191 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
191 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.XII July, 1934 No.7
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MASONIC BLUE
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by: Unknown
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The inquirer who asks why the Ancient Craft Masonry is <20>blue<75> - why
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speak of Blue Lodge, Blue Degrees, wear aprons edged with blue,
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suspend jewel about the necks of officers with blue ribbons - is
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faced at once with two divergent schools of thought. One of these is
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the practical, hard-headed, founded-on-fact school of the Masonic
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historian and antiquary; the other is that which associates ideas
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with objects, colors, numbers, beasts, birds, natural phenomena,
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etc., as symbolism has been developed and followed throughout the
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history of mankind.
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Historians both Masonic and secular agree that the square has been a
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symbol of rectitude, honesty, fair dealing, justice the world over
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for unknown ages. But the symbolist who reads much into the familiar
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square apron, with its triangular flap, is at once confronted with
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the undoubted fact that this form of apron is modern, not ancient.
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The invention of the square as a tool must have been coincident with
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the first appreciation of the right angle, and the advantages, in
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solidity and ease of construction, of the use of stones and timbers
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which were squared. Its Symbolism, therefore goes back to <20>time
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immemorial.<2E> Masonic aprons used by operative masons were simple
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skins of any shape or no particular shape. With the change from
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operative to speculative, the apron became conventionaized, but only
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in comparatively recent times did it assume its present rectangular
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and triangular features. The symbolism read into its present shape
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will not fit, for instance, the aprons worn by George Washington,
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which had curved flaps and rounded corners.
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Blue as the color for Ancient Craft Masonry is accounted for by two
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schools of thought on its origin. Both can adduce considerable
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evidence. One believes that the symbolism of the color, like that of
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the square, comes to us from <20>time immemorial<61> and that the color
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must have been adopted because of its meanings; the other
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demonstrates that blue as a Masonic color is not as old as the Mother
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Grand Lodge, and that it was adopted for other than symbolic reasons.
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Blue was a sacred color to the priests of Israel. The color is
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mentioned first in the Old Testament in Exodus XXV:3-4, in which the
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Lord Commands Moses to speak to the children of Israel: <20>And this is
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the offering which ye shall take of them; gold, and silver, and
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brass, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine linen, and goat<61>s
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hair.<2E>
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Throughout Exodus and Numbers are many references to the color, and
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several are to be found in Chronicles, Esther, Jeremiah and Ezekiel.
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We read of the <20>fine twined linens,<2C> <20>Make the ephod of Gold and
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Blue,<2C> <20>bind the breastplates with a lace of blue,<2C> <20>pomegranates of
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blue,<2C> <20>an hanging for the tabernacle of blue,<2C> <20>needlework of blue,<2C>
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<EFBFBD>a cloth wholly of blue, etc.
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Perhaps the most interesting allusion is in Numbers XV:37-38-39-40:
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<EFBFBD>And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Speak unto the children of
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Israel, and bid them that they make them fringes in the borders of
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their garments throughout their generations, and that they put upon
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the fringe of the borders a ribband of blue; And it shall be unto you
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for a fringe, that ye may look upon it, and remember all the
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commandments of the Lord, and do them; and that ye seek not after
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your own heart and your eyes, after which ye use to go a whoring;
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That ye may remember, and do all my commandments, and be holy unto
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your God.<2E>
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Mackey notes that the blue of the Old Testament is a translation of
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the Hebrew <20>tekelet<65> which is derived from a root signifying
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<EFBFBD>perfection.<2E> He develops the idea that the blue was anciently, and
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universally sacred as follows:
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<EFBFBD>Among the Druids, <20>blue<75> was the symbol of <20>truth<74> and the
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candidate, in the initiation into the sacred rights of Druidism, was
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invested with a robe composed of the colors, white, <20>blue<75> and green.
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<EFBFBD>The Egyptians esteemed <20>blue<75> as a sacred color, and the body of
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Amun, the principal God of their theogony, was painted light <20>blue,<2C>
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to imitate. as Wilkinson remarks, <20>His peculiarly exalted and
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heavenly nature.<2E>
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The ancient Babylonians clothed their idols in <20>blue,<2C> as we learn
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from the prophet Jeremiah (x, 9). The Chinese, in their mystical
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philosophy, represented <20>blue<75> as the symbol of the Deity, because,
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being, as they say, composed of black and red, this color is a fit
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representation of the obscure and brilliant, the male and the female,
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or active and passive principles.
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<EFBFBD>The Hindus assert that their God, Vishnu, was represented by a
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celestial or sky <20>blue,<2C> thus indicating that wisdom eminating from
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God was to be symbolized by this color.
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<EFBFBD>Among the medieval Christians, <20>blue<75> was sometimes considered as an
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emblem of immortality, as red was of the Divine Love. Portal says
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that <20>blue<75> was the symbol of perfection, hope and constancy. <20>The
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color of the celebrated dome, <20>azure,<2C> was in Divine language the
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symbol of eternal truth; in consecrated language, of immortality; and
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in profane for which Masons strive.<2E>
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Our ancient brethren met on hills and in vales, over which the blue
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vault of heaven is a ceiling; Jacob in his wisdom saw the ladder
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ascending from earth to heaven; the covering of a Lodge is the
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clouded canopy or starry decked heaven. These allusions seem to
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connote that blue, the color of the sky, is that of all celestial
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attributes for which Masons strive.
