225 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
225 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - January, 1932 No.1
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THE WINDING STAIRS
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by: unknown
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<EFBFBD>And they went up the winding stairs into the middle chamber.<2E> (I
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Kings 6:8)
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Freemasonry<EFBFBD>s Middle Chamber is wholly symbolic.
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Solomon the Wise would not have permitted any practice do uneconomic
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as sending multiplied thousands of workmen up a flight of stairs to a
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small Middle Chamber, to receive corn, wine and oil which had to be
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brought up in advance, only to be carried down in small lots by each
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workman as he received his wages.
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There actually was a winding stair in Solomon<6F>s Temple, but of the
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three, five and seven steps the scriptures are silent. Only in this
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country have the Winding Stairs but fifteen steps. In older days the
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stairs had but five, sometimes seven steps. Preston had thirty-six
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steps in his Winding Stairs; in series of one, three, five, seven,
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nine and eleven. The English system later eliminated the number
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eleven from Preston<6F>s thirty-six, making but twenty-five in all.
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The Stairs as a whole are a representation of life; not the physical
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life of eating, drinking, sleeping and working, but the mental and
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spiritual life, of both the lodge and the world without; of learning,
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studying, enlarging mental horizons and increasing the spiritual
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outlook.
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The first three steps represent the three principal officers of a
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lodge, and - though not stated in the ritual - must always refer to
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Deity, of which <20>three,<2C> the triangle, is the most ancient symbol.
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They assure the Fellowcraft just starting his ascent that he does not
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climb alone. The Worshipful Master, Senior and Junior Wardens are
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themselves symbolic of the lodge, and thus (as a lodge is a symbol of
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the world) of the Masonic World - the Fraternity. The Fellowcraft is
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surrounded by the Craft. The brethren are present to help him climb.
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In his search for truth, in quest of his wages in the Middle Chamber,
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the Fellowcraft receives the support and assistance of all in the
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Mystic Circle; surely an impressive symbol.
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Five is peculiarly the number of the Fellowcraft<66>s degree; it
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represents the central of the three groups which form the stairs; it
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refers to the five orders of architecture; five are required to hold
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a Fellowcraft<66>s lodge; there are five human senses; geometry is the
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fifth science, and so on. In the first degree the Blazing Star is
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Five Pointed and in the Sublime Degree are the Five Points of
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Fellowship.
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In the Winding Stairs the number five represents the five orders of
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architecture. Here the neophyte is taught of architecture as a
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science; its beginnings are laid before him; he is shown how the
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Greeks commenced and Romans added to the kinds of architecture; he
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learns of the <20>beautiful, perfect and complete whole<6C> which is a
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well-designed, well-constructed building.
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Temples are built stone by stone, a little at a time.
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Each stone must be hewn from the solid rock of the quarry. Then it
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must be laid out and chipped with the gavel until it becomes a
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Perfect Ashlar. Finally it must be set in place with the tempered
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mortar which will bind. But before any stone may be placed, a plan
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must come into existence; the architect must play his part.
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So must the Fellowcraft, studying the orders of architecture by which
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he will erect his spiritual Temple, design his structure before he
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commences to build.
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There are <20>five<76> orders of architecture; not one.
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There are many plans on which a man may build his life, not one only.
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Freemasonry does not attempt to distinguish as between Doric, Ionic,
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and Corinthian as to beauty or desirability. She does suggest that
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the Tuscan, plainer than the Doric, and the Composite, more
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ornamental though not more beautiful than the Corinthian, are less
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reverenced than the ancient and original orders. Freemasonry makes
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no attempt to influence the Fellowcraft as to which order of life
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building he shall choose. He may elect the physical, the mental, the
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spiritual. Or he may choose the sacrificial - <20>plainer than Doric,<2C>
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or the ornamental life, which is <20>not more beautiful than the
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Corinthian.<2E> Freemasonry is concerned less with what order of
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spiritual architecture a Fellowcraft chooses by which to build, than
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that he does choose one; that he build not aimlessly.
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Architecture is the most expressive of all the arts.
