egypt, known to
us only by a
tablet on a tomb or monument, became the deliverer
of the Jews,
and led them forth from Egypt to the frontiers of
Palestine, and
made for them a law, out of which grew the Christian
faith; and
so has shaped the destinies of the world. He and
the old Roman
lawyers, with Alfred of England, the Saxon Thanes
and Norman
Barons, the old judges and chancellors, and the
makers of the
canons, lost in the mists and shadows of the Past,--these
are our
legislators; and we obey the laws that they enacted.
Napoleon died upon the barren rock of his exile.
His bones,
borne to France by the son of a King, rest in the
Hopital des In-
valides, in the great city on the Seine. His Thoughts
still govern
France. He, and not the People, dethroned the Bourbon,
and
drove the last King of the House of Orleans into
exile. He, in
his coffin, and not the People, voted the crown
to the Third Napo-
leon; and he, and not the Generals of France and
England, led
their united forces against the grim Northern Despotism.
Mahomet announced to the Arabian idolaters the new
creed,
"There is but one God, and Mahomet, like Moses and
Christ, is
His Apostle." For many years unaided, then with
the help of his
family and a few friends, then with many disciples,
and last of all
with an army, he taught and preached the Koran.
The religion
of the wild Arabian enthusiast converting the fiery
Tribes of the
Great Desert, spread over Asia, built up the Saracenic
dynasties,
conquered Persia and India, the Greek Empire, Northern
Africa,
and Spain, and dashed the surges of its fierce soldiery
against the
battlements of Northern Christendom. The law of
Mahomet still
governs a fourth of the human race; and Turk and
Arab, Moor
and Persian and Hindu, still obey the Prophet, and
pray with their
faces turned toward Mecca; and he, and not the living,
rules and
reigns in the fairest portions of the Orient.
Confucius still enacts the law for China; and the
thoughts and
ideas of Peter the Great govern Russia. Plato and
the other great
Sages of Antiquity still reign as the Kings of Philosophy,
and
have dominion over the human intellect. The great
Statesmen
of the past still preside in the Councils of Nations.
Burke still
lingers in the House of Commons; and Berryer's sonorous
tones
will long ring in the Legislative Chambers of France.
The in-
fluences of Webster and Calhoun, conflicting, rent
asunder the
American States, and the doctrine of each is the
law and the
oracle speaking from the Holy of Holies for his
own State and all
consociated with it: a faith preached and proclaimed
by each at
the cannon's mouth and consecrated by rivers of
blood.
It has been well said, that when Tamerlane had builded
his pyr-
amid of fifty thousand human skulls, and wheeled
away with his
vast armies from the gates of Damascus, to find
new conquests,
and build other pyramids, a little boy was playing
in the streets
of Mentz, son of a poor artisan, whose apparent
importance in the
scale of beings was, compared With that of Tamerlane,
as that of
a grain of sand to the giant bulk of the earth;
but Tamerlane
and all his shaggy legions, that swept over the
East like a hurri-
cane, have passed away, and become shadows; while
printing, the
wonderful invention of John Faust, the boy of Mentz,
has exerted
a greater influence on man's destinies and overturned
more thrones
and dynasties than all the victories of all the
blood-stained con-
querors from Nimrod to Napoleon.
Long ages ago, the Temple built by Solomon and our
Ancient
Brethren sank into ruin, when the Assyrian Armies
sacked Jeru-
salem. The Holy City is a mass of hovels cowering
under the
dominion of the Crescent; and the Holy Land is a
desert. The
Kings of Egypt and Assyria, who were contemporaries
of Solo-
mon, are forgotten, and their histories mere fables.
The Ancient
Orient is a shattered wreck, bleaching on the shores
of Time. The
Wolf and the Jackal howl among the ruins of Thebes
and of
Tyre, and the sculptured images of the Temples and
Palaces of
Babylon and Nineveh are dug from their ruins and
carried into
strange lands. But the quiet and peaceful Order,
of which the
Son of a poor Phcenician Widow was one of the Grand
Masters,
with the Kings of Israel and Tyre, has continued
to increase in
stature and influence, defying the angry waves of
time and the
storms of persecution. Age has not weakened its
wide founda-
tions, nor shattered its columns, nor marred the
beauty of its har-
monious proportions. Where rude barbarians, in the
time of Solo-
mon, peopled inhospitable howling wildernesses,
in France and
Britain, and in that New World, not known to Jew
or Gentile,
until the glories of the Orient had faded, that
Order has builded
new Temples, and teaches to its millions of Initiates
those lessons
of peace, good-will, and toleration, of reliance
on God and confi-
dence in man, which it learned when Hebrew and Giblemite
worked side by side on the slopes of Lebanon, and
the Servant of
Jehovah and the Phoenician Worshipper of Bel sat
with the hum-
ble artisan in Council at Jerusalem.
It is the Dead that govern. The Living only obey.
And if
the Soul sees, after death, what passes on this
earth, and watches
over the welfare of those it loves, then must its
greatest happi-
ness consist in seeing the current of its beneficent
influences
widening out from age to age, as rivulets widen
into rivers, and
aiding to shape the destinies of individuals, families,
States, the
World; and its bitterest punishment, in seeing its
evil influences
causing mischief and misery, and cursing and afflicting
men, long
after the frame it dwelt in has become dust, and
when both name
and memory are forgotten.
We know not who among the Dead control our destinies.
The
universal human race is linked and bound together
by those influ-
ences and sympathies, which in the truest sense
do make men's
fates. Humanity is the unit, of which the man is
but a fraction.
What other men in the Past have done, said, thought,
makes the
great iron network of circumstance that environs
and controls us
all. We take our faith on trust. We think and believe
as the Old
Lords of Thought command us; and Reason is powerless
before
Authority.
We would make or annul a particular contract; but
the
Thoughts of the dead Judges of England, living when
their ashes
have been cold for centuries, stand between us and
that which we
would do, and utterly forbid it. We would settle
our estate in a
particular way; but the prohibition of the English
Parliament,
its uttered Thought when the first or second Edward
reigned,
comes echoing down the long avenues of time, and
tells us we
shall not exercise the power of disposition as we
wish. We would
gain a particular advantage of another; and the
thought of the
old Roman lawyer who died before Justinian, or that
of Rome's
great orator Cicero, annihilates the act, or makes
the intention in-
effectual. This act, Moses forbids;that, Alfred.
We would sell
our land; but certain marks on a perishable paper
tell us that our
father or remote ancestor ordered otherwise; and
the arm of the
dead, emerging from the grave, with peremptory gesture
prohibits
the alienation. About to sin or err, the thought
or wish of our
dead mother, told us when we were children, by words
that died
upon the air in the utterance, and many a long year
were forgot-
ten, flashes on our memory, and holds us back with
a power that
is resistless.
Thus we obey the dead; and thus shall the living,
when we are
dead, for weal or woe, obey us. The Thoughts of
the Past are the
Laws of the Present and the Future. That which we
say and do,
if its effects last not beyond our lives, is unimportant.
That
which shall live when we are dead, as part of the
great body of
law enacted by the dead, is the only act worth doing,
the only
Thought worth speaking. The desire to do something
that shall
benefit the world, when neither praise nor obloquy
will reach us
where we sleep soundly in the grave, is the noblest
ambition en-
tertained by man.
It is the ambition of a true and genuine Mason.
Knowing the
slow processes by which the Deity brings about great
results, he
does not expect to reap as well as sow, in a single
lifetime. It is
the inflexible fate and noblest destiny, with rare
exceptions, of the
great and good, to work, and let others reap the
harvest of their
labors. He who does good, only to be repaid in kind,
or in thanks
and gratitude, or in reputation and the world's
praise, is like him
who loans his money, that he may, after certain
months, receive it
back with interest. To be repaid for eminent services
with slan-
der, obloquy, or ridicule, or at best with stupid
indifference or cold
ingratitude, as it is common, so it is no misfortune,
except to those
who lack the wit to see or sense to appreciate the
service, or the
nobility of soul to thank and reward with eulogy,
the benefactor
of his kind. His influences live, and the great
Future will obey;
whether it recognize or disown the lawgiver.
Miltiades was fortunate that he was exiled; and
Aristides that
he was ostracized, because men wearied of hearing
him called
"The Just." Not the Redeemer was unfortunate; but
those only
who repaid Him for the inestimable gift He offered
them, and for
a life passed in toiling for their good, by nailing
Him upon the
cross, as though He had been a slave or malefactor.
The perse-
cutor dies and rots, and Posterity utters his name
with execration:
but his victim's memory he has unintentionally made
glorious and
immortal.
If not for slander and persecution, the Mason who
would bene-
benefit his race must look for apathy and cold indifference
in those
whose good he seeks, in those who ought to seek
the good of
others. Except when the sluggish depths of the Human
Mind
are broken up and tossed as with a storm, when at
the appointed
time a great Reformer comes, and a new Faith springs
up and
grows with supernatural energy, the progress of
Truth is slower
than the growth of oaks; and he who plants need
not expect to
gather. The Redeemer, at His death, had twelve disciples,
and
one betrayed and one deserted and denied Him. It
is enough for
us to know that the fruit will come in its due season.
When, or
who shall gather it, it does not in the least concern
us to know.
