THE BUILDERS
BY
JOSEPH FORT NEWTON,
LITT. D.
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p. 126
Noe person (of what degree soever) shalbee
accepted a Free Mason, unless hee shall have a lodge of five Free Masons at
least; whereof one to be a master, or warden, of that limitt, or division,
wherein such Lodge shalbee kept, and another of the trade of Free Masonry.
That noe person shalbee accepted a Free
Mason, but such as are of able body, honest parentage, good reputation, and
observers of the laws of the land.
That noe person shalbee accepted a Free
Mason, or know the secrets of said Society, until hee bath first taken the
oath of secrecy hereafter following: "I, A. B., doe in the presence of
Almighty God, and my fellows, and brethren here present, promise and declare,
that I will not at any time hereafter, by any act or circumstance whatsoever,
directly or indirectly, publish, discover, reveal, or make known any of the
secrets, privileges, or counsels, of the fraternity or fellowship of Free
Masonry, which at this time, or any time hereafter, shalbee made known unto
mee soe helpe mee God, and the holy contents of this booke."--HARLEIAN MS,
1600-1650
p. 127
CHAPTER II
Fellowcrafts
I
HAVING followed the Free-masons over a long
period of history, it is now in order to give some account of the ethics,
organization, laws, emblems, and workings of their lodges. Such a study is at
once easy and difficult by turns, owing to the mass of material, and to the
further fact that in the nature of things much of the work of a secret order
is not, and has never been, matter for record. By this necessity, not a little
must remain obscure, but it is hoped that even those not of the order may
derive a definite notion of the principles and practices of the old
Craft-masonry, from which the Masonry of today is descended. At least, such a
sketch will show that, from times of old, the order of Masons has been a
teacher of morality, charity, and truth, unique in its genius, noble in its
spirit, and benign in its influence.
Taking its ethical teaching first, we have only
to turn to the Old Charges or Constitutions of the
p. 128
order, with their quaint blending of high truth
and homely craft-law, to find the moral basis of universal Masonry. These old
documents were a part of the earliest ritual of the order, and were recited or
read to every young man at the time of his initiation as an Entered
Apprentice. As such, they rehearsed the legends, laws, and ethics of the craft
for his information, and, as we have seen, they insisted upon the antiquity of
the order, as well as its service to mankind--a fact peculiar to Masonry, for
no other order has ever claimed such a legendary or traditional history.
Having studied that legendary record and its value as history, it remains to
examine the moral code laid before the candidate who, having taken a solemn
oath of loyalty and secrecy, was instructed in his duties as an Apprentice and
his conduct as a man. What that old code lacked in subtlety is more than made
up in simplicity, and it might all be stated in the words of the Prophet: "To
do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly before God,"--the old eternal
moral law, founded in faith, tried by time, and approved as valid for men of
every clime, creed, and condition.
Turning to the Regius MS, we find
fifteen "points" or rules set forth for the guidance of Fellowcrafts, and as
many for the rule of Master Masons. 1
Later the number was reduced to nine,
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but so far from being an abridgment, it was in
fact an elaboration of the original code; and by the time we reach the
Roberts and Watson MSS a similar set of requirements for
Apprentices had been adopted--or rather recorded, for they had been in use
long before. It will make for clearness if we reverse the order and take the
Apprentice charge first, as it shows what manner of men were admitted to the
order. No man was made a Mason save by his own free choice, and he had to
prove himself a freeman of lawful age, of legitimate birth, of sound body, of
clean habits, and of good repute, else he was not eligible. Also, he had to
bind himself by solemn oath to serve under rigid rules for a period of seven
years, vowing absolute obedience--for the old-time Lodge was a school in which
young
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men studied, not only the art of building and
its symbolism, but the seven sciences as well. At first the Apprentice was
little more than a servant, doing the most menial work, his period of
endenture being at once a test of his character and a training for his work.
