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GRADES OF SAINT ANDREW
Régime Écossais.
The Master Grade.
Grade of Perfect Master
Hiram and Christ.
Issue of the Grade.
GRAND AND SUBLIME MASON
Heads of the Legend.
Version of Baron Tschoudy.
Knights of the Morning.
A Hermetic Motstre.
A Third Temple.
The Primeval Order.
The baid Solitaries
Knights of the Temple.
Ritual of the Grade
GRAND ARCHITECT
Master Architect.
GRAND GRADE ECOSSAIS
An Ineffable Degree.
GRAND INSPECTOR
A French Version.
The Recension of Pike.
Procedure in this Version.
GRAND LODGE
Decay of Operative Lodges.
Non-Operative Masons.
Operative or Speculative.
The Masons' Company.
Issues of Modern Research
The Grand Lodge Heritage.
Creation of Grand Lodge.
A Conflagration of Archives.
The Order to Anderson.
The Chair of Grand Master
Craft Expansion.
Book of Constitiution
Divisions and Feuds.
Grand Masters.
Authorities.
GRAND MASTER ARCHITECT
Points of the Grade.
The French Legend.
GRAND MASTER OF ALL SYMBOLIC LODGES
Defects and Insufficiencies.
Horizon of the Grade.
GRAND PONTIFF
An Apocalyptic Grade.
Points of the Pageant.







GRADES OF SAINT ANDREW
Régime Écossais.
The Master Grade.
Grade of Perfect Master
Hiram and Christ.
Issue of the Grade.
GRADES OF SAINT ANDREW. The Écossais Grades of Masonry and if their name is not legions they are many_are not all Grades of St. Andrew; but in a general sense he is the patron of all and over all a presiding spirit. Setting aside comparative trivialities and minima, Grades of St. Andrew enter into two systems of great historical importance, the RITE OF THE STRICT OBSERVANCE and the SWEDISH RITE.
To my poignant and lasting regret t can speak of the latter at second-hand only, and it is preferable therefore scarcely to speak at all, except to put on record an opinion that having regard to the date of its formation and the fact that its inspiration and character were drawn from many sources, something may have been rejected into it from the former. It has been a custom to speak of these creations and their kindred generally as Jacobite Degrees, as introduced by partisans of the Stuarts, as connected in particular with the thing called RAMSAY,S RITE, because Ramsay was tutor of Stuart Princes in his day. These affirmations are of the world of myth and legend, like the great romantic fables of Heredom and Kilwenning. We shall see that the Chevalier Ramsay never founded a Rite, that so far as evidence is concerned no Stuart Prince ever meddled oath Masonry, for his own or any other purpose, that the Grades of St. Andrew which count in Masonry and their developed symbolism are things of the spint and have no part in earthly kingdorns, their loss or their recovery. Finally, as regards Kilwinning, it nlay be noted as a cunous point that its Annual Festival is on the day of St. Thomas, not that of St. Andrew.
Régime Écossais. The Grades which are connected by their titles with the patron saint of Scotland are of necessity and obviously écossais Grades of Masonry, but they are'not all distinguished by the particular qualification itself, and I have shewn elsewhere that this is the only pretence under which we can group together a vast Ritual collection which has no essential elements in common. I have said also that the Grades of MASTER and PERFECT MASTER OF ST. ANDREW are the head and crown of the Ecossais cohort. They are included under these names in the RÉGIME ÉCOSSAIS ANCIEN ET RECTIFIE, but in the RITE OF THE STRICT OBSERVANCE they formed a single Degree under the denomination of SCOTTISH MASTER. When the STRICT OBSERVANCE came to be modified and transformed by the Martinists of Lyons, and at the memorable Masonic Convention held in that city, the S:cossais Degree was so altered that it fell naturally into two parts and has so remained. They constitute together an alternative in Christian Masonry to that Order of the HOLY ROYAL ARCH which is claimed as the completion of Craft Masonry under the aegis of the Old Law.
The Master Grade.
_The Candidate for advancement has been occupied, since he was Raixd to the Third Degree, in the preparation of plans for the erection of the Second Temple, and a long period of symbolical time has elapsed therefore since he took part in certain memorable events referable to the reign of Solomon and his work on the first House of God. The doom of the House has overtaken it, and he himself has been in exile at Babylon. But at length he has come out of captivity and out of its great tribulation to rejoin his Brethren at JerusaIem, hoping to assist in the great work of restoration. He is shewn the ruins of the First Temple and the cause of its destruction is explained to him, with its symbolical message in Masonry_the profanation of Sacred Rites and the occultation or Loss of the Sacred Word. He is covenanted to assist those who are at work on his own objects and for his own ends, and in accordance therewith it comes about that, through his instrumentality, the Seven-Branched Candlestick, the Table of Shew Bread and certain Masonic implements, " without which every construction is irregularéé, are recovered. He raises the overthrown Altar of Incense and finds that lamsna aurca which is inscribed with the Lost Word, some particulars of which are communicated in the ROYAL ARCH OF ENOCH. He is told to pronounce it with confidence and in a loud voice, he being in the presence of those who have travelled the path before him which leads to the Holy of Holies and have found, also before him, the sacred object of research. An histoncal discourse completes the reconstruction.of the Second Temple and tells how the sacred fire was restored to the Sanctuary. So far therefore as the Temple of Zerubbabel is concerned we are in the presence of a completed symbol and not with its initial part as in the English ROYAL ARCH.
Grade of Perfect Master
._In the Second Degree, or that of PERFECT MASTER, the undertaking is to continue that work " which has been some time since commenced ,, and carry it in fine to perfection. Now, I have said that the Second Temple is already finished in the hypothesis of the symbolism. Uthat is therefore that work which all are pledged to continue and what do they expect to complete ? There has been an.intimation already in a Discourse of the FIRST DEGREE: they are engaged in erecting a Temple to Virtue and a Sanctuary to Holy Service, and though the day is far to the end, yet ever the work goes on. The First lSouse of God erected by Solomon typifies a state of perfection, of integration in the Eternal Law, of love to God and man. That was the kind of Masonry, and it is this which was built in the heart and soul of the Brotherhood. But the Legend of the THIRD DEGREE indicates that even then there were evil forces at work, and not among Entered Apprentices but those who had so worked and so attained that they were numbered among the Craftsmen. As time went on the keepers of the Secret Tradition and the Wardens of the Sacred Law betrayed their trust; the House of God was destroyed; the city and the nation fell. It is said that " the wages of sin is death,,, and of such was the captivity in Babylon, till the day came when Masonry remembered Zion and wept beside the bitter waters. It was given to the elect people that they should rebuild the House of God, and the Temple of Zerubbabel represents the Israel of Masonry renouncing its false idols, the yoke of the evil law, and a return by the path of conduct to the freedom of the sons of God. This is how the PERFECT MASTER OF ST. ANDREW is taught as a Mason to read the history of Jewry, for his own profit and that of the Order at large. It leads him on to the Law of Christ.
Hiram and Christ.
_That which is shewn to him in the Ceremony is therefore the Resurrection of Hiram, issuing gloriously_as it is said_from the tomb and " reborn to a new life.,, In a word, the Master-Builder arises as Chnst. The Temple of Masonry is henceforward the House of Christ, at once of earth and of Heaven, of earth in so far as it is realised here in the heart and life of the Brotherhood, of Heaven as it is built in Christ, world without end. So in the Apocalyptic Vision is the New Jerusalem represented descending foursquare out of Heaven_perfect in its parts and honourable to the builder_that it may be manifested here below. And this is the last picture which is shewn to the Candidate, after which it is said to him that " all instruction by the mediation of symbols will for you have ceaued.,' It is said to him also that " the Temple of the Old Law has given place to the mystical Zion, on the summit of which is shewn the Lamb of God, bearing the standard of omnipotence acquired by His atoning immolation." And lastly: " the time has come, my Brother, to announce that our Order is Christian, though in the largest and highest sense of the term.',
Issue of the Grade.
_These Grades of the REGIME 1!COSSAIS may be defective from the dramatic standpoint, though they lend themselves readily to amendment in this respect, they may leave something to be desired from the sacramental standpoint, but this is a question of development; and they may have suffered within comZratively recent years from an attempt to edit them in accordance mnth so-called liberal religion, but the implicits remain untouched. While acknowledging these disabilities, and admitting that the ROYAL ARCH of England has divine gleams, they offer in respect of it two advantages which are of great and living reality_an unfolded consciousness of the spiritual messages conveyed to those who can receive them by the two Temples in Israel, and a saving realisation that no initiatory system based on symbols derived from the First Dispensation can be called complete unless it leads on the recipient to the higher sacrasnentSism which succeeded it. We shall see in the proper place that these Grades of St. Andrew are introductory to certain Grades of Spintual Chivalry which carry on their gospel tidings, and that after the accolade of a KNIGHT BENEFICENT and a figurative integration in the Fellowship of the Holy City there remains something in the hiddenness about which I have no intention to speak.