It is our business to plant the seed. It is God's
right to give the
fruit to whom He pleases; and if not to us, then
is our action by
so much the more noble.
To sow, that others may reap; to work and plant
for those who
are to occupy the earth when we are dead; to project
our influ-
ences far into the future, and live beyond our time;
to rule as the
Kings of Thought, over men who are yet unborn; to
bless with
the glorious gifts of Truth and Light and Liberty
those who will
neither know the name of the giver, nor care in
what grave his
unregarded ashes repose, is the true office of a
Mason and the
proudest destiny of a man.
All the great and beneficent operations of Nature
are produced
by slow and often imperceptible degrees. The work
of destruction
and devastation only is violent and rapid. The Volcano
and the
Earthquake, the Tornado and the Avalanche, leap
suddenly into
full life and fearful energy, and smite with an
unexpected blow.
Vesuvius buried Pompeii and Herculaneum in a night;
and Lis-
bon fell prostrate before God in a breath, when
the earth rocked
and shuddered; the Alpine village vanishes and is
erased at one
bound of the avalanche;and the ancient forests fall
like grass be-
fore the mower, when the tornado leaps upon them.
Pestilence
slays its thousands in a day; and the storm in a
night strews the
sand with shattered navies.
The Gourd of the Prophet Jonah grew up, and was
withered, in
a night. But many years ago, before the Norman Conqueror
stamped his mailed foot on the neck of prostrate
Saxon England,
some wandering barbarian, of the continent then
unknown to the
world, in mere idleness, with hand or foot, covered
an acorn with
a little earth, and passed on regardless, on his
journey to the dim
Past. He died and was forgotten; but the acorn lay
there still,
the mighty force within it acting in the darkness.
A tender shoot
stole gently up; and fed by the light and air and
frequent dews,
put forth its little leaves, and lived, because
the elk or buffalo
chanced not to place his foot upon and crush it.
The years
marched onward, and the shoot became a sapling,
and its green
leaves went and came with Spring and Autumn. And
still the
years came and passed away again, and William, the
Norman Bas-
tard, parcelled England out among his Barons, and
still the sapling
grew, and the dews fed its leaves, and the birds
builded their nests
among its small limbs for many generations. And
still the years
came and went, and the Indian hunter slept in the
shade of the
sapling, and Richard Lion-Heart fought at Acre and
Ascalon, and
John's bold Barons wrested from him the Great Charter;
and
the sapling had become a tree; and still it grew,
and thrust its
great arms wider abroad, and lifted its head still
higher toward
the Heavens; strong-rooted, and defiant of the storms
that roared
and eddied through its branches; and when Columbus
ploughed
with his keels the unknown Western Atlantic, and
Cortez and
Pizarro bathed the cross in blood; and the Puritan,
the Huguenot,
the Cavalier, and the follower of Penn sought a
refuge and a rest-
ing-place beyond the ocean, the Great Oak still
stood, firm-rooted,
vigorous, stately, haughtily domineering over all
the forest, heed-
less of all the centuries that had hurried past
since the wild Indian
planted the little acorn in the forest ;--a stout
and hale old tree,
with wide circumference shading many a rood of ground;
and fit
to furnish timbers for a ship, to carry the thunders
of the Great
Republic's guns around the world. And yet, if one
had sat and
watched it every instant, from the moment when the
feeble shoot
first pushed its way to the light until the eagles
built among its
branches, he would never have seen the tree or sapling
grow.
Many long centuries ago, before the Chaldaean Shepherds
watched the Stars, or Shufu built the Pyramids,
one could have
sailed in a seventy-four where now a thousand islands
gem the sur-
face of the Indian Ocean; and the deep-sea lead
would nowhere
have found any bottom. But below these waves were
myriads
upon myriads, beyond the power of Arithmetic to
number, of
minute existences, each a perfect living creature,
made by the Al-
mighty Creator, and fashioned by Him for the work
it had to do
There they toiled beneath the waters, each doing
its allotted work,
and wholly ignorant of the result which God intended.
They
lived and died, incalculable in numbers and almost
infinite in the
succession of their generations, each adding his
mite to the gigan-
tic work that went on there under God's direction.
Thus hath He
chosen to create great Continents and Islands; and
still the coral-
insects live and work, as when they made the rocks
that underlie
the valley of the Ohio.
Thus God hath chosen to create. Where now is firm
land, once
chafed and thundered the great primeval ocean. For
ages upon
ages the minute shields of infinite myriads of infusoria,
and the
stony stems of encrinites sunk into its depths,
and there, under
the vast pressure of its waters, hardened into limestone.
Raised
slowly from the Profound by His hand, its quarries
underlie the
soil of all the continents, hundreds of feet in
thickness; and we,
of these remains of the countless dead, build tombs
and palaces,
as the Egyptians, whom we call ancient, built their
pyramids.
On all the broad lakes and oceans the Great Sun
looks earnestly
and lovingly, and the invisible vapors rise ever
up to meet him.
No eye but God's beholds them as they rise. There,
in the upper
atmospere, they are condensed to mist, and gather
into clouds,
and float and swim around in the ambient air. They
sail with its
currents, and hover over the ocean, and roll in
huge masses round
the stony shoulders of great mountains. Condensed
still more by
change of temperature, they drop upon the thirsty
earth in gentle
showers, or pour upon it in heavy rains, or storm
against its bosom
at the angry Equinoctial. The shower, the rain,
and the storm
pass away, the clouds vanish, and the bright stars
again shine
clearly upon the glad earth. The rain-drops sink
into the ground,
and gather in subterranean reservoirs, and run in
subterranean
channels, and bubble up in springs and fountains;
and from the
mountain-sides and heads of valleys the silver threads
of water
begin their long journey to the ocean. Uniting,
they widen into
brooks and rivulets, then into streams and rivers;
and, at last, a
Nile, Ganges, a Danube, an Amazon, or a Mississippi
rolls be-
tween its banks, mighty, majestic, and resistless,
creating vast allu-
vial valleys to be the granaries of the world, ploughed
by the
thousand keels of commerce and serving as great
highways, and
as the impassable boundaries of rival nations; ever
returning to
the ocean the drops that rose from it in vapor,
and descended in
rain and snow and hail upon the level plains and
lofty moun-
tains; and causing him to recoil for many a mile
before the
long rush of their great tide.
So it is with the aggregate of Human endeavor. As
the invis-
ible particles of vapor combine and coalesce to
form the mists and
clouds that fall in rain on thirsty continents,
and bless the great
green forests and wide grassy prairies, the waving
meadows and
the fields by which men live; as the infinite myriads
of drops that
the glad earth drinks are gathered into springs
and rivulets and
rivers, to aid in levelling the mountains and elevating
the plains,
and to feed the large lakes and restless oceans;
so all Human
Thought, and Speech and Action, all that is done
and said and
thought and suffered upon the Earth combine together,
and flow
onward in one broad resistless current toward those
great results
to which they are determined by the will of God.
We build slowly and destroy swiftly. Our Ancient
Brethren
who built the Temples at Jerusalem, with many myriad
blows
felled, hewed, and squared the cedars, and quarried
the stones, and
carved the intricate ornaments, which were to be
the Temples.
Stone after stone, by the combined effort and long
toil of Appren-
tice, Fellow-Craft, and Master, the walls arose;
slowly the roof
was framed and fashioned; and many years elapsed
before, at
length, the Houses stood finished, all fit and ready
for the Worship
of God, gorgeous in the sunny splendors of the atmosphere
of
Palestine. So they were built. A single motion of
the arm of a
rude, barbarous Assyrian Spearman, or drunken Roman
or Gothic
Legionary of Titus, moved by a senseless impulse
of the brutal
will, flung in the blazing brand; and, with no further
human
agency, a few short hours sufficed to consume and
melt each Tem-
ple to a smoking mass of black unsightly ruin.
Be patient, therefore, my Brother, and wait!
The issues are with God: To do,
Of right belongs to us.
Therefore faint not, nor be weary in well-doing!
Be not dis-
couraged at men's apathy, nor disgusted with their
follies, nor
tired of their indifference! Care not for returns
and results;but
see only what there is to do, and do it, leaving
the results to God!
Soldier of the Cross! Sworn Knight of Justice, Truth,
and Tol-
eration! Good Knight and True!be patient and work!
The Apocalypse, that sublime Kabalistic and prophetic
Sum-
mary of all the occult figures, divides its images
into three Sep-
tenaries, after each of which there is silence in
Heaven. There
are Seven Seals to be opened, that is to say, Seven
mysteries to
know, and Seven difficulties to overcome, Seven
trumpets to
sound, and Seven cups to empty.
The Apocalypse is, to those who receive the nineteenth
Degree,
the Apothesis of that Sublime Faith which aspires
to God alone,
and despises all the pomps and works of Lucifer.
LUCIFER, the
Light-bearer! Strange and mysterious name to
give to the Spirit
of Darknesss! Lucifer, the Son of the Morning!
Is it he who
bears the Light, and with its splendors intolerable
blinds feeble,
sensual or selfish Souls ? Doubt it not!
for traditions are full of
Divine Revelations and Inspirations: and Inspiration
is not of
one Age nor of one Creed. Plato and Philo, also,
were inspired.
The Apocalypse, indeed, is a book as obscure as
the Sohar.
