255 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
255 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.XII September, 1934 No.9
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THE MASTER’S HAT
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by: Unknown
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“Why does the Master wear a hat?”
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How many times do newly raised brethren ask the question, and how few
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of the brethren interrogated can give a satisfactory answer! Usually
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the reply is: “Oh, that an old symbol,” or: “That’s one of the
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Landmarks.: But, as a matter of fact, wearing a hat in Lodge is
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symbolic only as all custom with regard to headgear are symbolic, and
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certainly no custom which has suffered so many changes and reversals
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as this, can, by any stretch of a point, be considered a Landmark.
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Ceremonies connected with clothing are very ancient, dating at least
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from the era in which the first captives in tribal wars were stripped
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of all their clothing, partly that their captors might possess it,
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partly as a symbol of the complete subjugation of the slave state.
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Among some peoples today, stripping part of the clothing is still a
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sign of respect; the Tahitians uncover to the waist as a sign of
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reverence to a king; Asiatics bare the feet; Japanese take off a
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slipper for ceremonious salute. Worshippers in ancient Greece and
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Rome remove their sandals in a house of worship, as do East Indians
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today.
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During the days of chivalry, knights often wore full armor in public,
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and usually when going upon private journeys. To open a visor was a
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form of greeting which said in effect: “I do not expect a sword
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thrust in the mouth from you,: A knight removed his helmet before a
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friend as a token that he feared no blow, and always in the presence
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of a King, as a symbol that his life was the King’s.
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Moderns remove the hat as a sign of respect in greeting a friend,
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always when speaking to or meeting a lady, a survival of the ancient
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custom of uncovering as a symbol of trust, or subjectivity to a
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higher authority.
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That monarchs wear crowns - or hats - as a right when all others are
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uncovered, has been sung by poets of all ages. In Scott’s “Lady of
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the Lake,” Ellen Douglas is taken to see the King, little suspecting
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who he is:
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“On many a splendid garb she gazed -
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Then turned bewildered and amazed
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For all stood bare, and in the room
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Fitz-James alone wore a cap and plume,
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To him each lady’s look was lent
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On him each courtier’s eye was bent;
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Midst furs and silks and jewels sheen
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He stood, in simple Lincoln green,
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The center of the glittering ring
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And Snowden’s knight is Scotland’s King!”
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The King never uncovered. He wore his crown where he would. even in
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the House of God. All had to uncover before the King, as all had to
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retreat from his presence by moving backward - a custom which obtains
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even today in ceremonial audiences in England - that none might “turn
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his back on the sovereign.” The very bowing of the head in the
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presence of authority confessed either fearlessness of an unseen
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blow, or his willingness to receive it from his liege Lord.
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Not always does the removal of the hat indicate respect. Orthodox
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Jews remain covered in their synagogues; early Quakers wore hats in
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their houses of worship; women do not remove their hats in some
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churches. Romans prayed with covered heads; indeed, Romans forbade
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the head covering to a slave, a wooden cap (pileus) being only for
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citizens. After a Roman owner liberated a slave, the manumitted man
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often went to the Temple of Feronia, on Mt. Suracte, if indeed, he
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did not receive his freedom in her Temple. Feronia, the goddess of
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fruits, nurseries and groves, was especially honored as the patroness
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of enfranchised slaves, and in her Temple the manumitted received a
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cap.
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Dr. George C. Williamson (Curious Survivals) says of the House of
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Commons in London: “A member has to wear his hat when he is to
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address the House and there is often confusion when the member is
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unable to find his hat at the moment, and put it on, before he
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addresses the speaker, but, were he to rise without his hat, he would
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be greeted immediately with cries of ‘Order, Order!’”
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Just when or where originated the custom of a Master wearing a hat as
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a sign of authority is an unsolved question. It is easy enough to
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“guess” that it began from operative Masons of the Middle Ages aping
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the customs of the Court, and requiring all Fellows of the Craft to
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uncover before the Master Mason. But guessing is not proving.
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Oliver is quoted as saying: “Among the Romans the hat was a sign of
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freedom. Formerly Masons wore them as a symbol of freedom and
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brotherly equality. In English and American Lodges it is now
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exclusively an attribute of the Master’s costume.”
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Oliver as a historian is open to question; certainly hats are not
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generally worn by Masters in England now. But this quotation
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indicates that English Masters formerly did, which is born out by
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some notable exceptions of today;
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Bristol, for instance and Lodge Newstead, 47, in the Province of
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Nottingham, where the Master wears a silk hat at Lodge ceremonies.