If he proved himself trustworthy and proficient, his wages were increased,
albeit his rules of conduct were never relaxed. How austere the discipline was
may be seen from a summary of its rules:
Confessing faith in God, an Apprentice vowed to
honor the Church, the State, and the Master under whom he served, agreeing not
to absent himself from the service of the order, by day or night, save with
the license of the Master. He must be honest, truthful, upright, faithful in
keeping the secrets of the craft, or the confidence of the Master, or of any
Free-mason, when communicated to him as such. Above all he must be chaste,
never committing adultery or fornication, and he must not marry, or contract
himself to any woman, during his apprenticeship. He must be obedient to the
Master without argument or murmuring, respectful to all Free-masons,
courteous, avoiding obscene or uncivil speech, free from slander, dissension,
or dispute. He must not haunt or frequent any tavern or ale-house, or so much
as go into them except it be upon
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an errand of the Master or with his consent,
using neither cards, dice, nor any unlawful game, "Christmas time excepted."
He must not steal anything even to the value of a penny, or suffer it to be
done, or shield anyone guilty of theft, but report the fact to the Master with
all speed.
After seven long years the Apprentice
brought his masterpiece to the Lodge--or, in earlier times, to the annual
Assembly 1--and
on strict trial and due examination was declared a Master. Thereupon he ceased
to be a pupil and servant, passed into the yanks of F'ellowcrafts, and became
a free man capable, for the first time in his life, of earning his living and
choosing his own employer. Having selected a Mark by which his work could be
identified,
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he could then take his kit of tools and travel
as a Master of his art, receiving the wages of a Master--not, however, without
first reaffirming his vows of honesty, truthfulness, fidelity, temperance, and
chastity, and assuming added obligations to uphold the honor of the order.
Again he was sworn not to lay bare, nor to tell to any man what he heard or
saw done in the Lodge, and to keep the secrets of a fellow Mason as inviolably
as his own--unless such a secret imperiled the good name of the craft. He
furthermore promised to act as mediator between his Master and his Fellows,
and to deal justly with both parties. If he saw a Fellow hewing a stone which
he was in a fair way to spoil, he must help him without loss of time, if able
to do so, that the whole work be not ruined. Or if he met a fellow Mason in
distress, or sorrow, he must aid him so far as lay within his power. In short,
he must live in justice and honor with all men, especially with the members of
the order, "that the bond of mutual charity and love may augment and
continue."
Still more binding, if possible, were the vows
of a Fellowcraft when he was elevated to the dignity of Master of the Lodge or
of the Work. Once
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more he took solemn oath to keep the secrets of
the order unprofaned, and more than one old MS quotes the Golden Rule as the
law of the Master's office. He must be steadfast, trusty, and true; pay his
Fellows truly; take no bribe; and as a judge stand upright. He must attend the
annual Assembly, unless disabled by illness, if within fifty miles--the
distance varying, however, in different MSS. He must be careful in admitting
Apprentices, taking only such as are fit both physically and morally, and
keeping none without assurance that he would stay seven years in order to
learn his craft. He must be patient with his pupils, instruct them diligently,
encourage them with increased pay, and not permit them to work at night,
"unless in the pursuit of knowledge, which shall be a sufficient excuse." He
must be wise and discreet, and undertake no work he cannot both perform and
complete equally to the profit of his employer and the craft. Should a Fellow
be overtaken by error, he must be gentle, skilful, and forgiving, seeking
rather to help than to hurt, abjuring scandal and bitter words. He must not
attempt to supplant a Master of the Lodge or of the Work, or belittle his
work, but recommend it and assist him in improving it. He must be liberal in
charity to those in need, helping a Fellow who has fallen upon evil lot,
giving him work and
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wages for at least a fortnight, or if he has no
work, "relieve him with money to defray his reasonable charges to the next
Lodge." For the rest, he must in all ways act in a manner befitting the
nobility of his office and his order.