It is written hieroglyphically with numbers and
images; and
the Apostle often appeals to the intelligence of
the Initiated.
"Let him who hath knowledge, understand! let him
who under-
stands, calculate !" he often says, after an allegory
or the mention
of a number. Saint John, the favorite Apostle, and
the Depositary
of all the Secrets of the Saviour, therefore did
not write to be
undertood by the multitude.
The Sephar Yezirah, the Sohar, and the Apocalypse
are the
completest embodiments of Occultism. They contain
more mean-
ings than words; their expressions are figurative
as poetry and
exact as numbers. The Apocalypse sums up, completes,
and sur-
passes all the Science of Abraham and of Solomon.
The visions
of Ezekiel, by the river Chebar, and of the new
Symbolic Temple,
are equally mysterious expressions, veiled by figures
of the enig-
matic dogmas of the Kabalah, and their symbols are
as little un-
derstood by the Commentators, as those of Free Masonry.
The Septenary is the Crown of the Numbers, because
it unites
the Triangle of the Idea to the Square of the Form.
The more the great Hierophants were at pains to
conceal their
absolute Science, the more they sought to add grandeur
to and
multiply its symbols. The huge pyramids, with their
triangular
sides of elevation and square bases, represented
their Metaphysics,
founded upon the knowledge of Nature. That knowledge
of Na-
ture had for its symbolic key the gigantic form
of that huge
Sphinx, which has hollowed its deep bed in the sand,
while keep-
ing watch at the feet of the Pyramids. The Seven
grand monu-
ments called the Wonders of the World, were the
magnificent
Commentaries on the Seven lines that composed the
Pyramids,
and on the Seven mystic gates of Thebes.
The Septenary philosophy of Initiation among the
Ancients
may be summed up thus:
Three Absolute Principles which are but One Principle:
four
elementary forms which are but one; all forming
a Single Whole,
compounded of the Idea and the Form.
The three Principles were these:
1ø. BEING IS BEING.
In Philosophy, identity of the Idea and of Being
or Verity;in
Religion, the first Principle, THE FATHER.
2ø. BEING IS REAL.
In Philosophy, identity of Knowing and of Being
or Reality;
in Religion, the LOGOS of Plato, the Demiourgos,
the WORD.
3ø. BEING IS LOGIC.
In Philosophy, identity of the Reason and Reality;
in Religion,
Providence, the Divine Action that makes real the
Good, that
which in Christianity we call THE HoLY SPIRIT.
The union of all the Seven colors is the White,
the analogous
symbol of the GOOD: the absence of all is the Black,
the analogous
symbol of the EVIL. There are three primary colors,
Red, Yellow,
and Blue; and four secondary, Orange, Green, Indigo,
and Vio-
let; and all these God displays to man in the rainbow;
and they
have their analogies also in the moral and intellectual
world. The
same number, Seven, continually reappears in the
Apocalypse,
compounded of three and four; and these numbers
relate to the
last Seven of the Sephiroth, three answering to
BENIGNITY or
MERCY, SEVERITY or JUSTICE, and BEAUTY or HARMONY;
and
four to Netzach, Hod, Yesod, and Malakoth, VICTORY,
GLORY,
STABILITY, and DOMINATION. The same numbers also
represent
the first three Sephiroth, KETNER, KHOKMAH, and
BAINAH, or
Will, Wisdom, and Understanding, which, with DAATH
or Intel-
lection or Thought, are also four, DAATH not being
regarded as a
Sephirah, not as the Deity acting, or as a potency,
energy, or at-
tribute, but as the Divine Action.
The Sephiroth are commonly figured in the Kabalah
as consti-
tuting a human form, the ADAM, KADMON Or MACROCOSM.
Thus
arranged, the universal law of Equipoise is three
times exernpli-
fied. From that of the Divine Intellectual, Active,
Masculine
ENERGY, and the Passive CAPACITY to produce Thought,
the
action of THINKING results. From that of BENIGNITY
and SE-
VERITY, HARMONY flows; and from that of VICTORY
or an Infi-
nite overcoming, and GLORY, which, being Infinite,
would seem to
forbid the existence of obstacles or opposition,
results STABILITY
or PERMANENCE, which is the perfect DOMINION Of
the Infinite
WILL.
The last nine Sephiroth are included in, at the
same time that
they have flowed forth from, the first of all, KETHER,
or the
CROWN. Each also, in succession flowed from, and
yet still re-
mains included in, the one preceding it. The Will
of God includes
His Wisdom, and His Wisdom is His Will specially
developed and
acting. This Wisdom is the LOGOS that creates, mistaken
and
personified by Simon Magus and the succeeding Gnostics.
By
means of its utterance, the letter YOD, it creates
the worlds, first
in the Divine Intellect as an Idea, which invested
with form be-
came the fabricated World, the Universe of material
reality. YOD
and HE, two letters of the Ineffable Name of the
Manifested
Deity, represent the Male and the Female, the Active
and the
Passive in Equilibrium, and the VAV completes the
Trinity and
the Triliteral Name, the Divine Triangle, which
with the
repetion of the He becomes the Tetragrammaton.
Thus the ten Sephiroth contain all the Sacred Numbers,
three,
five, seven, and nine, and the perfect Number Ten,
and correspond
with the Tetractys of Pythagoras.
BEING IS BEING, Ahayah Asar Ahayah. This
is the principle, the "BEGINNING."
In the Beginning was, that is to say, IS, WAS, and
WILL BE,
the WORD, that is to say, the REASON that Speaks.
The Word is the reason of belief, and in it also
is the expression
of the Faith which makes Science a living thing.
The Word,
is the Source of Logic. Jesus is the Word Incarnate.
The
accord of the Reason with Faith, of Knowledge with
Belief, of
Authority with Liberty, has become in modern times
the veritable
enigma of the Sphinx.
It is WISDOM that, in the Kabalistic Books of the
Proverbs and
Ecclesiasticus, is the Creative Agent of God. Elsewhere
in the
Hebrew writings it is Debar Iahavah, the Word of
God.
It is by His uttered Word that God reveals Himself
to us;
alone in the visible and invisible but intellectual
creation, but
in our convictions, consciousness, and instincts.
Hence it is that!
certain beliefs are universal. The conviction of
all men that God
is good led to a belief in a Devil, the fallen Lucifer
or Light-
bearer, Shaitan the Adversary, Ahriman and Tuphon,
as an at-
tempt to explain the existence of Evil, and make
it consistent with
the Infinite Power, Wisdom, and Benevolence of God.
Nothing surpasses and nothing equals, as a Summary
of all the
doctrines of the Old World, those brief words engraven
by
HERMES on a Stone, and known under the name of "The
Tablet
of Emerald:" the Unity of Being and the Unity of
the Harmonies,
ascending and descending, the progressive and proportional
scale of the Word; the immutable law of the Equilibrium,
and
the proportioned progress of the universal analogies;
the relation
of the Idea to the Word, giving the measure of the
relation be-
tween the Creator and the Created, the necessary
mathematics of
the Infinite, proved by the measures of a single
corner of the
Finite ;--all this is expressed by this single proposition
of the
Great Egyptian Hierophant:
"What is Superior is as that which is Inferior,
and what is
Below is as that which is Above, to form the Marvels
of the
Unity."
XX. GRAND MASTER OF ALL SYMBOLIC
LODGES.
The true Mason is a practical Philosopher, who, under
religious
emblems, in all ages adopted by wisdom, builds upon
plans traced
by nature and reason the moral edifice of knowledge.
He ought
to find, in the symmetrical relation of all the
parts of this rational
edifice, the principle and rule of all his duties,
the source of all
his pleasures. He improves his moral nature, becomes
a better man,
and finds in the reunion of virtuous men, assembled
with pure
views, the means of multiplying his acts of beneficence.
Masonry
and Philosophy, without being one and the same thing,
have the
same object, and propose to themselves the same
end, the worship
of the Grand Architect of the Universe, acquaintance
and familiar-
ity with the wonders of nature, and the happiness
of humanity
attained by the constant practice of all the virtues.
As Grand Master of all Symbolic Lodges, it is your
especial duty
to aid in restoring Masonry to its primitive purity.
You have be-
come an instructor. Masonry long wandered in error.
Instead
of improving, it degenerated from its primitive
simplicity, and re-
trograded toward a system, distorted by stupidity
and ignorance,
which, unable to construct a beautiful machine,
made a compli-
cated one. Less than two hundred years ago, its
organization was
simple, and altogether moral, its emblems, allegories,
and ceremo-
nies easy to be understood, and their purpose and
object readily to
be seen. It was then confined to a very small number
of Degrees.
Its constitutions were like those of a Society of
Essenes, written
in the first century of our era. There could be
seen the primitive
Christianity, organized into Masonry, the school
of Pythagoras
without incongruities or absurdities; a Masonry
simple and signifi-
cant, in which it was not necessary to torture the
mind to discover
reasonable interpretations; a Masonry at once religious
and philo-
sophical, worthy of a good citizen and an enlightened
philanthro-
pist.
Innovators and inventors overturned that primitive
simplicity.
Ignorance engaged in the work of making Degrees,
and trifles and
gewgaws and pretended mysteries, absurd or hideous,
usurped the
place of Masonic Truth. The picture of a horrid
vengeance, the
poniard and the bloody head, appeared in the peaceful
Temple of
Masonry, without sufficient explanation of their
symbolic meaning.
