MORALS and DOGMA
by: Albert Pike
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p. 22
II.
THE
FELLOW-CRAFT.
IN the Ancient Orient, all
religion was more or less a mystery and there was no divorce from it of
philosophy. The popular theology, taking the multitude of allegories and
symbols for realities, degenerated into a worship of the celestial luminaries,
of imaginary Deities with human feelings, passions, appetites, and lusts, of
idols, stones, animals, reptiles. The Onion was sacred to the Egyptians,
because its different layers were a symbol of the concentric heavenly spheres.
Of course the popular religion could not satisfy the deeper longings and
thoughts, the loftier aspirations of the Spirit, or the logic of reason. The
first, therefore, was taught to the initiated in the Mysteries. There, also,
it was taught by symbols. The vagueness of symbolism, capable of many
interpretations, reached what the palpable and conventional creed could not.
Its indefiniteness acknowledged the abstruseness of the subject: it treated
that mysterious subject mystically: it endeavored to illustrate what it could
not explain; to excite an appropriate feeling, if it could not develop
an adequate idea; and to make the image a mere subordinate conveyance
for the conception, which itself never became obvious or familiar.
Thus the knowledge now imparted
by books and letters, was of old conveyed by symbols; and the priests invented
or perpetuated a display of rites and exhibitions, which were not only more
attractive to the eye than words, but often more suggestive and more pregnant
with meaning to the mind.
Masonry, successor of the
Mysteries, still follows the ancient manner of teaching. Her ceremonies are
like the ancient mystic shows,--not the reading of an essay, but the opening
of a problem, requiring research, and constituting philosophy the
arch-expounder. Her symbols are the instruction she gives. The lectures are
endeavors, often partial and one-sided, to interpret these symbols. He who
would become an accomplished Mason must not be content merely to hear, or even
to understand, the lectures; he
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must, aided by them, and they
having, as it were, marked out the way for him, study, interpret, and develop
these symbols for himself.
Though Masonry is identical
with the ancient Mysteries, it is so only in this qualified sense: that it
presents but an imperfect image of their brilliancy, the ruins only of their
grandeur, and a system that has experienced progressive alterations, the
fruits of social events, political circumstances, and the ambitious imbecility
of its improvers. After leaving Egypt, the Mysteries were modified by the
habits of the different nations among whom they were introduced, and
especially by the religious systems of the countries into which they were
transplanted. To maintain the established government, laws, and religion, was
the obligation of the Initiate everywhere; and everywhere they were the
heritage of the priests, who were nowhere willing to make the common people
co-proprietors with themselves of philosophical truth.
Masonry is not the Coliseum in
ruins. It is rather a Roman palace of the middle ages, disfigured by modern
architectural improvements, yet built on a Cyclopæan foundation laid by the
Etruscans, and with many a stone of the superstructure taken from dwellings
and temples of the age of Hadrian and Antoninus.
Christianity taught the
doctrine of FRATERNITY; but repudiated that of political EQUALITY, by
continually inculcating obedience to Cæsar, and to those lawfully in
authority. Masonry was the first apostle of EQUALITY. In the Monastery there
is fraternity and equality, but no liberty. Masonry added
that also, and claimed for man the three-fold heritage, LIBERTY, EQUALITY, and
FRATERNITY.
It was but a development of the
original purpose of the Mysteries, which was to teach men to know and practice
their duties to themselves and their fellows, the great practical end of all
philosophy and all knowledge.
Truths are the springs from
which duties flow; and it is but a few hundred years since a new Truth began
to be distinctly seen; that MAN IS SUPREME OVER INSTITUTIONS, AND NOT THEY
OVER HIM. Man has natural empire over all institutions. They are
for him, according to his development; not he for them. This seems to us a
very simple statement, one to which all men, everywhere, ought to assent. But
once it was a great new Truth,---not
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revealed until governments had
been in existence for at least five thousand years. Once revealed, it imposed
new duties on men. Man owed it to himself to be free. He owed it to his
country to seek to give her freedom, or maintain her in that
possession. It made Tyranny and Usurpation the enemies of the Human Race. It
created a general outlawry of Despots and Despotisms, temporal and spiritual.
The sphere of Duty was immensely enlarged. Patriotism had, henceforth, a new
and wider meaning. Free Government, Free Thought, Free Conscience, Free
Speech! All these came to be inalienable rights, which those who had parted
with them or been robbed of them, or whose ancestors had lost them, had the
right summarily to retake. Unfortunately, as Truths always become perverted
into falsehoods, and are falsehoods when misapplied, this Truth became
the Gospel of Anarchy, soon after it was first preached.
Masonry early comprehended this
Truth, and recognized its own enlarged duties. Its symbols then came to have a
wider meaning; but it also assumed the mask of Stone-masonry, and borrowed its
working-tools, and so was supplied with new and apt symbols. It aided in
bringing about the French Revolution, disappeared with the Girondists, was
born again with the restoration of order, and sustained Napoleon, because,
though Emperor, he acknowledged the right of the people to select its rulers,
and was at the head of a nation refusing to receive back its old kings. He
pleaded, with sabre, musket, and cannon, the great cause of the People against
Royalty, the right of the French people even to make a Corsican General their
Emperor, if it pleased them.
Masonry felt that this Truth
had the Omnipotence of God on its side; and that neither Pope nor Potentate
could overcome it. It was a truth dropped into the world's wide treasury, and
forming a part of the heritage which each generation receives, enlarges, and
holds in trust, and of necessity bequeaths to mankind; the personal estate of
man, entailed of nature to the end of time. And Masonry early recognized it as
true, that to set forth and develop a truth, or any human excellence of gift
or growth, is to make greater the spiritual glory of the race; that whosoever
aids the march of a Truth, and makes the thought a thing, writes in the same
line with MOSES, and with Him who died upon the cross, and has an intellectual
sympathy with the Deity Himself.
The best gift we can bestow on
man is manhood. It is that
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which Masonry is ordained of
God to bestow on its votaries: not sectarianism and religious dogma; not a
rudimental morality, that may be found in the writings of Confucius, Zoroaster,
Seneca, and the Rabbis, in the Proverbs and Ecclesiastes; not a little and
cheap common-school knowledge; but manhood and science and philosophy.
Not that Philosophy or Science
is in opposition to Religion. For Philosophy is but that knowledge of God and
the Soul, which is derived from observation of the manifested action of God
and the Soul, and from a wise analogy. It is the intellectual guide which the
religious sentiment needs. The true religious philosophy of an imperfect
being, is not a system of creed, but, as SOCRATES thought, an infinite search
or approximation. Philosophy is that intellectual and moral progress, which
the religious sentiment inspires and ennobles.
As to Science, it could not
walk alone, while religion was stationary. It consists of those matured
inferences from experience which all other experience confirms. It realizes
and unites all that was truly valuable in both the old schemes of
mediation,--one heroic, or the system of action and effort; and the
mystical theory of spiritual, contemplative communion. "Listen to me,"
says GALEN, "as to the voice of the Eleusinian Hierophant, and believe that
the study of Nature is a mystery no less important than theirs, nor less
adapted to display the wisdom and power of the Great Creator. Their lessons
and demonstrations were obscure, but ours are clear and unmistakable."
We deem that to be the best
knowledge we can obtain of the Soul of another man, which is furnished by his
actions and his life-long conduct. Evidence to the contrary, supplied by what
another man informs us that this Soul has said to his, would weigh little
against the former. The first Scriptures for the human race were written by
God on the Earth and Heavens. The reading of these Scriptures is Science.
Familiarity with the grass and trees, the insects and the infusoria, teaches
us deeper lessons of love and faith than we can glean from the writings of
FĒNĒLON and AUGUSTINE. The great Bible of God is ever open before mankind.
Knowledge is convertible into
power, and axioms into rules of utility and duty. But knowledge itself is not
Power. Wisdom is Power; and her Prime Minister is JUSTICE, which is the
perfected law of TRUTH. The purpose, therefore, of Education and Science
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is to make a man wise. If
knowledge does not make him so, it is wasted, like water poured on the sands.
To know the formulas of Masonry, is of as little value, by itself, as
to know so many words and sentences in some barbarous African or Australasian
dialect. To know even the meaning of the symbols, is but little, unless
that adds to our wisdom, and also to our charity, which is to justice like one
hemisphere of the brain to the other.
Do not lose sight, then, of the
true object of your studies in Masonry. It is to add to your estate of wisdom,
and not merely to your knowledge. A man may spend a lifetime in studying a
single specialty of knowledge,--botany, conchology, or entomology, for
instance,--in committing to memory names derived from the Greek, and
classifying and reclassifying; and yet be no wiser than when he began. It is
the great truths as to all that most concerns a man, as to his rights,
interests, and duties, that Masonry seeks to teach her Initiates.
The wiser a man becomes, the
less will he be inclined to submit tamely to the imposition of fetters or a
yoke, on his conscience or his person. For, by increase of wisdom he not only
better knows his rights, but the more highly values them, and is more
conscious of his worth and dignity. His pride then urges him to assert his
independence. He becomes better able to assert it also; and better able
to assist others or his country, when they or she stake all, even existence,
upon the same assertion. But mere knowledge makes no one independent, nor fits
him to be free. It often only makes him a more useful slave. Liberty is a
curse to the ignorant and brutal.
Political science has for its
object to ascertain in what manner and by means of what institutions political
and personal freedom may be secured and perpetuated: not license, or the mere
right of every man to vote, but entire and absolute freedom of thought and
opinion, alike free of the despotism of monarch and mob and prelate; freedom
of action within the limits of the general law enacted for all; the Courts of
Justice, with impartial Judges and juries, open to all alike; weakness and
poverty equally potent in those Courts as power and wealth; the avenues to
office and honor open alike to all the worthy; the military powers, in war
or peace, in strict subordination to the civil power; arbitrary arrests
for acts not known to the law as crimes, impossible; Romish Inquisitions,
Star-Chambers, Military Commissions, unknown; the
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means of instruction within
reach of the children of all; the right of Free Speech; and accountability of
all public officers, civil and military.