GRAND AND SUBLIME MASON
In the ROYAL ARCH OF KNOCK the Candidate is supposed to receive the Lost Word of the Holy and Royal Art, but it is communicated_ . as we know_in a number of other Grades> it being understood that there are several modes of restoration, even as the Divine Names_ which are Names and Titles of God_ are numerous under the aegis of the religions of Christ and Israel. The fact that the Lost Word, in whatever manner it is formulated, belongs always to this class indicates the persistence of Jewish theosophy_meaning Kabalistic tradition_through every development of Masonry. It is too often apart from any trace of scholarship in the makers of Grades, and too often a clouded reflection, but the traces are always there. In the Grade which I am denominating GRAND AND SUBLIME MASON, as one who uses a shortened codex, that which is revealed in the ARCH OF ENOCH is communicated for a second time under circumstances that will appear immediately. This is the first point and represents a general note of intention. The second point is regarding the claim advanced on the part of the Grade, and as to this it is said in the Lecture that the Grand and Sublime Masons are the only depositanes of Ancient Masonry. We shall see that this claim depends from the traditional history, which belongs to a well-known form, is made in various synonymous terms on behalf of many Degrees or Rites, most of which exclude one another. It is otherwise and of course fabulous. The third and last point is that the Grade is found under a considerable number of obediences, though most belong to the past, and has a marked vanety of titles: they may be specified as foIlows, in order to clear the issues in respect of Masonic nomenclature. It has been known therefore
(I) as the GRAND ÉCOSSAIS MASON OF PERFECTION OF THE SACRED VAULT OF JAMES VI;
(2) as the DEGREE OF PERFECTION, a reduced version of the former title;
(3) as SCOTCH KNIGHT OF PERFECTION, according to the modern rendering of the ACCEPTED RITE in England;
(4) as GRAND ELECT ANCIENT PERFECT MASTER, being its original denomination in the COUNCIL OF EMPERORS;
(5) as ECOSSAIS OF PERFECTION, or GRAND ELECT, in the classification of the French SUPREME COUNCIL, during the first half of the nineteenth century;
(6) as K NIGHT OF THE SACRED VAULT, otherwise GRAND ECOSSAIS ELECT in the RITE OF MEMPHIS;
(7) as GRAND ELECT PERFECT AND SUBLIME MASON, according to the scottish RITE in America. I have not dealt with it under the ROYAL ARCH OF ENOCH, because of the vast symbolical time which separates the two Grades; nor under the section devoted to ECOSSAIS MASONRY, because it bears none of the characteristics of that series, dubious and fluidic as they are; nor lastly in my summary concerning ELECT Grades, because it is not Elect Masonry.
Heads of the Legend.
_It has passed through almost as many variations in Ritual procedure and motive as in descriptive names. We may compare the summary furnished by Ragon in his account of CAPITULAR GRADES with the recension of Albert Pike, which was based probably on several versions of the past, and offers by derivation from these a variant of the widespread myth concerning the preservation of Masonry in Palestine, from the age of Solomon and his Temple to the epoch of the Crusades, or in other words a theory of the transmission of Secret Tradition from the Covenant of Israel to that of Chnst. It is to be regretted that such a subject should not have fallen into more capable hands, whether those of the original inventors or of the American Grand Commander by whom it was revised as usual. The traditional story is given here in its baldest form and recounts how certain Masons, about whom we shall hear in connection with the-ROYAL ARCH OF ENOCH, carried the Ineffable Treasure of the True Word from Judea into other countries, giving secret instruction to those who were worthy of being induded among the keepers of the Royal Art. Masonry was propagated otherwise in the lower Degrees by far less cautious custodians and degenerated as it extended everywhere, but the Supreme Mystenes were reserved in sacred hiddenness by the Grand and Sublime Masons. They passed into Egypt and Assyria, they crossed over into Europe, and as it was indubitable that the original and historical home of Emblematic Masonry should not be left out, it is said that many settled in England, Scotland and Ireland. After such manner were Kilwinning and Heredom assured their own in legend. The centre of all remained, however, in Palestine, as did Christian Rosy Cross abide in the House of the Holy Spirit while the Brothers travelled abroad. They must have seen therefore the Lamp of Christ uplifted in the Holy Land, and though it is not said that they adopted the New Law, when the time came for the kings, princes and faithful of Europe to deliver Jerusalem from the yoke of unbelief and its miscreants, we are told that they offered their services in that all-holy enterprise and that the Sublime Masons performed prodigies of valour. One result was that the royal and noble crusaders solicited and obtained initiation. The legend breaks off at this point, so that it is left an open question whether the Christian Brethren who returned again to Europe communicated that which they had received under the same seals to others or whether they were received into those Hidden and Holy Houses which, by the hypothesis of the story, were located already in the West.
Version of Baron Tschoudy.
_I have said that there are several versions of this traditional myth, and seeing that it is the key of Templar Masonry, it is desirable at this point to observe how it stands in the earliest available if not original form, being that of Baron Tschoudy in his memorable L 1RTOILE FLAMBOYANTE. It is possible that what he offers is drawn from the traditional history communicated in the Fourteenth Degree of the COUNCIL OF EMPERORS, and as I have indicated that this Rite most probably began within more modest dimensions of Ritual, which were expanded as opportunity offered, it is possible also that its GRAND ELECT A NCIENT PERFECT MASTER may have been the work of Tschoudy himself, who composed many Grades and has been credited with the Institution of fully fledged Rites, complete with all their workings. I present therefore his story of Elect Masonry in Palestine in his own words.
Knights of the Morning.
_" The most ancient of military Orders, or otherwise the first to assume a corporate form, was the KNIGHTS OF THE MORNI NG AND OF PALESTINE, who were, lnoreover, the anceston;, fathers or founders of the Masonic Brotherhood. I must refrain from indicating the precise date of these illustrious men, and I dare not unveil their Mysteries; but it can be said that they were sorrowful spectators of all those misfortunes which successively befell the Kingdom of Judea. They looked also for that desired time when God would deign to turn an eye of compassion upon those Holy Places, where His presence had been manifested from the days of the Mosaic Law. Most of them were as yet ~convinced that His Divine Incarnation had hallowed those regions for a second time by the Gospel of the Law of Grace. They were dispersed among various hiding-places, where the conspiracy of untoward events and the almost complete destruction of the Jewish nation had driven them. Amidst such surroundings they awaited some future revolution which should place them once more in possession of their ancestral patrimony and enable them for a third time to erect their Holy Temple, to reassume their functions within its blessed precincts and otherwise those exalted occupations which had gathered them in old days about the person of their sovereign. In expectation of this glory to come, they stood guard jealously over their primeval traditions, their laws and their liturgy. The age of the world drew on to that year of grace in the Lord when Peter the Hermit summoned the Paces of Christendom to deliver the Holy Land: it was then that the Secret Companions discerned the approaching term of their long exile. From their concealment in the dew of the TheWd and from the obscurity of centuries the KNIGHTS OF PALESTINE came forth, reassumed their distinctive ins~a and communicated Aivith some of therassociates who had remained as watchers in Jerusalem. These had applied themselves to the study of Nature and the profound consideration of her secret forces, making precious discovenes, which might well contnbute successfully to the general designs of the Order. Their most es~al attention had been directed to the sublime treatise of Morien, an ascetic of the Thebaid, their purpose being to secure those resources which were necessary to encompass their ambitions.,,
A Hermetic Moistre.
_Baron Tschoudy confesses that his narratiere is intentionally obscure, since he is discoursing on subjects which should be understood only by a few, and it is indubitable that his KNIGHTS OF THE MORNING are left as to identity in a cloud of his own creation: they might be Essenes, Therapeutue, successors of Prophets or Levites; they might be lineal descendants of Melchizedek, King of Salem, Wemer's Sons of the Valley or the Grand and Sublime Masons of the Fourteenth Degree. But about the purpose of the Hidden Sodality there is no obscurity whatever, for Morien was an alchemist of his Rod and the alleged sublime treatise is still extant. It follows that the consociates at Jerusalem were themselves Hennetic students, aiming at the transmutation of metals to ennch the chivalry. It is said further that they had embraced Christianity, and when the KNIGHrS OF THE MORNING came from the Thebaid desert they were persuaded to do in like manner, from which, adds the author, it follows that the splendid edifice which they had erected so long in their hearts would now be devoted to the offering of " a pure, holy, unspotted, emblematic sacrifice,,' when it came to be built on earth. It should be understood that Baron Tschoudy was of the Catholic and Roman faith, as well as a literary alchemist.
A Third Temple.
_He affirms further that, under one or another disguise, the rebuilding of the Temple at Jerusalem was the real object of all crusaders; that the solitaries of the Thebaid made common cause with the cross-bearing warriors of Chnstendom, keeping, however, their peculiar designs a secret, save only that they were in possession of the mystic measurements of the First Temple, being descended from its original builders. It is said also that beneath the pretence of speculative architecture they pursued a more glorious ambition. There is no doubt that this in the implicits of the reverie was the ambition of the Sons of Hermes. Such also, we are left to infer, was the inward secret of Emblematic Freemasonry, which_by the hypothesis_is indebted to this Militia HerxKtica for its Laws and Constitutions, for its tissue of symbols, if not indeed its Rituals. According to Tschoudy, the KNIGHTS OF THE MORNING assumed the name of Freemasons and were identified as such with the work of the Holy Wars. Their isolation and modest demeanour amidst the turmoil of ambitious crowds drew upon them the attention of the crossbearing chivakies, who sought to be admitted among them, as affirmed by the traditional history of the GRAND AND SUBLIME MASONS. A fixed method of reception was therefore devised, which is the root and essence of our present Speculative Masonry, as it is also out of this primitive observance that all the crazy medley of bizarre formul~, forced analogies and equivocal symbols has grown up in the hands of unwise imitators. It follows that the KNIGHTS OF THE MORNING were the original founding Masters, creative agents and sole depositaries of the Royal Art.