Such were some of the laws of the moral life by
which the old Craft-masonry sought to train its members, not only to be good
workmen, but to be good and true men, serving their Fellows; to which, as the
Rawlinson MS tells us, "divers new articles have been added by the free choice
and good consent and best advice of the Perfect and True Masons, Masters, and
Brethren." If, as an ethic of life, these laws seem simple and rudimentary,
they are none the less fundamental, and they remain to this day the only gate
and way by which those must enter who would go up to the House of the Lord. As
such they are great and saving things to lay to heart and act upon, and if
Masonry taught nothing else its title to the respect of mankind would be
clear. They have a double aspect: first, the building of a spiritual man upon
immutable moral foundations; and second, the great and simple religious faith
in the Fatherhood of God, the Brotherhood of man, and the Life Eternal, taught
by Masonry from its earliest history to this good day. Morality and theistic
religion--upon these two rocks Masonry
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has always stood, and they are the only basis
upon which man may ever hope to rear the spiritual edifice of his life, even
to the capstone thereof.
II
Imagine, now, a band of these builders, bound
together by solemn vows and mutual interests, journeying over the most
abominable roads toward the site selected for an abbey or cathedral. Traveling
was attended with many dangers, and the company was therefore always well
armed, the disturbed state of the country rendering such a precaution
necessary. Tools and provisions belonging to the party were carried on
pack-horses or mules, placed in the center of the convoy, in charge of
keepers. The company consisted of a Master Mason directing the work, Fellows
of the craft, and Apprentices serving their time. Besides these we find
subordinate laborers, not of the Lodge though in it, termed layers, setters,
tilers, and so forth. Masters and Fellows wore a distinctive costume, which
remained almost unchanged in its fashion for no less than three centuries.
Withal, it was a serious
p. 136
company, but in nowise solemn, and the tedium
of the journey was no doubt beguiled by song, story, and the humor incident to
travel.
"Wherever they came," writes Mr. Hope in his
Essay on Architecture, "in the suite of missionaries, or were called by
the natives, or arrived of their own accord, to seek employment, they appeared
headed by a chief surveyor, who governed the whole troop, and named one man
out of every ten, under the name of warden, to overlook the other nine, set
themselves to building temporary huts for their habitation around the spot
where the work was to be carried on, regularly organized their different
departments, fell to work, sent for fresh supplies of their brethren as the
object demanded, and, when all was finished, again they raised their
encampment, and went elsewhere to undertake other work."
Here we have a glimpse of the methods of the
Free-masons, of their organization, almost military in its order and dispatch,
and of their migratory life; although they had a more settled life than this
ungainly sentence allows, for long time was required
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for the building of a great cathedral.
Sometimes, it would seem, they made special contracts with the inhabitants of
a town where they were to erect a church, containing such stipulations as,
that a Lodge covered with tiles should be built for their accommodation, and
that every laborer should be provided with a white apron of a peculiar kind of
leather and gloves to shield the hands from stone and slime.
At all events, the picture we have is that of a little community or village of
workmen, living in rude dwellings, with a Lodge room at the center adjoining a
slowly rising cathedral--the Master busy with his plans and the care of his
craft; Fellows shaping stones for walls, arches, or spires; Apprentices
fetching tools or mortar, and when necessary, tending the sick, and performing
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all offices of a similar nature. Always
the Lodge was the center of interest and activity, a place of labor, of study,
of devotion, as well as the common room for the social life of the order.