If Masonry needed to be
justified for imposing political as well as moral duties on its Initiates, it
would be enough to point to the sad history of the world. It would not even
need that she should turn back the pages of history to the chapters written by
Tacitus: that she should recite the incredible horrors of despotism under
Caligula and Domitian, Caracalla and Commodus, Vitellius and Maximin. She need
only point to the centuries of calamity through which the gay French nation
passed; to the long oppression of the feudal ages, of the selfish Bourbon
kings; to those times when the peasants were robbed and slaughtered by their
own lords and princes, like sheep; when the lord claimed the first-fruits of
the peasant's marriage-bed; when the captured city was given up to merciless
rape and massacre; when the State-prisons groaned with innocent victims, and
the Church blessed the banners of pitiless murderers, and sang Te Deums for
the crowning mercy of the Eve of St. Bartholomew.
We might turn over the pages,
to a later chapter,--that of the reign of the Fifteenth Louis, when young
girls, hardly more than children, were kidnapped to serve his lusts; when
lettres de cachet filled the Bastile with persons accused of no crime,
with husbands who were in the way of the pleasures of lascivious wives and of
villains wearing orders of nobility; when the people were ground between the
upper and the nether millstone of taxes, customs, and excises; and when Me
Pope's Nuncio and the Cardinal de la Roche-Ayman, devoutly kneeling, one on
each side of Madame du Barry, the king's abandoned prostitute, put the
slippers on her naked feet, as she rose from the adulterous bed. Then, indeed,
suffering and toil were the two forms of man, and the people were but beasts
of burden.
The true Mason is he who labors
strenuously to help his Order effect its great purposes. Not that the Order
can effect them by itself; but that it, too, can help. It also is one of God's
instruments. It is a Force and a Power; and shame upon it, if it did not exert
itself, and, if need be, sacrifice its children in the cause of humanity, as
Abraham was ready to offer up Isaac on the altar of sacrifice. It will not
forget that noble allegory of Curtius leaping, all in armor, into the great
yawning gulf that opened to
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swallow Rome. It will TRY. It
shall not be its fault if the day never comes when man will no
longer have to fear a conquest, an invasion, a usurpation, a rivalry of
nations with the armed hand, an interruption of civilization depending on a
marriage-royal, or a birth in the hereditary tyrannies; a partition of the
peoples by a Congress, a dismemberment by the downfall of a dynasty, a combat
of two religions, meeting head to head, like two goats of darkness on the
bridge of the Infinite: When they will no longer have to fear famine,
spoliation, prostitution from distress, misery from lack of work, and all the
brigandages of chance in the forest of events: when nations will gravitate
about the Truth, like stars about the light, each in its own orbit, without
clashing or collision; and everywhere Freedom, cinctured with stars, crowned
with the celestial splendors, and with wisdom and justice on either hand, will
reign supreme.
In your studies as a
Fellow-Craft you must be guided by REASON, LOVE and FAITH.
We do not now discuss the
differences between Reason and Faith, and undertake to define the domain of
each. But it is necessary to say, that even in the ordinary affairs of life we
are governed far more by what we believe than by what we know;
by FAITH and ANALOGY, than by REASON. The "Age of Reason" of the French
Revolution taught, we know, what a folly it is to enthrone Reason by itself as
supreme. Reason is at fault when it deals with the Infinite. There we must
revere and believe. Notwithstanding the calamities of the virtuous, the
miseries of the deserving, the prosperity of tyrants and the murder of
martyrs, we must believe there is a wise, just, merciful, and loving
God, an Intelligence and a Providence, supreme over all, and caring for the
minutest things and events. A Faith is a necessity to man. Woe to him who
believes nothing!
We believe that the soul of
another is of a certain nature and possesses certain qualities, that he is
generous and honest, or penurious and knavish, that she is virtuous and
amiable, or vicious and ill-tempered, from the countenance alone, from little
more than a glimpse of it, without the means of knowing. We venture our
fortune on the signature of a man on the other side of the world, whom we
never saw, upon the belief that he is honest and trustworthy. We believe that
occurrences have taken place, upon the assertion of others. We believe that
one will acts upon
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another, and in the reality of
a multitude of other phenomena that Reason cannot explain.
But we ought not to
believe what Reason authoritatively denies, that at which the sense of right
revolts, that which is absurd or self-contradictory, or at issue with
experience or science, or that which degrades the character of the Deity, and
would make Him revengeful, malignant, cruel, or unjust.
A man's Faith is as much his
own as his Reason is. His Freedom consists as much in his faith being free as
in his will being uncontrolled by power. All the Priests and Augurs of Rome or
Greece had not the right to require Cicero or Socrates to believe in the
absurd mythology of the vulgar. All the Imaums of Mohammedanism have not the
right to require a Pagan to believe that Gabriel dictated the Koran to the
Prophet. All the Brahmins that ever lived, if assembled in one conclave like
the Cardinals, could not gain a right to compel a single human being to
believe in the Hindu Cosmogony. No man or body of men can be infallible, and
authorized to decide what other men shall believe, as to any tenet of faith.
Except to those who first receive it, every religion and the truth of all
inspired writings depend on human testimony and internal evidences, to
be judged of by Reason and the wise analogies of Faith. Each man must
necessarily have the right to judge of their truth for himself; because no one
man can have any higher or better right to judge than another of equal
information and intelligence.
Domitian claimed to be the Lord
God; and statues and images of him, in silver and gold, were found throughout
the known world. He claimed to be regarded as the God of all men; and,
according to Suetonius, began his letters thus: "Our Lord and God commands
that it should be done so and so;" and formally decreed that no one should
address him otherwise, either in writing or by word of mouth. Palfurius Sura,
the philosopher, who was his chief delator, accusing those who refused to
recognize his divinity, however much he may have believed in that
divinity, had not the right to demand that a single Christian in Rome or the
provinces should do the same.
Reason is far from being the
only guide, in morals or in political science. Love or loving-kindness must
keep it company, to exclude fanaticism, intolerance, and persecution, to all
of which a morality too ascetic, and extreme political principles, invariably
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lead. We must also have faith
in ourselves, and in our fellows and the people, or we shall be easily
discouraged by reverses, and our ardor cooled by obstacles. We must not listen
to Reason alone. Force comes more from Faith and Love: and it is by the aid of
these that man scales the loftiest heights of morality, or becomes the Saviour
and Redeemer of a People. Reason must hold the helm; but these supply the
motive power. They are the wings of the soul. Enthusiasm is generally
unreasoning; and without it, and Love and Faith, there would have been no
RIENZI, or TELL, or SYDNEY, or any other of the great patriots whose names are
immortal. If the Deity had been merely and only All-wise and All-mighty, He
would never have created the Universe.
It is GENIUS that gets Power;
and its prime lieutenants are FORCE and WISDOM. The unruliest of men bend
before the leader that has the sense to see and the will to do. It is Genius
that rules with God-like Power; that unveils, with its counsellors, the hidden
human mysteries, cuts asunder with its word the huge knots, and builds up with
its word the crumbled ruins. At its glance fall down the senseless idols,
whose altars have been on all the high places and in all the sacred groves.
Dishonesty and imbecility stand abashed before it. Its single Yea or Nay
revokes the wrongs of ages, and is heard among the future generations. Its
power is immense, because its wisdom is immense. Genius is the Sun of the
political sphere. Force and Wisdom, its ministers, are the orbs that carry its
light into darkness, and answer it with their solid reflecting Truth.
Development is symbolized by
the use of the Mallet and Chisel; the development of the energies and
intellect, of the individual and the people. Genius may place itself at the
head of an unintellectual, uneducated, unenergetic nation; but in a free
country, to cultivate the intellect of those who elect, is the only mode of
securing intellect and genius for rulers. The world is seldom ruled by the
great spirits, except after dissolution and new birth In periods of transition
and convulsion, the Long Parliaments, the Robespierres and Marats, and the
semi-respectabilities of intellect, too often hold the reins of power. The
Cromwells and Napoleons come later. After Marius and Sulla and Cicero the
rhetorician, CÆSAR. The great intellect is often too sharp for the granite of
this life. Legislators may be very ordinary men; for legislation
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is very ordinary work; it is
but the final issue of a million minds.
The power of the purse or the
sword, compared to that of the spirit, is poor and contemptible. As to
lands, you may have agrarian laws, and equal partition. But a man's
intellect is all his own, held direct from God, an inalienable fief. It is the
most potent of weapons in the hands of a paladin. If the people comprehend
Force in the physical sense, how much more do they reverence the intellectual!
Ask Hildebrand, or Luther, or Loyola. They fall prostrate before it, as before
an idol. The mastery of mind over mind is the only conquest worth having. The
other injures both, and dissolves at a breath; rude as it is, the great cable
falls down and snaps at last. But this dimly resembles the dominion of the
Creator. It does not need a subject like that of Peter the Hermit. If the
stream be but bright and strong, it will sweep like a spring-tide to the
popular heart. Not in word only, but in intellectual act lies the fascination.
It is the homage to the Invisible. This power, knotted with Love, is the
golden chain let down into the well of Truth, or the invisible chain that
binds the ranks of mankind together.
Influence of man over man is a
law of nature, whether it be by a great estate in land or in intellect. It may
mean slavery, a deference to the eminent human judgment. Society hangs
spiritually together, like the revolving spheres above. The free country, in
which intellect and genius govern, will endure. Where they serve, and other
influences govern, the national life is short. All the nations that have tried
to govern themselves by their smallest, by the incapables, or merely
respectables, have come to nought. Constitutions and Laws, without Genius and
Intellect to govern, will not prevent decay. In that case they have the
dry-rot and the life dies out of them by degrees.
