152 lines
8.6 KiB
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152 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VII January, 1929 No.1
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THE MOTHER GRAND LODGE II
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by: Unknown
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Of "the few Lodges at London," as the record puts it, who constituted
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themselves a Grand Lodge in 1717, only four are named. If other
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lodges were invited, it maybe surmised that they either had not been
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notified of the purpose of the meeting, or if so, that they declined
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to associate themselves with the undertaking. Or perhaps no one knew
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what was afoot when the meeting was held, and the idea of a Grand
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Lodge was born of the spirit of the hour.
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The phrase "time immemorial," used to denote the age of the four
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lodges taking part, is all a blur, telling us no authentic story of
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their history. On the Engraved List of Lodges of 1729, the Goose and
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Gridiron Lodge No.1, known after as the Lodge of Antiquity, is said
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to have dated from 1691. Of the others we have no early knowledge at
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all, except the part they took in founding the first Grand Lodge.
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Even the Lodge of Antiquity pursued an uneventful career until
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Preston became its Master in 1774, when it was involved in a dispute
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with Grand Lodge.
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The lodge, which met at the Crown Ale-House, Parker's Lane - No.2, of
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the original four - played no part in Masonic history, and died of
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inanition twenty years later; stricken off the roll in 1740. No
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Mason of any note seems to have belonged to it. The Apple-Tree
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Tavern Lodge - No.3 - gave the Grand Lodge its first Grand Master,
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Anthony Sayer, who apparently appointed two members of his own Lodge
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as Grand Wardens - so at least we may conjecture. The lodge moved to
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the Queen's Head, Knaves Acre, about 1723, and, if we may believe
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Anderson, it was loath to come under the new Constitution adopted in
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that year.
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These two lodges seem to have been Operative Lodges, or largely so,
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composed of working Masons and Brethren of the artisan class.
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Clearly, then, the new Grand Lodge was made up, predominately, of
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Operative Masons, and not, as has so often been implied, the design
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of men who simply made use of the remnants of Operative Masonry the
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better to exploit some hidden cult. Still, it may be argued that,
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even if Operative Masons were in the majority, the real leadership of
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the movement came from Accepted Masons, and that is quite true. But
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anyone who knows the ingrained conservatism of Masons of every sort,
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will be slow to admit that any designing group could have imposed
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anything not inherently Masonic upon such an assembly.
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The premier lodge of the period, which seems to have initiated and
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led the formation and policy of the new Grand Lodge, was No.4,
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meeting at the Rummer and Grape Tavern in Channel Row, Westminster.
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It was almost entirely a Specu-lative Lodge, made up of Accepted
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Masons, and almost all the leading men of the Craft in that formative
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time were members of it. The other lodges had perhaps twenty members
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each, while No.4 had a roll of seventy, among them men of high social
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rank, including members of nobility. Had it not been for such a
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lodge, the only one of is kind and quality in London, the chances are
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many that no Grand Lodge would have been formed, and the story of our
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Craft, if it had any story at all, would have been very different.
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Besides Dr. Anderson, to whom, Gould says, we may safely attribute
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the authorship of the Constitutions - as well as much else, some of
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it rather fantastic - and Dr. Desaguliers, to whom tradition
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ascribes the refashioning of much of the ritual, the second and third
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Grand Masters were men of that lodge. It also furnished a Grand
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Secretary, William Cowper. The lodge continued to hold first place
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in numbers, social rank, and influence until 1735, when a decline set
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in, both in attendance and contributions, and in 1747 it was decreed
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that the lodge "be erased from the Book of Lodges." Four years later
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the lodge was restored, but it never regained its former power, and
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twenty years later appeared to be once more on the edge of
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extinction, from which it was rescued by being merged with the
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Somerset House Lodge founded in Dunckerley.