Oaths out of all proportion with their object, shocked
the candi-
date, and then became ridiculous, and were wholly
disregarded.
Acolytes were exposed to tests, and compelled to
perform acts,
which, if real, would have been abominable; but
being mere chi-
meras, were preposterous, and excited contempt and
laughter only.
Eight hundred Degrees of one kind and another were
invented:
Infidelity and even Jesuitry were taught under the
mask of
Masonry. The rituals even of the respectable Degrees,
copied and
mutilated by ignorant men, became nonsensical and
trivial; and
the words so corrupted that it has hitherto been
found impossible
to recover many of them at all. Candidates were
made to degrade
themselves, and to submit to insults not tolerable
to a man of
spirit and honor.
Hence it was that, practically, the largest portion
of the Degrees
claimed by the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite,
and before
it by the Rite of Perfection, fell into disuse,
were merely com-
municated, and their rituals became jejune and insignificant.
These Rites resembled those old palaces and baronial
castles, the
different parts of which, built at different periods
remote from
one another, upon plans and according to tastes
that greatly
varied, formed a discordant and incongruous whole.
Judaism and
chivalry, superstition and philosophy, philanthropy
and insane
hatred and longing for vengeance, a pure morality
and unjust and
illegal revenge, were found strangely mated and
standing hand in
hand within the Temples of Peace and Concord; and
the whole
system was one grotesque commingling of incongruous
things, of
contrasts and contradictions, of shocking and fantastic
extrava-
gances, of parts repugnant to good taste, and fine
conceptions
overlaid and disfigured by absurdities engendered
by ignorance,
fanaticism, and a senseless mysticism.
An empty and sterile pomp, impossible indeed to
be carried out,
and to which no meaning whatever was attached, with
far-fetched
explanations that were either so many stupid platitudes
or them-
selves needed an interpreter; lofty titles, arbitrarily
assumed, and
to which the inventors had not condescended to attach
any expla-
nation that should acquit them of the folly of assuming
temporal
rank, power, and titles of nobility, made the world
laugh, and the
Initiate feel ashamed.
Some of these titles we retain;but they have with
us meanings
entirely consistent with that Spirit of Equality
which is the foun-
dation and peremptory law of its being of all Masonry.
The
Knight, with us, is he who devotes his hand, his
heart, his brain,
to the Science of Masonry, and professes himself
the Sworn
Soldier of Truth: the Prince is he who aims to be
Chief [Prin-
ceps], first, leader, among his equals, in virtue
and good deeds:
the Sovereign is he who, one of an order whose members
are all
Sovereigns, is Supreme only because the law and
constitutions are
so, which he administers, and by which he, like
every other
brother, is governed. The titles, Puissant, Potent,
Wise, and Ven-
erable, indicate that power of Virtue, Intelligence,
and Wisdom,
which those ought to strive to attain who are placed
in high office
by the suffrages of their brethren: and all our
other titles and
designations have an esoteric meaning, consistent
with modesty
and equality, and which those who receive them should
fully un-
derstand. As Master of a Lodge it is your duty to
instruct your
Brethren that they are all so many constant lessons,
teaching the
lofty qualifications which are required of those
who claim them,
and not merely idle gewgaws worn in ridiculous imitation
of the
times when the Nobles and Priests were masters and
the people
slaves: and that, in all true Masonry, the Knight,
the Pontiff, the
Prince, and the Sovereign are but the first among
their equals: and
the cordon, the clothing, and the jewel but symbols
and emblems
of the virtues required of all good Masons.
The Mason kneels, no longer to present his petition
for ad-
mittance or to receive the answer, no longer to
a man as his su-
perior, who is but his brother, but to his God;to
whom he appeals
for the rectitude of his intentions, and whose aid
he asks to enable
him to keep his vows. No one is degraded by bending
his knee to
God at the altar, or to receive the honor of Knighthood
as Bayard
and Du Guesclin knelt. To kneel for other purposes,
Masonry
does not require. God gave to man a head to be borne
erect, a port
upright and majestic. We assemble in our Temples
to cherish and
inculcate sentiments that conform to that loftiness
of bearing
which the just and upright man is entitled to maintain,
and we do
not require those who desire to be admitted among
us, ignomini-
ously to bow the head. We respect man, because we
respect our-
selves that he may conceive a lofty idea of his
dignity as a human
being free and independent. If modesty is a virtue,
humility and
obsequiousness to man are base: for there is a noble
pride which
is the most real and solid basis of virtue. Man
should humble him-
self before the Infinite God; but not before his
erring and imper-
fect brother.
As Master of a Lodge, you will therefore be exceedingly
careful
that no Candidate, in any Degree, be required to
submit to any
degradation whatever; as has been too much the custom
in some
of the Degrees:and take it as a certain and inflexible
rule, to
which there is no exception, that real Masonry requires
of no man
anything to which a Knight and Gentleman cannot
honorably, and
without feeling outraged or humiliated submit.
The Supreme Council for the Southern Jurisdiction
of the
United States at length undertook the indispensable
and long-de-
layed task of revising and reforming the work and
rituals of the
Thirty Degrees under its jurisdiction. Retaining
the essentials of
the Degrees and all the means by which the members
recognize one
another, it has sought out and developed the leading
idea of each
Degree, rejected the puerilities and absurdities
with which many
of them were disfigured, and made of them a connected
system of
moral, religious, and philosophical instruction.
Sectarian of no
creed, it has yet thought it not improper to use
the old allegories,
based on occurrences detailed in the Hebrew and
Christian books,
and drawn from the Ancient Mysteries of Egypt, Persia,
Greece,
India, the Druids and the Essenes, as vehicles to
communicate the
Great Masonic Truths; as it has used the legends
of the Crusades,
and the ceremonies of the orders of Knighthood.
It no longer inculcates a criminal and wicked vengeance.
It
has not allowed Masonry to play the assassin: to
avenge the death
either of Hiram, of Charles the 1st, or of Jaques
De Molay and
the Templars. The Ancient and Accepted Scottish
Rite of Ma-
sonry has now become, what Masonry at first was
meant to be, a
Teacher of Great Truths, inspired by an upright
and enlightened
reason, a firm and constant wisdom, and an affectionate
and lib-
eral philanthropy.
It is no longer a system, over the composition and
arrangement
of the different parts of which, want of reflection,
chance, igno-
rance, and perhaps motives still more ignoble presided;
a system
unsuited to our habits, our manners, our ideas,
or the world-wide
philanthropy and universal toleration of Masonry;
or to bodies
small in number, whose revenues should be devoted
to the relief
of the unfortunate, and not to empty show; no longer
a hetero-
geneous aggregate of Degrees, shocking by its anachronisms
and
contradictions, powerless to disseminate light,
information, and
moral and philosophical ideas.
As Master, you will teach those who are under you,
and to whom
you will owe your office, that the decorations of
many of the De-
grees are to be dispensed with, whenever the expense
would inter-
fere with the duties of charity, relief, and benevolence;
and to be
indulged in only by wealthy bodies that will thereby
do no wrong
to those entitled to their assistance. The essentials
of all the De-
grees may be procured at slight expense; and it
is at the option
of every Brother to procure or not to procure, as
he pleases, the
dress, decorations, and jewels of any Degree other
than the 14th,
18th, 30th, and 32d.
We teach the truth of none of the legends we recite.
They are
to us but parables and allegories, involving and
enveloping
Masonic instruction; and vehicles of useful and
interesting in-
formation. They represent the different phases of
the human
mind, its efforts and struggles to comprehend nature,
God, the
government of the Universe, the permitted existence
of sorrow
and evil. To teach us wisdom, and the folly of endeavoring
to ex-
plain to ourselves that which we are not capable
of understanding,
we reproduce the speculations of the Philosophers,
the Kabalists,
the Mystagogues and the Gnostics. Every one being
at liberty to
apply our symbols and emblems as he thinks most
consistent with
truth and reason and with his own faith, we give
them such an in-
terpretation only as may be accepted by all. Our
Degrees may be
conferred in France or Turkey, at Pekin, Ispahan,
Rome, or Ge-
neva, in the city of Penn or in Catholic Louisiana,
upon the subject
of an absolute government or the citizen of a Free
State, upon Sec-
tarian or Theist. To honor the Deity, to regard
all men as our
Brethren, as children, equally dear to Him, of the
Supreme Creator
of the Universe, and to make himself useful to society
and himself
by his labor, are its teachings to its Initiates
in all the Degrees.
Preacher of Liberty, Fraternity, and Equality, it
desires them to
be attained by making men fit to receive them, and
by the moral
power of an intelligent and enlightened People.
It lays no plots
and conspiracies. It hatches no premature revolutions;
it encour-
ages no people to revolt against the constituted
authorities; but
recognizing the great truth that freedom follows
fitness for free-
dom as the corollary follows the axiom, it strives
to prepare men
to govern themselves.
Where domestic slavery exists, it teaches the master
humanity
and the alleviation of the condition of his slave,
and moderate cor-
rection and gentle discipline; as it teaches them
to the master of
the apprentice: and as it teaches to the employers
of other men,
in mines, manufactories, and workshops, consideration
and hu-
manity for those who depend upon their labor for
their bread, and
to whom want of employment is starvation, and overwork
is fever,
consumption, and death.