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Painting and sculpture, noble though they are, lack the utility of
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architecture, and strive to interpret nature rather than to
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originate. Architecture is not hampered by the necessity of
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reproducing something already in existence. It may raise its spires
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untrammeled by any natural model; it may fling its arches gloriously
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across a nave and a transept with no similitude in nature to hamper
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by suggestion. The architect may - if his genius be great enough -
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tell in his structure truths which may not be put into words, inspire
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by glories not sung in the divinest harmonies.
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So may the builder of his own House Not Made With Hands, if he
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chooses aright his plan of life and hews to the line of his plan.
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So, indeed, have done all those great men who have led the world; the
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Prophets of old, Pythagoras, Confucius, Buddha, Shakespeare, Milton,
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Goethe, Washington, Lincoln -.
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If the Fellowcraft, climbing his three, five and seven steps to the
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Middle Chamber of unknown proportions, containing an unknown Wage, is
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overweighed with the emphasis put upon the spiritual side of life, he
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may here be comforted.
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Freemasonry is not an ascetic organization. It recognizes that the
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physical is as much a part of normal life as the mental and spiritual
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upon which so much emphasis is put.
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The Fellowcraft<66>s degree is a glorification of education, the gaining
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of knowledge, the study of the Seven Liberal Arts and Sciences and
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all that they connote. Therefore it is wholly logical that the
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degree should make special references to the five means by which man
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has acquired all his knowledge; aye, by which he will ever acquire
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any knowledge.
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Take away his five senses and a man is no more a man; perhaps his
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mind is no more a mind. With no contact whatever with the material
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world he can learn nothing of it. As man reaches up through the
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material to the spiritual, he can learn nothing of the ethical side
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of life without a means of contact with the physical.
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If there are limits beyond which human investigations and
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explorations into the unknown may not go, it is because of the
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limitations of the five senses. Not even the extension of those
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senses by the marvelously sensitive instruments of science may
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overcome, in the last analysis, the limits of the five senses.
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Except for one factor! Brute beasts hear, see, feel, smell and
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taste, as we do. But they garner no facts of science, win no truths.
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formulate no laws of nature through these senses. More than the five
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senses are necessary to perceive the relation between thing and
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thing, and life and life. That factor is the perception, the mind,
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the soul or spirit, if you will, which differentiates man from all
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other living beings.
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The Fellowcraft<66>s five steps glorify the five senses of human nature
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because Freemasonry is a well-rounded scheme of living which
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recognizes the physical as well as the mental life of men, and knows
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that only through the physical do we perceive the spiritual. It is
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in this sense, not as a simple lesson in physiology, that we are to
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receive the teachings of the five steps by which we rise above the
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ground floor of the Temple to that last flight of seven steps which
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are typical of knowledge.
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Most potent of numbers in the ancient religions, the number seven has
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deep significance. The Pythagoreans called it the perfect number
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because it is made up of three and four, the two perfect figures,
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triangle and square. It was the virgin number because it cannot by
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multiplication produce any numbers within ten, as can two and two,
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two and three, two and four, or three and three. Nor can it be
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produced by the multiplication of any whole number.
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Our ancient ancestors knew seven planets. seven Pleiades, seven
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Hyades, seven lights burned before the Altar of Mithras, the Goths
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had seven Deities; Sun, Moon, Tuisco, Woden, Thor, Friga and Seatur
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or Saturn, from which we derive the names of the seven days of our
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week. In the Gothic mysteries the candidate met with seven
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obstructions; the ancient Jews swore by seven, because seven
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witnesses were used to confirm, and seven sacrifices offered to
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attest truth. The Sabbath is the seventh day; Noah had seven day<61>s
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notice of the flood; God created the heaven and earth in six days and
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rested on the seventh day; the walls of Jericho were encompassed
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seven times by seven priests bearing seven rams<6D> horns; the Temple
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was seven years in building, the seven branched candlestick burned in
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the Tabernacle and so on through a thousand references.
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It is only necessary to refer to the seven required to open an
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Entered Apprentice lodge, the seven original officers of a lodge
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(some now have nine or ten, or even more) and the seven steps which
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complete the Winding Stairs to show that seven is an important number
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in the Fraternity.