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The Goose and Gridiron Lodge, No.1, is the only one of the original
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four lodges now in existence. After various changes in name it is
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now the Lodge of Antiquity, No.2, having lost its proud position of
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first on the list when the lodges were renumbered by the casting of
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lots, at the time of the union of the two rival Grand Lodges, in
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1813. It seems to have been a mixed lodge, part Operative and part
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Speculative, and this fact, no doubt, made for continuity and
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stability in its long history and service.
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Not much is known of the first Grand Master, Anthony Sayer, whose
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life seems to have been uneventful, if not unimportant, save for the
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"accident," if we may call it such, of his election to his high
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office. About the only record of him - save the story of his ill
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fortune in later life - is to be found in the Anderson version of the
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organization of the Grand Lodge in the 1738 edition of the
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Constitutions. Nothing is known of his previous history, except that
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he is described as a "gentleman," in the old English meaning of the
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word, and that he was a member of the lodge meeting at the Apple-Tree
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Tavern. He was a Warden of his Lodge in 1723; apparently he had
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never been its Master, or if so, there is no record of it.
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Sayer served as Grand Master for one year, and in June, 1718, was
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followed by George Payne; he was made Grand Senior Warden in 1719.
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Later he fell upon evil days - Never, it would seem, having been a
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man of much influence or position in the world - and more than once
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was aided by the Craft over which he was the first to preside. He
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became Tyler of Old King's Arms Lodge, No.28, and it is reported in
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the records that he was assisted "out of the box of this society."
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He was also aided by Grand Lodge, in spite of some kind of irregular
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conduct of which he was accused in 1730, the nature of which is not
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known, for which he was called to account by Grand Lodge. The
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finding amounted to a verdict of "not guilty," but don't repeat the
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offence;" and Sayer did not again approach Grand Lodge for aid until
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1741, when he received help.
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After that one finds no allusion to him in the records of Grand
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Lodge, or anywhere else, until his death the following year, 1742,
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which was announced in the London papers - both in the "Champion" and
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in the "Evening Post. From these accounts we learn that his funeral
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was attended "by a great number of gentlemen of that honorable
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society of the best quality," and that he was buried in St. Paul's
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Church, Covent Garden - where his widow was buried a few months later
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in the same year. The vague impression of Sayer that is left us,
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almost too vague to be perceptible, is that of an amiable but rather
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ineffective man rescued from utter oblivion by the one brief honor of
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his life. Hardly more than a name, no biography of his has been
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written, and no materials for one exists - if indeed so obscure and
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colorless man deserved to be celebrated at all.
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Shortly after his death, probably in 1744, a portrait of Sayer was
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painted by Joseph Highmore, which was engraved by John Faber, a Dutch
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artist, both men of the Craft, as an appendix to a Masonic History,
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in which Highmore was interested. Bromley, in his Catalogue, issued
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in 1793, assigns the year 1750 as the date when the picture was
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published, with the legend, "Anthony Sayer, Gent, Grand Master of
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Masons." Of this engraving many copies have come down to us, which
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are highly prized as giving us the only image and likeness of the
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first ruler of our gentle Craft.
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So much for the first Grand Master, of whom we know so little, not
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even the place or date of his birth. It is plain that the real work
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of the Grand Lodge, in those critical and creative years, was done by
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other and stronger men. They wrought well, but, excepting Anderson,
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and less certainly Desaguliers, we know very little of what part each
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took in the work. Nor does it greatly matter, as it is the building
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and not the builders that is the goal of our labors, and it is an
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eloquent fact that Masonry, even in its modern form, which took shape
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in the First grand Lodge, is a cooperative enterprise, in which no
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names out-top their fellows.
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Let us be grateful that it is so, remembering the wisdom of Goethe,
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one of the greatest men in the annals of our Craft, who, as he grew
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older, took comfort in the beautiful feeling that entered his mind
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that only mankind together is the true man, and that the individual
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can only be happy when he has the courage to feel himself in the
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whole, and lose himself in it.
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