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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Feb. 25, 1860
  • Page 4
  • THE PRINCIPLES OF FREEMASONRY.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Feb. 25, 1860: Page 4

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Masterpieces Of The Architecture Of Different Nations.

missive . Some authors will have it that they are descendants of Abraham . It is well enough known that Bacchus , Semiramis and Osiris , effected one after the other the conquest of Hindostan , or , at any rate , went there with their armies ; and yet it was not until after the expedition of Alexander the Great into

that country , or rather that part of it wliich is watered b y the rivers Lulus ancl Ganges , that ive have been able , through the historians of that prince , to get at some certain notions as to the geography and population of Hindostan , and the customs and habits of its inhabitants .

According to the sacred books ofthe Hindoos , the Brahmins did not mi grate to India until Vichenou , their God , under the name of Rama , had gone there to preach his doctrine , now about 5 , 000 years ago , the ivorship of Cliiven being older by more than several thousand years . It may not be out of place to observe here that the Hindoos

, as well as ourselves , have their deluge , and that they date the epoch of it back to tweuty-one thousand years ago ! ( The Lamas , the Bonzes of Foe , of Siam , of Timquin and of Cochin China , the Talapsins of Pegu and of Ava , the priests of Ceylon , ancl those of Egypt and of Greece , may then be regarded as the successors of tho Bracmans .

The Saniassis alone , a kind of Hindoo religious sect , might be , in the opinion of De Sonnerat , perhaps the descendants of the Bracmans . The Vedas are also their most ancient books upon reli gion , and all the others appear formed from them . They treated of all the sciences , but in such a highflown and poetical style , that in order to understand them it

was necessary to have commentaries which have also become sacred , like thc Talmud to the Pentateuch and Hol y Books of the Jews and the Misna to the Koran . The most ancient of these commentaries are the Shaslas , or Chasirons , which signify science . They date back more than four thousand

eight hundred years ago , and treat of astronomy , astrology , prognostics , morals , religion , medicine and jurisprudence . It is from these books that the astronomers among the-Brahmins _ calculate the course of the stars , aud fabricate the pandjangans or almanacks . The language of these books is no longer understood b y the HindoosTh Jul

. ere are - y extracts from it iu translation in the common language . Ifamskrit , Sanskrit , or Sanscrit is that ancient and learned language which is partly fixed by eighteen dictionaries and several grammars , which , it is said , are masterpieces . Few oven of the Brahmins know it , which caused Bailly to conclude that it came from a more ancient aud

very learned people , noiv extinct . ^ There is a close connection between the Chinese , Siamese , . Egyptians , Persians and Hindoos . Philosophers ot" all nations went to India to gain instruction ; Pythagoras learnt there the dogma of the metempsychosis ' which Vichenou had establishedancl spread it abroad he also got thenthe science

, ; ; of numbers , ancl the custom of tracing cm the sand geometrical figures . The Egyptians , Greeks , and even the Jews adopted the dogma and modified it . The Hindoos , like all other people , worshipped the sun and moon ; and some savage nations still preserve that worshi p . They worshi pped thenfire under the

name of Chiven , who was God tho Destroyer , as Braraa and Vichenou were God thc ; Creator and God the Preserver . They havo had sacred fires like all other people , of which our modern lamps are but an imitation . These people have also sacrificed human victims to the Demon of Evil ; like all people of hot countries , thoy have had the bath enjoined to them by their religion . They wrote with a stylus on thc leaves ofthe palm tree , and learnt while tracing their letters on the sand .

