LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA 1 GIFT OF MRS. MARY WOLFSOHN IN MEMORY OF HENRY WOLFSOHN teiKiia^^ ^ A TEXT BOOK OF MASONIC JURISPRUDENCE; ILLUSTRATING THE WRITTEN AND UNWRITTEN LAWS OS FREEMASONRY. BY ALBERT G. MACKEY, M. P., AUTHOR OF A "LEXICON OF FREEMASONRY," "BOOK OF THE CHAPTER," ETC. 1 have applied myself, not to that which might seem moat for the osten- tation of mine own wit or knowledge, but to that which may yield most ami and profit to the student." LORD BACOX XEW YORK: CLARK & MAYNARD, PUBLISHERS, No. 5 BARCLAY STREET. 1872. Kfltcrca accorumg to act of Congress, iu the year 1869, V ALBERT G. MACKEY, to the Cbrk'a office c the District Court of the United States, for the District of South Carolina. TO THE HON. JOHN L. LEWIS, JR., GRAND MASTER OP MASONS OF NEW YORK, i iatoU ito ?Btofc, AS TO ONE WHOSE LEGAL AND MASONIC ATTAINMENTS WILL ENABLK HIM TO CRITICALLY JUDGE OF ITS MERITS, WII09E KINDNES9 OF HEART WILL LEAD HIM TO GENEROUSLY PARDON ITS DEFECTS. "T \ B * A ^ Of THE UNIVERSITY J PREFACE. FOUR years ago I wrote, and soon after published, a treatise on the " Principles of Masonic Law," which was received by the Fraternity with a readiness that convinced me I had not miscalculated the necessity of such a work. In the composition of it I was entering upon a field of Masonic Literature which had, up to that time, been traversed by no other writer. There was, it is true, an abundance of authorities scattered over thousands of pages of Grand Lodge Proceedings, and contained in the obiter dicta of Grand Masters 7 Addresses, and the reports of Committees on Foreign Correspondence. But these authorities were often of a conflicting character, and as often were repugnant to my sense of justice, and to the views I had long entertained of the spirit of equity and reason which pervaded the Masonic Institution. Hence, while re- ceiving much information on various points of Masonic Law, from the writings of distinguished brethren, in different jurisdictions, I was repeatedly constrained to regret that there was no standard of authority by which I might be guided in doubtful cases, and that, with every disposition to stand upon the old ways r Vlll PREFACE. stare super vias antiquas I was unable to discover any safe beacon to guide me in my search after these ancient ways. I was, therefore, compelled, in most cases, to depend upon my own judgment, and to draw my conclusions as to what was Masonic Law, not from precedent, or usage, or authoritative statutes, but from the deductions of common sense and the analogies of the municipal and civil law, and the customs of other institutions. It is not, therefore, surprising that in this dearth of light myself being the humble pioneer in the attempt to reduce the principles of Masonic Law to a sys- tematic science with no books to guide no prece- dents, in repeated instances, to direct me I should, sometimes, have wandered from the true path, and erred in judgment. My errors were, it is true, con- scientiously committed. I gave all the talent, the experience and the legal skill that I had, to the inves- tigation of every question that lay before me and my mistakes were those, in most cases, inseparable from the condition of the subject I was treating, and from the first attempt to give systematic form to a new science. But subsequent years of enlarged experience and more extensive research, directed with all the energy I possessed, to the correction of errors, and the review of former opinions, have led me to offer to the Masonic World that result of my labors which is embodied in the following pages. PREFACE X If I had been consulted on the subject, another edi< tion of the " Principles of Masonic Law," which was first published in 1856, would never have been given to the world ; at least, it should not have been sent forth without a diligent correction of those opinions in it, which I now believe to be erroneous. As it now appears, it is not, in every part, a just representation of my views. But the control of the book is not in my hands, and all that I can now do and I ask this as an act of justice to myself is to request my breth- ren, when they shall hereafter honor me by citing my opinions on Masonic Law, to look for those amended views, in this, my latest work, in which I have not felt any shame in correcting the immature theories, in many points, of my earlier labor. There is no dis- honor in acknowledging a mistake there is much, in obstinately persisting in it. I do not suppose that I shall ever write another work on Masonic Law. Of all Masonic literature it is the most tedious in its details in the task of composition, the most laborious ; and while I have sought, by the utmost care, to make the present treatise one worthy of the Fraternity, for whom I have written it, and to whom I am profoundly grateful for their uniform kind ness to me, I shall gladly turn, henceforward, to the more congenial employment of investigating the sym bols and the religious teachings of the Order. ALBERT G. MACKEY, M. D. CHARLESTON S. C., April, 1859. 