To give a nation the franchise
of the Intellect is the only sure mode of perpetuating freedom. This will
compel exertion and generous care for the people from those on the higher
seats, and honorable and intelligent allegiance from those below. Then
political public life will protect all men from self-abasement in sensual
pursuits, from vulgar acts and low greed, by giving the noble ambition of just
imperial rule. To elevate the people by teaching loving-kindness and wisdom,
with power to him who teaches best: and so to develop the free State from the
rough ashlar: this
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is the great labor in which
Masonry desires to lend a helping hand.
All of us should labor in
building up the great monument of a nation, the Holy House of the Temple. The
cardinal virtues must not be partitioned among men, becoming the exclusive
property of some, like the common crafts. ALL are apprenticed to the partners,
Duty and Honor.
Masonry is a march and a
struggle toward the Light. For the individual as well as the nation, Light is
Virtue, Manliness, Intelligence, Liberty. Tyranny over the soul or body, is
darkness. The freest people, like the freest man, is always in danger of
re-lapsing into servitude. Wars are almost always fatal to Republics. They
create tyrants, and consolidate their power. They spring, for the most part,
from evil counsels. When the small and the base are intrusted with power,
legislation and administration become but two parallel series of errors and
blunders, ending in war, calamity, and the necessity for a tyrant. When the
nation feels its feet sliding backward, as if it walked on the ice, the time
has come for a supreme effort. The magnificent tyrants of the past are but the
types of those of the future. Men and nations will always sell themselves into
slavery, to gratify their passions and obtain revenge. The tyrant's plea,
necessity, is always available; and the tyrant once in power, the necessity of
providing for his safety makes him savage. Religion is a power, and he must
control that. Independent, its sanctuaries might rebel. Then it becomes
unlawful for the people to worship God in their own way, and the old spiritual
despotisms revive. Men must believe as Power wills, or die; and even if they
may believe as they will, all they have, lands, houses, body, and soul, are
stamped with the royal brand. "I am the State," said Louis the
Fourteenth to his peasants; "the very shirts on your backs are mine, and I
can take them if I will."
And dynasties so established
endure, like that of the Cæsars of Rome, of the Cæsars of Constantinople, of
the Caliphs, the Stuarts, the Spaniards, the Goths, the Valois, until the race
wears out, and ends with lunatics and idiots, who still rule. There is
no concord among men, to end the horrible bondage. The State falls inwardly,
as well as by the outward blows of the incoherent elements. The furious human
passions, the sleeping human indolence, the stolid human ignorance, the
rivalry of human castes, are as good for the kings as the swords of the
Paladins. The worshippers
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have all bowed so long to the
old idol, that they cannot go into the streets and choose another Grand Llama.
And so the effete State floats on down the puddled stream of Time, until the
tempest or the tidal sea discovers that the worm has consumed its strength,
and it crumbles into oblivion.
Civil and religious Freedom
must go hand in hand; and Persecution matures them both. A people content with
the thoughts made for them by the priests of a church will be content with
Royalty by Divine Right,--the Church and the Throne mutually sustaining each
other. They will smother schism and reap infidelity and indifference; and
while the battle for freedom goes on around them, they will only sink the more
apathetically into servitude and a deep trance, perhaps occasionally
interrupted by furious fits of frenzy, followed by helpless exhaustion.
Despotism is not difficult in
any land that has only known one master from its childhood; but there is no
harder problem than to perfect and perpetuate free government by the people
themselves; for it is not one king that is needed: all must be kings. It is
easy to set up Masaniello, that in a few days he may fall lower than before.
But free government grows slowly, like the individual human faculties; and
like the forest-trees, from the inner heart outward. Liberty is not only the
common birth-right, but it is lost as well by non-user as by mis-user. It
depends far more on the universal effort than any other human property. It has
no single shrine or holy well of pilgrimage for the nation; for its waters
should burst out freely from the whole soil.
The free popular power is one
that is only known in its strength in the hour of adversity: for all its
trials, sacrifices and expectations are its own. It is trained to think for
itself, and also to act for itself. When the enslaved people prostrate
themselves in the dust before the hurricane, like the alarmed beasts of the
field, the free people stand erect before it, in all the strength of unity, in
self-reliance, in mutual reliance, with effrontery against all but the visible
hand of God. It is neither cast down by calamity nor elated by success.
This vast power of endurance,
of forbearance, of patience, and of performance, is only acquired by continual
exercise of all the functions, like the healthful physical human vigor, like
the individual moral vigor.
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And the maxim is no less true
than old, that eternal vigilance is the price of liberty. It is curious to
observe the universal pretext by which the tyrants of all times take away the
national liberties. It is stated in the statutes of Edward II., that the
justices and the sheriff should no longer be elected by the people, on account
of the riots and dissensions which had arisen. The same reason was given long
before for the suppression of popular election of the bishops; and there is a
witness to this untruth in the yet older times, when Rome lost her freedom,
and her indignant citizens declared that tumultuous liberty is better than
disgraceful tranquillity.
With the Compasses and Scale,
we can trace all the figures used in the mathematics of planes, or in what are
called GEOMETRY and TRIGONOMETRY, two words that are themselves deficient in
meaning. GEOMETRY, which the letter G. in most Lodges is said to
signify, means measurement of land or the earth--or Surveying;
and TRIGONOMETRY, the measurement of triangles, or figures with three sides or
angles. The latter is by far the most appropriate name for the science
intended to be expressed by the word "Geometry." Neither is of a meaning
sufficiently wide: for although the vast surveys of great spaces of the
earth's surface, and of coasts, by which shipwreck and calamity to mariners
are avoided, are effected by means of triangulation;--though it was by the
same method that the French astronomers measured a degree of latitude and so
established a scale of measures on an immutable basis; though it is by means
of the immense triangle that has for its base a line drawn in imagination
between the place of the earth now and its place six months hence in space,
and for its apex a planet or star, that the distance of Jupiter or Sirius from
the earth is ascertained; and though there is a triangle still more vast, its
base extending either way from us, with and past the horizon into immensity,
and its apex infinitely distant above us; to which corresponds a similar
infinite triangle below--what is above equalling what is below, immensity
equalling immensity;--yet the Science of Numbers, to which Pythagoras
attached so much importance, and whose mysteries are found everywhere in the
ancient religions, and most of all in the Kabalah and in the Bible, is not
sufficiently expressed by either the word "Geometry" or the word "Trigonometry."
For that science includes these, with Arithmetic, and also with Algebra,
Logarithms, the Integral and Differential
p. 35
[paragraph continues] Calculus; and by means of it are
worked out the great problems of Astronomy or the Laws of the Stars.
Virtue is but heroic bravery,
to do the thing thought to be true, in spite of all enemies of flesh or
spirit, in despite of all temptations or menaces. Man is accountable for the
uprightness of his doctrine, but not for the rightness of it. Devout
enthusiasm is far easier than a good action. The end of thought is action; the
sole purpose of Religion is an Ethic. Theory, in political science, is
worthless, except for the purpose of being realized in practice.
In every credo,
religious or political as in the soul of man, there are two regions, the
Dialectic and the Ethic; and it is only when the two are harmoniously blended,
that a perfect discipline is evolved. There are men who dialectically are
Christians, as there are a multitude who dialectically are Masons, and yet who
are ethically Infidels, as these are ethically of the Profane, in the
strictest sense:--intellectual believers, but practical atheists:--men who
will write you "Evidences," in perfect faith in their logic, but cannot carry
out the Christian or Masonic doctrine, owing to the strength, or weakness, of
the flesh. On the other hand, there are many dialectical skeptics, but ethical
believers, as there are many Masons who have never undergone initiation; and
as ethics are the end and purpose of religion, so are ethical believers the
most worthy. He who does right is better than he who thinks
right.
But you must not act upon the
hypothesis that all men are hypocrites, whose conduct does not square with
their sentiments. No vice is more rare, for no task is more difficult, than
systematic hypocrisy. When the Demagogue becomes a Usurper it does not follow
that he was all the time a hypocrite. Shallow men only so judge of others.
The truth is, that creed has,
in general, very little influence on the conduct; in religion, on that of the
individual; in politics, on that of party. As a general thing, the Mahometan,
in the Orient, is far more honest and trustworthy than the Christian. A Gospel
of Love in the mouth, is an Avatar of Persecution in the heart. Men who
believe in eternal damnation and a literal sea of fire and brimstone, incur
the certainty of it, according to their creed, on the slightest temptation of
appetite or passion. Predestination insists on the necessity of good works. In
Masonry, at the least flow of passion, one speaks ill of another behind his
back: and so
p. 36
far from the "Brotherhood" of
Blue Masonry being real, and the solemn pledges contained in the use of the
word "Brother" being complied with, extraordinary pains are taken to show that
Masonry is a sort of abstraction, which scorns to interfere in worldly
matters. The rule may be regarded as universal, that, where there is a choice
to be made, a Mason will give his vote and influence, in politics and
business, to the less qualified profane in preference to the better qualified
Mason. One will take an oath to oppose any unlawful usurpation of power, and
then become the ready and even eager instrument of a usurper. Another will
call one "Brother," and then play toward him the part of Judas Iscariot, or
strike him, as Joab did Abner, under the fifth rib, with a lie whose
authorship is not to be traced. Masonry does not change human nature, and
cannot make honest men out of born knaves.
While you are still engaged in
preparation, and in accumulating principles for future use, do not forget the
words of the Apostle James: "For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a
doer, he is like unto a man beholding his natural face in a glass, for he
beholdeth himself, and goeth away, and straightway forgetteth what manner of
man he was; but whoso looketh into the perfect law of liberty, and continueth,
he being not a forgetful hearer, but a doer of the work, this man shall be
blessed in his work. If any man among you seem to be religious, and bridleth
not his tongue, but deceiveth his own heart, this man's religion is vain. . .
. Faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being an abstraction. A man is
justified by works, and not by faith only. . . . The devils believe,--and
tremble. . . . As the body without the heart is dead, so is faith without
works."
