227 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
227 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.XI September, 1933 No.9
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TWENTY-FOUR INCH GAUGE
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by: Unknown
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In the early editions of his Monitor (1797 and on) Thomas Smith Webb
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wrote:
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“The twenty-four inch gauge is an instrument made us of my operative
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Masons, to measure and lay out their work; but Free and Accepted
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Masons are taught to make use of it for the more noble and glorious
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purpose of dividing their time; it being divided into twenty-four
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equal parts, is emblematical of the twenty-four hours of the day,
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which they are taught to divide into three equal parts; whereby are
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found eight hours for the service of God and a distressed worthy
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brother; eight hours for their usual avocations; and eight for
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refreshment and sleep.”
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Time and the often witless tinkering of well-meaning but uninformed
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brethren have altered here a word and there a phrase; in some
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Jurisdictions it is now “Vocations,” in others it is “we” instead of
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“they” and so on.
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But in essentials most American Jurisdictions use the paragraph as
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the great ritualist phrased it for us a century and a third ago.
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Unfortunately, he did not go deeply into the symbolism of the gauge,
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leaving it to us to dig out for ourselves its concealed meanings, and
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learn from it, as we are able to learn; thinking through it, as we
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are able to think.
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Like most Masonic symbols, it conceals far more than it reveals.
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Like many, the Monitorial explanation deals only with the obvious
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meaning, leaving the inner symbolism for the delver in the rubbish of
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the Temple’s verbiage who seeks the hidden truths Freemasonry
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discloses to all who look.
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Among the oldest of man’s beginnings of civilization, measures seem
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to have originated among all peoples with parts of the human body -
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the foot, the hand, the palm, the digit, the cubit (elbow to tip of
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the middle finger) etc. The word inch comes (as does ounce) from the
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Latin “unciae,” a unit divided into twelve parts. Some contend that
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origin of an inch was in the thumb joint. Both foot and Roman
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“unciae” are very old and our ancient brethren of the Gothic
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Cathedral building age must surely have known both. But what is
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important is not the name of the measure but the division of the
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gauge into units than its total, and their applicability to time.
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The relation of twenty-four inches to twenty-four hours is plain
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enough, but when we examine just what it is that is divided into
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twenty-four parts, the explanation becomes difficult.
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What is time? To most of us it is the duration between two noons;
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the elapsed interval between any two events; the passage of a certain
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fraction of life. To the philosopher, time is an unknown quantity.
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Like space, it appears to be a conception of the mind, without
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objective existence. Modern mathematicians contend that time and
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space are but two faces of the same idea, like the two sides of a
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shield. While we can comprehend one without reference to the other,
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we cannot “use” one without the other. Every material thing occupies
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space for a certain time; every material thing existing for a
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specified time, occupies space.
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We pass through space in three directions - up and down, right and
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left, forward and back. We pass through time, apparently,
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continuously in one direction from birth to death.
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We cannot go back for even the smallest fraction of an instant. Omar
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wrote:
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“The moving finger writes; and having writ, Moves on; nor all Piety
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nor Wit Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line, Nor all your tears
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wash out a Word of it.”
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The operative workman measures his stone with his gauge; if the
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ashlar is too long, he shortens it. If it is to broad, he narrows
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it. If it too crooked to make square, he casts it on the rubbish
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heap and begins anew with a rough ashlar.
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But the Speculative Mason, measuring his time with the twenty-four
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inch gauge, has no such latitude. The ruined minute is forever away;
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the crooked hour can never be made straight. The day unfit for the
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Building Not Made With Hands can never be set in the Eternal Wall,
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nor can the workman find in any quarry a new day to mould.
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Thinking of it thus, could any symbol cry a more clarion call for
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accuracy of labor? For skill with which to work? For care and pains
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in building?
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“Eight hours for the service of God and a worthy distressed brother,
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eight hours for their usual avocation, and eight for refreshment and
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sleep.”
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There is no time to waste. There is not time to be lost. There is
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no time for idleness. Thomas Smith Webb builded better than he knew
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when with so sparing a hand he laid out the Speculative Mason’s time
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for the lighter side of life. In his conception, all such must be
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taken from the eight hours allotted to refreshment and sleep. He who
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would “pass the time away” - he who would indulge in “pastimes,”
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must, according to the Monitor, take these hours from bed!
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To divide our twenty-four hours into three equal parts is a very
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practical, everyday admonition. Here is no erudite philosophy such
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as “laborer est orare” - tov labor is to pray. Nor is there any
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suggestion that even refreshment may be in the “service of God.”
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Again, the old ritualist knew his audience. His instructions are
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simple; their profundity is only for those who wish to look beneath
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the surface.
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For these, indeed, the whole twenty-four hours may be literally “in
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the service of God” since labor and sleep are necessary for life as
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we have to live it, and it is a poor theology which does not teach
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the common lot to be the Will of God.
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In 1784 Sir William Jones wrote:
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“Seven hours to law, to soothing slumber seven, Ten to the world
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allot, and all to heaven.”
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Webb does not so put it, but if the eight hours for labor us also to
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be “in the service of God,” it must be labor which results in good
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work, true work, square work. Refreshment of mind and body which is
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an offering to heaven must be clean and wholesome, if on the morrow
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the laborer is to be wholesome and clean for new labor, and prayer
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and service.
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The Mason interested in a further interpretation of the three-fold
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division of twenty-four hours need look no further than the Great
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Light upon his Altar - indeed, he need only turn back from
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Ecclesiastes XII to Ecclesiastes III to find the inspiration of this
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Monitorial admonition that there is a time for everything. We read:
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“To everything there is a season and a time for every purpose under
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heaven; a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a
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time to pluck up that which is planted; a time to kill and a time to
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heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up; a time to weep,
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and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance; a time to
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cast away stones, and a time to gather stones; a time to embrace, and
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a time to refrain from embracing; a time to get, and a time to lose;
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a time to keep, and a time to cast away; a time to rend, and a time
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to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak; a time to love,
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and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.”
