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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Sept. 28, 1867
  • Page 5
  • THE ANCIENT AND MYSTERIOUS ORDER OF THE DRUIDS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 28, 1867: Page 5

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    Article THE ANCIENT AND MYSTERIOUS ORDER OF THE DRUIDS. ← Page 5 of 5
    Article THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 5

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Ancient And Mysterious Order Of The Druids.

Welsh proclamation used on such occasions . At the close of this Gorsedd , the assembly adjourned to the house of Gwilym Morganwy ( Thomas Williams ) , this person and Taliesin Williams ( Ab Iolo ) were the only two Welsh bards regularly

initiated into the arcana of Druidism then existing at Newbridge , where an Eisteddfod was held to adjudicate the prize for the best Welsh ode in honour of the Rev . William Bruce , Knight Chancellor of the Diocese of Llandaff , and Senior Judge ofthe Cardiff Eisteddfod .

The Knights Templars.

THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS .

By ANTHONY ONEAL HAVE . CHAPTER HI . —( Continued . ) ( Continued from pctge 230 . ) GEAND MASTEE , HUGO DE PATENS .

De Payens returns to the Holy Land . —The Christians league ivith the Assassins .- —Advance against Damascus , but arc defeated . —Death of de Payens . —A . D . 1128—1139 . The wind of prosperity now sang full in the sails of the Templars , and from being a few and scattered number of knights , they rose rapidly in

strength and importance , under the patronage of monarchs and the blessing of the Church , until they became an enormous and powerful body . When they took the field to combat the Saracen , their armaments rivalled those of the miahtiest

sovereigns in equipment and valour , Avhile in peace the magnificence of their ceremonial and the splendour of their lives Avere not inferior to those of the

greatest churchmen of their clay . With the acquisition of wealth they proceeded to erect those stupendous houses , such as their habitations in Paris and London , Avhich are in the present time called after them " The Temple , " and Avhich speak

as much for the wealth of the Knights as for their fine taste in architecture . Their fortresses were simply but strongly built , the Order aiming more at strength than beauty in these erections . Their chapels , on the other hand , were of the costliest

material and most gorgeous Avorkmanship , fit temples for the faithful to worship in ; and Avhen we remember that they had chosen for their patroness the Blessed Yirgin , the saint , of all others , the dearest to the Catholic heart , Ave need

not Avonder that their chapels Avere the handsomest and costliest in Christendom . They vrere , farthermore , great patrons of the Masonic fraternities , and their intimate acquaintance Avith the

architecture ofthe East , and the eminent workmen they attracted to their Society , and Avho were actual members of the Order , as in a future chapter we will sheAV , made the presence of the Templars in Europe an epoch in the art of building , and to

their brilliant example we are indebted for some of the finest structures of the Middle Ages . Hugo de Payens , in his journey through Prance and England , received many nobles into the Order ; and the " Saxon Chronicle " says— " This

same year ( 1128 ) Hugh of the Temple came from Jerusalem to the king in Normandy , and the king received him with much honour , and gave him much treasure in gold and silver , and afterwards he sent him into England , and there he Avas well received

by ah good men , and all gave him treasure ( and in Scotland also ) , and they sent in all a great sum in gold and silver by him to Jerusalem , and upon his invitation there went with him , and after him , so great a number as never before since the days

of Pope Urban . " Knights of the noblest families , and of worldwide renown , now ranged themselves under the

banners of the Templars . Kings favoured , and fortune smiling upon the soldier monks , took them under her protection , and appeared to have no other care than to pour out the treasures of her cornucopia upon , the Order . This can be a subject of

little Avonder when Ave consider that that the Order offered inducements to all candidates forits honours , peculiarly grateful to the spirit of the time . Men flocked into the Church , that , undisturbed by the noise and bustle of the world , they might in

cloistered gloom meditate upon God . The Church , as in our OAVII time , Avas the natural career of younger sons , the family estates and wealth generally being kept sacred to the uses

ofthe elder . But among these younger sons there were many who viewed a Monastic life , if not Avith feelings of disgust , at least with those of dissatisfaction . Their hearts were full of the panoply of Avar , and their hands better formed to Avield the

sword than to grasp the crucifix , —their voices more attuned to tho shouts of tho tilt-yard than the chaunts of the chapel , —and , in their own secret opinion , their feces looked better smiling out through the barred avenfcaylo than sombi'ely

frowning from under the shade of a cowl . To these spirits the Templars offered every satisfaction * An Order blessed by the Pope , and under the protection of the great Bernard , uniting the piety and devotion of the monk Avith the gallantry

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1867-09-28, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 April 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_28091867/page/5/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE ANCIENT AND MYSTERIOUS ORDER OF THE DRUIDS. Article 1
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 5
WHAT IS FREEMASONRY? Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
MASONIC MEMS. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
SCOTLAND. Article 15
GLASGOW. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
LODGE MEETINGS, ETC., FOR, THE WEEK ENDING OCTOBER 5TH, 1867. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Ancient And Mysterious Order Of The Druids.

