314 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
314 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.I July. 1923 No.7
|
|
|
|
ALBERT PIKE
|
|
|
|
by: Unknown
|
|
|
|
Albert Pike found Freemasonry in a log cabin and left it in a Temple. He
|
|
was the master genius of Masonry in America, both as scholar and artist.
|
|
No other mind of equal power ever toiled so long in the service of the
|
|
Craft in the New World. No other has left a nobler fame in our annals.
|
|
|
|
A great American and a great Mason, the life of Pike is a part of the
|
|
romance of his country. Outside the Craft he was known as a poet,
|
|
journalist, soldier, jurist, orator, and his ability in so many fields
|
|
fills one with amazement. Apart from the chief work of his life in
|
|
Masonry, he merits honor as a philosopher and a scholar. Indeed, he was
|
|
one of the richest minds of his age, resembling the sages of the ancient
|
|
world in his appearance and in the quality of his mind. Those who do not
|
|
know Masonry often think of him as a man whom history passed by and forgot.
|
|
|
|
Pike was born in Boston, Massachusetts, December 29, 1809, of a family in
|
|
which are several famous names, such as Nicholas Pike, author of the first
|
|
arithmetic in America, and the friend of Washington; and Zebulon Pike, the
|
|
explorer, who gave his name to Pike's Peak. His father, he tells us, was a
|
|
shoemaker who worked hard to give his children the benefit of an education;
|
|
his Mother a woman of great beauty, but somewhat stern in her ideas of
|
|
rearing a boy. As a child he saw the festivities at the close of the War
|
|
with Great Britain, in 1815. When Albert Pike was four his father moved to
|
|
Newburyport, and there the boy grew up, attending the schools of the town,
|
|
and also the academy at Framingham. At fourteen he was ready for the
|
|
freshman class at Harvard, but was unable to pay the tuition fees for two
|
|
years in advance, as was required at that time, and proceeded to educate
|
|
himself. Had he been admitted to Harvard he would have been in the class
|
|
of Oliver Wendell Holmes.
|
|
|
|
As a lad, Albert Pike was sensitive, high-strung, conscious of power, very
|
|
shy and easily depressed; but, ambitious and determined to make his place
|
|
in the world. Always a poet, while teaching school at Fairhaven he wrote a
|
|
series of poems called "Hymns to the Gods," which he afterward revised and
|
|
sent to Christofer North, editor of "Blackwood's Magazine," at Edinburg,
|
|
receiving in reply a letter hailing him as a truly great poet. Had Pike
|
|
given himself altogether to poetry he would have been one of the greatest
|
|
of American Poets; but, he seemed not to care for such fame but only for
|
|
the joy, and sometimes the pain, of writing. Indeed, the real story of his
|
|
inner life may be traced in his poems, a volume of which was published as
|
|
early as 1813, in honor of which event his friends gave him a reception.
|
|
|
|
In a poem called "Fatasma" he pictures himself at that time as a pale-faced
|
|
boy, wasted by much study, reciting his poems to a crowded room. As his
|
|
lips move his eyes are fastened on the lovely face and starry eyes of a
|
|
girl to whom he dared not tell his love, because she was rich and he was
|
|
poor. No doubt this hopeless love had much to do with his leaving New
|
|
England to seek his fortune in the West. Anyway, it made him so sore of
|
|
heart that the word God does not appear in his poetry for several years.
|
|
Another reason for going away was the rather stern environment of New
|
|
England, in which he felt that he could never do and be his best. So, he
|
|
sings:
|
|
Weary of fruitless toil he leaves his home, To seek in other climes a
|
|
fairer fate.
|
|
|
|
Pike left New England in March, 1831, going first to Niagara, and thence,
|
|
walking nearly all the way, to St. Louis. In August he joined a party of
|
|
forty traders with ten covered wagons following the old Santa Fe Trail. He
|
|
was a powerful man, six feet and two inches tall, finely formed, with dark
|
|
eyes and fair skin, fleet of foot and sure of shot, able to endure
|
|
hardship, and greatly admired by the Indians. He spent a year at Santa Fe,
|
|
the unhappiest months of his life. Friendless, homesick, haunted by many
|
|
memories, he poured out his soul in sad-hearted poems in which we see not
|
|
only the desperate melancholy of the man but the vivid colors of the
|
|
scenery and life round about him. Shelly was his ideal, Coleridge his
|
|
inspiration but his own genius was more akin to Bryant than any other of
|
|
our singers. What made him most forlorn is told in such lines as these:
|
|
|
|
Friends washed off by life's ebbing tide, Like sands upon the shifting
|
|
coasts,
|
|
The soul's first love another's bride; And other melancholy though.