The Primeval Order.
_Baron Tschoudy says otherwise that this handful of faithful souls who assumed the denomination of Masons_ and whom he distinguishes additionally by a conventional and impossible title_marks the existence of something most ancient and most noble of all, " the first Order of the world, the trunk of all others, which are nothing more than its branches." Sacred and profane writings are represented as bearing their unqualified testimony to this Order, " apart from all tradition,,' and " in a manner so clear and positive that the least instructed man can easily verify all its data and attain certitude concerning it.,, Baron Tschoudy in this seemingly ingenuous affirmation is imitating his alchemical masters, who were invanably most ambiguous when they claimed to be speaking most frankly and apart from all similitude. As his KNIGHTS OF THE MORNING are incorporated from his own dreams and those of the Chevalier Ramsay, in combination with cognate reveries of High Grade legends, it is idle to ask who they were as, for example, the Frames Lucss or the Brethren of the Rosy Cross, referred back in chronology almost to the Gates of Eden; a school of the prophets in Israel perpetuated to Christian times; a priesthood within and behind the Jewish priesthood. They may have been any-of these, according to his own mind, or a blending of all the elect companies: it matters nothing historically. Philosophically it is Tschoudy,s mode of recognising the fact of a Sret Tradition, its subsistence from generation to generation, even from the earliest days of Israel, and its presumed transmission to Masonry. But it is not without interest to observe how it worked in the mind of another Masonic writer, many years after the author of L STOILE FLAMBOYANTE had passed from earWy life, though his work was still in circulation.
The baid Solitaries
-An anonymous DICTIONNIERE MAçONNIQUE was issued at Paris in the pseudo-Masonic year 5025 and embodies a collection of outline sketches concerning the various parts of that symbolic edifice known by the name of Freemasonry. Olle of its perfect ashlars is the legendary history of a particular Templar Grade which represents the Order of the Temple as derived from certain solitaries of the Thebaid, from the healing fraternity of Therapeutt and from those KNIGHTS OF THE MORNING AND OF PALESTINE whose claims were first made known to us by Baron Tschoudy. The instruc tion sets forth that Alexander, Patriarch of Alexandria, was a great ornament of the Order and that so early as the seventh century of this era the vows of the Templars were made in the presence of Simon, Patriarch of Jerusalem. Towards the eleventh century they are believed to have initiated a considerable number of virtuous crusaders, and it was at this epoch that the medical KNIGHTS OF THE MORNING Fumed the histoncal title of KNIGHTS TEMPLAR.
Their abolition at the beginning of the fourteenth century put an end to their visible existence, but the Order was not destroyed: " it has continued in an unbroken succession but secretly to this day and constitutes a Grade of the Elect.,' Its object is said to be defined in a verse of the Psalmist which is cited by one of its adepts: " I will bless the Lord at all times; His praise shall be ever in my mouth.,, A sentence from the pledge of the chivalry is cited also as defining its will and purpose: " I will ever Fist the poor and regard them as my Brethren."
Knights of the Temple.
_On the faith of ti unknown witness, summarising the traditional history of a Templar Grade early in the nineteenth century, the KNIGHTS OF THE MORNING, who appear under such mystenous veils in L lSTOILE FLAMBOYANCE_as if by way of a commentary on that document_ are explained to be the Knights of the Temple.
Ritual of the Grade
_In the Ceremony of Admission as revised by Albert Pike the Candidate demands the Perfection of Masonry, which he is not supposed to receive under all obediences exccept in the Grade of ROSE(XOIX, though he is destined to travel much further if he is to attain the completion of his experience. He desires also to continue his research into the Mystery of that Sacred Word about which he had heard and seen in the ROYAL ARCH OF ENOCH, as one who stands upon the threshold. He is made subject to a munute searching in respect of all previous Degrees and to a Masonic examination of conscience. Lie is pledged and anointed with oil, which is testified in the symbolism to be that used in the consecration of Aaron, and this is followed by a ceremonial observance of the Eucharistic kind_according to ancient custom, as it is said in the usual ineffectual fonnula of procedure. But in respect of the Sacred Word he is told that it is essentially ineffable, as it is spoken only in the heart. In the heart therefore he shall preserve the Sacred Mysteries of Masonry, and in his heart shall the Word be graven. So will he learn how to live in the immediate presence of the Grand Architect of the Universe, Whom it is prayed that his eyes may behold face to face. The lesson of the Grade is in reality that he has been upon a false quest in respect of the Word, but the mind of Pike was confused, and he missed the opportunity of enforcing this conclusion, so that it remains as a matter of inference.
GRAND ARCHITECT
Master Architect.
GRAND ARCHITECT Whether operative or speculative, it should be remembered that the Mason as such n C~"ntarius and not architect. His elevation from the one to the other rank is of course a conceivable proposition in both Orders of the Craft. We have seen that the so called Degree of ARCHITECT in the system of the EARLY GRAND SCOTTISH RITE is memorial in character and has no connection with building or plans for building, material or spiritual, in the heart or with the hand on earth. It is followed by the GRADE OF GRAND ARCHITECT, a mere vestige in the form under which it is presented, yet having a dramatic moment and a symbolic notion behind it, as exhibited by the following Summary:
(I) At the beginning of the procedure all work on the Temple has been brought practically to a standstill, for the want of a Master-Builder has put an end to the production of plans.
(2) The fact is proclahned, and the Master Architects are called upon to testify whether one of them is in possession of a design or has heard of a brother who can supply the deficiency anywhere in the ranlcs without.
(3) It is announced presently that Bro. ..Moabon is at the door of the Lodge, having a scheme for " the second elevation.',
(4) Here is the signal for the Candidate,s entrance with plans to submit for approval, which are examined and ratified in due course.
(5) In this manner Bro...Moabon is judged worthy to be acknowledged as a Master Architect, and after being pledged_to tWe his seat among his peers.

Master Architect.
_The proper title of this Degree is obviously MASTER ARCHITECT. The superior designation is reproduced in various Rites and Collections as GRAND or GRAND MASTER ARCHIITECT. It is found in the ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE, in that of MIZRAÏM and in the ELECT PRIESTHOOD of Pasqually. It is also in the Peuarret collection and in that of the METROPOLITAN CHAPTER OF FRANCE.
GRAND GRADE ECOSSAIS
An Ineffable Degree.
I know this only in a detached follsl, as I have found it in an old French manuscript; but it appears to belong to a series, having ENGLISH MASTER or Favourite behind it_this being the Candidate,s qualification and one of the multitudinous Grades of Knight or Prince of the East in front, as a SOVEREIGN GRAND LODGE under this title is the ultimate Court of Appeal, to which blind obedience must be rendered. The Statutes and Rules of the Worshipful Scottish Masters are formulated in twelve articles, which embody the usual clam to superionty and precedence over order Lodges of the Craft. Unfortunately for these magnificent pretensions, the Grand Grade is the last and most negligible of Masonic simulacra. The Master and Wardens personate Solomon, King of Israel, Hz.am, King of Tyre and Manon, bong the name of that favorite who_according to the English Master_was appointed in succession to the Builder, after his untimely death. The name is affirmed to stuffy Master of Masters and servant of the Grand Master. Nothing, however, is said, and there is nothing done to connect the officers with the Grand Originals whom they represent. There is simply the introduction of the Candidate, who is pledged, instructed and clothed; after which a Catechism is recited, which retraces the foolish historical episode of ENGLISH MASTER and refers to the picsc do rcsistansc of the GRADE ÉCOSSAIS, being a Tracing-Board or Transparency, representing St. John the Bapust baptizing on the banks of the Jordan, having the Sun and Moon as spectators at either foot of a rainbow, while the Ark of the Covenant, the Brazen Sea, and the Altar of Incense are very naturally grouped about him. Add to this that the histoncal anachronism is purposeless, even within its own measures, for nothing follows on the introduction of the Precursor, unless it be the explanation that the twelve oxen supporting the Brazen Sea represent the Twelve Tnbes of Israel, according to the Old Law, and the Twelve Apostles in the New. There is also a circle, to signify the omnipotence of the Most High, and within it is the Great Light, otherwise the Triangle of Perfection; but this betokens the grandeur of :S:cossais Masons, who are built about by Truth. Those who in such a connection might ask_What is Truth ?_ would do well to leave the Lodge of the GRAND GRADE SCOSSAIS without waiting for an answer. Compare ÉCOSSAIS MASONRY.
An Ineffable Degree._There are no particulars of this IneffiKe Degree, and there is no authonty concerning it except the old French manuscript already mentioned and entitled GRAND GRADE D’ÉCOSSAIS: it has a name therefore but no local habitation..
GRAND lNSPECTOR
A French Version.
The Recension of Pike.
Procedure in this Version.