As Master of a Lodge, you are to inculcate these
duties on your
brethren. Teach the employed to be honest, punctual,
and faithful
as well as respectful and obedient to all proper
orders: but also
teach the employer that every man or woman who desires
to work,
has a right to have work to do; and that they, and
those who from
sickness or feebleness, loss of limb or of bodily
vigor, old age or
infancy, are not able to work, have a right to be
fed, clothed, and
sheltered from the inclement elements: that he commits
an awful
sin against Masonry and in the sight of God, if
he closes his work-
shops or factories, or ceases to work his mines,
when they do not
yield him what he regards as sufficient profit,
and so dismisses his
workmen and workwomen to starve; or when he reduces
the wages
of man or woman to so low a standard that they and
their families
cannot be clothed and fed and comfortably housed;
or by overwork
must give him their blood and life in exchange for
the pittance
of their wages: and that his duty as a Mason and
Brother per-
emptorily requires him to continue to employ those
who else will
be pinched with hunger and cold, or resort to theft
and vice: and
to pay them fair wages, though it may reduce or
annul his profits
or even eat into his capital; for God hath but loaned
him his
wealth, and made him His almoner and agent to invest
it.
Except as mere symbols of the moral virtues and
intellectual
qualities, the tools and implements of Masonry belong
exclusively
to the first three Degrees. They also, however,
serve to remind
the Mason who has advanced further, that his new
rank is based
upon the humble labors of the symbolic Degrees,
as they are im-
properly termed, inasmuch as all the Degrees are
symbolic.
Thus the Initiates are inspired with a just idea
of Masonry, to-
wit, that it is essentially WORK; both teaching
and practising
LABOR; and that it is altogether emblematic. Three
kinds of work
are necessary to the preservation and protection
of man and soci-
ety: manual labor, specially belonging to the three
blue Degrees;
labor in arms, symbolized by the Knightly or chivalric
Degrees;
and intellectual labor, belonging particularly to
the Philosophical
Degrees.
We have preserved and multiplied such emblems as
have a true
and profound meaning. We reject many of the old
and senseless
explanations. We have not reduced Masonry to a cold
metaphy-
sics that exiles everything belonging to the domain
of the imagina-
tion. The ignorant, and those half-wise in reality,
but over-wise
in their own conceit, may assail our symbols with
sarcasms; but
they are nevertheless ingenious veils that cover
the Truth, respect-
ed by all who know the means by which the heart
of man is reach-
ed and his feelings enlisted. The Great Moralists
often had re-
course to allegories, in order to instruct men without
repelling
them. But we have been careful not to allow our
emblems to be
too obscure, so as to require far-fetched and forced
interpreta-
tions. In our days, and in the enlightened land
in which we live,
we do not need to wrap ourselves in veils so strange
and impene-
trable, as to prevent or hinder instruction instead
of furthering it;
or to induce the suspicion that we have concealed
meanings which
we communicate only to the most reliable adepts,
because they are
contrary to good order or the well-being of society.
The Duties of the Class of Instructors, that is,
the Masons of
the Degrees from the 4th to the 8th, inclusive,
are, particularly, to
perfect the younger Masons in the words, signs and
tokens and
other work of the Degrees they have received; to
explain to them
the meaning of the different emblems, and to expound
the moral
instruction which they convey. And upon their report
of pro-
ficiency alone can their pupils be allowed to advance
and receive
an increase of wages.
The Directors of the Work, or those of the 9th,
l0th, and 11th
Degrees are to report to the Chapters upon the regularity,
activity
and proper direction of the work of bodies in the
lower Degrees,
and what is needed to be enacted for their prosperity
and useful-
ness. In the Symbolic Lodges, they are particularly
charged to
stimulate the zeal of the workmen, to induce them
to engage in
new labors and enterprises for the good of Masonry,
their country
and mankind, and to give them fraternal advice when
they fall
short of their duty; or, in cases that require it,
to invoke against
them the rigor of Masonic law.
The Architects, or those of the 12th, 13th, and
14th, should be
selected from none but Brothers well instructed
in the preceding
Degrees; zealous, and capable of discoursing upon
that Masonry;
illustrating it, and discussing the simple questions
of moral phil-
osophy. And one of them, at every communication,
should be pre-
pared with a lecture, communicating useful knowledge
or giving
good advice to the Brethren.
The Knights, of the 15th and 16th Degrees, wear
the sword.
They are bound to prevent and repair, as far as
may be in their
power, all injustice, both in the world and in Masonry;
to protect
the weak and to bring oppressors to justice. Their
works and lec-
tures must be in this spirit. They should inquire
whether Masonry
fulfills, as far as it ought and can, its principal
purpose, which is
to succor the unfortunate. That it may do so, they
should pre-
pare propositions to be offered in the Blue Lodges
calculated to
attain that end, to put an end to abuses, and to
prevent or correct
negligence. Those in the Lodges who have attained
the rank of
Knights, are most fit to be appointed Almoners,
and charged to
ascertain and make known who need and are entitled
to the charity
of the Order.
In the higher Degrees those only should be received
who have
sufficient reading and information to discuss the
great questions
of philosophy. From them the Orators of the Lodges
should be
selected, as well as those of the Councils and Chapters.
They are
charged to suggest such measures as are necessary
to make Ma-
sonry entirely faithful to the spirit of its institution,
both as to its
charitable purposes, and the diffusion of light
and knowledge;
such as are needed to correct abuses that have crept
in, and of-
fences against the rules and general spirit of the
Order; and such
as will tend to make it, as it was meant to be,
the great Teacher of
Mankind.
As Master of a Lodge, Council, or Chapter, it will
be your duty
to impress upon the minds of your Brethren these
views of the
general plan and separate parts of the Ancient and
Accepted Scot-
tish Rite; of its spirit and design; its harmony
and regularity; of
the duties of the officers and members;and of the
particular les-
sons intended to be taught by each Degree.
Especially you are not to allow any assembly of
the body over
which you may preside, to close, without recalling
to the minds of
the Brethren the Masonic virtues and duties which
are represented
upon the Tracing Board of this Degree. That is an
imperative
duty. Forget not that, more than three thousand
years ago, ZORO-
ASTER said:"Be good, be kind, be humane, and charitable;
love
your fellows; console the afflicted; pardon those
who have done
you wrong." Nor that more than two thousand three
hundred
years ago CONFUCIUS repeated, also quoting the language
of those
who had lived before himself: "Love thy neighbor
as thyself: Do
not to others what thou wouldst not wish should
be done to thy-
self: Forgive injuries. Forgive your enemy, be reconciled
to him,
give him assistance, invoke God in his behalf!"
Let not the morality of your Lodge be inferior to
that of the
Persian or the Chinese Philosopher.
Urge upon your Brethren the teaching and the unostentatious
practice of the morality of the Lodge, without regard
to times,
places, religions, or peoples.
Urge them to love one another, to be devoted to
one another, to
be faithful to the country, the government, and
the laws: for to
serve the country is to pay a dear and sacred debt:
To respect all forms of worship, to tolerate all
political and
religious opinions; not to blame, and still less
to condemn the
religion of others: not to seek to make converts;
but to be content
if they have the religion of Socrates; a veneration
for the Creator,
the religion of good works, and grateful acknowledgment
of God's
blessings:
To fraternize with all men; to assist all who are
unfortunate;
and to cheerfully postpone their own interests to
that of the Order:
To make it the constant rule of their lives, to
think well, to
speak well, and to act well:
To place the sage above the soldier, the noble,
or the prince:
and take the wise and good as their models:
To see that their professions and practice, their
teachings and
conduct, do always agree:
To make this also their motto: Do that which thou
oughtest
to do; let the result be what it will.
Such, my Brother, are some of the duties of that
office which
you have sought to be qualified to exercise. May
you perform
them well; and in so doing gain honor for yourself,
and advance
the great cause of Masonry, Humanity, and Progress.
XXI. NOACHITE, OR PRUSSIAN KNIGHT.
You are especially charged in this Degree to be modest
and
humble, and not vain-glorious nor filled with self-conceit.
Be not
wiser in your own opinion than the Deity, nor find
fault with His
works, nor endeavor to improve upon what He has
done. Be
modest also in your intercourse with your fellows,
and slow to
entertain evil thoughts of them, and reluctant to
ascribe to them
evil intentions. A thousand presses, flooding the
country with
their evanescent leaves, are busily and incessantly
engaged in
maligning the motives and conduct of men and parties,
and in
making one man think worse of another; while, alas,
scarcely one
is found that ever, even accidentally, labors to
make man think
better of his fellow.
Slander and calumny were never so insolently licentious
in any
country as they are this day in ours. The most retiring
disposition,
the most unobtrusive demeanor, is no shield against
their poison-
ed arrows. The most eminent pulblic service only
makes their
vituperation and invective more eager and more unscrupulous,
when he who has done such service presents himself
as a candi-
date for the people's suffrages.
The evil is wide-spread and universal. No man, no
woman, no
household, is sacred or safe from this new Inquisition.