In political science, also,
free governments are erected and free constitutions framed, upon some simple
and intelligible theory. Upon whatever theory they are based, no sound
conclusion is to be reached except by carrying the theory out without
flinching, both in argument on constitutional questions and in practice.
Shrink from the true theory through timidity, or wander from it through want
of the logical faculty, or transgress against it through passion or on the
plea of necessity or expediency, and you have denial or invasion of rights,
laws that offend against first principles, usurpation of illegal powers, or
abnegation and abdication of legitimate authority.
p. 37
Do not forget, either, that as
the showy, superficial, impudent and self-conceited will almost always be
preferred, even in utmost stress of danger and calamity of the State, to the
man of solid learning, large intellect, and catholic sympathies, because he is
nearer the common popular and legislative level, so the highest truth is not
acceptable to the mass of mankind.
When SOLON was asked if he had
given his countrymen the best laws, he answered, "The best they are capable
of receiving." This is one of the profoundest utterances on record; and
yet like all great truths, so simple as to be rarely comprehended. It contains
the whole philosophy of History. It utters a truth which, had it been
recognized, would have saved men an immensity of vain, idle disputes, and have
led them into the clearer paths of knowledge in the Past. It means this,--that
all truths are Truths of Period, and not truths for eternity; that
whatever great fact has had strength and vitality enough to make itself real,
whether of religion, morals, government, or of whatever else, and to find
place in this world, has been a truth for the time, and as good as men were
capable of receiving.
So, too, with great men. The
intellect and capacity of a people has a single measure,--that of the great
men whom Providence gives it, and whom it receives. There have always
been men too great for their time or their people. Every people makes such men
only its idols, as it is capable of comprehending.
To impose ideal truth or law
upon an incapable and merely real man, must ever be a vain and empty
speculation. The laws of sympathy govern in this as they do in regard to men
who are put at the head. We do not know, as yet, what qualifications the sheep
insist on in a leader. With men who are too high intellectually, the mass have
as little sympathy as they have with the stars. When BURKE, the wisest
statesman England ever had, rose to speak, the House of Commons was
depopulated as upon an agreed signal. There is as little sympathy between the
mass and the highest TRUTHS. The highest truth, being incomprehensible to the
man of realities, as the highest man is, and largely above his level, will be
a great unreality and falsehood to an unintellectual man. The profoundest
doctrines of Christianity and Philosophy would be mere jargon and babble to a
Potawatomie Indian. The popular explanations of the symbols of Masonry are
fitting for the multitude that have swarmed into the Temples,--being fully up
to the level
p. 38
of their capacity. Catholicism
was a vital truth in its earliest ages, but it became obsolete, and
Protestantism arose, flourished, and deteriorated. The doctrines of ZOROASTER
were the best which the ancient Persians were fitted to receive; those of
CONFUCIUS were fitted for the Chinese; those of MOHAMMED for the idolatrous
Arabs of his age. Each was Truth for the time. Each was a GOSPEL, preached by
a REFORMER; and if any men are so little fortunate as to remain content
therewith, when others have attained a higher truth, it is their misfortune
and not their fault. They are to be pitied for it, and not persecuted.
Do not expect easily to
convince men of the truth, or to lead them to think aright. The subtle human
intellect can weave its mists over even the clearest vision. Remember that it
is eccentric enough to ask unanimity from a jury; but to ask it from any large
number of men on any point of political faith is amazing. You can hardly get
two men in any Congress or Convention to agree;--nay, you can rarely get one
to agree with himself. The political church which chances to be supreme
anywhere has an indefinite number of tongues. How then can we expect men to
agree as to matters beyond the cognizance of the senses? How can we compass
the Infinite and the Invisible with any chain of evidence? Ask the small
sea-waves what they murmur among the pebbles! How many of those words that
come from the invisible shore are lost, like the birds, in the long passage?
How vainly do we strain the eyes across the long Infinite! We must be content,
as the children are, with the pebbles that have been stranded, since it is
forbidden us to explore the hidden depths.
The Yellow-Craft is especially
taught by this not to become wise in his own conceit. Pride in unsound
theories is worse than ignorance. Humility becomes a Mason. Take some quiet,
sober moment of life, and add together the two ideas of Pride and Man; behold
him, creature of a span, stalking through infinite space in all the grandeur
of littleness! Perched on a speck of the Universe, every wind of Heaven
strikes into his blood the coldness of death; his soul floats away from his
body like the melody from the string. Day and night, like dust on the wheel,
he is rolled along the heavens, through a labyrinth of worlds, and all the
creations of God are flaming on every side, further than even his imagination
can reach. Is this a creature to make for himself a crown of glory, to deny
his own flesh, to mock at his fellow, sprung with him from that dust
p. 39
to which both will soon return?
Does the proud man not err? Does he not suffer? Does he not die? When he
reasons, is he never stopped short by difficulties? When he acts, does he
never succumb to the temptations of pleasure? When he lives, is he free from
pain? Do the diseases not claim him as their prey? When he dies, can he escape
the common grave? Pride is not the heritage of man. Humility should dwell with
frailty, and atone for ignorance, error and imperfection.
Neither should the Mason be
over-anxious for office and honor, however certainly he may feel that he has
the capacity to serve the State. He should neither seek nor spurn honors. It
is good to enjoy the blessings of fortune; it is better to submit without a
pang to their loss. The greatest deeds are not done in the glare of light, and
before the eyes of the populace. He whom God has gifted with a love of
retirement possesses, as it were, an additional sense; and among the vast and
noble scenes of nature, we find the balm for the wounds we have received among
the pitiful shifts of policy; for the attachment to solitude is the surest
preservative from the ills of life.
But Resignation is the more
noble in proportion as it is the less passive. Retirement is only a morbid
selfishness, if it prohibit exertions for others; as it is only dignified and
noble, when it is the shade whence the oracles issue that are to instruct
mankind; and retirement of this nature is the sole seclusion which a good and
wise man will covet or command. The very philosophy which makes such a man
covet the quiet, will make him eschew the inutility of the
hermitage. Very little praiseworthy would LORD BOLINGBROKE have seemed among
his haymakers and ploughmen, if among haymakers and ploughmen he had looked
with an indifferent eye upon a profligate minister and a venal Parliament.
Very little interest would have attached to his beans and vetches, if beans
and vetches had caused him to forget that if he was happier on a farm he could
be more useful in a Senate, and made him forego, in the sphere of a bailiff,
all care for re-entering that of a legislator.
Remember, also, that there is
an education which quickens the Intellect, and leaves the heart hollower or
harder than before. There are ethical lessons in the laws of the heavenly
bodies, in the properties of earthly elements, in geography, chemistry,
geology, and all the material sciences. Things are symbols of Truths.
p. 40
[paragraph continues]
Properties are symbols of Truths. Science, not teaching moral and spiritual
truths, is dead and dry, of little more real value than to commit to the
memory a long row of unconnected dates, or of the names of bugs or
butterflies.
Christianity, it is said,
begins from the burning of the false gods by the people themselves. Education
begins with the burning of our intellectual and moral idols: our prejudices,
notions, conceits, our worthless or ignoble purposes. Especially it is
necessary to shake off the love of worldly gain. With Freedom comes the
longing for worldly advancement. In that race men are ever falling, rising,
running, and falling again. The lust for wealth and the abject dread of
poverty delve the furrows on many a noble brow. The gambler grows old as he
watches the chances. Lawful hazard drives Youth away before its time; and this
Youth draws heavy bills of exchange on Age. Men live, like the engines, at
high pressure, a hundred years in a hundred months; the ledger becomes the
Bible, and the day-book the Book of the Morning Prayer.
Hence flow overreachings and
sharp practice, heartless traffic in which the capitalist buys profit with the
lives of the laborers, speculations that coin a nation's agonies into wealth,
and all the other devilish enginery of Mammon. This, and greed for office, are
the two columns at the entrance to the Temple of Moloch. It is doubtful
whether the latter, blossoming in falsehood, trickery, and fraud, is not even
more pernicious than the former. At all events they are twins, and fitly
mated; and as either gains control of the unfortunate subject, his soul
withers away and decays, and at last dies out. The souls of half the human
race leave them long before they die. The two greeds are twin plagues of the
leprosy, and make the man unclean; and whenever they break out they spread
until "they cover all the skin of him that hath the plague, from his head even
to his foot." Even the raw flesh of the heart becomes unclean with it.
Alexander of Macedon has left a
saying behind him which has survived his conquests: "Nothing is nobler than
work." Work only can keep even kings respectable. And when a king is a
king indeed, it is an honorable office to give tone to the manners and morals
of a nation; to set the example of virtuous conduct, and restore in spirit the
old schools of chivalry, in which the young
p. 41
manhood may be nurtured to real
greatness. Work and wages will go together in men's minds, in the most
royal institutions. We must ever come to the idea of real work. The rest that
follows labor should be sweeter than the rest which follows rest.
Let no Fellow-Craft imagine
that the work of the lowly and uninfluential is not worth the doing. There is
no legal limit to the possible influences of a good deed or a wise word or a
generous effort. Nothing is really small. Whoever is open to the deep
penetration of nature knows this. Although, indeed, no absolute satisfaction
may be vouchsafed to philosophy, any more in circumscribing the cause than in
limiting the effect, the man of thought and contemplation falls into
unfathomable ecstacies in view of all the decompositions of forces resulting
in unity. All works for all. Destruction is not annihilation, but
regeneration.
Algebra applies to the clouds;
the radiance of the star benefits the rose; no thinker would dare to say that
the perfume of the hawthorn is useless to the constellations. Who, then, can
calculate the path of the molecule? How do we know that the creations of
worlds are not determined by the fall of grains of sand? Who, then,
understands the reciprocal flow and ebb of the infinitely great and the
infinitely small; the echoing of causes in the abysses of beginning, and the
avalanches of creation? A flesh-worm is of account; the small is great; the
great is small; all is in equilibrium in necessity. There are marvellous
relations between beings and things; in this inexhaustible Whole, from sun to
grub, there is no scorn: all need each other. Light does not carry terrestrial
perfumes into the azure depths, without knowing what it does with them; night
distributes the stellar essence to the sleeping plants. Every bird which flies
has the thread of the Infinite in its claw. Germination includes the hatching
of a meteor, and the tap of a swallow's bill, breaking the egg; and it leads
forward the birth of an earth-worm and the advent of a Socrates. Where the
telescope ends the microscope begins. Which of them the grander view? A bit of
mould is a Pleiad of flowers--a nebula is an ant-hill of stars.