Every morning, as we learn from the Fabric Rolls of York Minster, began with
devotion, followed by the directions of the Master for the work of the day,
which no doubt included study of the laws of the art, plans of construction,
and the mystical meaning of ornaments and emblems. Only Masons were in
attendance at such times, the Lodge being closed to all others, and guarded by
a Tiler 1
against "the approach of cowans and eavesdroppers." Thus the
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work of each day was begun, moving forward
amidst the din and litter of the hours, until the craft was called from labor
to rest and refreshment; and thus a cathedral was uplifted as a monument to
the Order, albeit the names of the builders are faded and lost. Employed for
years on the same building, and living together in the Lodge, it is not
strange that Free-masons came to know and love one another, and to have a
feeling of loyalty to their craft, unique, peculiar, and enduring. Traditions
of fun and frolic, of song and feast and gala-day, have floated down to us,
telling of a comradeship as joyous as it was genuine. If their life had
hardship and vicissitude, it had also its grace and charm of friendship, of
sympathy, service, and community of interest, and the joy that comes of
devotion to a high and noble art.
When a Mason wished to leave one Lodge and go
elsewhere to work, as he was free to do when he desired, he had no difficulty
in making himself known
p. 140
to the men of his craft by certain signs,
grips, and words. Such tokens of recognition were necessary to men who
traveled afar in those uncertain days, especially when references or other
means of identification were ofttimes impossible. All that many people knew
about the order was that its members had a code of secret signs, and that no
Mason need be friendless or alone when other Masons were within sight or
hearing; so that the very name of the craft came to stand for any mode of
hidden recognition. Steele, in the Tatler, speaks of a class of people
who have "their signs and tokens like Free-masons."
There were more than one of these signs
and tokens, as we are more than once told in the Harleian MS, for
example, which speaks of "words and signs." What they were may not be here
discussed, but it is safe to say that a Master Mason of the Middle Ages, were
he to return from the land of shadows, could perhaps make himself known as
such in a Fellowcraft Lodge of today. No doubt some things would puzzle him at
first, but he would recognize the officers of the Lodge, its form, its
emblems, its great altar Light, and its moral truth taught in symbols.
Besides, he could tell us, if so minded, much that we should like to learn
about the craft in the olden times, its hidden mysteries, the details of its
rites, and the meaning of its symbols when the poetry of building was yet
alive.
III
This brings us to one of the most hotly debated
questions in Masonic history--the question as to the number and nature of the
degrees made use of in the old craft lodges. Hardly any other subject has so
deeply engaged the veteran archaeologists of the order, and while it ill
becomes any one glibly to decide such an issue, it is at least permitted us,
after studying all of value that has been written on both sides, to sum up
what seems to be the truth arrived
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at. While such a
thing as a written record of an ancient degree--aside from the Old Charges,
which formed a part of the earliest rituals--is unthinkable, we are not left
altogether to the mercy of conjecture in a matter so important. Cesare Cantu
tells us that the Comacine Masters "were called together in the Loggie by a
grand-master to treat of affairs common to the order, to receive novices, and
confer superior degrees on others." Evidence of
a sort similar is abundant, but not a little confusion will be avoided if the
following considerations be kept in mind:
First, that during its purely operative period
the ritual of Masonry was naturally less formal and ornate than it afterwards
became, from the fact that its very life was a kind of ritual and its symbols
were always visibly present in its labor. By the same token, as it ceased to
be purely operative, and others not actually architects were admitted to its
fellowship, of necessity its rites became more
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formal--"very formall," as Dugdale
said in 1686, --portraying in ceremony what had long
been present in its symbolism and practice.
Second, that with the decline of the old
religious art of building--for such it was in very truth--some of its
symbolism lost its luster, its form surviving but its meaning obscured, if not
entirely faded. Who knows, for example--even with the Klein essay on The
Great Symbol in hand--what Pythagoras meant by his lesser and greater
Tetractys? That they were more than mathematical theorems is plain, yet even
Plutarch missed their meaning. In the same way, some of the emblems in our
Lodges are veiled, or else wear meanings invented after the fact, in lieu of
deeper meanings hidden, or but dimly discerned. Albeit, the great emblems
still speak in truths simple and eloquent, and remain to refine, instruct, and
exalt.