GRAND INSPECTOR The makers of colossal Rites in Masonry have too often forgotten or failed to fulfil an old counsel concerning development from small beginnings to greater ends. The Ceremony of ROSE-CROIX is the pearl within the wide circle of the SCOTTISH RITE, but it is only the Eighteenth Degree. That of KADOSH bears no comparison with this, though it may not be without cl~s, as it is worked in certain SUPREME COUNCILS. rhe Thirty-first Degree has the intimidating title of GRAND INSPECTOR INQUISITOR COMMANDER, as if it had been sensated by the Holy Office, and there are ample matenals for a judgment on the claims of the Ritual under several independent obediences. I have intimated others my view that most additional Grades superposed on the RITE OF PERFECTION when it was transformed into the SCOTTISH RITE were drawn from anterior sources and not invented at Charleston. The Thirty-first Degree recalls by its title the Seventh and culminating Grade of the SCOSSAIS PHILOSOPHICAL RITE under the title of INSPECTOR COMMANDER, which is found also in the collection of the METROPOLITAN CHAPTER OF FRANCE. It was probably drawn therefrom, and this has been suggested by Woodford, but in terms of certitude which he was not entitled to use, as the name only is in evidence.
A French Version.
Under the tp of the SUPREME COUNCIL OF FRANCE there is no ceremonial procedure and no pretence of a traditional history, but a Grand Inspector or Liqliisitor testifies that he is not a Knight of Malta, which is more than presumptive endence that the Grade was originally Templar. This is otherwise probable as it follows the KADOSH immediately. His duties are
(I) to strive for the removal of abuses;
(2) to see that Masonic Laws are not contravened;
(3) to watch over Brethren of all Grades, lest the) neglect the duties imposed on them and_with characteristically illogical ineptitude_
(4) to examine Candidates for the Thirty-second Degree, being PRINCE OF THE ROYAL SECRET, which is not Used by the examiner and about which_technically and officially_he can therefore know nothing.
The Recension of Pike.
_In the recension of Albert Pike an elaborate and not unsuccessful attempt has been made to vindicate the claims of the Degree as a Supreme Masonic Tribunal and the obvious inconsistencies are removed; but the real government of the Rite is in the hands of its SUPREME COUNCIL, from which it follows that the whole position is illogical, that the alleged Tribunal neither is nor can be supreme and that its true status corresponds to the indications of the French form_apart from the final clause.specified above_ as competent only to the trial of minor causes: it is in fact conventional and pro forma. One is thus able to estimate the real value of the ceremonial affirmation that it is the Holy Sanctuary of Eternal Masonic Justice and Equity.
Procedure in this Version.
_In the course of his advancement the Candidate is taken from Pillar to Pillar and is brought before vanous Officers who personate great lawgivers of the past. Alfred the Great testifies that he caused just and speedy judgment to be given and that he reigned only to bless those over whom his dominion extended; Socrates states that when he sat in the Court of the Areopagus he swore to give sentence upnghtly, receiving neither gifts nor bnbes; Confucius read and interpreted the great laws engraved by the finger of God upon the Book of Nature; Minos taught the Cretans that the laws enacted by himself were those of Zeus, because righteous human justice is a reflection of that which is eternal; Zoroaster does not testify especially concerning himself, but lays down that the evil intentions of the cnminal are the true measure of cnme and not the events which follow it; Moses quotes some of his own sayings, affirms that he was initiated into the Mysteries and Wisdom of ancient Egypt and that this wisdom dictated those statutes by which he governed Israel. It must be said that the general impression of the several utterances and their applications impressed on the Candidate are precisely analogous to those produced by the trance orations of mediums when under the alleged control of great teachers of the past. The matter and manner correspond obviously to the mental and ethical measures of Albert Pike, on whom there never fell " the spark from heaven." The fact is illustrated further by the wilderness of lucubration which follows in discourses delivered by the Most Perfect President and by another Officer, who bet the title of Advocate. Their only point is one which elicits the general daim of the Grade, being
(I) that it was established for the maintenance of principles and regularity in Masonic forms;
(2) that it is charged with the duty of visiting and inspecting work in the various Lodges and Chapters under the obedience of the Rite;
(3) that it supennses selection of Candidates and has the care of Ritual observance in the Higher Degrees; and finally, as something added at a later period,
(4) that it gives judgment on differences between Brethren and on offenses against Masonic Law. To what extent these minor powers are exercised in the Northern or Southern Jurisdictions of the SCOTTISH RITE I arn not in a position to speak; but it is certain that the Grand Inquisitors Can act only as delegates of their SUPREME COUNCIL, to whom appeal must also be possible.
There’s no such delegation of powers by the SUPREME COUNCIL of England and Wales, while on the continent of Europe it is doubtful whether the Grade of GRAND INSPECTOR is conferred except proformA or that it has any activity at all.
GRAND LODGE
The circumstances attending that ever-memorable meeting of four London Lodges at the ApplbTree Tavern in 17I7, and the great train of its consequences, have been recited times without number. The most recent and in several respects the best account by far is that of Mr. A. F. Calvert, in his HISTORY OF THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND, I9I6, to which I refer my readers. It is reasonably exhaustive, impartial and lies within the strict measures of its proper issues. There was no convocation ever held with less pretence of importance than that of the Apple-Tree Tavern; there was no epoch-nuaking meeting in which the parties concerned were less conscious that they were originating a mighty movement, were setting a force in motion which hereafter was to fill the world. It was felt that Freemasonry had almost fallen into desuetude and that the practice of its immemorial customs was passing rapidly out of mind. The old Masons might have said with Matthew Arnold that " the end is everywhere." That on which they resolved, however, was to establish a governing or GRAND LODGE for the purpose of saving the situation, so that the life of a head might save the body from decay; and a GRAND LODGE was founded, not indeed at that meeting but at another which followed promptly. I ant not concerned with elaborating the familiar facts more than is aL)solutely essential: a comprehensive review of the subject is the main purpose in mind, and it must begin with things antecedent to tile event which has made an obscure house of call in Covent Garden a building of immortal memory.
Decay of Operative Lodges._About the decay of Freemasonry itself there seems no question whatever. M. Viollet le Duc says that after the fourteenth century the architect lost his importance, the reason assigned by I;ergusson being that every kind of tradesman had his share in the work at that period, or_in other words_that increasing specialization produced many experts in as many branches. But according to Gould the art at large of Masonry had passed its meridian in the sixteenth century and remained a shadow of itself till the end of the seventeenth. He gives specific reasons in respect of the two dates, being
(I) in respect of the earlier, that the building of monasteries had given place to castles, manors, colleges, schools and hospitals, putting an end in this manner to the exclusive monopoly of the Church; and
(2) as regards the later, that the builders almost died out after the Reformation. There was nothing that remained to be done for the glory of God, except to destroy or deface the great works of art u hich had been produced in His Name. By the end of the seventeenth century the Operative Lodges had lost much of their rasson d,dtrc; they had adopted, moreover, the custom of admitting persons not belonging to the trades, and it would appear that such honorary members outnumbered not infrequently the real craftsmen. We have every reason to know that this was no isolated practice peculiar to the Building Guild, and that in the words of Sir Henry S. Maine every trade company was transformed or transmuted and has long since relinquished " the occupation which gave it a name.,, I have not taken the history of all Liveries and Guilds as my province, but it is correct to say that the transformations in question were gradual and that with one exception it is difficult or impossible to put a finger on the precise date when the conversion could be called complete. This exception is Masonry, and the date is I7I7.
Non-Operatve Masons._It seems obvious that such mlscellaneous association could have no welding interest in common, and the Lodges naturally suffered, to the South at least of the Tweed. What Mr. D. Murray Lyon has teamed " the grafting of the non-professional element on to the stem of the Operative system ,, originated in Scotland and_in his opinion_" about the penod of the Reforrnation." The earliest instance on record belongs, however, to June 8, I600, when James Boswell, Laird of Auchinleck, was received into the LODGE OF EDINBURGH, as its Minutes testify. The same archives appear also to provide us with the first example in England, for they certify the admission of Sir Robert Moray at Newcastle on May 20, I64I, Gould making the happy conjecture that members of the EDINBURGH LODGE accompanied the forces of the Covenanters to that city, and that " it was at the hands of these militant Craftsmen ,, that he who was General Quartermaster to the army of Scotland received the benefit of initiation. A more satisfactory case is obviously that of an Englishman " made ,, in England: it belongs to the year I646 and has been dealt with already under the name of Elias Ashmole. I refer to it here because in March, I682, or after the lapse of thirtyfive years, there is a second note in his DIARY, according to which he was summoned to a Lodge at Masons, Hall, London, and attended a meeting, as it would seem, for the second time in his life. If this inference from silence is correct, if also it was a general state of things at that period among " Gentlemen Masons," and if there was little more to bind the Operative section together, it was high time in I7I7 to convene the meeting at the Apple-Tree Tavern.
Operative or Speculative. -Our next question is concerned with the kind of Masonry which it was proposed to set in order. We have seen elsewhere that Old Charges and Constitutions are without trace of any speculative element in the modern understanding of the term. It is true that Gould in his CONCISE HISTORY does not {ail to mention it as radiating to all parts from North and South Bntain, being something that had originated during the splendour of medieval Operative days; but his dicta on the subject are worthless and are characterized by the vicious habit of calling non-operative Masons speculative instead of theoretical or honorary members. For the rest, he puts forward " the solemn declaration ,' of a Scottish Presbyterian Synod in 1652 that " ministers of this persuasion ', had been Freemasons in the poorest times of the kirk, as indicating that " Speculative or Symbolical Masonry,' flounshed side by side with the Operative. What it proves is mixed membership, of which we have seen that there are examples much earlier; but in the absence of all other evidence to say that such membership suggests, implies or involves the existence of Emblematic Masonry is to talk nonsense.