There is the same and a still
more wonderful interpenetration between the things of the intellect and the
things of matter. Elements and principles are mingled, combined, espoused,
multiplied one by another, to such a degree as to bring the material world and
the moral world into the same light. Phenomena are perpetually
p. 42
folded back upon themselves. In
the vast cosmical changes the universal life comes and goes in unknown
quantities, enveloping all in the invisible mystery of the emanations, losing
no dream from no single sleep, sowing an animalcule here, crumbling a star
there, oscillating and winding in curves; making a force of Light, and an
element of Thought; disseminated and indivisible, dissolving all save that
point without length, breadth, or thickness, The MYSELF; reducing everything
to the Soul-atom; making everything blossom into God; entangling all
activities, from the highest to the lowest, in the obscurity of a dizzying
mechanism; hanging the flight of an insect upon the movement of the earth;
subordinating, perhaps, if only by the identity of the law, the eccentric
evolutions of the comet in the firmament, to the whirlings of the infusoria in
the drop of water. A mechanism made of mind, the first motor of which is the
gnat, and its last wheel the zodiac.
A peasant-boy, guiding Blücher
by the right one of two roads, the other being impassable for artillery,
enables him to reach Waterloo in time to save Wellington from a defeat that
would have been a rout; and so enables the kings to imprison Napoleon on a
barren rock in mid-ocean. An unfaithful smith, by the slovenly shoeing of a
horse, causes his lameness, and, he stumbling, the career of his
world-conquering rider ends, and the destinies of empires are changed. A
generous officer permits an imprisoned monarch to end his game of chess before
leading him to the block; and meanwhile the usurper dies, and the prisoner
reascends the throne. An unskillful workman repairs the compass, or malice or
stupidity disarranges it, the ship mistakes her course, the waves swallow a
Cæsar, and a new chapter is written in the history of a world. What we call
accident is but the adamantine chain of indissoluble connection between all
created things. The locust, hatched in the Arabian sands, the small worm that
destroys the cotton-boll, one making famine in the Orient, the other closing
the mills and starving the workmen and their children in the Occident, with
riots and massacres, are as much the ministers of God as the earthquake; and
the fate of nations depends more on them than on the intellect of its kings
and legislators. A civil war in America will end in shaking the world; and
that war may be caused by the vote of some ignorant prize-fighter or crazed
fanatic in a city or in a Congress, or of some stupid boor in an obscure
country parish. The
p. 43
electricity of universal
sympathy, of action and reaction, pervades everything, the planets and the
motes in the sunbeam. FAUST, with his types, or LUTHER, with his sermons,
worked greater results than Alexander or Hannibal. A single thought sometimes
suffices to overturn a dynasty. A silly song did more to unseat James the
Second than the acquittal of the Bishops. Voltaire, Condorcet, and Rousseau
uttered words that will ring, in change and revolutions, throughout all the
ages.
Remember, that though life is
short, Thought and the influences of what we do or say are immortal; and that
no calculus has yet pretended to ascertain the law of proportion between cause
and effect. The hammer of an English blacksmith, smiting down an insolent
official, led to a rebellion which came near being a revolution. The word well
spoken, the deed fitly done, even by the feeblest or humblest, cannot help but
have their effect. More or less, the effect is inevitable and eternal. The
echoes of the greatest deeds may die away like the echoes of a cry among the
cliffs, and what has been done seem to the human judgment to have been without
result. The unconsidered act of the poorest of men may fire the train that
leads to the subterranean mine, and an empire be rent by the explosion.
The power of a free people is
often at the disposal of a single and seemingly an unimportant individual;--a
terrible and truthful power; for such a people feel with one heart, and
therefore can lift up their myriad arms for a single blow. And, again, there
is no graduated scale for the measurement of the influences of different
intellects upon the popular mind. Peter the Hermit held no office, yet what a
work he wrought!
From the political point of
view there is but a single principle,--the sovereignty of man over himself.
This sovereignty of one's self over one's self is called LIBERTY. Where two or
several of these sovereignties associate, the State begins. But in this
association there is no abdication. Each sovereignty parts with a certain
portion of itself to form the common right. That portion is the same for all.
There is equal contribution by all to the joint sovereignty. This identity of
concession which each makes to all, is EQUALITY. The common right is nothing
more or less than the protection of all, pouring its rays on each. This
protection of each by all, is FRATERNITY.
p. 44
Liberty is the summit, Equality
the base. Equality is not all vegetation on a level, a society of big spears
of grass and stunted oaks, a neighborhood of jealousies, emasculating each
other. It is, civilly, all aptitudes having equal opportunity; politically,
all votes having equal weight; religiously, all consciences having equal
rights.
Equality has an
organ;--gratuitous and obligatory instruction. We must begin with the right to
the alphabet. The primary school obligatory upon all; the higher school
offered to all. Such is the law. From the same school for all springs
equal society. Instruction! Light! all comes from Light, and all returns to
it.
We must learn the thoughts of
the common people, if we would be wise and do any good work. We must look at
men, not so much for what Fortune has given to them with her blind old eyes,
as for the gifts Nature has brought in her lap, and for the use that has been
made of them. We profess to be equal in a Church and in the Lodge: we shall be
equal in the sight of God when He judges the earth. We may well sit on the
pavement together here, in communion and conference, for the few brief moments
that constitute life.
A Democratic Government
undoubtedly has its defects, because it is made and administered by men, and
not by the Wise Gods. It cannot be concise and sharp, like the despotic. When
its ire is aroused it develops its latent strength, and the sturdiest rebel
trembles. But its habitual domestic rule is tolerant, patient, and indecisive.
Men are brought together, first to differ, and then to agree. Affirmation,
negation, discussion, solution: these are the means of attaining truth. Often
the enemy will be at the gates before the babble of the disturbers is drowned
in the chorus of consent. In the Legislative office deliberation will often
defeat decision. Liberty can play the fool like the Tyrants.
Refined society requires
greater minuteness of regulation; and the steps of all advancing States are
more and more to be picked among the old rubbish and the new materials. The
difficulty lies in discovering the right path through the chaos of confusion.
The adjustment of mutual rights and wrongs is also more difficult in
democracies. We do not see and estimate the relative importance of objects so
easily and clearly from the level or the waving land as from the elevation of
a lone peak, towering above the plain; for each looks through his own mist.
p. 45
Abject dependence on
constituents, also, is too common. It is as miserable a thing as abject
dependence on a minister or the favorite of a Tyrant. It is rare to find a man
who can speak out the simple truth that is in him, honestly and frankly,
without fear, favor, or affection, either to Emperor or People.
Moreover, in assemblies of men,
faith in each other is almost always wanting, unless a terrible pressure of
calamity or danger from without produces cohesion. Hence the constructive
power of such assemblies is, generally deficient. The chief triumphs of modern
days, in Europe, have been in pulling down and obliterating; not in building
up. But Repeal is not Reform. Time must bring with him the Restorer and
Rebuilder.
Speech, also, is grossly abused
in Republics; and if the use of speech be glorious, its abuse is the most
villainous of vices. Rhetoric, Plato says, is the art of ruling the minds of
men. But in democracies it is too common to hide thought in words, to
overlay it, to babble nonsense. The gleams and glitter of intellectual
soap-and-water bubbles are mistaken for the rainbow-glories of genius. The
worthless pyrites is continually mistaken for gold. Even intellect condescends
to intellectual jugglery, balancing thoughts as a juggler balances pipes on
his chin. In all Congresses we have the inexhaustible flow of babble, and
Faction's clamorous knavery in discussion, until the divine power of speech,
that privilege of man and great gift of God, is no better than the screech of
parrots or the mimicry of monkeys. The mere talker, however fluent, is barren
of deeds in the day of trial.
There are men voluble as women,
and as well skilled in fencing with the tongue: prodigies of speech, misers in
deeds. Too much talking, like too much thinking, destroys the power of action.
In human nature, the thought is only made perfect by deed. Silence is the
mother of both. The trumpeter is not the bravest of the brave. Steel and not
brass wins the day. The great doer of great deeds is mostly slow and slovenly
of speech. There are some men born and bred to betray. Patriotism is their
trade, and their capital is speech. But no noble spirit can plead like Paul
and be false to itself as Judas.
Imposture too commonly rules in
republics; they seem to be ever in their minority; their guardians are
self-appointed; and the unjust thrive better than the just. The Despot, like
the night-lion roaring, drowns all the clamor of tongues at once, and
p. 46
speech, the birthright of the
free man, becomes the bauble of the enslaved.
It is quite true that republics
only occasionally, and as it were accidentally, select their wisest, or even
the less incapable among the incapables, to govern them and legislate for
them. If genius, armed with learning and knowledge, will grasp the reins, the
people will reverence it; if it only modestly offers itself for office, it
will be smitten on the face, even when, in the straits of distress and the
agonies of calamity, it is indispensable to the salvation of the State. Put it
upon the track with the showy and superficial, the conceited, the ignorant,
and impudent, the trickster and charlatan, and the result shall not be a
moment doubtful. The verdicts of Legislatures and the People are like the
verdicts of juries,--sometimes right by accident.
Offices, it is true, are
showered, like the rains of Heaven, upon the just and the unjust. The Roman
Augurs that used to laugh in each other's faces at the simplicity of the
vulgar, were also tickled with their own guile; but no Augur is needed to lead
the people astray. They readily deceive themselves. Let a Republic begin as it
may, it will not be out of its minority before imbecility will be promoted to
high places; and shallow pretence, getting itself puffed into notice, will
invade all the sanctuaries. The most unscrupulous partisanship will prevail,
even in respect to judicial trusts; and the most unjust appointments
constantly be made, although every improper promotion not merely confers one
undeserved favor, but may make a hundred honest cheeks smart with injustice.