|
|
|
|
Happily, new scenes, new friends, and new adventures healed his heart, and
|
|
a new note of joy is added to his rare power of describing the picturesque
|
|
country in which he was a pilgrim. In 1832, with a trapping party, he went
|
|
down the Pecos river into the Staked Plains, and then to the headwaters of
|
|
the Brazos and Red Rivers. It was a perilous journey and he almost died of
|
|
hunger and thirst, as he has told us in his poem, "Death in the Desert."
|
|
After walking five hundred miles he arrived at Fort Smith, Arkansas,
|
|
friendless, without a dollar, and well-nigh naked. He was soon teaching
|
|
school in a tiny log cabin near Van Buren, and, tired of wandering, his
|
|
life began to take root and grow.
|
|
|
|
Again his pen was busy, writing verses for the "Little Rock Advocate," as
|
|
well as political articles under the pen name "Casca," which attracted so
|
|
much notice that Horace Greely reprinted them in the New York Tribune.
|
|
Soon the whole state was eager to know the genius who signed himself
|
|
"Casca." Robert Crittenden and Judge Turner rode through the wilderness
|
|
and found the tall, handsome young man teaching in a log schoolhouse on
|
|
Little Piney River. Charmed with his modesty and power, they invited him
|
|
to go to Little Rock as assistant editor of the Advocate. Here ended the
|
|
winter of his wanderings, and his brilliant summer began among friends who
|
|
love him and inspired him to do his best.
|
|
|
|
Pike made an able editor, studying law at night, never sleeping more than
|
|
five hours a day - which enabled him to do as much work as two men usually
|
|
do. By 1835 he owned the Advocate, which contained some of his best
|
|
writing. He delved deep into law, mastering its history, its philosophy;
|
|
and, once admitted to the bar, his path to success was an open road. About
|
|
this time we read a tender poem, "To Mary," showing that other thoughts
|
|
were busy in his mind. That same year he married Miss Mary Hamilton, a
|
|
beautiful girl whom he met on a June day at the home of a friend. A few
|
|
months later appeared this "Prose Sketches and Poems," followed by a longer
|
|
poem; bold, spirited, and scholarly entitled "Ariel." His poems were
|
|
printed, for the most part, by his friends as he seemed deaf to the
|
|
whispers of literary ambition.
|
|
|
|
In the War with Mexico Pike won fame for his valor in the field of Buena
|
|
Vista, and he has enshrined that scene in a thrilling poem. After the war
|
|
he took up the cause of the Indians, whose life and languages fascinated
|
|
him and who, he felt, were being robbed of their rights. He carried their
|
|
case to the Supreme Court. to whose Bar he was admitted in 1849, along with
|
|
Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin. His speech in the case of the Senate
|
|
Award to the Choctaws is famous, Webster passing high eulogy upon it.
|
|
Judged by any test, Pike was a great orator, uniting learning with
|
|
practical acumen, grace with power, and the imperious magnetism which only
|
|
genius can command.
|
|
|
|
Pike was made a Master Mason in Western Star Lodge No. 1, Little Rock,
|
|
Arkansas, July, 1850; and the symbolism of the Craft fascinated him from
|
|
the first, both as a poet and scholar. Everywhere he saw suggestions, dim
|
|
intimations, half-revealed and half-concealed ideas which could not have
|
|
had their origin among the common craft Masons of old. He set himself to
|
|
study the Order, his enthusiasm keeping pace with his curiosity, in search
|
|
of the real origin and meaning of its symbols. At last he found that
|
|
Freemasonry is the Ancient Great Mysteries in disguise, it's simple emblems
|
|
the repository of the highest wisdom of the Ancient World, to rescue and
|
|
expound which became more and more his desire and passion. Here his words:
|
|
"It began to shape itself to my intellectual vision into something imposing
|
|
and majestic, solemnly mysterious and grand. It seemed to me like the
|
|
Pyramids in the grandeur and loneliness, in whose yet undiscovered chambers
|
|
may be hidden, for the en-lightenment of the coming generations, the sacred
|
|
books of the Egyptians, so long lost to the World; like the Sphinx, half-
|
|
buried in the sands. In essence, Freemasonry is more ancient than any of
|
|
the world's living religions. So I came at last to see that its symbolism
|
|
is its soul."
|
|
|
|
Thus a great poet saw Freemasonry and sought to renew the luster of its
|
|
symbols of high and gentle wisdom, making it a great humanizing,
|
|
educational and spiritual force among men. He saw in it a faith deeper
|
|
than all creeds, larger than all sects, which, if rediscovered, he
|
|
believed, would enlighten the world. It was a worthy ambition for any man,
|
|
and one which Pike, by the very quality of his genius, as well as his
|
|
tastes, temper and habits of mind, seemed born to fulfill. All this
|
|
beauty, be it noted, Pike found in the old Blue Lodge - he had not yet
|
|
advanced to the higher degrees - and to the end of his life the Blue Lodge
|
|
remained to him a wonder and a joy. There he found universal Masonry, all
|
|
the higher grades being so many variations on its theme. He did not want
|
|
Masonry to be a mere social club, but a power for the shaping of character
|
|
and society.
