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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Sept. 11, 1869
  • Page 6
  • MELROSE ABBEY AND LODGE.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 11, 1869: Page 6

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    Article MELROSE ABBEY AND LODGE. ← Page 2 of 5 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Melrose Abbey And Lodge.

end of the fourteenth , or the beginning of the fifteenth century ; * Ave know this , not only from the above notices of the ravages of preceding structures , but also from the style of the architecture , which is late—not early—Gothic . The

tracery of the east windoAV has something of the English Perpendicular in it ; but ti'eated in a beautiful and rather novel manner . It is of this

window Sir Walter Scott says" The moon on the east orielf shone Through slender shafts of stately stone , By foliaged tracery combined ; Thou would'st have thought some fairy ' s hand 'Twixt poplars straight the osier wand ,

In many a freakish knot had twined , Then framed a spell when the work was done , Aud changed the willow wreathes to stone . "

The windows of the nave , again , are rather of the French "flamboyant'' style . In the south transept there is a fine doorway , with a really beautiful window above it , filled Avith chaste yet rich floAving tracery , and surrounded by niches , Avhich

are UOAV empty . "j" There is also another doorway whose arch being circular , leads many to suppose it Norman , whereas the style of the mouldings , & c , at once SIIOAVS it to be merely one of the many examples of the retainment of the circular

arch in Scotland all through the Pointed or Gothic period . The sculptures Avhich formerly stood on the brackets are almost all gone ; many of the brackets are sculptured as figures of men

supportingburdens , & c . Some Avag has taken an old displaced bracket , and jnlacing it upside doAvn on the top of another in situ , the pair pass as " the blind carrying the lame . " The fair Hebe—a fitting conductor for so fair a ruin—Avho was explaining the

curiosities , Avas not quite certain Avhat to make of our difficult-to-be-concealed Avant of faith about this and some other matters . One of the first

questions a stranger naturally asks of the guide is — " When Avas it built ? " Ans . " It Avas founded by David the First in 1136 , and finished in ten years . " " And has the present building stood all that time since then ? " " 0 ! yes , it is now above

700 years old ! " So said our fair conductor , with a look that defied contradiction , Ave had , therefore , to surrender at discretion , only as Ave got off

Avithout sealing our obligation by " kissiug the book , " Ave consider ourselves at liberty to speak our mind . Afterwards Ave had the pleasure of meeting , "the oldest inhabitant , " who was amember of the venerable Lodge "St . John ' s , Melrose ;"

this old worthy brother then informed us that " that old building which you have just seen , sir ,. Avas built in the reign of David the First , A . D . 1136 , by the Masons of the Melrose St . John ' s-Lodge , the oldest lodge in Scotland ! and that

structure , sir , has stood the ' battle and the breeze ' for more than 700 years . " - We tried to slip in a word about Robert the Bruce leaving money in the fourteenth century to build a new edifice , but it was no use , being completely

nonplussed by the statement " it is 700 years old , and was built by the Melrose St . John ' s Lodge , the oldest lodge in Scotland . John Murdo being our first Grand Master then ! " From the folloAving inscription upon a tablet inserted in the wall of

the south transept , it would seem that John was living about the fifteenth century , so he must have been very early at his trade to have been Grand Master in the first half of the twelfth , not to mention the difference between Grand Master

and " maister of werk . " John : Morow : sum : tym : callifc was : I : and : born : in : parysse : certauly : and : had : in : kepyng : al : masom : Werk : of : Santan droys : ye : hye : kyrk : of : glas

gw : melros : and : paslay : of : nyddysdayll : and : of : galway : + pray : to : god : and : mari : bath : And : sweet : Sanct : J ohn : to : keep this : haly : kyrk : fra : skaith : The abbey was dedicated to "Mari , " or St .

Mary , and "sweet Sanct John" seems to have been the patron saint of the Masons * . John Murdo seems to have had the " kepyng " or superintendence of whatever repairs or alterations were going on in St . Andrew ' s , Glasgow , Melrose ,

Paisley , Nyddysdale , and Gahvay . He Avas probably not born before the fourteenth century , whatever later . The Melrose St . John Lodge is certainly one of the last of the old independent lodges still extant , that has not as yet given in its