The Temple or Pagoda of the Gentoos , on the coast of Coromanclol , is a _ large square building with a door in the middle of each side , above which rise pyramidal masses to tho hei ght of seven or ei ght storeys , called oobrone , surmounted by domes or vaulted roofs . ' In it aro observed

Masterpieces Of The Architecture Of Different Nations.

square openings , others in arcades and small triangles ; they are more or less rich in Bengal and on the coast of Malabar . The most famous on the coast of Coromandel are , for Chiven , Tironnamaley , Ghalcmbra , and Tirvcdour , and , for Vichenou , Tiroupadi , Ghirangam , and Cangivarou . The temple called The Seven , Pagodas , or of Marcsivwran , between

Pondicherry ancl Madras , near Salera . s , must be the most ancient , if one may judge so from the encroachments made upon it by the sea since its construction , for it bathes its first storey , six only being visible , the seventh being under tiie waters of the sea . The Pagoda of Ghalembron appears very ancient , but its inscriptions are almost effaced and in

unintelligible characters . According to the annals ofthe country aud the sacred books , the Pagoda of Jagrena , the most ancient , must be more than four thousand nine- hundred years old . That in which are the two elephants is of a single block carved in a mountain . The following is the description of it : ¦—On . the summit was a colossal figure with four ai-ms , placed on a high

pyramid , which served as the crowning to the temple ; at the four angles were elephants , as colossal , fastened by chains , which the figure jilaced on the top of thc jiyramid held in its hand ; and these chains , as well as the ivhole of the work , were of the stone of the mountain , hollowed out with admirable skillin the same pieceand in a stylo nearly

, , mixed between the Persian , Hindoo and Egyptian ; which proves the correspondence between these j ^ eople and the similarity of their genius for architecture . ( To lo continued . )

The Principles Of Freemasonry.

THE PRINCIPLES OF FREEMASONRY .

! WE have been requested to republish the following speech , delivered some time since by Bro . HAUTE ., the then D . Prov . G . M . for Suffolk , on the occasion of the pi-esentation of a portrait of the late Sir Thos . Gooch , then Prov . G . M ., to his son : — " Eight AVorshipful Sir , —The presence of ladies iu a Masonic

society , is an event so rare , so gracious , ancl so welcome , that I crave j'oiir permission to preface the more immediate object of this day ' s proceedings hy addressing to them a few observations explanatory ofthe Order they thus honour hy their presence . Ladies , —AVe cannot hut admit , that a society exclusive to one sex and essentially secret , at first sight presents few claims to your favour ; wc , therefore , the more thank you for your presence : and I

am desirous to avail myself of the opportunity it affords to explain to you , as far as I am permitted , the especial tenets and principles of our Order . First , then , let me inform you , Freemasonry is more ancient than thc Golden Fleece or Roman Eagle ; more honourable than the Star , the Garter , or any Order iu existence . It is founded upon thc purest principles of piety and virtue . It possesses great and invaluable privileges to worthmenand

many y , we trust , to the worthy alone . To preserve these privileges our ancient brethren have imposed on us laws as immutable as those of the Medes ancl Persians . Amongst these laws is secrecy with regard to some of our observances , more especially those by wliich a Freemason in any part of the globe , by night or day , may dis cover a brother ; nor , widely as is Freemasonry extended—its branches extending over the habitable globe—do we confine our

sympathies and better feelings within its pale , but wheresoever seen , by whomsoever uttered" To widow ' s tear , to orphan ' s cry , All wants our ready hands supply , So far as power is given . Tho naked clothe , tho prisoner free , Such are thy deeds , sweet Masonry , Beveal'd to us from Heaven . '

Thus , ladies , ive consider ' charity' to be the true characteristic of a Freemason ' s heart . Charity vauuteth not itself ; ancl I beg to he clearly understood , I vaunt not the brethren , but the principles of thc Order they profess . Freemasonry is an allegorical , symliolical , ancl emblematical science . In taking a survey of a Freemason ' s Lodge , you will perceive that its walls ancl our paraphernalia arc decorated by the ivorking tools of the operative Mason

; believe them not I . beseech you , to he unmeaning observances ; believe me there is not one amongst those tools hut conveys to the mind ofthe well instructed Mason some useful lesson on his moral and social virtues . As thc material tools in the hands ofthe operative

