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  • April 1, 1877
  • Page 45
  • THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY.
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The Masonic Magazine, April 1, 1877: Page 45

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Page 45

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The Origin And References Of The Hermesian Spurious Freemasonry.

built before the flood , and that Cephen reigned there , which is witnessed by certain ancient altars , bearing titles of lum and his brother Phineus , together with a memorial of the grounds and principles of their religion . And of the city Henoch there is

much like relation . But what need I mention more , seeing Josephus , a writer of good credit , affirmeth that he , himself , saw one of these pillars ; and the truth of this was never questioned , but warranted by all antiquity . "

This writer assumes too much ; and I think there can be no question but all the works of the antediluvians iu any of the sciences ; their ornaments in gold , silver , ivory or copper ; their instruments of music ; their astronomical machines ; and

all their performances in the fine arts perished , and were submerged in the mighty abyss ; and no specimen was ever found to show the nature and excellence

of antediluvian architecture . It is even said that the marble p illar of Enoch was uprooted and lost ; and it is extremly doubtful , notwithstanding a masonic tradition to the contrary , whether the pillar , mentioned by Josephuswas truly an

ante-, diluvian work . The foreign evidence , which afford such an abundant confirmation of the Mosaic writings , do not rest in general deductions ; for the history of the origin of all nations is connected with the destruction of a

previous world by water . The Chaldaic account of Xisuthrus , who was apprized by Saturn of such an event , and commanded to build a ship cemented with bitumen , in which himself and family were preserved ; with the method he pursued to ascertain whether the waters had subsided by a

fli ght of birds , and his subsequent erection of an altar for sacrifice on a mountain in Armenia ,, forms an approach to the mosaic record of so perfect a character aa to need ao elucidation ; and the Grecian history of ¦ "eucalios and Pyrrha is its exact

counterpart . There was a strange story , says Lucian , related b y the inhabitants of ilierapolis , of a great hole iu the earth , iu that country which received all the waters of the deluge ; and when they had subsided , -Deucalios built an altar , and erected a temple to Juno over the hole . I saw the bole myself . It ia but a small oue , under

the temple ; whether it was larger formerly , I know not . In commemoration they perform this ceremony : twice in every year water is brought from the sea into the temple ; and not only the priests , but all the people of Syria and Arabia fetch it .

Many go as far as the sea from the river Euphrates to fetch water , which they pour into this hole ; and though it looks small , yet it holds a vast quantity of water . And while they are performing the ceremony , they cry out that it was instituted

by Deucalios , in memory of the deluge , and of his preservation amidst the destruction of mankind . " The Hindoos , according to the testimony of their Pauranics , appear unwilling to admit the dangerous experiment of an ark floating at large on the waters of the flood , without sails or rudder ; yet the machinery

by which their account of the Deluge was accomplished appears incomplete without the presence of such a vessel . The kierop hant instructs the candidate with great solemnity that Satyavrata moored it for safety with a cable of incredible length to the peak of the Chasgarone of the

Hima-, laya mountains , that it might not be overturned or lost during the prevailance of the waters . In all these legends we have the same calamity plainly set forth . The Chinese philosophers describe the Deluge iu the following appropriate

language : " The pillars of Heaven were broken , the earth was shaken to its very foundations , the heavens sunk lower towards the north ; the sun , the moon , and the stars changed their motions ; the earth fell to pieces , the waters enclosed within its bosom burst forth with violence and

overflowed it . Man rebelling against heaven , the system of the universe was quite disordered ; the sun was eclipsed , the planets altered their course , and universal harmony was disturbed . " And what became of the bones of the

immense myriads of inhabitants by which the old world was thronged , for the population appears to have been almost incredible . Mr . Cockburn has made it upwards of 54 billions of souls . The writer of the articleAntediluviansin the

En-, , cyclopedia takes half that number , and , after making large concessions on account of deaths , thus concludes his argument "Though we are far from thinking that