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1869-09-11, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_11091869/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
RECOGNITION OF NOVA SCOTIA. Article 1
CHIPS OF FOREIGN ASHLAR. Article 2
MASONIC GOVERNMENT. Article 4
MELROSE ABBEY AND LODGE. Article 5
MASONIC CELESTIAL MYSTERIES. Article 9
THE ANCIENT RECORDS OF "THE LODGE OF EDINBURGH (MARY'S CHAPEL)," No. 1. Article 11
NON-OPERATIVE OFFICE-BEARERS OR SCOTCH LODGES IN THE 17TH CENTURY. Article 11
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 11
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 13
"CHIPS OF FOREIGN ASHLAR ;" OR, BURNS IMPROVED (pp. 184-186). Article 13
MASONIC DISCIPLINE. Article 13
BROADFOOT, THOMPSON, AND MUGGERIDGE'S RITUAL . Article 14
Untitled Article 15
MASONIC MEMS Article 15
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 15
METROPOLITAN. Article 16
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
LIST OF STEWARDS AT THE INAUGURATION FESTIVAL, 14TH APRIL, 1869. Article 19
Poetry. Article 19
MASONIC SONG. Article 19
LITERATURE, SCIENCE, MUSIC, DRAMA, AND THE FINE ARTS. Article 20
LIST OF LODGE, &c., MEETINGS FOR WEEK ENDING 18TH SEPTEMBER, 1869. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Melrose Abbey And Lodge.

end of the fourteenth , or the beginning of the fifteenth century ; * Ave know this , not only from the above notices of the ravages of preceding structures , but also from the style of the architecture , which is late—not early—Gothic . The

tracery of the east windoAV has something of the English Perpendicular in it ; but ti'eated in a beautiful and rather novel manner . It is of this

window Sir Walter Scott says" The moon on the east orielf shone Through slender shafts of stately stone , By foliaged tracery combined ; Thou would'st have thought some fairy ' s hand 'Twixt poplars straight the osier wand ,

In many a freakish knot had twined , Then framed a spell when the work was done , Aud changed the willow wreathes to stone . "

The windows of the nave , again , are rather of the French "flamboyant'' style . In the south transept there is a fine doorway , with a really beautiful window above it , filled Avith chaste yet rich floAving tracery , and surrounded by niches , Avhich

are UOAV empty . "j" There is also another doorway whose arch being circular , leads many to suppose it Norman , whereas the style of the mouldings , & c , at once SIIOAVS it to be merely one of the many examples of the retainment of the circular

arch in Scotland all through the Pointed or Gothic period . The sculptures Avhich formerly stood on the brackets are almost all gone ; many of the brackets are sculptured as figures of men

supportingburdens , & c . Some Avag has taken an old displaced bracket , and jnlacing it upside doAvn on the top of another in situ , the pair pass as " the blind carrying the lame . " The fair Hebe—a fitting conductor for so fair a ruin—Avho was explaining the

curiosities , Avas not quite certain Avhat to make of our difficult-to-be-concealed Avant of faith about this and some other matters . One of the first

questions a stranger naturally asks of the guide is — " When Avas it built ? " Ans . " It Avas founded by David the First in 1136 , and finished in ten years . " " And has the present building stood all that time since then ? " " 0 ! yes , it is now above

700 years old ! " So said our fair conductor , with a look that defied contradiction , Ave had , therefore , to surrender at discretion , only as Ave got off

Avithout sealing our obligation by " kissiug the book , " Ave consider ourselves at liberty to speak our mind . Afterwards Ave had the pleasure of meeting , "the oldest inhabitant , " who was amember of the venerable Lodge "St . John ' s , Melrose ;"

this old worthy brother then informed us that " that old building which you have just seen , sir ,. Avas built in the reign of David the First , A . D . 1136 , by the Masons of the Melrose St . John ' s-Lodge , the oldest lodge in Scotland ! and that

structure , sir , has stood the ' battle and the breeze ' for more than 700 years . " - We tried to slip in a word about Robert the Bruce leaving money in the fourteenth century to build a new edifice , but it was no use , being completely

nonplussed by the statement " it is 700 years old , and was built by the Melrose St . John ' s Lodge , the oldest lodge in Scotland . John Murdo being our first Grand Master then ! " From the folloAving inscription upon a tablet inserted in the wall of

the south transept , it would seem that John was living about the fifteenth century , so he must have been very early at his trade to have been Grand Master in the first half of the twelfth , not to mention the difference between Grand Master

and " maister of werk . " John : Morow : sum : tym : callifc was : I : and : born : in : parysse : certauly : and : had : in : kepyng : al : masom : Werk : of : Santan droys : ye : hye : kyrk : of : glas

gw : melros : and : paslay : of : nyddysdayll : and : of : galway : + pray : to : god : and : mari : bath : And : sweet : Sanct : J ohn : to : keep this : haly : kyrk : fra : skaith : The abbey was dedicated to "Mari , " or St .

Mary , and "sweet Sanct John" seems to have been the patron saint of the Masons * . John Murdo seems to have had the " kepyng " or superintendence of whatever repairs or alterations were going on in St . Andrew ' s , Glasgow , Melrose ,

Paisley , Nyddysdale , and Gahvay . He Avas probably not born before the fourteenth century , whatever later . The Melrose St . John Lodge is certainly one of the last of the old independent lodges still extant , that has not as yet given in its

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