|
|
|
|
So far Pike had not even heard of the Scottish Rite, to which he was to
|
|
give so many years of service. He seems not to have heard of it until
|
|
1852, and then, as he tells us, with much the same feeling with which a
|
|
Puritan might hear of a Buddhist ceremony performed in a Calvinistic
|
|
church. He imagined that it was not Masonry at all, or else a kind of
|
|
Masonic atheism. His misunderstanding was due, perhaps, to the bitter
|
|
rivalry of rites which then prevailed, and which he did so much to heal.
|
|
At length he saw that Masonry was one, though its rites are many, and he
|
|
studied the Scottish Rite, its origin, history, and such ritual as it had
|
|
at the time, which was rather crude and chaotic, but sufficient to reveal
|
|
its worth and promise.
|
|
|
|
The Scottish appeared in America in 1801, at Charleston, South Carolina,
|
|
derived from a Supreme Council constituted in Berlin in 1786. For its
|
|
authority it had, in manuscript, a Grand Constitution, framed by the
|
|
Prussian body - a document which Pike afterwards defended so ably, though
|
|
toward the end of his life he was led by facts brought out by Gould and
|
|
others, to modify his earlier position. The Council so established had no
|
|
subordinate bodies at first, and never very many, in fact, until 1855, a
|
|
very natural result in a country which, besides having Masonry of its own,
|
|
regarded the Rite as heresy. None the less Pike entered the Scottish Rite,
|
|
at Charleston, March 20, 1853, receiving its degrees from the fourth to the
|
|
thirty-second, and the thirty-third degree in New Orleans, in 1857.
|
|
|
|
The following year he delivered a lecture in New Orleans, by special
|
|
request, before the Grand Lodge of Louisiana; his theme being "The Evil
|
|
Consequences od Schisms and Disputes for Power in Masonry, and of Jealousy
|
|
and Dissensions Between Masonic Rites" - one of the greatest single Masonic
|
|
lectures ever delivered, in which may be found the basis of all his Masonic
|
|
thought and teaching. Masonry, as Pike saw it, is morality founded in
|
|
faith and taught by symbols. It is not a religion, but a worship in which
|
|
all good men can unite, its purpose being to benefit mankind physically,
|
|
socially, and spiritually; by helping men to cultivate freedom, friendship
|
|
and character. To that end, beyond the facts of faith - the reality of
|
|
God, the moral law, and the hope of immortality - it does not go.
|
|
|
|
One is not surprised to learn that Pike was made Sovereign Grand Commander
|
|
of the Scottish Rite, Southern Jurisdiction, in 1859. He at once began to
|
|
recast the Rite, rewriting its rituals, reshaping its degrees, some of
|
|
which existed only in skeleton, and clothing them in robes of beauty. To
|
|
this task he brought all his learning as a scholar, his insight as a poet,
|
|
and his enthusiasm as a Mason. He lived in Little Rock, in a stately home
|
|
overlooking the city, where he kept his vast library and did his work. In
|
|
the same year, 1859, he was reported dead by mistake, and had the
|
|
opportunity of reading many eulogies written in his memory. When the
|
|
mistake was known, his friends celebrated his "return from Hades," as it
|
|
was called, by a festival.
|
|
|
|
Alas, then came the measureless woe of Civil War, and Pike cast his lot
|
|
with the South, and was placed in command of the Indian Territory. Against
|
|
his protest the Indian regiments were ordered from the Territory and took
|
|
part in the Battle of Elkhorn. The battle was a disaster, and some
|
|
atrocities by Indian Troops, whom he was unable to restrain, cause
|
|
criticism. Later, when the Union Army attacked Little Rock the Commanding
|
|
General, Thomas H. Benton, Grand Master of Masons in Iowa, posted a guard
|
|
to protect the home of Pike and his Masonic Library. After the War Pike
|
|
practiced Law for a time in Memphis. In 1868 he moved to Alexandria,
|
|
Virginia, and in 1870 to Washington.
