126 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
126 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VI November, 1928 No.11
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FOREIGN COUNTRIES
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by: Carl H. Claudy
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A reprint of Chapter XXX of "Foreign Countries," published and
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copyrighted by the Masonic Service association in 1925.
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Our ancient operative brethren desired to become Masters so that,
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when they travelled in foreign countries, they could still practice
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their craft. Speculative Freemasons still desire to "travel in
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foreign countries" and study their craft that they may receive such
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instruction as will enable them to do so, and when travelling, to
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receive a Master's Wages.
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But the "Foreign Countries" do not mean to us the various
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geographical and political divisions of the Old World, nor do we use
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the Word we learn as a means of identification to enable us to build
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material temples and receive coin of the realm for our labor.
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"Foreign Countries" is to us a symbol.
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Like all the rest of the symbols, it has more than one
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interpretation; but, unlike many, none of these is very difficult to
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trace or understand.
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Freemasonry itself is the first "foreign country" in which the
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initiate will travel; a world as different from the familiar workaday
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world, as France is different from England, or Belgium from Greece.
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Everything is different in the Masonic world; the standards are
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different, the "Money" is different, the ideas are different. In the
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familiar world, money, place and power are the standards by which we
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judge our fellows. In the fraternity all are on the level, and there
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are neither rich nor poor. In the world outside there are laws to
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prevent, and police and penalties to enforce obedience; in the
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fraternity the laws are not "thou shalt not" but "thou shalt" and the
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fundamental of them all is the golden rule, the law of brotherly
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love. Men conform to the laws of Freemasonry not because they must
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but because they will. Surely such a land is a "foreign country" to
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the stranger within its borders; and the visitor must study it, learn
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its language and its customs, if he is to enjoy it.
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Many learn but a few phrases and only enough of its customs to
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conform. There are thousands of Americans who went all over France
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during the war with a pack of cigarettes, a friendly smile and "no
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comprende!" as their sole knowledge of the language; but did they
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learn to know France? A Lodge member may know the words of the
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opening and closing and how to act in a lodge, learn to call his
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fellows "brother" and pay his dues; but will that get him all there
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is in the foreign country in which he finds him-self?
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America north and south is a mighty continent . . . It has many
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countries. To know one is not to know all. The man at home in
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Mexico will find Newfoundland strange, and the Canadian will not feel
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at home in Chile if he knows nothing of that country.
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So it is with the vast continent of Freemasonry. It has many
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"foreign countries within it; and he is the wise and happy Freemason
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who works patiently at the pleasant task of visiting and studying
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them. There are the foreign countries of philosophy, of
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jurisprudence and of history. No Freemason is really worthy of the
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name who does not understand something of how his new land is
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governed, of what it stands for and why.
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And there is the foreign country of Symbolism of which this little
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book is far less a guide than a gateway.
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As a Master Mason, a man has the right to travel in all the foreign
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countries of Freemasonry. There is none to say him nay. If he will
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but "learn the work" and keep himself in good standing, he may visit
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where he will. But it is not within the door of other lodges than
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his own that he will find the boundary line and the guide posts of
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those truly Masonic "Foreign Countries" to which he has been given
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the passport by his brethren. He will find gateways to those lands
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in the library, in the study club, in books and magazines; and, most
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and best of all, in the quiet hour alone, when what he has read and
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learned comes back to him to be pondered over and thought through.
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The "foreign country" of symbolism has engaged the thoughtful and
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serious consideration of hundreds of able Masonic students, as has
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that of the history of our Order. Not to visit them both; aye, not
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to make oneself a citizen of them both, is to refuse the privileges
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one has sought and labored to obtain. One asks for a petition, prays
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one's friend to take it to his lodge, knocks on the door, takes
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obligations, works to learn and finally receives the Master's Degree.
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One receives it, struggles for it, hopes for it . . . why? That one
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may travel in the far lands and receive the reward there awaiting. .
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Then why hesitate? Why wait? Why put it off? Why allow others to
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pass on and gain; while one stands, the gate open, the new land
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beckoning, and all the Masonic world to see?
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That is the symbolism of the "foreign countries" . . . that is the
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meaning of the phrase which once meant, to operative Masons, exactly
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what it says. To the Freemason who reads it aright it is a clarion
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call to action, to study, to an earnest pressing forward on the new
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highway. For time is short and the night cometh when no man can
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work!
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To the young Freemason, particularly, is the symbol a ringing appeal.
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To those who are old in the Craft, who have set their pace,
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determined their course and become satisfied with all they have
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managed to learn of the fraternity, with what little they have been
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able to take from it, "foreign countries" means countries which are
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foreign and nothing more. But to the young man just starting out as
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a Freemason . . . Oh, my brother, heed you the symbolism of the
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phrase and make your entry through the gateway, your limbs strong to
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travel, your mind open to learn. For if you truly travel in the
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Masonic foreign countries, you will receive Master's Wages beyond
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your greatest expectations. The way is open to the Freemason; not an
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easy way, perhaps, or a short way, but a clear way. Not for the old
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Mason, the man set in his ways, the man content with the literal
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meaning of the words, the "book Mason," the pin- wearer, not for them
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the foreign countries of symbolism, and Masonic knowledge.
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But you, you who are new, you to whom Freemasonry is yet a wonder and
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a vision. a mystery and a glory . . . for you the gate is wide, for
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you the path is clear; for you the foreign countries beckon . . .
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hang you not back!
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For at the end of the journey, when the last foreign country of
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Freemasonry has been travelled and learned and loved, you shall come
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to a new gate, above which there is a new name written . . . and when
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you have read it you will know the True Word of a Master Mason.
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