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Man<EFBFBD>s earliest forms of worship were of the sun and fire. The sun
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rose, traveled and set in a realm of blue; to associate the color
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with Deity was inevitable. Blue also is the color of the ocean, of
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mountain streams, of lakes, of good drinking water - that blue should
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also become emblematical of purity is equally natural.
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In heraldry, blue or azure signifies chasity, loyalty and fidelity.
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In painting, the color is frequently used in an emblematical manner,
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as in depicting an angel<65>s robe and the robe of the Virgin Mary, to
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signify humility, fidelity and especially faith. It is the color of
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hope. It has been held to signify eternity and immortality; pale
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blue is especially associated with peace. Of forty-seven nations,
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twenty-seven have blue in their flags; all, doubtless with the same
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thought that Brother Wilbur D. Nesbit so beautifully expressed:
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Your Flag and my Flag
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And how it flies today
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In your land and my land
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And half a world away!
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Rose-Red and Blood-Red
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The stripes forever gleam;
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Snow-white and Soul-white
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The good forefathers<72> dream;
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<EFBFBD>Sky-blue and true-blue
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With stars to gleam aright -
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The glorious guidon of the day
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A shelter through the night.
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There seem to be many grounds on which he can firmly stand who
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believes that Freemasonry adopted blue as the color of the three
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degrees with its ancient symbolism in mind. Yet it is to be
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remembered that Freemasonry as we know it was not formed overnight,
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by any one group of men, each of whom contributed some idea to its
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ritual, ceremonies, ancient usages and customs. No committee sat
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about a table to decide the question <20>what color shall we adopt by
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which the Ancient Craft shall forever more be distinguished?<3F>
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It is possible, of course, that the ancient operative masons, from
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whose guilds and organizations modern Freemasonry came as a result of
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slow evolution, may have had an especial reverence for the color
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blue. As has been noted, blue has been associated from early times
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in ecclesiastical history with the Virgin Mary. The earliest
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document of Freemasonry, the Regius Poem (1390) has two lines:
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<EFBFBD>Pray we now to God almyght And to hys moder, Mary brytht.<2E>
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Which certainly connotes a reverence of these ancient Freemasons for
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Mary the Mother, and may easily be considered ground for thinking
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that the early builders also revered her special color.
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However that may be, it is obvious that the absence of any evidence
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is not negative evidence; it is commonplace of human experience that
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in the face of any positive evidence for an idea, in the absence of
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any evidence against it, the fact should be admitted.
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All of which brings us to what we know of the earliest use of blue as
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a Masonic color, regardless of how much we may wish that our
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forefathers had adopted blue for the symbolism we are now content to
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read into the hue of heaven.
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Two extracts from the minutes of the Grand Lodge of England (1717)
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are explicit upon the matter of color:
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<EFBFBD>Resolved, nem. con, that in private Lodges and Quarterly
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Communications and General Meetings, the Masters and Wardens do wear
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Jewells of Masonry hanging to a White Ribbon (vizt.) That the Master
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wear the square, the Senr. Warden the Levell, the Junr. Warden the
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Plumb-Rule.<2E>
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G.L. MINUTES, 24th JUNE, 1727.
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<EFBFBD>Dr. Desagulier taking notice of some irregularities in wearing the
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marks of Distinction which have been allowed by former Grand Lodges.
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<EFBFBD>Proposed, that none but the Grand Master, his Deputy and Wardens
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shall wear their Jewels in Gold or Gilt pendant to blue ribbons about
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their necks and white leather Aprons lined with blue silk.
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<EFBFBD>That all those who have served any of the three Grand Offices shall
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wear the like Aprons lined with Blue Silk in all Lodges and
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assemblies of Masons when they appear clothed.
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<EFBFBD>That all Masters and Wardens of Lodges may wear their Aproms lined
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with White Silk and their respective Jewels with plain white Ribbons
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but of no other color whatsoever.
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<EFBFBD>The Deputy Grand Master accordingly put the question whether the
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above regulation should be agreed to.
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<EFBFBD>And it was carried in the affirmative. Nemine Con.<2E>
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G.L. Minutes, 17th March, 1731.
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But why did the Grand Lodge adopt, or permit, <20>blue<75> in 1731, when
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<EFBFBD>white<EFBFBD> was specified just four years previously?
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Passing over the common but wholly coincidental <20>reason<6F> - that many
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taverns where Masons met were distinguished by blue signs, such as
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the Blue Boar - the sanest theory seems to be that proposed by the
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noted Masonic scholar Fred J.W. Crowe. He wrote (1909-10 <20>Lodge of
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Research Transactions).
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<EFBFBD>The color of the Grand Lodge Officers clothing was adopted from the
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ribbon of the Most Noble Order of the Garter. The Grand Stewards
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from the second National Order - the Most Honourable Order of the
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Bath. The Scottish Grand Lodge undoubtedly copied the ribbon of the
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Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle, and the Grand Lodge
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of Ireland anticipated the formation of the Most Illustrious Order of
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St. Patrick in 1788 by selecting light Blue - thus accidentally
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completing the series, although I would suggest that light Blue may
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in all probability have been chosen merely to mark a difference from
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the English Grand Lodge. In like manner I believe the light blue of
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our own private Lodge clothing was, by a natural sequence of ideas,
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adopted to contrast with the deeper colour of Grand Lodge attire, and
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not very long after the last-named became the rule.<2E>
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