No act is
so pure or so praiseworthy, that the unscrupulous
vender of lies
who lives by pandering to a corrupt and morbid public
appetite
will not proclaim it as a crime. No motive is so
innocent or so
laudable, that he will not hold it up as villainy.
Journalism pries
into the interior of private houses, gloats over
the details of do-
mestic tragedies of sin and shame, and deliberately
invents and
industriously circulates the most unmitigated and
baseless false-
hoods, to coin money for those who pursue it as
a trade, or to
effect a temporary result in the wars of faction.
We need not enlarge upon these evils. They are apparent
to all
and lamented over by all, and it is the duty of
a Mason to do all
in his power to lessen, if not to remove them. With
the errors
and even sins of other men, that do not personally
affect us or
ours, and need not our condemnation to be odious,
we have noth-
ing to do; and the journalist has no patent that
makes him the
Censor of Morals. There is no obligation resting
on us to trumpet
forth our disapproval of every wrongful or injudicious
or im-
proper act that every other man commits. One would
be ashamed
to stand on the street corners and retail them orally
for pennies.
One ought, in truth, to write, or speak against
no other one in
this world. Each man in it has enough to do, to
watch and keep
guard over himself. Each of us is sick enough in
this great
Lazaretto: and journalism and polemical writing
constantly re-
mind us of a scene once witnessed in a little hospital;
where it
was horrible to hear how the patients mockingly
reproached each
other with their disorders and infirmities: how
one, who was
wasted by consumption, jeered at another who was
bloated by
dropsy: how one laughed at another's cancer of the
face; and
this one again at his neighbor's lock-jaw or squint;
until at last
the delirious fever-patient sprang out of his bed,
and tore away
the coverings from the wounded bodies of his companions,
and
nothing was to be seen but hideous misery and mutilation.
Such
is the revolting work in which journalism and political
partisan-
ship, and half the world outside of Masonry, are
engaged.
Very generally, the censure bestowed upon men's
acts, by those
who have appointed and commissioned themselves Keepers
of the
Public Morals, is undeserved. Often it is not only
undeserved,
but praise is deserved instead of censure, and,
when the latter
is not undeserved, it is always extravagant, and
therefore un-
just.
A Mason will wonder what spirit they are endowed
withal, that
can basely libel at a man, even, that is fallen.
If they had any
nobility of soul, they would with him condole his
disasters, and
drop some tears in pity of his folly and wretchedness:
and if they
were merely human and not brutal, Nature did grievous
wrong to
human bodies, to curse them with souls so cruel
as to strive to add
to a wretchedness already intolerable. When a Mason
hears of
any man that hath fallen into public disgrace, he
should have a
mind to commiserate his mishap, and not to make
him more dis-
consolate. To envenom a name by libels, that already
is openly
tainted, is to add stripes with an iron rod to one
that is flayed with
whipping; and to every well-tempered mind will seem
most in-
human and unmanly.
Even the man who does wrong and commits errors often
has a
quiet home, a fireside of his own, a gentle, loving
wife and inno-
cent children, who perhaps do not know of his past
errors and
lapses--past and long repented of; or if they do,
they love him
the better, because, being mortal, he hath erred,
and being in the
image of God, he hath repented. That every blow
at this husband
and father lacerates the pure and tender bosoms
of that wife and
those daughters, is a consideration that doth not
stay the hand of
the brutal journalist and partisan: but he strikes
home at these
shrinking, quivering, innocent, tender bosoms; and
then goes out
upon the great arteries of cities, where the current
of life pulsates,
and holds his head erect, and calls on his fellows
to laud him and
admire him, for the chivalric act he hath done,
in striking
his dagger through one heart into another tender
and trusting
one.
If you seek for high and strained carriages, you
shall, for the
most part, meet with them in low men. Arrogance
is a weed that
ever grows on a dunghill. It is from the rankness
of that soil that
she hath her height and spreadings. To be modest
and unaffected
with our superiors is duty; with our equals, courtesy;
with our in-
feriors, nobleness. There is no arrogance so great
as the pro-
claiming of other men's errors and faults, by those
who under-
stand nothing but the dregs of actions, and who
make it their
business to besmear deserving fames. Public reproof
is like strik-
ing a deer in the herd: it not only wounds him,
to the loss of
blood, but betrays him to the hound, his enemy.
The occupation of the spy hath ever been held dishonorable,
and it is none the less so, now that with rare exceptions
editors
and partisans have become perpetual spies upon the
actions of
ocher men. Their malice makes them nimble-eyed,
apt to note a
fault and publish it, and, with a strained construction,
to deprave
even those things in which the doer's intents were
honest. Like
the crocodile, they slime the way of others, to
make them fall;
and when that has happened, they feed their insulting
envy on the
life-blood of the prostrate. They set the vices
of other men on
high, for the gaze of the world, and place their
virtues under-
ground, that none may note them. If they cannot
wound upon
proofs, they will do it upon likelihoods: and if
not upon them, they
manufacture lies, as God created the world, out
of nothing; and
so corrupt the fair tempter of men's reputations;
knowing that
the multitude will believe them, because affirmations
are apter to
win belief, than negatives to uncredit them; and
that a lie travels
faster than an eagle flies, while the contradiction
limps after it at
a snail's pace, and, halting, never overtakes it.
Nay, it is con-
trary to the morality of journalism, to allow a
lie to be contra-
dicted in the place that spawned it. And even if
that great favor
is conceded, a slander once raised will scarce ever
die, or fail of
finding many that will allow it both a harbor and
trust.
This is, beyond any other, the age of falsehood.
Once, to be
suspected of equivocation was enough to soil a gentleman's
escut-
cheon; but now it has become a strange merit in
a partisan or
statesman, always and scrupulously to tell the truth.
Lies are part
of the regular ammunition of all campaigns and controversies,
valued according as they are profitable and effective;
and are
stored up and have a market price, like saltpetre
and sulphur;
being even more deadly than they.
If men weighed the imperfections of humanity, they
would
breathe less condemnation. Ignorance gives disparagement
a
louder tongue than knowledge does. Wise men had
rather know,
than tell. Frequent dispraises are but the faults
of uncharitable
wit: and it is from where there is no judgment,
that the heaviest
judgment comes; for self-examination would make
all judgments
charitable. If we even do know vices in men, we
can scarce
show ourselves in a nobler virtue than in the charity
of concealing
them: if that be not a flattery persuading to continuance.
And it
is the basest office man can fall into, to make
his tongue the de-
famer of the worthy man.
There is but one rule for the Mason in this matter.
If there be
virtues, and he is called upon to speak of him who
owns them, let
him tell them forth impartially. And if there be
vices mixed with
them, let him be content the world shall know them
by some other
tongue than his. For if the evil-doer deserve no
pity, his wife, his
parents, or his children, or other innocent persons
who love him
may; and the bravo's trade, practised by him who
stabs the de-
fenceless for a price paid by individual or party,
is really no more
respectable now than it was a hundred years ago,
in Venice.
Where we want experience, Charity bids us think
the best, and
leave what we know not to the Searcher of Hearts;
for mistakes,
suspicions, and envy often injure a clear fame;
and there is least
danger in a charitable construction.
And, finally, the Mason should be humble and modest
toward
the Grand Architect of the Universe, and not impugn
His Wis-
dom, nor set up his own imperfect sense of Right
against His
Providence and dispensations, nor attempt too rashly
to explore
the Mysteries of God's Infinite Essence and inscrutable
plans, and
of that Great Nature which we are not made capable
to under-
stand.
Let him steer far away from all those vain philosophies,
which
endeavor to account for all that is, without admitting
that there is
a God, separate and apart from the Universe which
is his work:
which erect Universal Nature into a God, and worship
it alone:
which annihilate Spirit, and believe no testimony
except that of
the bodily senses:which, by logical formulas and
dextrous colloca-
tion of words, make the actual, living, guiding,
and protecting God
fade into the dim mistiness of a mere abstraction
and unreality,
itself a mere logical formula.
Nor let him have any alliance with those theorists
who chide the
delays of Providence and busy themselves to hasten
the slow
march which it has imposed upon events: who neglect
the practi-
cal, to struggle after impossibilities: who are
wiser than Heaven;
know the aims and purposes of the Deity, and can
see a short and
more direct means of attaining them, than it pleases
Him to em-
ploy: who would have no discords in the great harmony
of the
Universe of things; but equal distribution of property,
no subjec-
tion of one man to the will of another, no compulsory
labor, and
still no starvation, nor destitution, nor pauperism.
Let him not spend his life, as they do, in building
a new Tower
of Babel; in attempting to change that which is
fixed by an in-
flexible law of God's enactment: but let him, yielding
to the
Superior Wisdom of Providence, content to believe
that the march
of events is rightly ordered by an Infinite Wisdom,
and leads,
though we cannot see it, to a great and perfect
result,--let him
be satisfied to follow the path pointed out by that
Providence, and
to labor for the good of the human race in that
mode in which
God has chosen to enact that that good shall be
effected: and
above all, let him build no Tower of Babel, under
the belief that
by ascending he will mount so high that God will
disappear or be
superseded by a great monstrous aggregate of material
forces, or
mere glittering, logical formula; but, evermore,
standing humbly
and reverently upon the earth and looking with awe
and confi-
dence toward Heaven, let him be satisfied that there
is a real God;
a person, and not a formula; a Father and a protector,
who loves,
and sympathizes, and compassionates; and that the
eternal ways
by which He rules the world are infinitely wise,
no matter how
far they may be above the feeble comprehension and
limited vision
of man.
