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  • March 23, 1859
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 23, 1859: Page 10

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    Article MUSIC AND THE MASONIC RITUAL.—No. I. ← Page 2 of 6 →
Page 10

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Music And The Masonic Ritual.—No. I.

recommended to his study . Granting the importance of architecture , wc also put in a pica for a revival of musical knowledge among our brethren ; and we arc induced to do this from analogy , for it must be veil known , that in the religious revival before alludecKo , while architecture has been fostered and encouraged , music has no less been studiedand on this assumption we claim to go hand in hand with

, the architectural revival now happily commenced in our own body . By the permission of the conductors of the Freemasons' Magazine , wo purpose to present our readers with several papers on music , showing how it lias boon employed as an accessory in tho chief reli g ions and mysterious rites of the ancients , as well as the character

of such music as AVC think should be applied to our ritual—and we hope to do justice to the subject . Appropriate illustrations will from time to time be given in music type , so that every Lodge will be j ^ i'ovided with A selection of music applicable to each and every one of its ceremonies , in which all that portion of the various component parts of our ritual that can bo illustrated by sweet sounds will be found ready for our brethren ' s wants , and , we hope , prove

that" A thing of Jjo . iiity is n joy for over . " We arc not about to write an essay on theoretical or practical music—nor do we intend to say much of its antiquity , but shall strictly confine ourselves to the matter in hand—yet we must beg our reader ' s forbearance for a time , as iu the present paper we feel it necessary to give some idea of the science itself , to show that music

is fairly entitled to the rank and position whicli we claim for it , aud without further preface we proceed to speak of it ns an art . Music is both an art and a science . It is an art from its being acquired by certain laws whicli require skill and cunning to overcome . It ranks as a science , because it is a portion of the hi gher mathematics , ancl it is demonstrable that its principles are founded on certain general and universal laws , into which all that wc discover , in the material world , of harmony , symmetry , proportion , and order , can be resolved .

Music , as a source of intellectual pleasure , lias great superiority over the sister arts of painting and sculpture—inasmuch as they are merely imitative : for , however imaginative in subject or design a representation either by the pencil or the chisel may be , it must convey to the eye some form with which it is acquainted ; and if the delineation of that form lias no prototype in our knowledge of

nature , the artist is compelled to present it to ns under some shape with which wc arc acquainted . Should we discover any of its parts to be " out of drawing , " we instantly exclaim , " How unnatural !" showing that pictorial art is dependent for its cllccts on that close —imitation of natural objects whicli constitutes its chief beauty . In music there is little beyond it-self to which we need , or indeed can , refer to hei ghten its charms . If we investigate the princi ples of

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-03-23, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23031859/page/10/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
ROMAN CATHOLICISM AND CHARITY. Article 1
MASONIC MISSIONS. Article 3
MUSIC AND THE MASONIC RITUAL.—No. I. Article 9
A SCOTTISH MASONIC HALL. Article 14
MASONRY IN KENTUCKY. Article 17
RELIEF AND TRUTH. Article 19
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 20
A HINT. Article 20
MASONRY IN TURKS ISLANDS. Article 21
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 22
METROPOLITAN. Article 23
PROVINCIAL. Article 28
MARK MASONRY. Article 34
ROYAL ARCH. Article 34
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 35
COLONIAL. Article 35
INDIA. Article 38
AMERICA. Article 39
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 42
THE WEEK. Article 43
Obituary. Article 47
Untitled Article 48
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Music And The Masonic Ritual.—No. I.

recommended to his study . Granting the importance of architecture , wc also put in a pica for a revival of musical knowledge among our brethren ; and we arc induced to do this from analogy , for it must be veil known , that in the religious revival before alludecKo , while architecture has been fostered and encouraged , music has no less been studiedand on this assumption we claim to go hand in hand with

, the architectural revival now happily commenced in our own body . By the permission of the conductors of the Freemasons' Magazine , wo purpose to present our readers with several papers on music , showing how it lias boon employed as an accessory in tho chief reli g ions and mysterious rites of the ancients , as well as the character

of such music as AVC think should be applied to our ritual—and we hope to do justice to the subject . Appropriate illustrations will from time to time be given in music type , so that every Lodge will be j ^ i'ovided with A selection of music applicable to each and every one of its ceremonies , in which all that portion of the various component parts of our ritual that can bo illustrated by sweet sounds will be found ready for our brethren ' s wants , and , we hope , prove

that" A thing of Jjo . iiity is n joy for over . " We arc not about to write an essay on theoretical or practical music—nor do we intend to say much of its antiquity , but shall strictly confine ourselves to the matter in hand—yet we must beg our reader ' s forbearance for a time , as iu the present paper we feel it necessary to give some idea of the science itself , to show that music

is fairly entitled to the rank and position whicli we claim for it , aud without further preface we proceed to speak of it ns an art . Music is both an art and a science . It is an art from its being acquired by certain laws whicli require skill and cunning to overcome . It ranks as a science , because it is a portion of the hi gher mathematics , ancl it is demonstrable that its principles are founded on certain general and universal laws , into which all that wc discover , in the material world , of harmony , symmetry , proportion , and order , can be resolved .

Music , as a source of intellectual pleasure , lias great superiority over the sister arts of painting and sculpture—inasmuch as they are merely imitative : for , however imaginative in subject or design a representation either by the pencil or the chisel may be , it must convey to the eye some form with which it is acquainted ; and if the delineation of that form lias no prototype in our knowledge of

nature , the artist is compelled to present it to ns under some shape with which wc arc acquainted . Should we discover any of its parts to be " out of drawing , " we instantly exclaim , " How unnatural !" showing that pictorial art is dependent for its cllccts on that close —imitation of natural objects whicli constitutes its chief beauty . In music there is little beyond it-self to which we need , or indeed can , refer to hei ghten its charms . If we investigate the princi ples of

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