178 lines
9.9 KiB
Plaintext
178 lines
9.9 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VI December, 1928 No.12
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THE MOTHER GRAND LODGE
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by: Unknown
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It has often been remarked how casually , if not accidentally, so
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many great movements seem to start. They seem to spring up of
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themselves, at the bidding of impulses of which men are only vaguely
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aware, and the full measure and meaning of which they do not know.
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As in the Alps, a shout or the report of a gun may start an avalanche
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of ice and snow, because of the poise of forces, so in history a
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little act often releases a vast pent-up power.
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A perfect example is the "Revival" of Masonry in 1717,. which, not
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only gave a new date to our annals, but a new form and force to the
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Craft, sending it to the ends of the earth on its benign mission. So
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true is it that we almost say that modern Masonry, in its origin and
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organization, is as much a mystery as ancient Masonry with its
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symbols and rites, and the mystery may never be solved.
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Out of a period of dim half-light and much obscurity the new Masonry
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arose, and knowing what it is, we have a keen curiosity to know how
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it came to be what it is. How many questions we are eager to ask,
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answers to which are not found, or likely to be found, unless un-
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guessed records should leap to light. Anyway, our brethren of those
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formative days practiced the Masonic virtues of silence and
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circumspection to an extraordinary degree, telling us very little of
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what we should like to know so much.
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How many lodges of Masons existed in London at that time is a matter
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of conjecture, but there must have been a number. What tie, if any,
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united them for common action and fellowship we do not know. Some
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were purely operative lodges, others seem to have been purely
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speculative - there were such lodges, such as the one in which
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Ashmole was initiated as early as 1646 - while others, as we shall
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see, were mixed; made up of men part of whom were Accepted Masons and
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part actual working masons.
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The Craft, as all agree, was in a state of neglect, if not
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disintegration. It enjoyed a period of prosperity in the rebuilding
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of London after the great fire in 1666, but as we read in the only
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record we have, "the few lodges at London finding themselves
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neglected by Sir Christopher wren, though it fit to cement under a
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Grand Master as the centre of union and harmony." Wren was the great
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architect of the day, the builder of St. Paul's Cathedral. Whether
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he was actually a lodge member or not is uncertain, but such was the
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reason given for the forming of a Grand Lodge.
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Gould, our great historian, in describing "the assembly of 1717," out
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of which the first Grand Lodge grew, remarks that "unfortunately, the
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minutes of Grand Lodge only commence on July 24th, 1723 - six years
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after the event! For the story of those first six years we are
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dependent upon an account not written, or at least not published,
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until the second edition of the Constitutions of 1738 - twenty-one
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years after the event to which it refers! Surely, no other movement
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of equal importance ever left so scanty a record made so long after
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the fact.
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Why no minutes were kept - or if kept at all, were lost we do not
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know. Still less do we know why the first Grand Lodge was formed
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without a Constitution/ The General Regulations did not appear until
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1721, the Constitutions in 1723. The impression is unmistakable that
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is was only an experiment, in response to a growing need for a
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"Center of Union and Harmony," and that those who took part in it did
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not dream that they were launching a movement destined to cover the
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earth with a great fraternal fellowship. Four lodges united to form
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the Mother Grand Lodge, those that met:
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1. At the Goose and Gridiron Ale-House in St. Paul's Church Yard.
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2. At The Crown Ale-House in Parker's Lane, near Drury Lane.
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3. At the Apple-Tree Tavern in Charles Street, Covent Garden.
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4. At the Rummer and Grape Tavern in Channel-Row, Westminster.
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In those days. as in our own day in London. lodges met in taverns and
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ale-houses - the hotels of the time. Their meetings were festive,
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and often convivial, in the manner and custom of the day. A rare old
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book called "Multa Paucis" asserts that six lodges, not four, were
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represented, but there is no record of the fact, though members of
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other lodges were no doubt present as guests. Indeed, we have a hint
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to that effect in the meager record, as follows:
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"They, (the four lodges) and old Brothers met at said Apple-Tree, and
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having put into the chair the oldest Master Mason (now Master of a
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lodge) they constituted themselves a Grand Lodge pro Tempore in Due
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Form, and forthwith revived the Quarterly Communication of the
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Officers of Lodges (called the Grand Lodge), resolved to hold the
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Annual Assembly and Feast, then Chuse a Grand Master from among
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themselves, till they should have the honor of a Noble Brother at
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their Head."