|
|
|
|
Again he took up his labors in behalf of Masonry, revising its rituals, and
|
|
writing those nobel lectures into which he gathered the wisdom of the ages
|
|
- as though his mind were a great dome which caught the echoes of a
|
|
thousand thinkers. By 1871 the Scottish Rite was influential and widely
|
|
diffused, due, in part, to the energy and genius of its Commander. In the
|
|
same year he published "Morals and Dogma," a huge manual for the
|
|
instruction of the Rite, as much a compilation as a composition, able but
|
|
ill-arranged, which remains to this day a monument of learning. It ought
|
|
to be revised, rearranged, and reedited, since it is too valuable to be
|
|
left in so cumbersome a form, containing as it does much of the best
|
|
Masonic thinking and writing in our literature. It is studded with
|
|
flashing insights and memorable sayings, as for example:
|
|
|
|
Man is accountable for the uprightness of his doctrine,
|
|
But not for the rightness of it.
|
|
The free country where intellect and genius rule, will endure.
|
|
Where they serve, and other influences govern, its life is short.
|
|
When the state begins to feed part of the people, it prepares all to be
|
|
slaves.
|
|
Deeds are greater than words.
|
|
They have a life, mute but undeniable, and they grow.
|
|
They people the emptiness of Time.
|
|
Nothing is really small.
|
|
Every bird that flies carries a thread of the infinite in its claws.
|
|
Sorrow is the dog of that unknown Shephard who guides the flock of men.
|
|
Life has its ills, but it is not all evil.
|
|
If life is worthless, so is immortality.
|
|
Our business is not to be better than others, but to be better than
|
|
ourselves.
|
|
|
|
For all his strength and learning, Pike was ever a sensitive, beauty-loving
|
|
soul, touched by the brevity and sadness of life, which breathe in his
|
|
poems. His best known poem, but by no means his greatest, was written in
|
|
1872 entitled, "Every Year," in which this note of melancholy is heard:
|
|
Life is a count of losses,
|
|
Every year;
|
|
For the weak are heavier crosses,
|
|
Every year;
|
|
Lost springs with sobs replying,
|
|
Unto weary Autumn's sighing,
|
|
While those we love are dying,
|
|
Every year.
|
|
To the past go more dead faces,
|
|
Every year;
|
|
As the loved leave vacant places,
|
|
Every year;
|
|
Everywhere the sad eyes meet us,
|
|
In the evening's dusk they greet us,
|
|
And to come to them entreat us,
|
|
Every year.
|
|
But the truer life draws nigher,
|
|
Every year;
|
|
And the morning star climbs higher,
|
|
Every year;
|
|
Earth's hold on us grows slighter,
|
|
And the heavy burden lighter,
|
|
And the Dawn Immortal brighter,
|
|
Every year.
|
|
Death often pressed the cup of sorrow to his lips.
|
|
|
|
Three of his children died in infancy. His first son was drowned; his
|
|
second, an officer, was killed in battle. His eldest daughter died in
|
|
1869, and the death of his wife was the theme of a melting poem, "The
|
|
Widowed Heart." His tributes to his friends in the Fraternity, as one by
|
|
one they passed away, were memorable for their tenderness and simple faith.
|
|
Nothing could shake his childlike trust in the veiled kindness of the
|
|
Father of Men; and despite many clouds, "Hope still with purple flushed his
|
|
sky."
|
|
|
|
In his lonely later years, Pike betook himself more and more to his
|
|
studies, building a city of the mind for inward consolation and shelter.
|
|
He mastered many languages - Sanskrit, Hebrew, old Samarian, Persian -
|
|
seeking what each had to tell of beauty and of truth. He left in the
|
|
library of the House of the Temple fifteen large manuscript volumes,
|
|
translations of the sacred books of the East, all written with an old-
|
|
fashioned quill, in a tiny flowing hand, without blot or erasure. There he
|
|
held court and received his friends amid the birds and flowers he loved so
|
|
well. He was companionable, abounding in friendship, brilliant in
|
|
conversation, his long white hair lending him an air of majesty, his face
|
|
blushing like a child's at merited praise, simple. kindly, lovable. So
|
|
death found him in April, 1891, fulfilling his own lines written as a boy:
|
|
|
|
So I, who sing, shall die,
|
|
Worn thin and pale, by care and sorrow;
|
|
And, fainting. with a soft unconscious sigh,
|
|
Bid unto this poor body that I borrow,
|
|
A long good-by - tomorrow
|
|
To enjoy, I hope, eternal spring in high
|
|
Beyond the sky.
|
|
|
|
So passed Pike. No purer, nobler man has stood at the Altar of Freemasonry
|
|
or left his story in our traditions. He was the most eminent Mason in the
|
|
world, alike for his high rank, his rich culture, and his enduring service.
|
|
Nor will our craft ever permit to grow dim the memory of that stately,
|
|
wise, and gracious teacher - a Mason to whom the world was a Temple, a poet
|
|
to whom the world was a song.
|
|
|
|
|