The country is stabbed in the
front when those are brought into the stalled seats who should slink into the
dim gallery. Every stamp of Honor, ill-clutched, is stolen from the Treasury
of Merit.
Yet the entrance into the
public service, and the promotion in it, affect both the rights of individuals
and those of the nation. Injustice in bestowing or withholding office ought to
be so intolerable in democratic communities that the least trace of it should
be like the scent of Treason. It is not universally true that all citizens of
equal character have an equal claim to knock at the door of every public
office and demand admittance. When any man presents himself for service he has
a right to aspire to the highest body at once, if he can show his fitness for
such a beginning,--that
p. 47
he is fitter than the rest who
offer themselves for the same post. The entry into it can only justly be made
through the door of merit. And whenever any one aspires to and attains such
high post, especially if by unfair and disreputable and indecent means, and is
afterward found to be a signal failure, he should at once be beheaded. He is
the worst among the public enemies.
When a man sufficiently reveals
himself, all others should be proud to give him due precedence. When the power
of promotion is abused in the grand passages of life whether by People,
Legislature, or Executive, the unjust decision recoils on the judge at once.
That is not only a gross, but a willful shortness of sight, that cannot
discover the deserving. If one will look hard, long, and honestly, he will not
fail to discern merit, genius, and qualification; and the eyes and voice of
the Press and Public should condemn and denounce injustice wherever she rears
her horrid head.
"The tools to the workmen!"
no other principle will save a Republic from destruction, either by civil war
or the dry-rot. They tend to decay, do all we can to prevent it, like human
bodies. If. they try the experiment of governing themselves by their smallest,
they slide downward to the unavoidable abyss with tenfold velocity; and there
never has been a Republic that has not followed that fatal course.
But however palpable and gross
the inherent defects of democratic governments, and fatal as the results
finally and inevitably are, we need only glance at the reigns of Tiberius,
Nero, and Caligula, of Heliogabalus and Caracalla, of Domitian and Corn-modus,
to recognize that the difference between freedom and despotism is as wide as
that between Heaven and Hell. The cruelty, baseness, and insanity of tyrants
are incredible. Let him who complains of the fickle humors and inconstancy of
a free people, read Pliny's character of Domitian. If the great man in a
Republic cannot win office without descending to low arts and whining beggary
and the judicious use of sneaking lies, let him remain in retirement, and use
the pen. Tacitus and Juvenal held no office. Let History and Satire punish the
pretender as they crucify the despot. The revenges of the intellect are
terrible and just.
Let Masonry use the pen and the
printing-press in the free State against the Demagogue; in the Despotism
against the Tyrant. History offers examples and encouragement. All history,
for four thousand years, being filled with violated rights and the
p. 48
sufferings of the people, each
period of history brings with it such protest as is possible to it. Under the
Cæsars there was no insurrection, but there was a Juvenal. The arousing of
indignation replaces the Gracchi. Under the Cæsars there is the exile of Syene;
there is also the author of the Annals. As the Neros reign darkly they should
be pictured so. Work with the graver only would be pale; into the grooves
should be poured a concentrated prose that bites.
Despots are an aid to thinkers.
Speech enchained is speech terrible. The writer doubles and triples his style,
when silence is imposed by a master upon the people. There springs from this
silence a certain mysterious fullness, which filters and freezes into brass fn
the thoughts. Compression in the history produces conciseness in the
historian. The granitic solidity of some celebrated prose is only a
condensation produced by the Tyrant. Tyranny constrains the writer to
shortenings of diameter which are in-creases of strength. The Ciceronian
period, hardly sufficient upon Verres, would lose its edge upon Caligula.
The Demagogue is the
predecessor of the Despot. One springs from the other's loins. He who will
basely fawn on those who have office to bestow, will betray like Iscariot, and
prove a miser-able and pitiable failure. Let the new Junius lash such men as
they deserve, and History make them immortal in infamy; since their influences
culminate in ruin. The Republic that employs and honors the shallow, the
superficial, the base,
"who crouch
Unto the offal of an office promised,"
at last weeps tears of blood
for its fatal error. Of such supreme folly, the sure fruit is damnation. Let
the nobility of every great heart, condensed into justice and truth, strike
such creatures like a thunderbolt! If you can do no more, you can at least
condemn by your vote, and ostracise by denunciation.
It is true that, as the Czars
are absolute, they have it in their power to select the best for the public
service. It is true that the beginner of a dynasty generally does so; and that
when monarchies are in their prime, pretence and shallowness do not thrive and
prosper and get power, as they do in Republics. All do not gabble in the
Parliament of a Kingdom, as in the Congress of a Democracy. The incapables do
not go undetected there, all their lives.
p. 49
But dynasties speedily decay
and run out. At last they dwindle down into imbecility; and the dull or
flippant Members of Congresses are at least the intellectual peers of the vast
majority of kings. The great man, the Julius Cæsar, the Charlemagne, Cromwell,
Napoleon, reigns of right. He is the wisest and the strongest. The incapables
and imbeciles succeed and are usurpers; and fear makes them cruel. After
Julius came Caracalla and Galba; after Charlemagne, the lunatic Charles the
Sixth. So the Saracenic dynasty dwindled out; the Capets, the Stuarts, the
Bourbons; the last of these producing Bomba, the ape of Domitian.
* * * * * *
Man is by nature cruel, like
the tigers. The barbarian, and the tool of the tyrant, and the civilized
fanatic, enjoy the sufferings of others, as the children enjoy the contortions
of maimed flies. Absolute Power, once in fear for the safety of its tenure,
cannot but be cruel.
As to ability, dynasties
invariably cease to possess any after a few lives. They become mere shams,
governed by ministers, favorites, or courtesans, like those old Etruscan
kings, slumbering for long ages in their golden royal robes, dissolving
forever at the first breath of day. Let him who complains of the short-comings
of democracy ask himself if he would prefer a Du Barry or a Pompadour,
governing in the name of a Louis the Fifteenth, a Caligula making his horse a
consul, a Domitian, "that most savage monster," who sometimes drank the blood
of relatives, sometimes employing himself with slaughtering the most
distinguished citizens before whose gates fear and terror kept watch; a tyrant
of frightful aspect, pride on his forehead, fire in his eye, constantly
seeking darkness and secrecy, and only emerging from his solitude to make
solitude. After all, in a free government, the Laws and the Constitution are
above the Incapables, the Courts correct their legislation, and posterity is
the Grand Inquest that passes judgment on them. What is the exclusion of worth
and intellect and knowledge from civil office compared with trials before
Jeffries, tortures in the dark caverns of the Inquisition, Alva-butcheries in
the Netherlands, the Eve of Saint Bartholomew, and the Sicilian Vespers?
The Abbé Barruel in his
Memoirs for the History of Jacobinism, declares that Masonry in France
gave, as its secret, the
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words
Equality and Liberty, leaving it for every honest and religious Mason to
explain them as would best suit his principles; but retained the
privilege of unveiling in the higher Degrees the meaning of those words, as
interpreted by the French Revolution. And he also excepts English Masons from
his anathemas, because in England a Mason is a peaceable subject of the civil
authorities, no matter where he resides, engaging in no plots or conspiracies
against even the worst government. England, he says, disgusted with an
Equality and a Liberty, the consequences of which she had felt in the
struggles of her Lollards, Anabaptists, and Presbyterians, had "purged her
Masonry" from all explanations tending to overturn empires; but there still
remained adepts whom disorganizing principles bound to the Ancient Mysteries.
Because true Masonry,
unemasculated, bore the banners of Freedom and Equal Rights, and was in
rebellion against temporal and spiritual tyranny, its Lodges were proscribed
in 1735, by an edict of the States of Holland. In 1737, Louis XV. forbade them
in France. In 1738, Pope Clement XII. issued against them his famous Bull of
Excommunication, which was renewed by Benedict XIV.; and in 1743 the Council
of Berne also proscribed them. The title of the Bull of Clement is, "The
Condemnation of the Society of Conventicles de Liberi Muratori, or of
the Freemasons, under the penalty of ipso facto excommunication, the
absolution from which is reserved to the Pope alone, except at the point of
death." And by it all bishops, ordinaries, and inquisitors were empowered to
punish Freemasons, "as vehemently suspected of heresy," and to call in, if
necessary, the help of the secular arm; that is, to cause the civil authority
to put them to death.
Also, false and slavish
political theories end in brutalizing the State. For example, adopt the theory
that offices and employments in it are to be given as rewards for services
rendered to party, and they soon become the prey and spoil of faction, the
booty of the victory of faction;--and leprosy is in the flesh of the State.
The body of the commonwealth becomes a mass of corruption, like a living
carcass rotten with syphilis. All unsound theories in the end develop
themselves in one foul and loathsome disease or other of the body politic. The
State, like the man, must use constant effort to stay in the paths of virtue
and manliness. The
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habit of electioneering and
begging for office culminates in bribery with office, and corruption
in office.
A chosen man has a visible
trust from God, as plainly as if the commission were engrossed by the notary.
A nation cannot renounce the executorship of the Divine decrees. As little can
Masonry. It must labor to do its duty knowingly and wisely. We must remember
that, in free States, as well as in despotisms, Injustice, the spouse of
Oppression, is the fruitful parent of Deceit, Distrust, Hatred, Conspiracy,
Treason, and Unfaithfulness. Even in assailing Tyranny we must have Truth and
Reason as our chief weapons. We must march into that fight like the old
Puritans, or into the battle with the abuses that spring up in free
government, with the flaming sword in one hand, and the Oracles of God in the
other.