The Masons' Company._Gould reaches no finder ground in discussing the MASONS' COMPANY of London, as he has done on several occasions at a certain length. In the opinion of Mr. Edward Conder, this institution may be referred to about I220, though the earliest notice of Masons as one of the City Guilds occurs in a list of Companies entitled to send representatives to the Common Council, and this document is dated in August, I376. In I472 the London Company was described as " the Hole Crafte and Felowship of Masons ,,; by I537 it had become the Company of Freemasons; and in I655-56 it assumed the title of Worshipful Company of Masons of London. On the basis of an old book of accounts, found among the archives consulted by Mr. Conder, it can be shewn that " certain Brethren who were members of the Company, in conjunction, it is supposed, with others who were not, met at a Lodge in Masons' Hall " and " were known to the Company as the Accepted Masons." This was in I620 2I. Those who belonged to the Acception were not for such reason members of the Company, and vsce versa, as evidenced in the case of Nicholas Stone, " the King,s Master Mason,,' who " was not enrolled among the Accepted Masons of the Lodge until I639," though he had been twice Master of the Company. Most of the Company,s records were destroyed, I believe, in the Great Fire of London, including those of the Acception, if any existed. There are, however, two inventones, of the years I665 and I676 respectively, the former including a list of the Lodge Members and the latter the Book of their CONSTITUTIONS. Apparently there is no separate list of those who were freemen of the Company. I have put every point of the evidence fully and without prejudice, but nothing follows therefrom, except that the institution was Operative at the dates under notice, as indicated by the Master whom I have mentioned, which notwithstanding there was a Lodge of mixed membership attached to it. The income accniing from this was paid into the funds of the Company. Mr. Conder says, citing the book of accounts, that its freemen paid 20S. " for coming on the Acception,,, whereas strangers paid double. Later on there are references to the Lodge in the Minutes of the Company, the last belonging to the year I677. But from the wording of Ashmole's DIARY it seems certain that the Meeting which he attended in I682 was one of a Lodge of Accepted Masons. It follows that we have excellent evidence of Craftsmen and non-Craftsmen meeting together within the walls of the Masons' Company of London and under their auspices, but of Emblematic or Speculative Masonry, " veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols,,' we have no evidence at all. It may be added that there were Masons, Companies in various English cities and at Edinburgh.
Issues of Modern Research_Before finishing with Masonry prior to the GRAND LODGE period, it is desirable to put on record certain findings of research which are designed to reduce the elements of old romance in its history. The authonties are Street and Gould, the latter especially having done sane and good work in this connection. The findings may be summarised as follows:
(I) There is no evidence forthcoming from any statute of the Realm or other authentic record that Freemasons_" as a Fraternity or Guild,,- ys®si any exclusive privileges in England at any penod whatever.
(2) There is no evidence that continental Freemasons were warranted by Papal Bulls to go at their will over Europe, for the purpose of building churches: stones to this effect were challenged even by Ashmole ill the seventeenth century.
(3) The old story concerning Colleges of Masons founded in various countries may be dismissed as " chimencal,,, and so also that of the Comacines, which originated with Hope in I835.
(4) The common belief in ubiquitous bodies of touring Free masons is " altogether erroneous," but it is obvious that they travelled within certain limits, wherever they heard of work in their own land.
(5) There Is no evidence that companies of Masons passed from land to land and kingdom to kingdom for the erection of sacred edifices and royal palaces: a cloud of traditional histones and mythical hypotheses dissolves under this test.
(6) The Building Guilds were ordinary medieval Guilds.
Among findings whidh reman open to debate are
(I) the alleged exaggeration of monastic influence on architecture and
(2) the view which has been fathered on Christopher Wren_that what is called Gothic architecture arose through the influence of the Saracenic style on Crusaders.
They do not belong to our subject, for our concern is Emblematic Freemasonry Ed not the Building Art; but generations of misconception mWe it needful to turn away at times from the real issues.
The Grand Lodge Heritage.- After a due consideration of all these facts and points, it would appear that there came into the hands of the GRAND LODGE of I7I7 the remnants of a Society in and about London which had lost its raison d,Fre as a Trade Guild, which no longer consisted exclusively or even generally of persons belonging to the building trade, but which continued to meet in various Lodges and to transact some kind of formal business, including the admission of fresh persons within their ranks. When the business was over there followed a meal in common. It will be seen that on the surface at least the heritage committed into the hands of the GRAND LODGE was not a little like the dry bones of Ezekiel,s Vision, and that unless they could be raised by a word of life passing over them the experiment of the Apple-Tree Tavern was likely to prove abortive. The living element was supplied in my view by the group of lsGcrats who were gathered within the walls of the first GRAND LODGE; but not at the beginning of things. Besides the proposition " to cement under a Grand Master as the centre of union and harmony," it was resolved
(I) to revive the Quarterly Communications,
(2) " to hold the Annual Assembly and Feast.', Of an Annual or Triennial Assembly we hear very often in the Old Charges, including the Regius and Cooke Codices and the Roberts group of MSS. But of anything corresponding to quarterly communications I can remember only the Charter granted by the Bishop of Durham on April 24, I67I, whereby vanous crafts were constituted into a Community, Fellowship and Company, and were enjoined to meet on the Feast of St. John Baptist, the Feast of St. Michael the Archangel, St. John's Day in Christeninas and the with day of March in every year. It is well known, moreover, that there is no trace of the proposed revival in the first BOOK OF CONSTITUTIONS, and as a fact quarterly communications find no place in the records till St. John the Evangelist,s Day in I720.
Creation of Grand Lodge._The first Minutes of GRAND LODGE are dated June 24, I723, and the sole record of the early proceedings was inserted by James Anderson in his second BOOK OF CONSTITU_ TIONS, published in I738, or more than twenty years after the chief event. He tells us (I) that " the few Lodges at London ,, thought fit, as we have seen, " to cement under a Grand Master ,,;
(2) that these Lodges met
-(a) at the Goose and Gridiron Ale-House in St. Paul's Churchyard,
-(b) at the Crown Ale-House in Parker,s Lane,
-(c) at the Apple-Tree Tavern in Charles Street, Covent Garden, and
-(d) at the Rummer and Grapes Tavern in Channel Row, Westminster;
(3) that there were further " some old Brothers,,' in addition to the members _few or many_of these Lodges;
(4) that in Febmary, I7I7, they put the oldest Master Mason into the Chair;
(5) that they constituted themselves a GRAND LODGE pro tempore;
(6) that they decided to hold the Quarterly Communications and the Annual Assembly, at which they would choose a Grand Master from among themselves, " till they should have the honour of a noble Brother at their head; ',
(7) that accordingly on St. John Baptist's Day, being June 24 of the same year, they elected Antony Sayer, Gentleman, Grand Master of Masons, Jacob Lamball, a carpenter, and Captain Joseph Elliott being appointed Grand Wardens;
(8) that the Grand Master commanded the Masters and Wardens of Lodges " to meet the Grand Officers every quarter in communication," at the place appointed in his Summons. Such, in summary form, are the Minutes of the first GRAND LODGE Meeting and of that which led thereto.
It is obvious that four London Lodges had no power to appoint " a Grand Master of Masons," considering that Masonry was spread over Great Britain, Scotland and existed also in Ireland. They could act only for themselves. It is probable, however, that the title was a subsequent invention, making in I73~when the face of things had changed very much_a more extended claim on jurisdiction. We may dismiss also the question of quarterly communications, as according to Anderson's own showing they do not seem to have been held till much later: the rule concerning them is presumably antedated. When the maker of the BOOK OF CONSTITUTIONS is unsupported by evidence outside his own, it is prudent to infer that he was dreaming.
A Conflagration of Archives._The chronological record of Anderson continues to the year I723, at which penod GRAND LODGE thought fit, as we have seen, to begin keeping Minutes. The notion of its original importance may be gauged by the previous omission. The succession of Grand Masters is given and there is information on matters connected therewith. Among things extrinsic to this, there is a note under I720 that in this year certain " private Lodges," i.e. not under the jurisdiction of GRAND LODGE_burnt their " Regulations, Charges, Secrets and Usages,', lest they might " fall into strange hands." There must have been an understanding in common leading to the concurrent act, and as there were no enemies_real or supposed _without the gates at the period, it must be concluded that they were thought to be within. I do not wish to be invidious where there is no ground of certitude, but the destruction may have been actuated by hostility to the new GRAND LODGE, which was on the quest of old memorials, and was unwelcome in several quarters.
The Order to Anderson. The desire for a " noble Brother,, at the head of affairs was gratified in I721 by the installation of the Duke of Montague, and on September 29 of that year Anderson was ordered to " digest ', the old " Gothic Constitutions ,, in " a new and better method,,, which work being finished " fourteen learned Brothers ,' were appointed on December 27 to examine the MS. and report thereon. Their report was presented and their approval signified on March 25, I722. Thereupon the Grand Master, at the request of the Lodge, ordered the MS. to be printed. It appears on other authority that this order was ratified by the signatures of twenty-four representatives of Lodges. As a typical anomaly of the period, the ownership of the BOOK OF CONSTITUTIONS remained with Anderson as his sole property. I pass now to the last notable point in the belated records.