1* BOOK I. 3?ounbflf ions of JlBesonir afo. THE Foundations of Masonic Law are to be found in the Landmarks, or Unwritten Law, and in the Ancient Consti- tutions, or the Written Law. These will, therefore, constitute the subject matte of the preaeut book. THE FOUNDATIONS OF MASONIC LAW. CHAPTER I. (EJe 3Latrtrmarrfe0, or tfje aantorttten Hato Sm WILLIAM BLACKSTONE commences his Com- mentaries on the Laws of England with the succinct definition, that " law, in its most general and com- prehensive sense, signifies a rule of action, and is applied to all kinds of action, whether animate or inanimate, rational or irrational." It is in this sense that we speak of the laws of a country as being those rules, whether derived from positive enactment of the legislative authority, or from long- established custom, by which the conduct of its citizens or subjects is regulated. So too, societies, which are but empires, kingdoms, or republics in miniature, are also controlled by rules of action which are, to their respective mem- bers, as perfect laws as the statutes of the realm. And hence Freemasonry, as the most ancient and universal of all societies, is governed by its laws or rules of action, which either spring out of ita 14 THE LANDMARKS, OR organization, and are based upon its long-established customs and usages, or which are derived from the enactment of its superintending tribunals. This difference in the origin of the Laws of Masonry* leads to a threefold division of them, as follows : 1. LANDMARKS. 2. GENERAL REGULATIONS. 3. LOCAL REGULATIONS. The writers on municipal law have made a divi- sion of all laws into unwritten and written the " leges non-scriptae" and " leges scriptae."* Apply- ing these terms to the threefold division of Masonic Law, we should say that the unwritten laws or cus- toms of Masonry constitute its Landmarks, and that the written law is to be obtained in the regulations made by the supreme Masonic authority, and which are either general or local, as the authority which enacted them was either general or local in its character. * Blackstone defines the " unwritten laws" as those whose " original instr tution and authority are not set down in writing as acts of parliament are, but receive their binding power and the force of laws by long and imme- morial usage, and by their universal reception throughout the kingdom." And he defines the " written laws" to be the " statutes, acts or edicts made by and with the advice and consent of the lords spiritual and temporal and commons in parliament assembled." Comment. Inlrod., 3. The civil law of the Romans made a similar distinction into the "jus scriptum" and the " jus non scriptum," the latter or unwritten law being also called the "jus raoribus constitutum," or the law founded on " consuetude inveterata," or Immemorial custom. The Hebrews, too, had their double set of laws, the written, which are found in the Pentateuch, and the oral, said to have been given by God to Moses, to be by him orally communicated to Aaron and tlw elders, and thence traditionally handed down to future generations. THE UNWKITTEJST LAW. 15 Of the nature of the Landmarks of Masonry, there has been some diversity of opinion among writers ;* but perhaps the safest method is to re- strict them to those ancient, and therefore universal, customs of the Order, which either gradually grew into operation as rules of action, or if at once enacted by any competent authority, were enacted at a period so remote, that no account of their ori- gin is to be found in the records of history. Both the enactors and the time of the enactment have passed away from the record, and the Landmarks are therefore " of higher antiquity than memory or history can reach." The first requisite, therefore, of a custom or rule of action to constitute it a Landmark is, that it must have existed from " time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary. "f Its antiquity is its essential element. Were it possible for all the Masonic authorities at the present day to unite in a universal congress, and with the most perfect unanimity to adopt any new regulation, although * " With respect to the Landmarks of Masonry, some restrict them to the 0. B., signs, tokens and words. Others include the ceremonies of initiation, passing and raising; and the form, dimensions and supports ; the ground, situation and covering; the ornaments, furniture and jewels of a lodge, or their characteristic symbols. Some think that the order has no landmarks beyond its peculiar secrets." OLIVER, Diet. Symb. Mas. All these are lose and unsatisfactory definitions, excluding things that are essential, and admitting others that are non-essential. f- Blackstone says, (Introd. 3), "the goodness of a custom depends upon its having been used time out of mind: or in the solemnity of our legal phrase, time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary. This, it is, that gives it its weight and authority." All this may be applieu iu the precise terms *o the Landmarks of Freemasonry. 