XXII. KNIGHT OF THE ROYAL AXE
OR
PRINCE OF LIBANUS.
SYMPATHY with the great laboring classes, respect
for labor itself, and
resolution to do some good work in our day and generation,
these are the
lessons of this Degree, and they are purely Masonic.
Masonry has made a
working-man and his associates the Heroes of her
principal legend, and himself
the companion of Kings. The idea is as simple and
true as it is sublime. From
first to last, Masonry is work. It venerates the
Grand Arckitrct of the
Universe. It commemorates the building of a Temple.
Its principal emblems are
the working fools of Masons and Artisans. It preserves
the name of the first
worker in brass and iron as one of its pass-words.
When the Brethren meet
together, they are at labor. The Master is the overseer
who sets the craft to
work and gives them proper instruction. Masonry
is the apotheosis of Work.
It is the hands of brave, forgotten men that have
made this great, populous,
cultivated world a world for us. It is all work,
and forgotten work. The real
conquerors, creators, and eternal proprietors of
every great and civilized land
are all the heroic souls that ever were in it, each
in his degree: all the men
that ever felled a forest-tree or drained a marsh,
or contrived a wise scheme,
or did or said a true or valiant thing therein.
Genuine work alone, done
faithfully, is eternal, even as the Almighty Founder
and World-builder Himself.
All work is noble: a life of ease is not for any
man, nor for any God. The
Almighty Maker is not like one who, in old immemorial
ages, having made his
machine of a Universe, sits ever since, and sees
it go. Out of that belief
comes Atheism. The faith in an Invisible, unnamable,
Directing Deity, present
everywhere in all that we see, and work, and suffer,
is the essence of all
faith whatsoever.
The life of all Gods figures itself to us as a Sublime
Earnest
ness,-of Infinite battle against Infinite labor
Our highest religion is named
the Worship of Sorrow. For the Son of Man there
is no noble crown, well-worn,
or even ill-worn, but is a crown of thorns. Man's
highest destiny is not to be
happy, to love pleasant things and find them. His
only true unhappiness should
be that he cannot work, and get his destiny as a
man fulfilled. The day passes
swiftly over, our life passes swiftly over, and
the night cometh, wherein no
man can work. That nights once come, our happiness
and unhappiness are
vanished, and become as things that never were.
But our work is not abolished,
and has not vanished. It remains, or the want of
it remains, for endless Times
and Eternities.
Whatsoever of morality and intelligence ; what of
patience, perseverance,
faithfulness, of method, insight, ingenuity, energy;
in a word, whatsoever of
STRENGTH a man has in him, will lie written in the
WORK he does. To work is to
try himself against Nature and her unerring, everlasting
laws : and they will
return true verdict as to him. The noblest Epic
is a mighty Empire slowly built
together, a mighty series of heroic deeds, a mighty
conquest over chaos. Deeds
are greater than words. They have a life, mute,
but undeniably ; and grow. They
people the vacuity of Time, and make it green and
worthy.
Labor is the truest emblem of God, the Architect
and Eternal Maker; noble
Labor, which is yet to be the King of this Earth,
and sit on the highest
Throne. Men without duties to do, are like trees
planted on precipices ; from
the roots of which all the earth has crumbled. Nature
owns no man who is not
also a Martyr. She scorns the man who sits screened
from all work, from want,
danger, hardship, the victory over which is work
; and has all his work and
battling done by other men; and yet there are men
who pride themselves that
they and theirs have done no work time out of mind.
So neither have the swine.
The chief of men is he who stands in the van of
men, fronting the peril which
frightens back all others, and if not vanquished
would devour them. Hercules
was worshipped for twelve labors. The Czar of Russia
became a toiling
shipwright, and worked with his axe in the docks
of Saardam ; and something
came of that. Cromwell worked, and Napoleon; and
effected somewhat.
There is a perennial nobleness and even sacredness
in work. Be he never so
benighted and forgetful of his high calling, there
is always hope in a
man who actually and earnestly works : in Idleness
alone is there perpetual
Despair. Man perfects himself by working. Jungles
are cleared away. Fair
seed-fields rise instead, and stately cities ; and
withal, the man himself
first ceases to be a foul unwholesome jungle and
desert thereby. Even in the
meanest sort of labor, the whole soul of man is
composed into a kind of real
harmony, the moment he begins to work. Doubt, Desire,
Sorrow, Remorse,
Indignation, and even Despair shrink murmuring far
off into their caves,
whenever the man bends himself resolutely against
his task. Labor is life. From
the inmost heart of the worker rises his God-given
Force, the Sacred Celestial
life essence, breathed into him by Almighty God
; and awakens him to all
nobleness, as soon as work fitly begins. By it man
learns Patience, Courage,
Perseverance, Openness to light, readiness to own
himself mistaken, resolution
to do better and improve. Only by labor will man
continually learn the virtues.
There is no Religion in stagnation and inaction;
but only in activity and
exertion. There was the deepest truth in that saying
of the old monks,
"laborare est orare." "He prayeth best who liveth
best all things both great
and small;" and can man love except by working earnestly
to benefit that being
whom he loves?
"Work; and therein have well-being," is the oldest
of Gospels; unpreached,
inarticulate, but ineradicable, and enduring forever.
To make Disorder,
wherever found, an eternal enemy; to attack and
subdue him, and make order of
him, the subject not of Chaos, but of Intelligence
and Divinity, and of
ourselves ; to attack ignorance, stupidity and brute-mindedness,
wherever
found, to smite it wisely and unweariedly, to rest
not while we live and it
lives in the name of God, this is our duty as Masons;
commanded us by the
Highest God. Even He, with his unspoken voice, more
awful than the thunders of
Sinai, or the syllabled speech of the Hurricane,
speaks to us. The Unborn Ages
; the old Graves, with their long-moldering dust
speak to us. The deep
Death-Kingdoms, the Stars in their never-resting
course, all Space and all
Time, silently and continually admonish us that
we too must work whore it is
called to-day. Labor, wide as the Earth, has its
summit in Heaven. To toil,
whether with the sweat of the brow, or of the brain
or heart, is worship,-the
noblest thing yet discovered beneath the Stars.
Let the weary cease to think
that labor is a curse and doom pronounced by Deity.
Without it there could be
no true excellence in human nature. Without it,
and pain, and sorrow,
where would be the human virtues? Where Patience,
Perseverance, Submission,
Energy, Endurance, Fortitude, Bravery, Disinterestedness,
Self-Sacrifice, the
noblest excellencies of the Soul?
Let him who toils complain not, nor feel humiliated
! Let him. look up, and
see his fellow-workmen there, in God's Eternity,
they alone surviving there.
Even in the weak human memory they long survive,
as Saints, as Heroes, and as
Gods : they alone survive, and people the unmeasured
solitudes of Time.
To the primeval man, whatsoever good came, descended
on him (as in mere fact,
it ever does) direct from God; whatsoever duty lay
visible for him, this a
Supreme God had prescribed. For the primeval man,
in whom dwelt Thought, this
Universe was all a Temple, life everywhere a Worship.
Duty is with us ever; and evermore forbids us to
be idle. To work with the
hands or brain, according to our requirements and
our capacities, to do that
which lies before us to do, is more honorable than
rank and title. Ploughers,
spinners and builders, inventors, and men of science,
poets, advocates, and
writers, all stand upon one common level, and form
on grand, innumerable host,
marching ever onward since the beginning of the
world : each entitled to our
sympathy and respect, each a man and our brother.
It was well to give the earth to man as a dark mass,
whereon to labor. It was
well to provide rude and uprightly materials in
the ore-bed and the forest, for
him to fashion into splendor and beauty. It was
well, not because of that
splendor and beauty ; but because the act creating
them is better than the
things themselves; because exertion is nobler than
enjoyment; because the
laborer is greater and more worthy of honor than
the idler. Masonry stands up
for the nobility of labor. It is Heaven's great
ordinance for human
improvement.. It has been broken down for ages ;
and Masonry desires to build
it up again. It has bean broken down, because men
toil only because ihey must,
submitting to it as, in some sort, a degrading necessity;
and desiring nothing
so much on earth as to escape from it. They fulfill
the great law of labor in
the letter, but break it in the spirit: they fulfill
it with the muscles, but
break it with the mind.
Masonry teaches that every idler ought to hasten
to some field of labor,
manual or mental, as a chosen and coveted theatre
of improvement ; but he is
not impelled to do so, under the teachings of an
imperfect civilization.
On the contrary, he sits down, folds his hands,
and blesses and glorifies
himself in his idleness. It is time that this opprobrium
of toil were done
away. To be ashamed of toil; of the dingy workshop
and dusty labor-field; of
the hard hand, stained with service more honorable
than that of war; of the
soiled and weather-stained garments, on which Mother
Nature has stamped, midst
sun and rain, midst fire and steam, her own heraldic
honors; to be ashamed of
these tokens and titles, and envious of the flaunting
robes of imbecile
idleness and vanity, is treason to Nature, impiety
to
Heaven, a breach of
Heaven's great Ordinance. Toil,) of brain, heart,
or hand, is the only true
manhood and genuine nobility.
