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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1881
  • Page 8
  • THE ILLUSTRATION
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The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1881: Page 8

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Page 8

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

The Illustration

THE ILLUSTRATION

ON the opposite page is taken from a MS . in the Cottonian Library , British Museum , Nero D . 1 . It is found in a "Life of King Offa , " written by Matthew Paris . In the illustration , King Offa is represented as giving instructions to the "Master Mason" of the masons— " Hand Masons , " one MS . calls them—employed hi the erection of St . Alban ' s Cathedral . The Mastei Mason has the " square and compasses" in his left hand . Two Masons are at

work under the arches knocking off the superfluous " corners " from the stones . One is placing a stone in its proper position ; another is " adjusting a perpendicular arch on its proper basis" by the plumb rule ; two are hoisting up stones by a windlass . This drawing well represents , doubtless , the dress and working tools of the " mediaeval Freemasons . "—[ ED . M . M . ]

The Work Of A Masonic Session.

THE WORK OF A MASONIC SESSION .

BT AN OLD MASON . WERE I a young man I might hesitate to trouble the readers of the Masonic Magazine with my lucubrations , but pleading the garrulity of old age , I will " spin " for them a short " yarn , " which I hojse will "bore "

none , and may interest , perchance , some friendly minds ; for I assume on " my premise " that we all " believe in " Freemasonry . Of course , if we do not , then mine is truly " mentalis labor " in writing—theirs a " waste of time " in reading . No doubt there are " Freemasons and Freemasons ; " there are those , that is , ' who enter Freemasonry from idle , yes , and sordid motives , to whom its " be all and end all" are found in glittering decorations and dainty banquets . But such miss the inner mind and value of our great and mysterious Order . They have the " trash " without the " jewel ; " they realise the " show , " not the

" reality ; " they possess the " shadow , " not the "substance ; " they have found the " exoteric " not the " esoteric " of our ancient organisation . There are a good many of us who affect to deny what they call " sublimated views " of Freemasonry , and so they sink the Masonic gatherings to the level of a convivial club . There are not a few who look to Freemasonry both for what it gives and what it does for them , and beyond that narrow and dim horizon their ideas cannot passtheir vision cannot penetrate . But I do not write for

, such , they are out of my " pale " altogether ; they belong to a school which I think is passing away , anel with them and for them I do not affect to sympathise or feel . But I am writing to-day for some who , like myself , after long years of faithful membership have found value , improvement , happiness in onr " good old Order . " Like myself , they can recall gratefully many years ; maybe , of kind , fast friends and good real work ; and they are not ashamed to

avow themselves Freemasons wherever they be , at home or abroad , because they are proud both of the kindly and tolerant principles and the practical beneficent outcome of this worldwide sodality .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1881-08-01, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081881/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE YORK MS. No. 5, A.D. 1670. Article 1
THE ADVANTAGE OF CONFESSION. Article 5
Untitled Article 7
THE ILLUSTRATION Article 8
THE WORK OF A MASONIC SESSION. Article 8
BARNARD'S INN, HOLBORN. Article 10
MASONRY V. AGNOSTICISM* Article 13
THE MAIDEN'S BOWER: A SERENADE. Article 16
OFF FOR A HOLIDAY. Article 17
HISTORY OF THE AIREDALE LODGE, No. 387, Article 19
DESCRIPTIVE GEOMETRY AND OUR ANCIENT SECRETS. Article 22
THE GUILDHALL AND THE CHARTERS OF THE CORPORATION. Article 24
MASONIC SYMBOLISM* Article 26
FORTY YEARS AGO. Article 30
A MASON'S STORY. Article 31
THE EGYPTIAN BOOK OF THE DEAD. Article 34
AFTER ALL. Article 36
IN A HUNDRED YEARS. Article 42
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 43
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Page 8

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

The Illustration

THE ILLUSTRATION

ON the opposite page is taken from a MS . in the Cottonian Library , British Museum , Nero D . 1 . It is found in a "Life of King Offa , " written by Matthew Paris . In the illustration , King Offa is represented as giving instructions to the "Master Mason" of the masons— " Hand Masons , " one MS . calls them—employed hi the erection of St . Alban ' s Cathedral . The Mastei Mason has the " square and compasses" in his left hand . Two Masons are at

work under the arches knocking off the superfluous " corners " from the stones . One is placing a stone in its proper position ; another is " adjusting a perpendicular arch on its proper basis" by the plumb rule ; two are hoisting up stones by a windlass . This drawing well represents , doubtless , the dress and working tools of the " mediaeval Freemasons . "—[ ED . M . M . ]

The Work Of A Masonic Session.

THE WORK OF A MASONIC SESSION .

BT AN OLD MASON . WERE I a young man I might hesitate to trouble the readers of the Masonic Magazine with my lucubrations , but pleading the garrulity of old age , I will " spin " for them a short " yarn , " which I hojse will "bore "

none , and may interest , perchance , some friendly minds ; for I assume on " my premise " that we all " believe in " Freemasonry . Of course , if we do not , then mine is truly " mentalis labor " in writing—theirs a " waste of time " in reading . No doubt there are " Freemasons and Freemasons ; " there are those , that is , ' who enter Freemasonry from idle , yes , and sordid motives , to whom its " be all and end all" are found in glittering decorations and dainty banquets . But such miss the inner mind and value of our great and mysterious Order . They have the " trash " without the " jewel ; " they realise the " show , " not the

" reality ; " they possess the " shadow , " not the "substance ; " they have found the " exoteric " not the " esoteric " of our ancient organisation . There are a good many of us who affect to deny what they call " sublimated views " of Freemasonry , and so they sink the Masonic gatherings to the level of a convivial club . There are not a few who look to Freemasonry both for what it gives and what it does for them , and beyond that narrow and dim horizon their ideas cannot passtheir vision cannot penetrate . But I do not write for

, such , they are out of my " pale " altogether ; they belong to a school which I think is passing away , anel with them and for them I do not affect to sympathise or feel . But I am writing to-day for some who , like myself , after long years of faithful membership have found value , improvement , happiness in onr " good old Order . " Like myself , they can recall gratefully many years ; maybe , of kind , fast friends and good real work ; and they are not ashamed to

avow themselves Freemasons wherever they be , at home or abroad , because they are proud both of the kindly and tolerant principles and the practical beneficent outcome of this worldwide sodality .

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