1G THE LANDMARKS, OB such regulation would, so long as it remained unre pealed, be obligatory on the whole craft, yet ii would not be a landmark. It would have the character of universality, it is true, but it would be wanting ii. that of antiquity. Another peculiarity of these Landmarks of Ma- sonry is, that they are unrepealable. As the con- gress to which I have just alluded would not have the power to enact a Landmark, so neither would it have the prerogative of abolishing one. The Land- marks of the Order, like the laws of the Medes and the Persians, can suffer no change. What they were centuries ago, they still remain, and must so continue in force until Masonry itself shall cease to exist. It is fortunate for the stability of Masonry, that Landmarks so unchangeable should exist ; they stand in the way of innovations controllhig and checking them,* and if sometimes inadvertently violated, are ever bringing the reflective and conscientious Mason back again under their influence, and preserving that general uniformity of character and design which constitutes the true universality of the insti- tution. But it is equally fortunate for the prosper- ity of the Order, and for its capacity of keeping up with the progress of the age, that these Landmarks * " The preservation of the ancient customs is a very considerable point in respect to manners. Since a corrupt people seldom perform any memor- able actions, seldom establish societies, build cities or enact laws; on the contrary, since most institutions are derived from people of simple or severe morals; to recall men to the ancient maxims is generally recalling them tc t-irtue." MONTESQUIEU Spirit of Laws, V. vii. THE UNWRITTEN LAW. IT are few in number. They are sufficiently numerous to act as bulwarks against innovation, but not suf- ficient to stand in the way of needful reform.* The Landmarks of Masonry, so far as I have been enabled to compute them, after the most care ful examination, amount only to twenty-five in num- ber, and arc as follows : SLautrmnrH jFtrst. THE MODES OF RECOGNITION are, of all the Land- marks, the most legitimate and unquestioned. t They admit of no variation ; ud if ever they have suffered alteration or addition, the evil of such a violation of the ancient law has always made itself subsequently manifest. An admission of this is to be found in the proceedings of the late Masonic Congress at Paris, where a proposition was pre- sented to render these modes of recognition* once * The fundamental principles of Freemasonry are, it is true, the same now that they were in the very beginning of the institution, and must always con- tinue the same. And yet there can be no doubt that, like every other science, Freemasonry is progressive in its character. It must of necessity be in- fluenced by the progress of the age. Even now it is in a transition state in this country, passing from the simply social condition which it presented less than half a century ago to the character of a scientific and philosophical asso- ciation. For proof of this, look to the Grand Lodge proceedings of 1815 and of 1858. With the progress in literary improvement, the Landmarks do not interfere. t Smith says that at the institution of the order to each of the degrees, " a particular distinguishing test was adopted, which test, together with the explication, was accordingly settled and communicated to the fraternity previous to their dispersion, under a necessary and solemn injunction tc secrecy; and they have been most cautiously preserved and transmitted aown to posterity by faithful brethren, ever since their emigration.'' Use and Abiite of Freemasonry, p. 46. 18 THE LANDMARKS, OR more universal* a proposition which ncvei wo aid have been necessary, if the integrity of this im- portant Landmark had been rigorously preserved. Secontr, THE DIVISION OF SYMBOLIC MASONRY INTO THREE DEGREES,'!* is a Landmark that has been better pre- served than almost any other, although even here the mischievous spirit of innovation has left its traces, and by the disruption of its concluding por- tion from the third degree,! a want of uniformity has been created in respect to the final teaching of the Master's order ; and the Royal Arch of Eng- land, Scotland. Ireland, and America, and the " high degrees" of France and Germany, are all made to differ in the mode in which they lead the neophyte * That proposition is contained in the 7th resolution of the Congress, and is in these words : " Masters of lodges, in conferring the degree of Master Mason, should invest the candidate with the words, signs and grips of the Scottish and Modern rites." If the Landmark had never been violated, the resolution would have been unnecessary. The symbolic degrees being the foundation of all masonry, should never have been permitted to differ in any of the rites. t Smith thus accounts for this Landmark: " Though there were no ap- prentices employed in the building of the temple, yet as the craftsmen were all intended to be promoted to the degree of Masters, after its dedication; and as these would receive a succession by receiving apprentices, who might themselves in due time become Masters, it was determined that the gradations in the science should consist in three distinct degrees." Use and Abuse of Freemasonry, p. 46. Lond., 1783. J Dr. Olivet says that " the difference between the ancient and modern systems (that is, between the ancient