The citizen who cannot
accomplish well the smaller purposes of public life, cannot compass the
larger. The vast power of endurance, forbearance, patience, and performance,
of a free people, is acquired only by continual exercise of all the functions,
like the healthful physical human vigor. If the individual citizens have it
not, the State must equally be without it. It is of the essence of a free
government, that the people should not only be concerned in making the laws,
but also in their execution. No man ought to be more ready to obey and
administer the law than he who has helped to make it. The business of
government is carried on for the benefit of all, and every co-partner should
give counsel and co-operation.
Remember also, as another shoal
on which States are wrecked, that free States always tend toward the
depositing of the citizens in strata, the creation of castes, the perpetuation
of the jus divinum to office in families. The more democratic the
State, the more sure this result. For, as free States advance in power, there
is a strong tendency toward centralization, not from deliberate evil
intention, but from the course of events and the indolence of human nature.
The executive powers swell and enlarge to inordinate dimensions; and the
Executive is always aggressive with respect to the nation. Offices of all
kinds are multiplied to reward partisans; the brute force of the sewerage and
lower strata of the mob obtains large representation, first in the lower
offices, and at last in Senates; and Bureaucracy raises its bald head,
bristling with pens, girded with spectacles, and bunched with ribbon. The art
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of Government becomes like a
Craft, and its guilds tend to become exclusive, as those of the Middle Ages.
Political science may be much
improved as a subject of speculation; but it should never be divorced from the
actual national necessity. The science of governing men must always be
practical, rather than philosophical. There is not the same amount of positive
or universal truth here as in the abstract sciences; what is true in one
country may be very false in another; what is untrue to-day may become true in
another generation, and the truth of to-day be reversed by the judgment of
to-morrow. To distinguish the casual from the enduring, to separate the
unsuitable from the suitable, and to make progress even possible, are the
proper ends of policy. But without actual knowledge and experience, and
communion of labor, the dreams of the political doctors may be no better than
those of the doctors of divinity. The reign of such a caste, with its
mysteries, its myrmidons, and its corrupting influence, may be as fatal as
that of the despots. Thirty tyrants are thirty times worse than one.
Moreover, there is a strong
temptation for the governing people to become as much slothful and sluggards
as the weakest of absolute kings. Only give them the power to get rid, when
caprice prompts them, of the great and wise men, and elect the little, and as
to all the rest they will relapse into indolence and indifference. The central
power, creation of the people, organized and cunning if not enlightened, is
the perpetual tribunal set up by them for the redress of wrong and the rule of
justice. It soon supplies itself with all the requisite machinery, and is
ready and apt for all kinds of interference. The people may be a child all its
life. The central power may not be able to suggest the best scientific
solution of a problem; but it has the easiest means of carrying an idea into
effect. If the purpose to be attained is a large one, it requires a large
comprehension; it is proper for the action of the central power. If it be a
small one, it may be thwarted by disagreement. The central power must step in
as an arbitrator and prevent this. The people may be too averse to change, too
slothful in their own business, unjust to a minority or a majority. The
central power must take the reins when the people drop them.
France became centralized in
its government more by the apathy and ignorance of its people than by the
tyranny of its kings. When the inmost parish-life is given up to the direct
guardianship
p. 53
of the State, and the repair of
the belfry of a country church requires a written order from the central
power, a people is in its dotage. Men are thus nurtured in imbecility, from
the dawn of social life. When the central government feeds part of the people
it prepares all to be slaves. When it directs parish and county affairs, they
are slaves already. The next step is to regulate labor and its wages.
Nevertheless, whatever follies
the free people may commit, even to the putting of the powers of legislation
in the hands of the little competent and less honest, despair not of the final
result. The terrible teacher, EXPERIENCE, writing his lessons on hearts
desolated with calamity and wrung by agony, will make them wiser in time.
Pretence and grimace and sordid beggary for votes will some day cease to
avail. Have FAITH, and struggle on, against all evil influences and
discouragements! FAITH is the Saviour and Redeemer of nations. When
Christianity had grown weak, profitless, and powerless, the Arab Restorer and
Iconoclast came, like a cleansing hurricane. When the battle of Damascus was
about to be fought, the Christian bishop, at the early dawn, in his robes, at
the head of his clergy, with the Cross once so triumphant raised in the air,
came down to the gates of the city, and laid open before the army the
Testament of Christ. The Christian general, THOMAS, laid his hand on the book,
and said, "Oh God! IF our faith be true, aid us, and deliver us not
into the hands of its enemies!" But KHALED, "the Sword of God," who
had marched from victory to victory, exclaimed to his wearied soldiers, "Let
no man sleep! There will be rest enough in the bowers of Paradise; sweet will
be the repose never more to be followed by labor." The faith of the Arab
had become stronger than that of the Christian, and he conquered.
The Sword is also, in the
Bible, an emblem of SPEECH, or of the utterance of thought. Thus, in that
vision or apocalypse of the sublime exile of Patmos, a protest in the name of
the ideal, overwhelming the real world, a tremendous satire uttered in the
name of Religion and Liberty, and with its fiery reverberations smiting the
throne of the Cæsars, a sharp two-edged sword comes out of the mouth of the
Semblance of the Son of Man, encircled by the seven golden candlesticks, and
holding in his right hand seven stars. "The Lord," says Isaiah, "hath made my
mouth like a sharp sword." "I have slain them," says Hosea, "by the words
p. 54
of my mouth." "The word of
God," says the writer of the apostolic letter to the Hebrews, "is quick and
powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing
asunder of soul and spirit." "The sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of
God," says Paul, writing to the Christians at Ephesus. "I will fight against
them with the sword of my mouth," it is said in the Apocalypse, to the angel
of the church at Pergamos.
The spoken discourse may roll
on strongly as the great tidal wave; but, like the wave, it dies at last
feebly on the sands. It is heard by few, remembered by still fewer, and fades
away, like an echo in the mountains, leaving no token of power. It is nothing
to the living and coming generations of men. It was the written human
speech, that gave power and permanence to human thought. It is this that makes
the whole human history but one individual life.
To write on the rock is to
write on a solid parchment; but it requires a pilgrimage to see it. There is
but one copy, and Time wears even that. To write on skins or papyrus was to
give, as it were, but one tardy edition, and the rich only could procure it.
The Chinese stereotyped not only the unchanging wisdom of old sages, but also
the passing events. The process tended to suffocate thought, and to hinder
progress; for there is continual wandering in the wisest minds, and Truth
writes her last words, not on clean tablets, but on the scrawl that Error has
made and often mended.
Printing made the movable
letters prolific. Thenceforth the orator spoke almost visibly to listening
nations; and the author wrote, like the Pope, his cumenic decrees, urbi et
orbi, and ordered them to be posted up in all the market-places;
remaining, if he chose, impervious to human sight. The doom of tyrannies was
thenceforth sealed. Satire and invective became potent as armies. The unseen
hands of the Juniuses could launch the thunderbolts, and make the ministers
tremble. One whisper from this giant fills the earth as easily as Demosthenes
filled the Agora. It will soon be heard at the antipodes as easily as in the
next street. It travels with the lightning under the oceans. It makes the mass
one man, speaks to it in the same common language, and elicits a sure and
single response. Speech passes into thought, and thence promptly into act. A
nation becomes truly one, with one large heart and a single throbbing pulse.
Men are invisibly present
p. 55
to each other, as if already
spiritual beings; and the thinker who sits in an Alpine solitude, unknown to
or forgotten by all the world, among the silent herds and hills, may flash his
words to all the cities and over all the seas.
Select the thinkers to be
Legislators; and avoid the gabblers. Wisdom is rarely loquacious. Weight and
depth of thought are unfavorable to volubility. The shallow and superficial
are generally voluble and often pass for eloquent. More words, less
thought,--is the general rule. The man who endeavors to say something worth
remembering in every sentence, becomes fastidious, and condenses like Tacitus.
The vulgar love a more diffuse stream. The ornamentation that does not cover
strength is the gewgaws of babble.
Neither is dialectic subtlety
valuable to public men. The Christian faith has it, had it formerly more than
now; a subtlety that might have entangled Plato, and which has rivalled in a
fruitless fashion the mystic lore of Jewish Rabbis and Indian Sages. It is not
this which converts the heathen. It is a vain task to balance the great
thoughts of the earth, like hollow straws, on the finger-tips of disputation.
It is not this kind of warfare which makes the Cross triumphant in the hearts
of the unbelievers; but the actual power that lives in the Faith.
So there is a political
scholasticism that is merely useless. The dexterities of subtle logic rarely
stir the hearts of the people, or convince them. The true apostle of Liberty,
Fraternity and Equality makes it a matter of life and death. His combats are
like those of Bossuet,--combats to the death. The true apostolic fire is like
the lightning: it flashes conviction into the soul. The true word is verily a
two-edged sword. Matters of government and political science can be fairly
dealt with only by sound reason, and the logic of common sense: not the common
sense of the ignorant, but of the wise. The acutest thinkers rarely succeed in
be-coming leaders of men. A watchword or a catchword is more potent with the
people than logic, especially if this be the least metaphysical. When a
political prophet arises, to stir the dreaming, stagnant nation, and hold back
its feet from the irretrievable descent, to heave the land as with an
earthquake, and shake the silly-shallow idols from their seats, his words will
come straight from God's own mouth, and be thundered into the conscience. He
will reason, teach, warn, and rule. The real "Sword of the Spirit"
p. 56
is keener than the brightest
blade of Damascus. Such men rule a land, in the strength of justice, with
wisdom and with power. Still, the men of dialectic subtlety often rule well,
because in practice they forget their finely-spun theories, and use the
trenchant logic of common sense. But when the great heart and large intellect
are left to the rust in private life, and small attorneys, brawlers in
politics, and those who in the cities would be only the clerks of notaries, or
practitioners in the disreputable courts, are made national Legislators, the
country is in her dotage, even if the beard has not yet grown upon her chin.