Third, that when Masonry finally became a
purely speculative or symbolical fraternity, no longer an order of practical
builders, its ceremonial inevitably became more elaborate and imposing--its
old habit and custom, as well as its symbols and teachings, being enshrined in
its ritual. More than this, knowing how "Time the white god makes all things
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holy, and what is old becomes religion," it is
no wonder that its tradition became every year more authoritative; so that the
tendency was not, as many have imagined, to add to its teaching, but to
preserve and develop its rich deposit of symbolism, and to avoid any break
with what had come down from the past.
Keeping in mind this order of evolution
in the history of Masonry, we may now state the facts, so far as they are
known, as to its early degrees; dividing it into two periods, the Operative
and the Speculative. An Apprentice in the olden days
was "entered" as a novice of the craft, first, as a purely business
proceeding, not unlike our modern indentures, or articles. Then, or shortly
afterwards--probably
p. 145
at the annual Assembly--there was a
ceremony of initiation making him a Mason--including an oath, the recital of
the craft legend as re-corded in the Old Charges, instruction in moral
conduct and deportment as a Mason, and the imparting of certain secrets. At
first this degree, although comprising secrets, does not seem to have been
mystic at all, but a simple ceremony intended to impress upon the mind of the
youth the high moral life required of him. Even Guild-masonry had such a rite
of initiation, as Hallam remarks, and if we may trust the Findel version of
the ceremony used among the German Stone-masons, it was very like the first
degree as we now have it--though one has always the feeling that it was
embellished in the light of later time.
So far there is no dispute, but the question is
whether any other degree was known in the early lodges. Both the probabilities
of the case, together with such facts as we have, indicate that there was
another and higher degree. For, if all the secrets of the order were divulged
to an Apprentice, he could, after working four years, and just when he was
becoming valuable, run away, give himself out as a Fellow, and receive work
and wages as such. If there was only one set of secrets, this deception
p. 146
might be practiced to his own profit and the
injury of the craft--unless, indeed, we revise all our ideas held hitherto,
and say that his initiation did not take place until he was out of his
articles. This, however, would land us in worse difficulties later on. Knowing
the fondness of the men of the Middle Ages for ceremony, it is hardly
conceivable that the day of all days when an Apprentice, having worked for
seven long years, acquired the status of a Fellow, was allowed to go unmarked,
least of all in an order of men to whom building was at once an art and an
allegory. So that, not only the exigencies of his occupation, but the
importance of the day to a young man, and the spirit of the order, justify
such a conclusion.
Have we any evidence tending to confirm this
inference? Most certainly; so much so that it is not easy to interpret the
hints given in the Old Charges upon any other theory. For one thing, in
nearly all the MSS, from the Regius Poem down, we are told of two rooms
or resorts, the Chamber and the Lodge--sometimes called the Bower and the
Hall--and the Mason was charged to keep the "counsells" proper to each place.
This would seem to imply that an Apprentice had access to the Chamber or
Bower, but not to the Lodge itself--at least not at all times. It may be
argued that the "other counsells"
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referred to were merely technical secrets, but
that is to give the case away, since they were secrets held and communicated
as such. By natural process, as the order declined and actual building ceased,
its technical secrets became ritual secrets, though they must always
have had symbolical meanings. Further, while we have record of only one
oath--which does not mean that there was only one--signs, tokens, and
words are nearly always spoken of in the plural; and if the secrets of a
Fellowcraft were purely technical--which some of us do not believe--they were
at least accompanied and protected by certain signs, tokens, and passwords.
From this it is clear that the advent of an Apprentice into the ranks of a
Fellow was in fact a degree, or contained the essentials of a degree,
including a separate set. of signs and secrets.