Labor is a more beneficent ministration than man's
ignorance comprehends, or
his complaining will admit. Even when its end is
hidden from him, it is not
mere blind drudgery, It is all a training, a discipline,
a development of
energies, a nurse of virtues, a school bf improvement.
From the poor boy who
gathers a few sticks for his mother's hearth, to
the strong man who fells the
oak or guides the ship or the steam-car, every human
toiler, with every weary
step and every urgent task, is obeying a wisdom
far above his own wisdom, and
fulfilling a design far beyond his own design.
The great law of human industry is this : that industry,
working either with
the hand or the mind, the application of our powers
to some task, to the
achievement of some result, lies at the foundation
of all human improvement. We
are not sent into the world like animals, to crop
the spontaneous herbage of
the field, and then to lie down in indolent repose:
but we are sent to dig the
soil and plough the sea; to do the business of cities
and the world of
manufactories. The world is the great and appointed
school of industry. In an
artificial state of society, mankind is divided
into the idle and the laboring
classes; but such was not the design of Providence.
Labor is man's great function, his peculiar distinction
and his privilege.
From being an animal, that eats and drinks and sleeps
only, to become a worker,
and with the hand of ingenuity to pour his own thoughts
into the moulds of
Nature, fashioning ttorn into forms of grace and
fabrics of convenience, and
converting them to purposes of improvement and happiness,
is the greatest
possible step in privilege.
The Earth and the Atmosphere are man's laboratory.
With spade and
plough, with mining-shafts and furnaces and forges,
with fire and steam ; midst
the noise and whirl of swift and bright machinery,
and abroad in the silent
fields, man was made to be ever working, ever experimenting.
And while he and
all his dwellings of care and toil are borne onward
with the circling skies,
and the splendour of Heaven are around him, and
their infinite depths image and
invite his thought, still in all the worlds of philosophy,
in the universe of
intellect, man must be a worker. He is nothing,
he can be nothing, can achieve
nothing, fulfill nothing, without working. Without
it, he can gain neither
lofty improvement nor tolerable happiness. The idle
must hunt down the hours as
their prey. To them Time is an enemy, clothed with
armor; and they must kill
him, or :themselves die. It never yet did answer,
and it never will answer for
any man to do nothing, to be exempt from all care
and effort to lounge, to
walk, to ride, and to feast alone. No man can live
in that way. God made a law
against it : which no human power can annul, no
human ingenuity evade.
The idea that a property is to be acquired in the
course of ten or twenty
years, which shall suffice for the rest of life;
that by some prosperous
traffic or grand speculation, all the labor of a
whole life is to be
accomplished in a brief portion of it; that by dexterous
management, a large
part of the term of human existence is to be exonerated
from the cares of
industry and self- denial, is founded upon a grave
mistake, upon a
misconception of the true nature and design of business,
and of the conditions
of human well being. The desire of accumulation
for the sake of securing a life
of ease and gratification, of escaping from exertion
and self-denial, is wholly
wrong, though very common.
It is better for the Mason to live while he lives,
and enjoy life as it passes
to live richer and die poorer. It is best of all
for him to banish from the
mind that empty dream of future indolence and indulgent
; to address himself to
the business of life, as the school of his earthly
education; to settle it with
himself now that independence, if he gains it, is
not to give him exemption
from employment It is best for him to know, that,
in order to be a happy man,
he must always be a laborer, with the mind or the
body, or with both: and that
the reasonable exertion of his powers, bodily and
mental, is not to be regarded
as mere drudgery, but as a good discipline, a wise
ordination, a training in
this primary school of our being, for nobler endeavors,
and spheres of higher
activity hereafter
There are reasons why a Mason may lawfully and even
earnestly desire a
fortune. If he can fill some fine palace, itself
a work of art, with the
productions of lofty genius; if he can be the friend
and helper of humble
worth; if he can seek it out, where failing health
or adverse fortune presses
it hard, and soften or stay the bitter hours that
are hastening it to madness
or to the grave; if he can stand between the oppressor
and his prey, and bid
the fetter and the dungeon give up their victim
; if he can build up great
institutions of learning, and academies of art ;
if he can open fountains of
knowledge for the people, and conduct its streams
in the right channels; if he
can do better for the poor thzn to bestow alms upon
them-even to think of them,
and devise plans for their elevation in knowledge
and virtue, instead of
forever opening the , old reservoirs and resources
for their improvidence; if
he has sufficient heart and soul to do all this,
or part of it; if wealth would
be ta him the handmaid of exertion; facilitating
effort, and giving success to
endeavor; then may he lawfully, and yet warily and
modestly, desire it. But if
it is to do nothing for him, but (o minister ease
and indulgence, and to place
his children in the same bad school, then there
is no reason why he should
desire it.
What is there glorious in the world, that is not
the product of labor, either
of the body or of the mind? What is history, but
its record? What are the
treasures of genius and art, but its work? What
are cultivated fields, but its
toil? The busy marts, the rising cities, the enriched
empires of the world are
but the great treasure-houses of labor. The pyramids
of Egypt, the' castles and
towers and temples of Europe, the buried cities
of Italy and Mexico, the canals
and railroads of Christendom, are but tracks, all
round the world, of the
mighty footsteps of labor. Without it antiquity
would not have been. Without
it, there would be no memory of the past, and no
hope for the future.
Even utter indolence reposes on treasures that labor
at some time gained and
gathered. He that does nothing, and yet does not
starve, has still his
significance ; for he is a standing proof that somebody
has at some time
worked. But not to such does Masonry do honor. It
honors the Worker, the
Toiler; him who produces and not alone consumes;
him who puts forth his hand to
add to the treasury of human comforts, and not alone
to take away. " It honors
him who goes forth amid the struggling elements
to fight his battle, and who
shrinks not, with cowardly effeminacy, behind pillows
of ease. It honors
the strong muscle, and the manly nerve, and the
resolute and brave heart, the
sweating brow, and the toiling brain. It honors
the great and beautiful offices
of humanity, manhood's toil and woman's task; paternal
industry and maternal
watching and weariness ; wisdom teaching and patience
learning; the brow of
care that presides over the State, and many handed
labor that toils in
workshop, field, and study, beneath its mild and
beneficent sway.
God has not made a world of rich men; but rather
a world
of poor men; or of men, at least, who must toil
for a subsistence. That is,
then, the best condition for man, and the grand
sphere of human improvement.,
If the whole world could acquire wealth (and one
man is as much entitled to it
as another, when he is born) ; if the present generation
could lay up a
complete provision for the next, as some men desire
to do for their children;
the world would be destroyed at a single blow. All
industry would cease with
the necessity for it; all improvement would stop
with the demand for exertion;
the dissipation of fortunes, the mischief of which
are now countervailed by the
healthful tone of society, would breed universal
disease, and wreak out into
universal license ; and the. world would sink, rotten
as Herod, into the grave
of its own loathsome vices.
Almost all the noblest things that have been achieved
in
the world, have been achieved by poor men ; poor
scholars, poor professional
men, poor artisans and artists, poor philosophers,
poets, and men of genius. A
certain solidness and sobriety, a certain moderation
and restraint, a certain
pressure of circumstances, are good for man. liis
body was not made for
luxuries. It sickens, sinks, and dies under them.
His mind was not made for
indulgerice. It grows weak, effeminate, and dwarfish,
under that condition. And
he who pampers his body with luxuries and his mind
with indulgence, bequeaths
the consequences to the minds and bodies of his
descendants, without the wealth
which was their cause. For wealth, without a law
of entail to help it, has
always lacked the energy even to keep its own treasures.
They drop from its
imbecile hand. The third generation almost inevitably
goes down the rolling
wheel of fortune, and there learns the energy necessary
to rise again, if it
rises at all ; heir, as it is, to the bodily diseases,
and mental weaknesses,
and the soul's vices of its andestors, and not heir
to their wealth. And yet we
are, almost all of us, anxious to put our children,
or to insure that
our grandchildren shall be put, on this road to
indulgence, luxury, vice,
degradation, and ruin ; this headship of hereditary
disease, soul malady, and
mental leprosy.
If wealth were employed in promoting mental culture
at home and works of
philanthropy abroad ; if it were multiplying studies
of art, and building up
institutions of learning around us; if it were in
every way raising the
intellectual character of the world, there could
scarcely be too much of it.
But if the utmost aim, effort, and ambition of wealth
be, to procure rich
furniture, and provide costly entertainments, and
build luxurious houses, and
minister to vanity, extravagance, and ostentation,
there could scarcely be too
little of it. To a certain extent it may laudably
be the minister of elegancies
and luxuries, and the servitor of hospitality and
physical enjoyment: but just
in proportion as its tendencies, divested of all
higher aims and tastes, are
running that way, they are running to peril and
evil.
Nor does that peril attach to individuals and families
alone. It stands, a
fearful beacon, in the experience of Cities, Republics,
and Empires. The
lessons of past times, on this subject, are emphatic
and solemn. The history of
wealth has always been a history of corruption and
downfall. the people never
existed that could stand the trial. Boundless profusion
is too little likely to
spread for any people the theatre of manly energy,
rigid self-denial, and lofty
virtue. You do not look for the bone and sinew and
strength of a country, its
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