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-04-01, Page 45” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01041877/page/45/.
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Title Category Page
"DYBOTS." Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
EXTRACTS FROM THE MINUTES OF THE ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER OF CONCORD ATTACHED TO THE ANCHOR AND HOPE LODGE, No. 37, BOLTON. Article 4
SONNET. Article 8
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE OF OHIO. Article 8
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 13
THREE CHARGES. Article 14
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 14
ON FATHER FOY'S NOTES. Article 18
A TRIP TO DAI-BUTSU. Article 19
THE HAPPY HOUR. Article 21
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. Article 21
THE QUESTION OF THE COLOURED FREEMASONS IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 24
THE JEALOUS SCEPTIC. Article 25
THE LADY MURIEL. Article 27
THE MASSORAH. Article 29
THE BRIGHT SIDE. Article 32
HOPE. Article 33
ON THE EXCESSIVE INFLUENCE OF WOMEM. Article 34
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 39
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 40
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 43
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 46
A MASONIC ENIGMA. Article 50
BORN IN MARCH. Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Origin And References Of The Hermesian Spurious Freemasonry.

built before the flood , and that Cephen reigned there , which is witnessed by certain ancient altars , bearing titles of lum and his brother Phineus , together with a memorial of the grounds and principles of their religion . And of the city Henoch there is

much like relation . But what need I mention more , seeing Josephus , a writer of good credit , affirmeth that he , himself , saw one of these pillars ; and the truth of this was never questioned , but warranted by all antiquity . "

This writer assumes too much ; and I think there can be no question but all the works of the antediluvians iu any of the sciences ; their ornaments in gold , silver , ivory or copper ; their instruments of music ; their astronomical machines ; and

all their performances in the fine arts perished , and were submerged in the mighty abyss ; and no specimen was ever found to show the nature and excellence

of antediluvian architecture . It is even said that the marble p illar of Enoch was uprooted and lost ; and it is extremly doubtful , notwithstanding a masonic tradition to the contrary , whether the pillar , mentioned by Josephuswas truly an

ante-, diluvian work . The foreign evidence , which afford such an abundant confirmation of the Mosaic writings , do not rest in general deductions ; for the history of the origin of all nations is connected with the destruction of a

previous world by water . The Chaldaic account of Xisuthrus , who was apprized by Saturn of such an event , and commanded to build a ship cemented with bitumen , in which himself and family were preserved ; with the method he pursued to ascertain whether the waters had subsided by a

fli ght of birds , and his subsequent erection of an altar for sacrifice on a mountain in Armenia ,, forms an approach to the mosaic record of so perfect a character aa to need ao elucidation ; and the Grecian history of ¦ "eucalios and Pyrrha is its exact

counterpart . There was a strange story , says Lucian , related b y the inhabitants of ilierapolis , of a great hole iu the earth , iu that country which received all the waters of the deluge ; and when they had subsided , -Deucalios built an altar , and erected a temple to Juno over the hole . I saw the bole myself . It ia but a small oue , under

the temple ; whether it was larger formerly , I know not . In commemoration they perform this ceremony : twice in every year water is brought from the sea into the temple ; and not only the priests , but all the people of Syria and Arabia fetch it .

Many go as far as the sea from the river Euphrates to fetch water , which they pour into this hole ; and though it looks small , yet it holds a vast quantity of water . And while they are performing the ceremony , they cry out that it was instituted

by Deucalios , in memory of the deluge , and of his preservation amidst the destruction of mankind . " The Hindoos , according to the testimony of their Pauranics , appear unwilling to admit the dangerous experiment of an ark floating at large on the waters of the flood , without sails or rudder ; yet the machinery

by which their account of the Deluge was accomplished appears incomplete without the presence of such a vessel . The kierop hant instructs the candidate with great solemnity that Satyavrata moored it for safety with a cable of incredible length to the peak of the Chasgarone of the

Hima-, laya mountains , that it might not be overturned or lost during the prevailance of the waters . In all these legends we have the same calamity plainly set forth . The Chinese philosophers describe the Deluge iu the following appropriate

language : " The pillars of Heaven were broken , the earth was shaken to its very foundations , the heavens sunk lower towards the north ; the sun , the moon , and the stars changed their motions ; the earth fell to pieces , the waters enclosed within its bosom burst forth with violence and

overflowed it . Man rebelling against heaven , the system of the universe was quite disordered ; the sun was eclipsed , the planets altered their course , and universal harmony was disturbed . " And what became of the bones of the

immense myriads of inhabitants by which the old world was thronged , for the population appears to have been almost incredible . Mr . Cockburn has made it upwards of 54 billions of souls . The writer of the articleAntediluviansin the

En-, , cyclopedia takes half that number , and , after making large concessions on account of deaths , thus concludes his argument "Though we are far from thinking that

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