When we pass to the second period, and men of
wealth and learning who were not actual architects began to enter the
order--whether as patrons of the art or as students and mystics attracted by
its symbolism--other evidences of change appear. They, of course, were not
required to serve a seven year apprenticeship, and they would naturally be
Fellows, not Masters, because they were in no sense masters of the craft. Were
these Fellows made acquainted with the secrets of an Apprentice? If
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so, then the two degrees were either conferred
in one evening, or else--what seems to have been the fact--they were welded
into one; since we hear of men being made Masons in a single evening. Customs
differed, no doubt, in different Lodges, some of which were chiefly operative,
or made up of men who had been working Masons, with only a sprinkling of men
not workmen who had been admitted; while others were purely symbolical Lodges
as far back as 1645. Naturally in Lodges of the first kind the two degrees
were kept separate, and in the second they were merged--the one degree
becoming all the while more elaborate. Gradually the men who had been
Operative Masons became fewer in the Lodges--chiefly those of higher position,
such as master builders, architects, and so on--until the order became a
purely speculative fraternity, having no longer any trade object in view.
Not only so, but throughout this period of
transition, and even earlier, we hear intimations of "the Master's Part," and
those hints increase in number as the office of Master of the Work lost its
practical aspect after the cathedral-building period. What was the Master's
Part? Unfortunately, while the number of degrees may be indicated, their
nature and details cannot be discussed without grave indiscretion;
p. 149
but nothing is plainer than that we
need not go outside Masonry itself to find the materials out of which all
three degrees, as they now exist, were developed. Even the French
Companionage, or Sons of Solomon, had the legend of the Third Degree long
before 1717, when some imagine it to have been invented. If little or no
mention of it is found among English Masons before that date, that is no
reason for thinking that it was unknown. Not until 1841 was it known to
have been a secret of the Companionage in Prance, so deeply and carefully was
it hidden. 2
Where so much is dim one may not be dogmatic, but what seems to have taken
place in 1717 was, not the addition of a third degree
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made out of whole cloth, but the conversion
of two degrees into three.
That is to say, Masonry is too great an
institution to have been made in a day, much less by a few men, but was a slow
evolution through long time, unfolding its beauty as it grew. Indeed, it was
like one of its own cathedrals upon which one generation of builders wrought
and vanished, and another followed, until, amidst vicissitudes of time and
change, of decline and revival, the order itself became a temple of Freedom
and Fraternity--its history a disclosure of its innermost soul in the natural
process of its transition from actual architecture to its "more noble and
glorious purpose." For, since what was evolved from Masonry must always have
been involved in it--not something alien added to it from extraneous sources,
as some never tire of trying to show--we need not go outside the order itself
to learn what Masonry is, certainly not to discover its motif and its genius;
its later and more elaborate form being only an expansion and exposition of
its inherent nature and teaching. Upon this fact the present study insists
with all emphasis, as over against those who go hunting in every odd nook and
corner to find whence Masonry came, and where it got its symbols and degrees.
Footnotes
128:1 Our
present craft nomenclature is all wrong; the old order was first Apprentice,
then Master, then Fellowcraft--mastership being,
p. 129 not a degree
conferred, but a reward of skill as a workman and of merit as a man. The
confusion today is due, no doubt, to the custom of the German Guilds, where a
Fellowcraft had to serve an additional two years as a journeyman before
becoming a Master. No such restriction was known in England. Indeed, the
reverse was true, and it was not the Fellowcraft but the Apprentice who
prepared his masterpiece, and if it was accepted, he became a Master. Having
won his mastership, he was entitled to become a Fellowcraft--that is, a peer
and fellow of the fraternity which hitherto he had only served. Also, we must
distinguish between a Master and the Master of the Work, now represented by
the Master of the Lodge. Between a Master and the Master of the Work there was
no difference, of course, except an accidental one; they were both Masters and
Fellows. Any Master (or Fellow) could become a Master of the Work at any time,
provided he was of sufficient skill and had the luck to be chosen as such
either by the employer, or the Lodge, or both.
131:1 The older
MSS indicate that initiations took place, for the most part, at the annual
Assemblies, which were bodies not unlike the Grand Lodges of today, presided
over by a President--a Grand Master in fact, though not in name. Democratic in
government, as Masonry has always been, they received Apprentices, examined
candidates for mastership, tried cases, adjusted disputes, and regulated the
craft; but they were also occasions of festival and social good will. At a
later time they declined, and the functions of initiation more and more
reverted to the Lodges.