The Chair of Grand Master._Regarding the proclamation of Montague, four years after GRAND LODGE Was created, it is said for the first time that he was installed " in Solomon,s Chair,, and that Dr. John Beal was installed thereafter " in Hiram Abif,s Chair on the Grand Master's left hand.,' The absence of these formularies from the installations of I7I7, I7I8, I7I9 and I720 are, in my view, pregnant with significance, while their sudden introduction in I72I is a silent indication of a great change which is commemorated in no Minutes and no other records.
Craft Expansion._In respect finally of the Anderson chronology, it is stated that on the installation of Montague, Philip Lord Stanhope _afterwards Earl of Chesterfield_was made a Mason and that during the reign of his successor, the Duke of Wharton, " many noblemen and gentlemen of the first rank desired to be admitted into the Fraternity, besides other learned men.,' There is evidence also that still earlier than the the Roll of membership included the Duke of Queensboro', Lord Dumbarton and Lord Dalkeith, not to speak of Wharton himself. It has been said in new of these facts but more especially on the accession of Montague that the Masonic Society " rose at one bound into notice and esteem.,' Previous GRAND LODGE doings, according to Gould, evoked no notice in contemporary writings or newspapers. The point is borne out cunousiy by the DIARY of Dr. William Stukeley, who affirms, under date of January 6, I72I_or prior to the accession in question
(I) that he was made a Freemason at the Salutation Tavern, Tavistock Street;
(2) that he was the first person so made in London " for many years ,,;
(3) that great difficulty was expenenced in finding members enough to perform the ceremony; but (4) that " immediately upon that it took a run, and ran itself out through the folly of its members.,,
The DIARY, which is in private hands, has not been printed Ed is not available for consultation, but it seems obvious that the date mentioned refers to the initiation of Stukeley, the other points being drawn from a later entry. Alternatively, he also wrote up his notes from memory, a considerable time after.
Book of Constitiution_The internal history of the document has been certified as follows by Gould and other writers:
(I) The dedicatory Preface was the work of Desaguliers;
(2) The New Regulations were drafted by George Payne and were agreed by GRAND LODGE in I720;
(3) the Constitution and History, described as collected from general records and faithful traditions, was the compilation of Anderson, in accordance with his order to " digest,,, as were also the Charges of a Freemason and the Manner of Constituting a New Lodge, for which last there is no old authonty. Gould tells us that the Boox OF CONSTITUTIONS and its author were openly derided in many publications, while there was otherwise marked resentment, owing to the innovations of Anderson and the new GRAND LODGE. It was the culmination of a hostility to which I have adverted previously and which had grown from more to more during a period of six years. The most universal of the old charges was " to be true to God and the Holy Church"; but the Church was now relegated to the region of " particular opinions ,, and placed on a par with the synagogue, the free thought of Deism and the general horde of sects. The hands of a Scotch Presbytenan and a French Huguenot were seen presumably therein, and those who understood the clause in the Apostles, Creed concerning the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church either in the sense of Rome or Canterbury would be alike offended. There would be those also who objected on the general ground that Masonry was a Christian Institution, outside all question of Churches. The resentment signified, however, much that was over and above any matter of official religion, and one must beware of regarding that which is most vital to oneself as the chief operating factor. Gould speaks of the terms ENTERED APPRENTICE and FELLOW CRAFT being imposed by the BOOK OF CONSTITUTIONS on English Masons and suggests that it was a ground of irritation. These compounds were brought over by D"aguliers from Scotland, business having called him to Edinburgh in the summer of I7ZI. There is something no doubt in the contention, but a grievance of this kind could have played only a small part. Finally, the CONSTITUTIONS forbade the working of what was termed the " MASTER,S PART ,, in pnvate Lodges, by which part Gould understands the old manner of receiving or passing a Fellow. There can be no doubt that this would be opposed with all the strength of_at least_the independent Lodges, for it struck at their liberties and removed a right which they had possessed, by the hypothesis, from immemorial time. But Gould does not observe that this ordinance is the key to a much graver situation. It was one among many moves of the GRAND LODGE in the direction of despotic self-aggrandisement. It has been held that its jurisdiction was limited originally to the cities of London and Westminster, but the CONSTITUTIONS virtually extended it over all England. We shall see shortly how one ancient seat of Masonry in NorthernEngland regarded this arrogation; meanwhile it is certain that within the metropolitan limits just mentioned there were Lodges and individual Masons who looked upon the proceedings of the Apple-Tree Tavern and Goose and Gridiron as ultra sires. This is as much as can be said in the present place on a very wide subject, and it is of course understood that many great movements begin in an irregular manner, having the seal of heresy upon them, but they become orthodox in the effluxion of time, more especially if they happen to succeed. Old Operative Grades._The reference to a MASTER S PART " opens another subject. No person at the present day whose opinion is entitled to a hearing would affirm that the three Symbolical Degrees, as now worked among us, antedate the year I7I7: against that possibility the canons of literary criticism haore some time since pronounced. The debate continues on the antiquity of their root matter, with a tendency_as it would seem_to leave that of the Third Degree in a suspension out of consideration, since no one knows where to look for light thereon_within Masonic limits. In I862 Findel affirmed that there was " but one Degree of initiation in I7I7.,, On the other hand, the General Regulations said to have been compiled by George Payne in I720 and printed in the BOOK OF CON_ STITUTIONS, I723, provide that APPRENTICES were only to be " admitted MASTERS and FELLOW CRAFr in the GRAND LODGE, " unless by dispensation.,, The date I720 is that given by Anderson, but according to Stukeley,s DIARY " a new set of articles,,, which must have been the General Regulations, were read over by Payne at GRAND LODGE on June 24, I72I, though there is no record of the fact in Anderson,s Minutes. The reference to FELLOW CRAFT shews almost certainly that the provision under notice was drawn up after his visit to Edinburgh in August, I72I, or that it was altered subsequently. However this may be, Gould and others understand the words " MASTERS and FELLOW CRAFT , as alternative titles of one Degree, making with that of ENTERED APPRENTICE two Degrees of Masonry in I723. There are several points of evidence in favour of this view, but they cannot be cited here. The next question is What eras this sbcalled MASTER S PART, MASTERS or FELLOW CRAFT DEGREE ? According to Gould, it was some form of our present Third Degree, for which he produces no evidence whatever. In the opinion of others it corresponded to our Second or Pass Degree, and we hear of Brethren being " regularly passed Masters.', My own opinion is that in the year I723 the Three Degrees of " pure and ancient Freemasonry,, were actually in the making and that the Legend of Hiram Abif had been either discovered or invented. In the former case it came from North Britain, a question which remains for our consideration in connection with York and Scotland. So far as all evidence goes, there was nothing whatever in the South. We have to remember in this connection that on August 25, I78I, Theophilus Desaguliers witnessed at MARY'S CHAPEL how certain " honourable persons were admitted and received ENTERED APPRENTICES and FELLOW CRAFrS " in that ancient Lodge. It is probable that he brought something away, and in the opinion of D. Murray Lyon he took something with him, namely, " the Ritual which he was anxious to introduce.,, In this manner Lyon accounts for the subsequent adoption by Scotland of " English Symbolical Masonry.', It is of course mere speculation to say that he carried a Ritual; but if he did, then in my opinion it would be that of two Degrees, in the likeness of our First and Second. Speaking not less tentatively, I am disposed to infer that the Third Degree was manufactured in London between I723 and I732_›mbodying whatever archaic matenals may have been in the hands of the makers. A letter pnnted in the GRAND MYSTERY OF THE FREEMASONS DISCOVER D, 2nd edition, October, I724, embodies a reference to " two unhappy busy persons who were Masons ,' and who " obtruded their idle notions among the vulgar Chinese, of Adam and Solomon and Hiram." By the Chinese are understood the rank and file of Masons, while the busy persons are identified with Anderson and Driers. Prichard's M^so~aY DISSECTED speaks of Three Steps or Degrees; in I732 Lodge No. 83 was working Three Degrees; and in I738 the second BOOK OF CON_ STITUTIONS alters Payne,s Regulation XIII to " Apprentices must be admitted FELLOW CRAFTS and MASTERS OnlY here, while shewng that it was repealed in I725. It remap to be stated that the Operative Titles of ENTERED APPRENTICE, FELLOW CRAFT and MASTER MASON are found in the Schaw Statutes of I598, shewing that they were extant in Scotland at that period. There are other early traces of these denominations but whether they stood for distinct steps, having procedure and official secrets attached thereto, IS a very different question. It should be understood that I have no thesis to maintain for the increase or reduction of Operative steps: my concern is that the GRAND LODGE of London produced three elaborate Symbolical Degrees during the first fifteen years of its existence, that they were couched in the language and represented the notions of their penod, and that we have yet to find their root-matter elsewhere in the Masonic world of antiquity. On the other hand, there is full evidence to shew that the old mode of making a Mason at MOTHER KILWINNING was one of uttennost simplicity, while at York people were " sworn and admitted.', The Schaw Statutes speak of a " great oath ,, and also of an " oath of fidelity ,, which was renewed annually. The qualification for passing from the status of ENTERED APPRENTICE to that of FELLOW CRAFT and (or) MASTER WaS attained in a trial of skill, success in which seems to have conferred the new status and not a ceremonial advancement. In fine, as regards official secrets, Gould has shewn conclusively that Scotland knew only of one " Master Word." The keyZistinctions therefore between Scottish Operative Masonry and Emblematic or Symbolical Freemasonry as developed by the GRAND LODGE is that the one possessed the Word while the other commemorates its loss.