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In the Royal Sussex Lodge of Hospitality (Bristol) the Master carries
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(not wears) wa cocked hat into the Lodge room. In Lodge Moria the
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transfer of the hat from outgoing to incoming Master has for many
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years been a part of Installation.
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There are extant some rituals of French Masonry of 1787, apparently
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authentic, which seem to give a true picture of the ritual and
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practices of French Brethren of the time. Masonic students are
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agreed that while doubtless French Masons did dramatize some of the
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English ritual and made certain changes in the Old English ceremonies
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which better fitted the Latin temperament, on the whole these rituals
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contain much that was originally English Masonic practice.
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In the old French Ritual of 1787, in the third degree, each Master is
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required to wear a hat. The word “Master” here has the double
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significance; Master of the Lodge and Master Mason. This has led to
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some confusion in translating the real meaning of the rituals. But
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in this particular instance the context is made clear by some old
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prints, showing French brethren in a Lodge in which all present wear
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hats “except the candidate.”
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Writing in 1896, Wor. Brother Gotthelf Greiner states, of German
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Masons;” . . .it is the invariable custom for brethren in Lodge to
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wear silk hats (which are raised during prayer and when the name of
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the G.A.O.T.U. is invoked). In that country, it (the wearing of the
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hat) is not a distinction confined to those of any particular
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standing.
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It is to be noted that the Ahiman Rezon of Pennsylvania specifies
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that at Masonic funerals all the brethren should wear black hats,
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Contrast these instances of all brethren wearing hats (except the
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candidate) with one of the articles of the statutes of the Chapter of
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Clermont (1755) which reads:
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“Only the Master of a Lodge and the Scots Masters are permitted to
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remain covered.”
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Confirming this, an old eighteenth century catch question (which
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survives in some of our Lodges to this day) is:
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Q. “Where does the Master hang his hat?”
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A. “On nature’s peg.”
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Some fanciful theories have been advanced to account for the Master’s
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hat. Among these may be mentioned this curious idea; because of a
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supposed unpopularity of the Mason’s Craft in the middle ages, the
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brethren on a cathedral building project were occasionally permitted
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to hold their meetings in the cathedral they built, or, if it was not
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sufficiently advanced, in a nearby monastery. The monks, being
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learned men, were often made Masters of the various builders’ Lodges,
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and continued to wear their mitres, as was their custom. From this
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is supposed to have arisen the custom of a Master wearing a hat!
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Fort, in his “Antiquities of Freemasonry,” writes:
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“During the Middle ages, when a traveling Fellow approached a Lodge
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of Masons in prescribed form, he first exclaimed: ‘May God Bless,
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direct and prosper you, Master, Pallier (Wardens), and dear fellows!’
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Whereupon the Master, or in his absence the Pallier, was instructed
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by the ordinance of Torgau, to thank him in reply, in order that the
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visiting brother might see who was custodian of the Lodge. And
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having obtained suitable assistance, the wandering craftsman removed
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his hat, and thanked the brethren with an established formula. From
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the proceeding ceremony, it is evident that neither the Master not
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the Wardens of a mediaeval German Lodge were distinguishable by
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distinctive tokens while at mechanical labor; otherwise, no
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regulation was essential or obligatory upon the officers to make
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proper response to a visitor for the purpose of deter-mining the
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Master.
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“Curiously enough, the implication is direct and clear that the
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Masons of ancient times, when regularly convened for work, and during
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the formal reception of a traveler, pursued their daily avocation and
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attended the usual Masonic demands, within closed portals, with
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covered heads. At the present day the custom has materially changed,
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and, with one exception, the members of a Lodge at labor noticeably
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divest themselves of their hats. This is unquestionably a
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transformation of recent origin, and with it the instruction usually
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incident to the distinction has been adopted to the innovation.
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“When the initiatory rites in a mediaeval Lodge were performed, the
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Master was not thus prominently contrasted with his brethren. I
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speak with especial emphasis upon this point, because the esoteric
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and sublime signification involved in the Master’s hat has been
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recklessly perverted and destroyed.
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It was typical, during the Middle Ages, of superiority, and was so
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interpreted in the ceremonies of initiation by the Masons of France
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at the termination of the eighteenth century, all of whom sat in open
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Lodge with covered heads. (At the conclusion of the rites in French
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Lodges, the Master handed the candidate his hat, and said: ‘For the
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future, you shall be covered in a Master’s Lodge.’