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But nowhere in the wise counsel of prophet or patriot, preacher or
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teacher, is there set forth a time to waste time.
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Time is the very substance of life, its golden minutes the only
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stones we have with which to build. Every accomplishment of man, be
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it Temple of marble or Temple of character, act of selfishness or
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selfless giving to others, building a nation or building a house,
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must be accomplished with “Time.” Without time nothing is ever done.
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Hence he who wastes either his time or another’s, squanders that
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which he cannot replace; which comes from we know not whither, to go
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we know not whence, which once gone, is gone forever.
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About us are many varieties of men with as many ideas of how time
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should be spent. Every human being has the same number of minutes in
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an hour, of hours in a day, of days in a year. Some have little or
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nothing to show for their thirty, forty, or fifty years. Others have
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great accomplishments to exhibit as the product of their time.
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Lincoln used all the time he did not need to devote to his usual
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avocation to mastering geometry, learning politics, understanding the
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question of slavery. Albert Pike made himself a learned scholar by
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constant use of spare time. These men knew what the twenty-four inch
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gauge really meant, how profound a symbol it is - aye, Lincoln knew,
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though he was a Freemason only “in his heart” and not a member of any
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Lodge.
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It provokes sober thought to apply the Masonic rule to a
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determination of how long we really have. Our days are allotted as
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three score and ten. We rarely start on our life work before we are
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twenty. Of the fifty years of actual time for labor, we are
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admonished to spend a third of in the service of God and a distressed
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worthy brother, a third in refreshment and sleep, and but a third in
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labor - not quite seventeen years in which to accomplish all we have
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to do! No wonder so few of us leave behind a monument which will
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stand long enough to be seen by the coming generation, still less one
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which will last through the ages.
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“But the harder the task, the greater the joy of accomplishment!”
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Much has been made of the amount of time spent in the “service of God
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and a distressed worthy brother” by enemies of the Craft, who have
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tried to read into this admonition the thought that the other sixteen
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hours are to be used without service to God, and that only a
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distressed “brother” is to share in our labors.
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This, of course , is pure casuistry. If we instruct a workman to
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build a wall, we mean that he is to carry the brick, make the mortar,
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lay the courses, level the whole, leave an opening for the gate,
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point up the joints - do the whole job!
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“Service to God,” then, does not mean merely spending time upon ones
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knees in prayer, but living life acceptable to the Great Architect.
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By “worthy distressed brother” we have no reason to assume that
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Masonry means only “brother of the Mystic Tie.” Masons are
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repeatedly bidden to turn to the Great Light as the rule and guide of
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faith and practice. Here we find “inasmuch as ye do it into the
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least of these . . . “ And all men who own to a common Father are
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brothers.
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The attentive Freemason quickly notes how frequently are the Masonic
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allusions to work, and how few to refreshment. Our twenty-four inch
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gauge gives us - almost grudgingly, it seems - eight hours for two
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occupations of which we know one needs the greater part - eight hours
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for refreshment and sleep. The other sixteen are for labor, work,
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effort, doing.
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To him who finds labor irksome, the twenty-four inch gauge must be a
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painful symbol. Alas, all symbols are painful for the idle! But for
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those who have learned life’s greatest lesson, that the most lasting
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joy comes from accomplishment, the symbol is beautiful.
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Fortunate is the man who is happy at his daily task; discontented he
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who has not found his work. For him who likes his job, sixteen hours
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a day are scarce enough. Find the carpenter who carves wood in his
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spare hours, the bookkeeper who spends his evenings doing
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mathematics, the doctor whose leisure is spent teaching his healing
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art, and you hear men singing at their labors; men who curse the
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clocks which go too fast!
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Find the Mason interested in the Ancient Craft, prompt to offer his
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services for visiting the sick, doing committee work, helping the
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tiler, laboring on Fellowcraft or Degree Team, and you see one happy
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in his lodge.
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Such men have no time to waste - all have some division of their
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gauge of time which makes every minute count with “sixty seconds
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worth of distance run.”
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Time - substance of life! Time - gift of the Great Architect! Time
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- building stone for the spiritual temple! Time - man’s greatest
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mystery, bitterest enemy, truest friend! Its care, conservation,
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employment, is the secret of the twenty-four inch gauge - its waste
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and aimless spending is the sin against which this symbolic working
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tool unalterably aligns the Ancient Craft.
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The Scythe, emblem of Time, wins in the end. We can race with Father
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Time for but a little while.
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“But we can win while we are permitted to race.”
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And at the end, the great ruler of our lives is merciful! As you
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think of the twenty-four inch gauge and its three divisions, think
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also of these tender and beautiful words written of the mighty
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servant, mightier master, Time:
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I bring you woe and scalding tears and all life holds of sadness,
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Because I am remorseless, your heart in torture pays
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In bitter coin of memories of times when time was madness,
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“I am the passing hours; I amyour march of days.”
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Enemy and best of friends am I to those who sorrow;
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Pitiless in passing, yet Oh, so slow, so slow. . .
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I hurry to the sleeping the greyness of tomorrow;
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Sluggard in my sun-down, I never seem to go . . .
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Little bit by even less, all pain I can diminish,
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Slowly win the smile to eyes that now know but to weep.
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I began your race with life, and I shall see its finish;
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My arms, and none but mine, shall in the end give sleep.
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I linger not for anyone, yet I may not be hastened;
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You must bear your agony until I bid it cease . . .
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But when your head is in the dust, and all your pride is
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chastened,
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“At long last, I promise you, I bring the gift of peace.”
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