Divisions and Feuds._The later history of GRAND LODGE must be dismissed in a few words. In the year I726 the old Lodge at York began to assume the title of GRAND LODGE OF ALL ENGLAND, on the authority of its legend that in A.D. 600 Edwin, " the first Christian King of the Northumbrians,,, had " sat as Grand Master therein,,' and though often in a state of inactivity it appears to harre continued till I740 or I750. It was revived again when the GRAND LODGE in the South invaded its temtory, i.e. in I76I, and continued till about I792, or a few years later. In I75I a " schismatic ,, GRAND LODGE Was formed in London under the title of " GRAND LODGE OF ENG>ND, according to the Old Institutions.,' Laurence Dermott was appointed Grand Secretary in the year following, he having seceded from the other jurisdiction. I do not know that the last word bas been said on the subject; but the disposition of the present time is to accept the evidence and arguments produced by Henry Sadler, according to which the new organisation was established by Irish Masons in London. It has been attributed otherwise
(I) to lethargy and supineness on the part of " the constitutional Grand Body,';
(2) to the transposition of certain official words for a certain specific reason which was adopted by the recognised GRAND LODGE;
(3) to other innovations;
(4) to the presence of a general innovating spirit which tended to remove all ancient vestiges; and
(5) to what Gould tenns " the summary erasure of Lodges at the Quarterly Communications ,, for not " paying in their chaIity.,, Over and above all perhaps, it is suggested that the Irish Masons had the matter of the ROYAL ARCH, or alternatively that this had been derived from York. It is certain that the new GRAND LODGE identified itself with York Mascnry and it conferred also on its members the title of Ancients as a distinction from those of the authorised GRAND LODGE, whom it termed Modern. Its daims were recognised by the Supreme Obediences of Scotland and Ireland, while owing to the successful administration of Dennott and the conspicuous success of his AHIMAN REZON its influence was extended into the continent of i:urope, the British Colonies and America. This is as much as can be said upon the subject in the present place. There came a time fortunately when both parties were anxious to heal the breach, in the course of which process it is a matter of history that the older GRAND LODGE made a surrender which has been called " unconditional ,' and almost deserves the epithet, In more desirable language it had come to see that the alternative orthodoxy had won its way to very full recognition and was in the right over several things. The way of reunion was paved by a LODGE OF PROMULGATION. The Duke of Sussex became Grand Master of the original GRAND LODGE Lo May, I9I3; the Duke of Kent took the chair of the Ancient GRAND LODGE on December I; and on the Day of St. John the Evangelist in the same month " the Freemasons of Englandvwere reunited in a single society,', the Duke of Sussex becoming Grand Master of the U NITED GRAND LODGE on the motion of the Duke of Kent.
Grand Masters.
_The succession of Grand Masters can be seen in any Masonic Calendar, but presumably must be given here for the sake of completeness:
(I) Anthony Sayer, I7I7;
(2) George Payne, I7I8;
(3) J. T. Desaguliers, I7I9;
(4) George Payne, I720;
(5) John, Duke of Montague, I72I;
(6) Philip, Duke of Wharton, I722;
(7) Francis Scott, Earl of Dalkeith, I723;
(8) Charles Lenox, Duke of Richmond, I724;
(9) James Hamilton, Lord Paisley, I725;
(IO) Wiliam O Brien, Earl of Inchiquin, I726;
(II) Henry Hare, Lord Coleraine, I727;
(I2) James King, Lord Kingston, I728;
(I3) Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk, I72t30;
(I4) Thomas Coke, Lord Lovel, I73I;
(I5) Anthony Brown, Viscount Montague, I732 ;
(I6) James Lyon, Earl of Strathmore;
(I7) John Lindsay, Earl of Crawford;
(I8) Thomas Thynne, Viscount Weymouth, I73S;
(I9) John Campbell, Earl of Loudoun, I736;
(20) Edward Bligh, Earl of Damley, I737;
(2I) Henry Bridges, Marques of Carnarvon, I738;
(22) Robert, Lord Raynnond, I739;
(23) John Keith, Earl of Kintore, I740;
(24) James Douglas, Earl of Morton, I74I;
(25) John, Vacount Dudley, I742-43;
(26) Thomas Lyon, Earl of Strathmore, I744;
(27) James, Lord Cranstoun, I745-46;
(28) William, Lord Byron, I747-5I;
(29) John Proby, Lord Carysfort, I752-53;
(30) Jannes Bridges, Marquess of Carnarvon, I754-56;
(3I) Sholto Douglas, Lord Aberdour, I757-6I;
(32) Washington Shirley, Earl Ferrers, I762 4 3;
(33) Cadwallader, Lord Blarney, I764_66;
(34) Henry Somerset, Duke of Beaufort, I767 1 I;
(35) Robert Edward, Lord Petre, I?72<
6;
(36) George Montagu, Duke of Manchester, I7774 2;
(37) H.R.H. Henry Frederick, Duke of Cumberland, I782 go;
(38) H.R.H. The Prince of Wales, afterwards George IV, I790 I8I3;
(39) H.R.H. Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex, I8I3-43;
(40) Earl of Zetland, I844-70;
(4I) Earl de Grey and Ripon, afterwards Marquess of Ripon, I870 74;
(42) H.R.H. The Pnnce of Wales, afterwards Edward VII, I874-I90I;
(43) H.R.H. The Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, K.G.,I90I.
ANCIENT or ATHOLL GRAND LODGE:
(I) The Grand Committee, I75I-53;
(2) Robert Turner, I753;
(3) Hon. Edward Vaughan, I754-55;
(4) Earl of Blessington, I755-59;
(5) Thomas, Earl of Kelly, I760 (6) Hon. Thomas Mathews I765-70;
(7) John, 3rd Duke of AthOll,I77I-74;
(8) John,4thDukeofAtholl,I77s-8r;
(9) William Randal, Earl of Antrim, afterwards Marquess of Antrim, ~783St;
(IO) John, 4th Duke of Atholl, I79I-I8I3;
(II) H.R.H. The Duke of Kent, I8I3. I cannot conceive that it will serve any useful purpose to reproduce the catalogue of mythical Grand Masters inserted by Anderson in his second BOOK OF CONSTITUTIONS, in I738, and extended further by John Entick in a later edition, dated I767. It begins with St. Alban, includes Alfred the Great, St. Edward the Confessor, Gilbert de Clare, a Grand Master of the Templars, Henry VII, Cardinal Wolsey, Inigo Jones, Charles I, Charles II, William III and Sir Christopher Wren. It is agreed on all sides that the CONSTITUTIONS of I738 were a miserable production, too bad even for that uncritical period of Masonic history.
Authorities. As regards points of fact, apart from individual views, the sources of this notice are:
(I) Gould's large HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY, especially the second volume, I887;
(2) Gould s CONCISE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY, I903;
(3) A. F. Calvert s GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND, already cited;
(4) Findel s HISTORY 0E FREEMASONRY;
(5) Fergusson s HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE;
(6) Robert Plot s NATURAL HISTORY OF STAEFORDSHIRE, cap. 3, I686;
(7) D. Murray Lyon s HISTORY OF THE LODGE OF EDINBURGH;
(8) W. J. Hughan s ORIGIN OF THE ENGLISH RITE OF FREEMASONRY, I884;
(9) William Preston s ILLUSTRATIONS OF FREEMASONRY, of which there are several editions, onwards from I772;
(IO) Henry Sadler s MASONIC FACTS AND FICTIONS, I887;
(II) Gould s FOUR OLD LODGES, I879;
(I2) Laurence Dermott s AHIMAN REZON, the polemical introduction to which is of importance for the " schismatic,, point of view and also on the historical side. I have cited the various editions previously. Dermott died in I79I, having been twice Deputy Grand Master of the body whose cause he espoused for a penod of about forty years.

GRAND MASTER ARCHITECT
Points of the Grade.
The French Legend.
GRAND MASTER ARCHITECT The thesis is
(I) that every expenenced Mason has a right to further knowledge;
(2) that to each is the proportionate reward which belongs to his measures of attainment; and
(3) that those who know the origin of things and apply this knowledge to the good of mankind are GRAND MASTER ARCHITECTS, It is the Twelfth Degree Of the scottish RITE and is held to unfold the pnnciples of architecture and the Masonic connections of the " liberal arts.,, According to the traditional history, it was established by Solomon as a school of architecture for the instruction of craftsmen and to animate them with zeal for perfection in the Royal Art. But according to the revision of Albert Pike the attainment of this end was a preparation of those who would approach the Throne of God. The King of Israel is affirmed to have selected such as were already Grand Masters of the workmen, otherwise the SUBLIME ELECTS of the Eleventh Degree in the series of the ScorrIsH RITE, looking towards that time when God would dwell in His Temple and His Name should be revealed therein. This is the plan of the Grade and now as to the mode of its fulfilment.