In a free country, human speech
must needs be free; and the State must listen to the maunderings of folly, and
the screechings of its geese, and the brayings of its asses, as well as to the
golden oracles of its wise and great men. Even the despotic old kings allowed
their wise fools to say what they liked. The true alchemist will extract the
lessons of wisdom from the babblings of folly. He will hear what a man has to
say on any given subject, even if the speaker end only in proving himself
prince of fools. Even a fool will sometimes hit the mark. There is some truth
in all men who are not compelled to suppress their souls and speak other men's
thoughts. The finger even of the idiot may point to the great highway.
A people, as well as the sages,
must learn to forget. If it neither learns the new nor forgets the old, it is
fated, even if it has been royal for thirty generations. To unlearn is to
learn; and also it is sometimes needful to learn again the forgotten. The
antics of fools make the current follies more palpable, as fashions are shown
to be absurd by caricatures, which so lead to their extirpation. The buffoon
and the zany are useful in their places. The ingenious artificer and
craftsman, like Solomon, searches the earth for his materials, and transforms
the misshapen matter into glorious workmanship. The world is conquered by the
head even more than by the hands. Nor will any assembly talk forever. After a
time, when it has listened long enough, it quietly puts the silly, the
shallow, and the superficial to one side,--it thinks, and sets to work.
The human thought, especially
in popular assemblies, runs in the most singularly crooked channels, harder to
trace and follow than the blind currents of the ocean. No notion is so absurd
that it may not find a place there. The master-workman must train
p. 57
these notions and vagaries with
his two-handed hammer. They twist out of the way of the sword-thrusts; and are
invulnerable all over, even in the heel, against logic. The martel or mace,
the battle-axe, the great double-edged two-handed sword must deal with
follies; the rapier is no better against them than a wand, unless it be the
rapier of ridicule.
The SWORD is also the symbol of
war and of the soldier. Wars, like thunder-storms, are often
necessary to purify the stagnant atmosphere. War is not a demon, without
remorse or reward. It restores the brotherhood in letters of fire. When men
are seated in their pleasant places, sunken in ease and indolence, with
Pretence and Incapacity and Littleness usurping all the high places of State,
war is the baptism of blood and fire, by which alone they can be renovated. It
is the hurricane that brings the elemental equilibrium, the concord of Power
and Wisdom. So long as these continue obstinately divorced, it will continue
to chasten.
In the mutual appeal of nations
to God, there is the acknowledgment of His might. It lights the beacons of
Faith and Freedom, and heats the furnace through which the earnest and loyal
pass to immortal glory. There is in war the doom of defeat, the quenchless
sense of Duty, the stirring sense of Honor, the measureless solemn sacrifice
of devotedness, and the incense of success. Even in the flame and smoke of
battle, the Mason discovers his brother, and fulfills the sacred obligations
of Fraternity.
Two, or the Duad, is the symbol
of Antagonism; of Good and Evil, Light and Darkness. It is Cain and Abel, Eve
and Lilith, Jachin and Boaz, Ormuzd and Ahriman, Osiris and Typhon.
THREE, or the Triad, is most
significantly expressed by the equilateral and the right-angled triangles.
There are three principal colors or rays in the rainbow, which by
intermixture make seven. The three are the blue, the yellow,
and the red. The Trinity of the Deity, in one mode or other, has been
an article in all creeds. He creates, preserves, and destroys. He is the
generative power, the productive capacity, and the result.
The immaterial man, according to the Kabalah, is composed of vitality,
or life, the breath of life; of soul or mind, and
spirit. Salt, sulphur, and mercury are the great symbols of the
alchemists. To them man was body, soul, and spirit.
FOUR is expressed by the
square, or four-sided right-angled
p. 58
figure. Out of the symbolic
Garden of Eden flowed a river, dividing into four streams,--PISON,
which flows around the land of gold, or light; GIHON, which flows around the
land of Ethiopia or Darkness; HIDDEKEL, running eastward to Assyria; and the
EUPHRATES. Zechariah saw four chariots coming out from between two
mountains of bronze, in the first of which were red horses; in the
second, black; in the third, white; and in the fourth,
grizzled: "and these were the four winds of the heavens, that go forth
from standing before the Lord of all the earth." Ezekiel saw the four
living creatures, each with four faces and four wings, the faces
of a man and a lion, an ox and an eagle; and the
four wheels going upon their four sides; and Saint John beheld
the four beasts, full of eyes before and behind, the LION, the young
Ox, the MAN, and the flying EAGLE. Four was the signature of the Earth.
Therefore, in the 148th Psalm, of those who must praise the Lord on the land,
there are four times four, and four in particular of
living creatures. Visible nature is described as the four quarters of
the world, and the four corners of the earth. "There are four,"
says the old Jewish saying, "which take the first place in this world: man,
among the creatures; the eagle among birds; the ox among cattle;
and the lion among wild beasts." Daniel saw four great beasts
come up from the sea.
FIVE is the Duad added to the
Triad. It is expressed by the five-pointed or blazing star, the mysterious
Pentalpha of Pythagoras. It is indissolubly connected with the number seven.
Christ fed His disciples and the multitude with five loaves and two
fishes, and of the fragments there remained twelve, that is, five
and seven, baskets full. Again He fed them with seven loaves and
a few little fishes, and there remained seven baskets full. The five
apparently small planets, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn, with the
two greater ones, the Sun and Moon, constituted the seven celestial
spheres.
SEVEN was the peculiarly sacred
number. There were seven planets and spheres presided over by seven
archangels. There were seven colors in the rainbow; and the Phnician Deity
was called the HEPTAKIS or God of seven rays; seven days of the
week; and seven and five made the number of months, tribes, and
apostles. Zechariah saw a golden candlestick, with seven lamps and
seven pipes to the lamps, and an olive-tree on each side. Since
p. 59
he says, "the seven eyes
of the Lord shall rejoice, and shall see the plummet in the hand of Zerubbabel."
John, in the Apocalypse, writes seven epistles to the seven
churches. In the seven epistles there are twelve promises. What
is said of the churches in praise or blame, is completed in the number
three. The refrain, "who has ears to hear," etc., has ten
words, divided by three and seven, and the seven by
three and four; and the seven epistles are also so divided.
In the seals, trumpets, and vials, also, of this symbolic vision, the seven
are divided by four and three. He who sends his message to
Ephesus, "holds the seven stars in his right hand, and walks amid the
seven golden lamps."
In six days, or periods,
God created the Universe, and paused on the seventh day. Of clean
beasts, Noah was directed to take by sevens into the ark; and of fowls
by sevens; because in seven days the rain was to commence. On
the seventeenth day of the month, the rain began; on the seventeenth
day of the seventh month, the ark rested on Ararat. When the dove
returned, Noah waited seven days before he sent her forth again; and
again seven, after she returned with the olive-leaf. Enoch was the
seventh patriarch, Adam included, and Lamech lived 777 years.
There were seven lamps
in the great candlestick of the Tabernacle and Temple, representing the
seven planets. Seven times Moses sprinkled the anointing oil upon
the altar. The days of consecration of Aaron and his sons were seven in
number. A woman was unclean seven days after child-birth; one infected
with leprosy was shut up seven days; seven times the leper was
sprinkled with the blood of a slain bird; and seven days afterwards he
must remain abroad out of his tent. Seven times, in purifying the
leper, the priest was to sprinkle the consecrated oil; and seven times
to sprinkle with the blood of the sacrificed bird the house to be purified.
Seven times the blood of the slain bullock was sprinkled on the
mercy-seat; and seven times on the altar. The seventh year was a
Sabbath of rest; and at the end of seven times seven years came
the great year of jubilee. Seven days the people ate unleavened bread,
in the month of Abib. Seven weeks were counted from the time of first
putting the sickle to the wheat. The Feast of the Tabernacles lasted seven
days.
Israel was in the hand of
Midian seven years before Gideon delivered them. The bullock sacrificed
by him was seven years old. Samson told Delilah to bind him with
seven green withes; and
p. 60
she wove
the seven locks of his head, and afterwards shaved them off. Balaam
told Barak to build for him seven altars. Jacob served seven
years for Leah and seven for Rachel. Job had seven sons and
three daughters, making the perfect number ten. He had also
seven thousand sheep and three thousand camels. His friends sat down with
him seven days and seven nights. His friends were ordered to
sacrifice seven bullocks and seven rams; and again, at the end,
he had seven sons and three daughters, and twice seven thousand
sheep, and lived an hundred and forty, or twice seven times ten
years. Pharaoh saw in his dream seven fat and seven lean kine,
seven good ears and seven blasted ears of wheat; and there were
seven years of plenty, and seven of famine. Jericho fell, when
seven priests, with seven trumpets, made the circuit of the city
on seven successive days; once each day for six days, and seven
times on the seventh. "The seven eyes of the Lord," says
Zechariah, "run to and fro through the whole earth." Solomon was seven
years in building the Temple. Seven angels, in the Apocalypse, pour out
seven plagues, from seven vials of wrath. The scarlet-colored
beast, on which the woman sits in the wilderness, has seven heads and
ten horns. So also has the beast that rises up out of the sea. Seven
thunders uttered their voices. Seven angels sounded seven
trumpets. Seven lamps of fire, the seven spirits of God, burned
before the throne; and the Lamb that was slain had seven horns and
seven eyes.
EIGHT is the first cube, that
of two. NINE is the square of three, and represented by the
triple triangle.
TEN includes all the other
numbers. It is especially seven and three; and is called the
number of perfection. Pythagoras represented it by the TETRACTYS, which had
many mystic meanings. This symbol is sometimes composed of dots or points,
sometimes of commas or yōds, and in the Kabalah, of the letters of the name of
Deity. It is thus arranged:
p. 61
The Patriarchs from Adam to
Noah, inclusive, are ten in number, and the same number is that of the
Commandments.
TWELVE is the number of the
lines of equal length that form a cube. It is the number of the months, the
tribes, and the apostles; of the oxen under the Brazen Sea, of the stones on
the breast-plate of the high priest.
Next: III.
The Master