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-02-25, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_25021860/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—VII. Article 1
CURSORY REMARKS ON FREEMASONY.-I. Article 2
MASTERPIECES OF THE ARCHITECTURE OF DIFFERENT NATIONS. Article 3
THE PRINCIPLES OF FREEMASONRY. Article 4
THE YEAR 1860. Article 5
ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
Literature. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 13
WEST LANCASHIRE. Article 13
THE BLACKHEATH MEETING OF AUGUST 1858. Article 14
THE GRAND LODGE OF IRELAND. Article 14
INSPECTION OF LODGES. Article 14
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 15
METROPOLITAN. Article 15
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
SCOTLAND. Article 17
GERMANY. Article 18
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 19
Obituary. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masterpieces Of The Architecture Of Different Nations.

missive . Some authors will have it that they are descendants of Abraham . It is well enough known that Bacchus , Semiramis and Osiris , effected one after the other the conquest of Hindostan , or , at any rate , went there with their armies ; and yet it was not until after the expedition of Alexander the Great into

that country , or rather that part of it wliich is watered b y the rivers Lulus ancl Ganges , that ive have been able , through the historians of that prince , to get at some certain notions as to the geography and population of Hindostan , and the customs and habits of its inhabitants .

According to the sacred books ofthe Hindoos , the Brahmins did not mi grate to India until Vichenou , their God , under the name of Rama , had gone there to preach his doctrine , now about 5 , 000 years ago , the ivorship of Cliiven being older by more than several thousand years . It may not be out of place to observe here that the Hindoos

, as well as ourselves , have their deluge , and that they date the epoch of it back to tweuty-one thousand years ago ! ( The Lamas , the Bonzes of Foe , of Siam , of Timquin and of Cochin China , the Talapsins of Pegu and of Ava , the priests of Ceylon , ancl those of Egypt and of Greece , may then be regarded as the successors of tho Bracmans .

The Saniassis alone , a kind of Hindoo religious sect , might be , in the opinion of De Sonnerat , perhaps the descendants of the Bracmans . The Vedas are also their most ancient books upon reli gion , and all the others appear formed from them . They treated of all the sciences , but in such a highflown and poetical style , that in order to understand them it

was necessary to have commentaries which have also become sacred , like thc Talmud to the Pentateuch and Hol y Books of the Jews and the Misna to the Koran . The most ancient of these commentaries are the Shaslas , or Chasirons , which signify science . They date back more than four thousand

eight hundred years ago , and treat of astronomy , astrology , prognostics , morals , religion , medicine and jurisprudence . It is from these books that the astronomers among the-Brahmins _ calculate the course of the stars , aud fabricate the pandjangans or almanacks . The language of these books is no longer understood b y the HindoosTh Jul

. ere are - y extracts from it iu translation in the common language . Ifamskrit , Sanskrit , or Sanscrit is that ancient and learned language which is partly fixed by eighteen dictionaries and several grammars , which , it is said , are masterpieces . Few oven of the Brahmins know it , which caused Bailly to conclude that it came from a more ancient aud

very learned people , noiv extinct . ^ There is a close connection between the Chinese , Siamese , . Egyptians , Persians and Hindoos . Philosophers ot" all nations went to India to gain instruction ; Pythagoras learnt there the dogma of the metempsychosis ' which Vichenou had establishedancl spread it abroad he also got thenthe science

, ; ; of numbers , ancl the custom of tracing cm the sand geometrical figures . The Egyptians , Greeks , and even the Jews adopted the dogma and modified it . The Hindoos , like all other people , worshipped the sun and moon ; and some savage nations still preserve that worshi p . They worshi pped thenfire under the

name of Chiven , who was God tho Destroyer , as Braraa and Vichenou were God thc ; Creator and God the Preserver . They havo had sacred fires like all other people , of which our modern lamps are but an imitation . These people have also sacrificed human victims to the Demon of Evil ; like all people of hot countries , thoy have had the bath enjoined to them by their religion . They wrote with a stylus on thc leaves ofthe palm tree , and learnt while tracing their letters on the sand .