Points of the Grade.
_The Candidate testifies that he has seen the symbolical circles and beheld the square; that he has distributed justice impartially to all the workmen; that he has penetrated to the inner parts of the Temple; that he knows the mysterious cavern_ being intimations of his experience in earlier Grades of the Rite. He is still on the quest of knowledge, as one who would find a sure path through the darkness and the unknown places. He has not finished with the Temple of Solomon, for he is still Joubert and Solomon is the Master of the Lodge, but in the delirium of the procedure he calls on the Holy Evangelist, meaning St. John, to be with him in the keeping of his pledge. He is a Perfect Master, Intendant of the Building and Sublime Elect, but that which is now offered him as a means of unfolding " the most sublime knowledge " is a case of mathematical instruments, and one of the simplest kind. That which they teach symbolically is
(I) the equilibrium of opposing forces;
(2) the necessity of a distinct plan to precede action;
(3) the fundamental agreement of truth in the particular with truth in the universal state;
(4) the limitations of designs within the due measures of means and time; and
(5) the necessity of a sure beginning ill order to discover truth as well as to act with confidence. The closing Instruction explains that the five Pillars which are part of the furniture of the Lodge not only correspond to the l~ive Orders of Architecture, but that in combination with these they are emblematical of five divisions of the SCOTTISH RITE:
(I) the Tuscan is referable to the Blue Degrees, understood as primitive Masonry;
(2) the Doric corresponds to the Ineffable Degrees, so called, or from the Fourth to the lxourteenth inclusive;
(3) the Ionic belongs to the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Degrees, which are those of the Second Temple;
(4) the Connthian is connected with the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Degrees, which are under the obedience of the New Law; while
(5) the Composite is in analogy with the long series extending from the Nineteenth to the Thirty second Degree, those being in part philosophical and in part Christian.
The French Legend.
_The traditional History is different in the French version, which is of course the original form. It represents the people of Israel overburdened by tributes, the public treasury empty and the labours of the Temple suspended for want of funds. Twelve architects, who are Intendants of the Building, are appointed by the Twelve Tribes and are delegated to provide a practical plan for the unfinished part of the scheme, together with a method of raising funds for the amelioration of the people.
GRAND MASTER OF ALL SYMBOLIC LODGES
Defects and Insufficiencies.
Horizon of the Grade.
GRAND MASTER OF ALL SYMBOLIC LODGES. Few and rare are the moments in which " the shaping spirit of imagination,' comes down on the makers of Masonic Grades; rare is the sense of the sacraments and of the higher life of symbolism; rarest perhaps of all is the light_which is grace_of the eternal and its shining in the offices of time. But ever present, insistent and super-insistent is the ringing of everlasting changes on the counsels of commonplace and the revelation, under solemn pledges, of the things that all men know. The Grand Master of all Symbolic Lodges attains as such a very high titular distinction and solemn conventional duties are imposed upon him; but he has not in reality advanced one step further, even in the acquisition of canons of morality_not to speak of hidden truths or the Mysteries of Nature and Science than when he took the Craft Degrees.
Defects and Insufficiencies.
._The Grade has its moments, more especially in the Opening and Closing, as revised by Albert Pike, for the kindling and extinction of certain symbolical lights are acts performed with ceremonial dignity amidst the interchange of unexceptionable maxims_even if these are " familiar in our mouths as household words,,' and then in more favoured forms. But a great opportunity is missed, as we have found in other Degrees, because the significance of the symbolism is so much wider than was dreamed by Albert Pike. It is over and over the same record of insufficiency and hence the same line of criticism. He who in comparative youth wrote his HYMNS TO THE GODS had_as the saying goes_registered at once, and from the beginning, his " ambition and incapacity."
Horizon of the Grade.
_There is again no real procedure. The proclamation of the Four Cardinal Virtues, with all their possible variants and analogies that can be formed in fours, fills up the opening part, toleration and truth resounding as watchwords over all. It is perhaps rather fortunate that the question of Pilate is itself neither asked nor answered, but it is certified that no man has truth in his possession, as if it were a chattel. Under these circumstances there is no right of dictation on the part of any one in matters of religious belief: it is go as you please in your gospels, almost as a counsel of scorn. Nor is any one to judge another, save only as he judges himself_ dismissing him presumably with a caution or at most recommending to mercy. Out of these banalities arises a fervid denunciation of persecution, much as if the rack and the faggot still prevailed among us. Truth and Toleration outstanding, there remain Veneration, Charity, Generosity, Heroism, Honour, Patriotism and Justice, as already defined: these are the lights of a Grand Master, and very nice too_as we learned them at our mother,s knee, or with the pictured help of Mr. Peter Parley. It is these which shall qualify Candidates by the hypothesis to rule over all Symbolic Lodges, not that the Twentieth Degree of the SCOTTISH RITE, in America or otherwhere, really conveys the Office, even within the extent of its own circuit. Under the auspices of such aids to perfection, it becomes the duty and privilege of each Candidate who is promoted to this Honourable Degree of pretentious Masonry to work at the restoration of the Order, so that it may shine forth in its primitive purity. From this it has degenerated through the foolishness of innovating minds. There is what might be termed by admirers a trenchant cnticism of grandiloquent and meaningless titles, which used to be conferred in the past; but under the obedience of the SCOTTISH RITE it is indicated proudly that a Knight is one who is devoted_hand and heart and brain_to the science of Masonry; the Sovereign is among Sovereigns, and is supreme only by virtue of the supremacy of that law which he is entitled to administer in Masonry. How and in what wise or prudent sense those who go yet further are entitled to call themselves PRINCE OF MERCY, KNIGHT OF THE SUN AND SUBLIME PRINCE OF THE ROYAL SECRET are questions perhaps left over, pending further advancements. They suggest meanwhile the decried distinctions of MEMPHIS and MIZRAÏM, their COMMANDERS OF THE STARS, Adepts and Masters of the Great Work, with many others great galaxy.
GRAND PONTIFF -The Candidate for Masonic perfection in the Grade of ROSEXROIX affirms not only his integration in the great Order of Christian Knighthood, but his princely descent as belonging to the Tribe of Judah. His actual, though implied qualification is, however, that he has accepted the yoke of the New Law and entered under the obedience of Chnst. In the Grade of GRAND PONTIFF we are again among the Tnbes of Israel, but they are now on the quest of light, as those who are coming out of exile, symbolised by Egypt and Babylon. Their Aces are set towards the Mystic City, the Jerusalem which is alcove. There is no question therefore that it is a Grade of Christian priesthood, but in the reconstruction of Albert Pike, though the New Law is explained to be that of Love, the name of Christ is suppressed, in the interests of a spurious catholicity, which throws open the portals of the High Grades to Jews and Deists. Let it be understood once and for all that my arms are against no man on the ground of his official religion, while my respect and veneration for the great theosophy of Israel is like that of the Sons of its Doctrine: the opposition of my thesis, here as elsewhere in these volumes, is directed towards those who have tampered with Christian documents to suppress their essential element and have done their work so badly that the thing which they sought to exclude has been mangled only and manifests in this condition at every point and page. The lead in the case of Pike was taken from the fraudulent manufactories of MEMPHIS and MIZRAIM, and though as ntualist and symbolist_when engaged in this kind of work_he was always in marsh and quagmire, his worst floundering is, I think, in the present case.
An Apocalyptic Grade._The Grade of GRAND PONTIFF remains that which it was, an Apocalyptic Mystery. The Candidate hears that Judah shall be restored to its first estate, that Issachar shall enter into liberation, that peace shall descend upon Zebu}un, that the dawn comes for Reuben, that Simeon shall be reconciled to God, that Gad in the end shall triumph, that Ephraim, however hardly, shall find eternal rest, that Manasseh in Divine Light shall yet see and know, that Benjamin shall attain redemption, that Dan shall obey the New Law, that Asher shall eat the fruit of the Tree of Life in the Kingdom of the Lord, and that Naphtali shall not wait in " rain " on the fulfilment of the promises of God.
Points of the Pageant._Amidst darkness and isolation thereafter the officers of the Chapter proclaim the dominion of the beast, the opening of the seven vials of REVELATION and the fall of Babylon. But it is the city of intolerance which has passed, the city of fraud and falsehood. So also when the Candidate is brought into light and is shewn the four-square city coming down out of Heaven, when he hears of the new Heaven and the new earth, the apocalyptic account is reduced so that the city appears to be one of simple theism, governed by principles of good-will, while He Who sits upon the throne, though He is called the Lord God Almighty and Redeemer, is not the Christ of St. John. So does Pike put on record by implication his view of the judgment which threatens those who " shall take away from the words of the book of this prophecy.', The Candidate is anointed with oil, is made and proclaimed a priest for ever according to the Order of Melchizedek, but the equivalent of this title in the nameless banality of the scheme is scol^TrsH MASON. The New Jerusalem is interpreted as Ancient Masonry. There is otherwise nothing more preposterous than the attempt to expunge the Name of Christ from the memonal of a revelation which is made under His Name, while retaining the other apocalyptic elements and appealing to the authority of St. John. We hear also of the Twelve Apostles, the initials of whose names are inscribed upon the gates and foundations of this Mystical City; of the seed of the woman who should bruise the serpent's head; while the Obligation.has reference to honour and truth in Christendom.