131:2 The
subject of Mason's Marks is most interesting, particularly with reference to
the origin and growth of Gothic architecture, but too intricate to be entered
upon here. As for example, an essay entitled "Scottish Mason's Marks Compared
with Those of Other Countries," by Prof. T. H. Lewis, British
Archaeological Association, 1888, and the theory there advanced that some
great unknown architect introduced Gothic architecture from the East, as shown
by the p. 132
difference in Mason's Marks as compared with those of the Norman period. (Also
proceedings of A. Q. C., iii, 65-81.)
135:1 History
of Masonry, Steinbrenner. It consisted of a short black tunic--in summer
made of linen, in winter of wool--open at the sides, with a gorget to which a
hood was attached; round the waist was a leathern girdle, from which depended
a sword and a satchel. Over the tunic was a black scapulary, similar to the
habit of a priest, tucked under the girdle when they were working, but on
holydays allowed to hang down. No doubt this garment also served as a coverlet
at night, as was the custom of the Middle Ages, sheets and blankets being
luxuries enjoyed only by the rich and titled (History of Agriculture and
Prices in England, T. Rogers). On their heads they wore large felt or
straw hats, and tight leather breeches and long boots completed the garb.
137:1 Gloves were
more widely used in the olden times than now, and the practice of giving them
as presents was common in mediaeval times. Often, when the harvest was over,
gloves were distributed to the laborers who gathered it (History of Prices
in England, Rogers), and richly embroidered gloves formed an offering
gladly accepted by princes. Indeed, the bare hand was regarded as a symbol of
hostility, and the gloved hand a token of peace and goodwill. For Masons,
however, the white gloves and apron had meanings hardly guessed by others, and
their symbolism remains to this day with its simple and eloquent appeal. (See
chapter on "Masonic Clothing and Regalia," in Things a Freemason Should
Know, by J. W. Crowe, an interesting article by Rylands, A. Q. C.,
vol. v, and the delightful essay on "Gloves," by Dr. Mackey, in his
Symbolism of Freemasonry.) Not only the tools of the builder, but his
clothing, had moral meaning.
138:1 Tiler--like
the word cable-tow--is a word peculiar to the language of Masonry, and
means one who guards the Lodge to see that only Masons are within ear-shot. It
probably derives from the Middle Ages when the makers of tiles for roofing
were also of migratory habits (History of Prices in England, Rogers),
and accompanied the Free-masons to perform their share of the work of covering
buildings. Some tiler was appointed to act as sentinel to keep off intruders,
and hence, in course of time, the name of Tiler came to be applied to any
Mason who guarded the Lodge.
138:2 Much
has been written of the derivation and meaning of the word cowan, some
finding its origin in a Greek term meaning "dog." (See "An Inquiry Concerning
Cowans," by D. Ramsay, Review of Freemasonry, vol. i.) But its origin is still
to seek, unless we accept it as an old Scotch word of contempt (Dictionary
of Scottish Language, Jamieson). Sir Walter Scott uses it as such in Rob
Roy, "she doesna’ value a Cawmil mair as a cowan" (chap. xxix). Masons used
the word to describe a "dry-diker, one who built without cement," or a Mason
without the word. Unfortunately, we still have cowans in this sense--men who
try to be Masons p. 139
without using the cement of brotherly love. If only they could be kept
out! Blackstone describes an eavesdropper as "a common nuisance punishable by
fine." Legend says that the old-time Masons punished such prying persons, who
sought to learn their signs and secrets, by holding them under the eaves until
the water ran in at the neck and out at the heels. What penalty was inflicted
in dry weather, we are not informed. At any rate, they had contempt for a man
who tried to make use of the signs of the craft without knowing its art and
ethics.