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This very ancient usage is a sign of liberty and superiority.) Among
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the Germans, this article was used as a symbol of transfer of
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chattels, and landed property. The judge held a hat in his hands;
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the purchaser must receive it from him, and with it the title passed.
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Frequently the ceremony perfecting a sale was performed by the
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contract parties thrusting their hands into a hat, and upon
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withdrawing them the estate changed owners.
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“Gothic justices wore a cap or suitable headdress when presiding over
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court, as emblematic of authority, and manifestly the people wore
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their hats while attending the tribunal as symbols of personal
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liberty. (In an engraving, dating from the 15th century, given in
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Lacroxi, op. cit. p. 379, all persons attendant upon court are
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presented with heads covered). And with this typical allusion
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generally acquiescence originally harmonized; but the distinctive and
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exceptional feature of a Master’s head-dress contains the secret
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symbolism of authority at the present day, while mediaeval Masons
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worked with covered heads as a sign of freedom. Both customs,
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descended from a remote teutonic antiquity, have long since
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dissipated their vital forces, while the ordinary interpretation
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possesses less significance than a dilapidated mile-post!”
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By all of which it may be seen that we really know very little, and
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must guess a great deal as to the origin of the custom. But in the
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light of history and the etiquette of various ages, the most probable
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theory seems to be that a Master wears a hat today in imitation of
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the rulers of olden times who wore hat or crown while those who them
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allegiance were uncovered.
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Turning from history to practice, a question often asked is: “When
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should the Worshipful Master remove his hat?” The answer must come
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from taste rather than law. Some Masters are veritable “hat
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snatchers,” pulling off their headgear whenever they speak from the
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East. There seems little more reason for a Master to divest himself
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of his badge of office when addressing a brother, than to remove his
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apron or jewel. the Master’s hat is not used as a head covering
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designed for warmth and protection from the weather, but as a badge
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of authority. Good taste would dictate its lifting when the Master
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speaks of or to Deity, of death, during the reading of passages of
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Scripture, and in the presence of the Grand Master. In other words,
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the Master’s hat is doffed in the presence of superior authority.
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What kind of a hat should a Master wear? Here also is neither law
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nor rule except for those of good taste. Fashion and custom rule all
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our clothing, including our hats. The gentleman in dark cutaway
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coat, gray stripped trousers, a black and white tie, gray gloves and
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spats, who appeared at the White House wearing a golf cap, might
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easily be mistaken for a lunatic; he who tried to step to bat on the
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diamond with a derby would certainly receive Bronx cheers if not pop
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bottles!
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Lodges in which the officers appear in evening clothes, either
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“swallow tails” or dinner coats, naturally expect Masters to use
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black silk hats. Lodges where less formality is practiced frequently
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see Masters in silk hats, but the results are sometimes anomalous.
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The spectacle of a brother in white trousers, black and white shoes
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and a silk hat, is incongruous, at the least. At a Lodge meeting in
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hot weather in informal clothes the Master is better dressed with a
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straw hat than the more formal silk. Lodges in which officers wear
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ordinary business clothes should look with approbation on the felt or
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derby.
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The Grand Master in Massachusetts wears a three cornered cockade hat
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at the solemn ceremonies of St. John’s Day in winter, survival of the
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custom begun in the days when Paul Revere was Grand Master in that
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Jurisdiction, inclusive of a large, heavily gold-encrusted apron,
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collar, gauntlets and jewels, removes any feeling of incongruity from
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the appearance of this old custom; the Massachusetts Grand Master
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does not wear his cockade when visiting other Grand Lodges.
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That the Grand Master “should” wear his hat, and not let the old
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custom go by default, merely for personal convenience, goes without
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saying. But it has been said!
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On closing the one hundred fiftieth Communication of the Grand Lodge
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of New York, Grand Master Charles S. Johnson (now Grand Secretary)
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said:
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“I want to call your attention to the fact that I have been wearing a
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hat during this communication. I have done it on purpose - not
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because I have any desire to wear a hat like this, but I want you men
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in the Lodge to see that the ancient custom of a Master wearing a hat
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shall not be dispensed with. I have found as I have gone around the
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State, again and again, that in many Lodges there is no attempt on
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the part of the Master to fulfill this ancient tradition of our
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Fraternity. It is a very interesting tradition in our organization,
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and I think it is one that we ought not to lose; and, therefore, I
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have set you the example, and I ask you in your respective Lodges
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throughout the State and the City of New York, to see that this old
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tradition, which has been so honoured in the past, shall continue
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even in these modern days.”
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