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The seventeenth century conception of a liberal education was
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compromised in the study of Grammar, Rhetoric and Logic; called the
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<EFBFBD>tritium.<2E> and Arithmetic, Geometry, Music and Astronomy, called the
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<EFBFBD>quadrivium. William Preston endeavored to compress into his Middle
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Chamber Lecture enough of these to make at least an outline available
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to men who might otherwise know nothing of them.
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In our day and times grammar and rhetoric are considered of
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importance, but in a secondary way; logic is more or less swallowed
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up as study in the reasoning appropriate to any particular subject;
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arithmetic, of course, continues its primary importance, but from the
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standpoint of science, geometry and its off-shoots are still the
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vital sciences of measurement. Music is no longer a necessary part
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of a liberal education; it is now one of the arts, not the sciences,
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and astronomy is so interrelated with physics that it is hard to say
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where one leaves off and the other begins. As for electricity,
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chemistry, biology, civics, government and the various physical
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sciences, they were barely dreamed of in Preston<6F>s day.
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So it is not actually but symbolically that we are to climb the seven
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steps. As a Masonic author put it:
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<EFBFBD>William Preston, who put so practical an interpretation upon these
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steps, lived in an age when these did, indeed, represent all
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knowledge. But we must not refuse to grow because the ritual has not
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grown with modern discovery. When we rise by Grammar an Rhetoric, we
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must consider that they mean not only language, but all methods of
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communication. The step of Logic means a knowledge not only of a
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method of reasoning which logicians have accomplished. When we
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ascend by Arithmetic and Geometry we must visualize all science;
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since science is but measurement, in the true mathematical sense, it
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requires no great stretch of the imagination to read into these two
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steps all that science may teach. The step denominated Music means
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not only sweet and harmonious sounds, but all beauty, poetry, art,
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nature and loveliness of whatever kind. Not to be familiar with the
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beauty which nature provides is to be, by so much, less a man; to
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stunt, by so much, a striving soul. As for the seventh step of
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Astronomy, surely it means not only a study of the solar system and
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the stars as it did in William Preston<6F>s day, but also a study of all
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that is beyond the earth; of spirit and the world of spirit, of
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ethics, philosophy, the abstract - of Deity. Preston builded better
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than he knew; his seven steps are both logical in arrangement and
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suggestive in their order. The true Fellowcraft will see in them a
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guide to the making of a man rich in mind and spirit, by which riches
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only can the truest brotherhood be practiced.<2E>
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Finally, consider the implication of the <20>winding<6E> stairs as opposed
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to those which are straight.
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The one virtue which most distinguishes man is courage.
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It requires more courage to face the unknown than the known. A
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straight stair, a ladder, hides neither secret nor mystery at its
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top. But the stairs which wind hide each step from the climber; what
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is just around the corner is unknown. The Winding Stairs of life
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lead us to we know not what; for some of us, a Middle Chamber of fame
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and fortune, for others, of pain and frustration. The Angle of Death
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may stand with drawn sword on the very next step for any of us.
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Yet, man climbs!
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Man has always climbed; he climbed from a cave man savagery to the
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dawn of civilization; Lowell<6C>s:
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***brute despair of trampled centuries
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Leapt up with one hoarse yell and snapped its hands,
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Groped for its right with horny, callous hands,
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And stared around for God with bloodshot eyes.
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was a climbing from slavery to independence, from the brute to the
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spiritual. Through ignorance, darkness, misery, cruelty, wrong,
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oppression, danger and despair; man has climbed his own Winding
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Stairs through much the same experi-ence as that of the race.
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Aye, man climbs because he has courage; because he has faith, because
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he is a man. So must the Freemason climb. The Winding Stairs do
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lead somewhere. There is a Middle Chamber. There are wages of the
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Fellowcraft to be earned.
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So believing, so unafraid, climbing, the Fellowcraft may hope at the
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top of his Winding Stairs to reach a Middle Chamber, and see a new
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sign in the East - - -.
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