Welsh proclamation used on such occasions . At the close of this Gorsedd , the assembly adjourned to the house of Gwilym Morganwy ( Thomas Williams ) , this person and Taliesin Williams ( Ab Iolo ) were the only two Welsh bards regularly

initiated into the arcana of Druidism then existing at Newbridge , where an Eisteddfod was held to adjudicate the prize for the best Welsh ode in honour of the Rev . William Bruce , Knight Chancellor of the Diocese of Llandaff , and Senior Judge ofthe Cardiff Eisteddfod .

The Knights Templars.

THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS .

By ANTHONY ONEAL HAVE . CHAPTER HI . —( Continued . ) ( Continued from pctge 230 . ) GEAND MASTEE , HUGO DE PATENS .

De Payens returns to the Holy Land . —The Christians league ivith the Assassins .- —Advance against Damascus , but arc defeated . —Death of de Payens . —A . D . 1128—1139 . The wind of prosperity now sang full in the sails of the Templars , and from being a few and scattered number of knights , they rose rapidly in

strength and importance , under the patronage of monarchs and the blessing of the Church , until they became an enormous and powerful body . When they took the field to combat the Saracen , their armaments rivalled those of the miahtiest

sovereigns in equipment and valour , Avhile in peace the magnificence of their ceremonial and the splendour of their lives Avere not inferior to those of the

greatest churchmen of their clay . With the acquisition of wealth they proceeded to erect those stupendous houses , such as their habitations in Paris and London , Avhich are in the present time called after them " The Temple , " and Avhich speak

as much for the wealth of the Knights as for their fine taste in architecture . Their fortresses were simply but strongly built , the Order aiming more at strength than beauty in these erections . Their chapels , on the other hand , were of the costliest

material and most gorgeous Avorkmanship , fit temples for the faithful to worship in ; and Avhen we remember that they had chosen for their patroness the Blessed Yirgin , the saint , of all others , the dearest to the Catholic heart , Ave need

not Avonder that their chapels Avere the handsomest and costliest in Christendom . They vrere , farthermore , great patrons of the Masonic fraternities , and their intimate acquaintance Avith the

architecture ofthe East , and the eminent workmen they attracted to their Society , and Avho were actual members of the Order , as in a future chapter we will sheAV , made the presence of the Templars in Europe an epoch in the art of building , and to

their brilliant example we are indebted for some of the finest structures of the Middle Ages . Hugo de Payens , in his journey through Prance and England , received many nobles into the Order ; and the " Saxon Chronicle " says— " This

same year ( 1128 ) Hugh of the Temple came from Jerusalem to the king in Normandy , and the king received him with much honour , and gave him much treasure in gold and silver , and afterwards he sent him into England , and there he Avas well received

by ah good men , and all gave him treasure ( and in Scotland also ) , and they sent in all a great sum in gold and silver by him to Jerusalem , and upon his invitation there went with him , and after him , so great a number as never before since the days

of Pope Urban . " Knights of the noblest families , and of worldwide renown , now ranged themselves under the

banners of the Templars . Kings favoured , and fortune smiling upon the soldier monks , took them under her protection , and appeared to have no other care than to pour out the treasures of her cornucopia upon , the Order . This can be a subject of

little Avonder when Ave consider that that the Order offered inducements to all candidates forits honours , peculiarly grateful to the spirit of the time . Men flocked into the Church , that , undisturbed by the noise and bustle of the world , they might in

cloistered gloom meditate upon God . The Church , as in our OAVII time , Avas the natural career of younger sons , the family estates and wealth generally being kept sacred to the uses

ofthe elder . But among these younger sons there were many who viewed a Monastic life , if not Avith feelings of disgust , at least with those of dissatisfaction . Their hearts were full of the panoply of Avar , and their hands better formed to Avield the

sword than to grasp the crucifix , —their voices more attuned to tho shouts of tho tilt-yard than the chaunts of the chapel , —and , in their own secret opinion , their feces looked better smiling out through the barred avenfcaylo than sombi'ely

frowning from under the shade of a cowl . To these spirits the Templars offered every satisfaction * An Order blessed by the Pope , and under the protection of the great Bernard , uniting the piety and devotion of the monk Avith the gallantry

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