140:1 This subject
is most fascinating. Even in primitive ages there seems to have been a kind of
universal sign-language employed, at times, by all peoples. Among widely
separated tribes the signs were very similar, owing, perhaps, to the fact that
they were natural gestures of greeting, of warning, or of distress. There is
intimation of this in the Bible, when the life of Ben-Hadad was saved by a
sign given (I Kings, 20:30-35). Even among the North American Indians a
sign-code of like sort was known (Indian Masonry, R. C. Wright, chap
iii). "Mr. Ellis, by means of his knowledge as a Master Mason, actually passed
himself into the sacred part or adytum of one of the temples of India" (Anacalypsis,
G. Higgins, vol. i, 767). See also the experience of Haskett Smith among the
Druses, already referred to (A. Q. C., iv, 11). Kipling has a
rollicking story with the Masonic sign-code for a theme, entitled The Man
Who Would be King, and his imagination is positively uncanny. If not a
little of the old sign-language of the race lives to this day in Masonic
Lodges, it is due not only to the exigencies of the craft, but also to the
instinct of the order for the old, the universal, the human; its genius
for making use of all the ways and means whereby men may be brought to know
and love and help one another.
142:1 Once more it
is a pleasure to refer to the transactions of the Quatuor Coronati Lodge of
Research, whose essays and discussions of this issue, as of so many others,
are the best survey of the whole question from all sides. The paper by J. W.
Hughan arguing in behalf of only one degree in the old time lodges, and a like
paper by G. W. Speth in behalf of two degrees, with the materials for the
third, cover the field quite thoroughly and in full light of all the facts (A.
Q. C., vol. x, 127; vol. xi, 47). As for the Third Degree, that will be
considered further along.
142:2 Storia di
Como, vol. i, 440.
143:1 Natural
History of Wiltshire, by John Aubrey, written, but not published, in 1686.
143:2 A. Q. C.,
vol. x, 82.
144:1 Roughly
speaking, the year 1600 may be taken as a date dividing the two periods.
Addison, writing in the Spectator, March 1, 1711, draws the following
distinction between a speculative and an operative member of a trade or
profession: "I live in the world rather as a spectator of mankind, than as one
of the species, by which means I have made myself a speculative statesman,
soldier, merchant, and artisan, without ever meddling with any
practical part of life." By a Speculative Mason, then, is meant a man who,
though not an actual architect, sought and obtained membership among
Free-masons. Such men, scholars and students, began to enter the order as
early as 1600, if not earlier. If by Operative Mason is meant one who attached
no moral meaning to his tools, there were none such in the olden time--all
Masons, even those in the Guilds, using their tools as moral emblems in a way
quite unknown to builders of our day. ’Tis a pity that this light of poetry
has faded from our toil, and with it the joy of work.
145:1 History
of Masonry, p. 66.
148:1 For a single
example, the Diary of Elias Ashmole, under date of 1646.
149:1 Time out of
mind it has been the habit of writers, both within the order and without, to
treat Masonry as though it were a kind of agglomeration of archaic remains and
platitudinous moralizings, made up of the heel-taps of Operative legend and
the fag-ends of Occult lore. Far from it! If this were the fact the present
writer would be the first to admit it, but it is not the fact. Instead, the
idea that an order so noble, so heroic in its history, so rich in symbolism,
so skilfully adjusted, and with so many traces of remote antiquity, was the
creation of pious fraud, or else of an ingenious conviviality, passes the
bounds of credulity and enters the domain of the absurd. This fact will be
further emphasized in the chapter following, to which those are respectfully
referred who go everywhere else, except to Masonry itself, to learn
what Masonry is and how it came to be.
149:2 Livre du
Compagnonnage, by Agricol Perdiguier, 1841. George Sand's novel, Le
Compagnon du Tour de France, was published the same year. See full account
of this order in Gould, History of Masonry, vol. i, chap. v.
Next: Chapter III. Accepted Masons