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Such is the record of the preliminary meeting - what would we not
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give for a full account of its discussions and proceedings! Diligent
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search has been made among the records, diaries and papers of the
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time, but few facts have been added to this record. Even the date of
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the meeting was omitted, but it must have been in the spring or early
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summer of 1717, as the meeting at which the Grand Lodge was actually
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organized took place shortly afterward, in June of that year, and was
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held in the Goose and Gridiron Ale-House in St. Paul's Churchyard,
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near the west end of the Cathedral.
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The old Ale-House had a long story, being one of the most famous in
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the city, whereof we may read in "London Inns and Taverns," by
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Leopold Wagner. Before the Great Fire it had been called the Mitre,
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the first "Musick House" in London, and the meeting place of a
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Company of Musicians, its sign being a Swan and a Lyre. Its master
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had gathered many trophies of travel, which he displayed, and which
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are said to have formed the nucleus of the Britian Museum. After the
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fire it was rebuilt on the same site, but the new sign was so badly
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made that the wits of the town called it the Goose and Gridiron, and
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the name clung to it. The record goes on:
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"Accordingly, on St. John Baptist's Day, in the 3rd year of King
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George I, A.D. 1717, the assembly and Feast of the Free and Accepted
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Masons was held at the foresaid Goose and Gridiron Ale-House.
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"Before dinner, the oldest Master Mason (now the Master of a Lodge),
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in the Chair, proposed a list of proper candidates; and the Brethren
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by a majority of Hands elected Mr. Anthony Sayer, Gentleman, Grand
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Master of Masons (Mr. Jacob Lamball, Carpenter; Capt. Joseph Elliot,
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Grand Wardens), who being forthwith invested with the Badges of
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Office and Power by said oldest Master, and installed, was duly
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congratulated by the Assembly, who paid him the Homage.
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"Sayer, Grand Master, commanded the Masters and Wardens of Lodges to
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meet the Grand Officers every Quarter in Communication, at the place
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that he should appoint in the Summons sent by the Tyler."
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So reads the only record that has come down to us of the founding of
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the Mother Grand Lodge. Who were present, besides the three officers
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named, has so far eluded all research; their faces have faded, their
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names are lost - but imagine the scene. The big room extended the
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width of the house, thirty feet one way and nearly twenty the other.
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In the center was an oak table, around which the delegates from the
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various lodges sat on chairs, smoking their pipes. The seat of
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Anthony Sayer was before the fireplace, with its polished brass fire-
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irons, with chestnut-roasters and bed-warmers hanging on either side
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of it.
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It was an hour of feast and fun and fellowship, as they sat down to
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dinner together, as English lodges do today. Each man had a rummer
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of foaming ale before him on the table, and as he drained it betimes
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it was refilled by a handsome maid, Hannah, whose name has survived
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long after others were lost. Only a few memories live of that event
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which divided the story of Masonry into before and after; the famous
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sign in front of the house, so ugly that a Swan and a Lyre were
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mistaken for a Goose and a Gridiron; the skittleground on the roof;
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the small water-course, a rivulet of Fleet Brook, for which a way had
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to be made through the chimney; the pillar that propped up the
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chimney, and - Hannah, the maid.
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How strange that the Masons of England allowed the old Ale-House to
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be taken down in 1893 - it ought to have been kept as a shrine of
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fellowship and fun. But so little interest was taken in its fate
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that the historic sign was sold to a citizen of Dulwick, who put it
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in his greenhouse. Later on, however, the old relic was recovered,
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and it now has a place of honor in the Guildhall Museum, along with
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other tokens of the London that is no more. Alas, so little do men
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see, and so lightly do they value what is passing before their eyes.
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What of the men who formed the Mother Grand Lodge?
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They did not - could not - realize what they had done so casually and
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in the spirit of frolic, much less foreknow its meaning and future.
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They merely wanted to make a "Centre of Union and Harmony," as they
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called it, between the lodges of the city. There was no thought of
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imposing the authority of Grand Lodge upon the country in general,
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still less upon the world, as is clear from the Constitutions of
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1723, which are said to be "for the use of Lodges in London." Yet,
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so great was the necessity for a Grand Lodge, that, once started, the
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impulse spread to Ireland, Scotland, and the ends of the earth. Link
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was added link until it put "a girdle around the earth."
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As a great man of the Craft has said so picturesquely, it is
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possible, and it is true, to say that Masonry was born in a Tavern,
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but it belongs to Almighty God; and so gentle was its spirit, so
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friendly and tolerant and wise withal, that it began to make the life
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of the Tavern like a vestibule for the life of the Church.
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