The Temple or Pagoda of the Gentoos , on the coast of Coromanclol , is a _ large square building with a door in the middle of each side , above which rise pyramidal masses to tho hei ght of seven or ei ght storeys , called oobrone , surmounted by domes or vaulted roofs . ' In it aro observed

Masterpieces Of The Architecture Of Different Nations.

square openings , others in arcades and small triangles ; they are more or less rich in Bengal and on the coast of Malabar . The most famous on the coast of Coromandel are , for Chiven , Tironnamaley , Ghalcmbra , and Tirvcdour , and , for Vichenou , Tiroupadi , Ghirangam , and Cangivarou . The temple called The Seven , Pagodas , or of Marcsivwran , between

Pondicherry ancl Madras , near Salera . s , must be the most ancient , if one may judge so from the encroachments made upon it by the sea since its construction , for it bathes its first storey , six only being visible , the seventh being under tiie waters of the sea . The Pagoda of Ghalembron appears very ancient , but its inscriptions are almost effaced and in

unintelligible characters . According to the annals ofthe country aud the sacred books , the Pagoda of Jagrena , the most ancient , must be more than four thousand nine- hundred years old . That in which are the two elephants is of a single block carved in a mountain . The following is the description of it : ¦—On . the summit was a colossal figure with four ai-ms , placed on a high

pyramid , which served as the crowning to the temple ; at the four angles were elephants , as colossal , fastened by chains , which the figure jilaced on the top of thc jiyramid held in its hand ; and these chains , as well as the ivhole of the work , were of the stone of the mountain , hollowed out with admirable skillin the same pieceand in a stylo nearly

, , mixed between the Persian , Hindoo and Egyptian ; which proves the correspondence between these j ^ eople and the similarity of their genius for architecture . ( To lo continued . )

The Principles Of Freemasonry.

THE PRINCIPLES OF FREEMASONRY .

! WE have been requested to republish the following speech , delivered some time since by Bro . HAUTE ., the then D . Prov . G . M . for Suffolk , on the occasion of the pi-esentation of a portrait of the late Sir Thos . Gooch , then Prov . G . M ., to his son : — " Eight AVorshipful Sir , —The presence of ladies iu a Masonic

society , is an event so rare , so gracious , ancl so welcome , that I crave j'oiir permission to preface the more immediate object of this day ' s proceedings hy addressing to them a few observations explanatory ofthe Order they thus honour hy their presence . Ladies , —AVe cannot hut admit , that a society exclusive to one sex and essentially secret , at first sight presents few claims to your favour ; wc , therefore , the more thank you for your presence : and I

am desirous to avail myself of the opportunity it affords to explain to you , as far as I am permitted , the especial tenets and principles of our Order . First , then , let me inform you , Freemasonry is more ancient than thc Golden Fleece or Roman Eagle ; more honourable than the Star , the Garter , or any Order iu existence . It is founded upon thc purest principles of piety and virtue . It possesses great and invaluable privileges to worthmenand

many y , we trust , to the worthy alone . To preserve these privileges our ancient brethren have imposed on us laws as immutable as those of the Medes ancl Persians . Amongst these laws is secrecy with regard to some of our observances , more especially those by wliich a Freemason in any part of the globe , by night or day , may dis cover a brother ; nor , widely as is Freemasonry extended—its branches extending over the habitable globe—do we confine our

sympathies and better feelings within its pale , but wheresoever seen , by whomsoever uttered" To widow ' s tear , to orphan ' s cry , All wants our ready hands supply , So far as power is given . Tho naked clothe , tho prisoner free , Such are thy deeds , sweet Masonry , Beveal'd to us from Heaven . '

Thus , ladies , ive consider ' charity' to be the true characteristic of a Freemason ' s heart . Charity vauuteth not itself ; ancl I beg to he clearly understood , I vaunt not the brethren , but the principles of thc Order they profess . Freemasonry is an allegorical , symliolical , ancl emblematical science . In taking a survey of a Freemason ' s Lodge , you will perceive that its walls ancl our paraphernalia arc decorated by the ivorking tools of the operative Mason

; believe them not I . beseech you , to he unmeaning observances ; believe me there is not one amongst those tools hut conveys to the mind ofthe well instructed Mason some useful lesson on his moral and social virtues . As thc material tools in the hands ofthe operative

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