and modern Lodges in the 18th cen- tury) consisted solely in the mutilation of the third degree." See " Some Account of the Schism" &c., which contains a full relation of this disrup tiou of the Royal Arch from the Master's degree. TEE UNWRITTEN LAW. 19 to the great consummation of all symbolic Masonry. * In 1813, the Grand Lodge of England vindicated the ancient Landmark, by solemnly enacting that Ancient Craft Masonry consisted of the three de- grees of Entered Apprentice, Fellow Craft, and Master Mason, including the Holy Royal Arch.f But the disruption has never been healed, and the Landmark, although acknowledged in its integrity by all, still continues to be violated. Siantrmarfc THE LEGEND OF THE THIRD DEGREE is an import- ant Landmark, the integrity of which has been well preserved.^ There is no rite of Masonry, practised in any country or language, in which the essential elements of this legend are not taught. The lectures may vary, and indeed are constantly changing, but the legend has ever remained sub- stantially the same. And it is necessary that it * The true word, which is the symbol of divine truth, is the great ob- ject of Freemasonry. Any system without it must be imperfect; and there- fore in all the various rites, and I might almost say that their name was legion, this true word is sought for, but the search is in each, prosecuted in a different way, which really constitutes the essential difference of the masonic rites. t " It is declared and pronounced that pure ancient Masonry consists of three degrees, and no more; viz : those of the Entered Apprentice, the Fellow Craft and the Master Mason, including the Supreme Order of the Holy Royal Arch." Articles of Union between Hie Two G-rand Lodges of England, 1813. Art. 5i. " After the union of speculative and operative Masonry, and when the temple of Solomon was completed, a legend of sublime and symbolic mean- ing was introduced into the system, which is still retained, and consequently Known to all Master Masons." OLIVER, Landmarks, vol. ii. p. 169. JO THE LANDMARKS, OB should be so, for the legend of the Temple Builder constitutes the very essence and identity of Masonry. Any rite which should exclude it, or materially alter it, would at once, by that exclusion or alteration, cease to be a Masonic rite. SLnntrmarfc JFourtfj, THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FRATERNITY, by a pre- siding officer called a Grand Master, who is elected from the body of the craft, is a fourth Landmark of the Order.* Many persons ignorantly suppose that the election of the Grand Master is held in conse- quence of a law or regulation of the Grand Lodge. Such, however, is not the case.t The office is in- debted for its existence to a Landmark of the Order. Grand Masters are to be found in the records of the institution long before Grand Lodges were estab- lished ; and if the present system of legislative government by Grand Lodges were to be abolished, a Grand Master would still be necessary. In fact, * " No brother can be a Warden, until be has passed the part of a Fellow Craft; nor a Master, until he has acted as a Warden ; nor Grand Warden, until he has been Master of a lodge; nor Grand Master, unless he has been a Fellow Craft before his election." 0/d Charges, iv. f The mode and time of his election is, in modern times, prescribed by a regulation of the Grand Lodge, it is true, but the office itself exists inde- pendently of any such regulation. When installed into office, it is not as the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge, but as the " Grand Master of Masons." See ANDERSON'S Constitutions, Id edit, passim. The earliest references to the office in English Masonry is in the time of the Emperor Carausius, m the third century, who, as Preston states, " granted the Masons a charter, and commandwl Albanus to preside over them in person as Grand Master."-- PJIESTON, Illustrations, p. 125. Oliv. edit. THE UNWRITTEN LAW. 21 although there has been a period within the records of history, and indeed of very recent date, when a Grand Lodge was unknown, there never has been a time when the craft did not have their Grand Master.* THE PREROGATIVE OF THE GRAND MASTER TO PRE- SIDE over every assembly of the craft, wheresoever and whensoever held, is a fifth Landmark. It is in consequence of this law; derived from ancient usage, and not from any special enactment, that the Grand Master assumes the chair, or as it is called in Eng- land. " the throne," at every communication of the Grand Lodge ;t and that he is also entitled to pre- side at the communication of every Subordinate Lodge, where he may happen to be present:]: THE PREROGATIVE OF THE GRAND MASTER TO GRANT DISPENSATIONS for conferring degrees at ir- regular times, is another and a very important * " The Grand Master is not a creation of the General Regulations, the Ancient Charges or Written Constitutions. He existed when all those that we know anything of were made." Com. of Correspond. G. L. N. Y., 1851. f The Thirty-nine General Regulations, adopted in 1721, acknowledged this Landmark in the following words: " The Grand Lodge consists of and is formed by the Master and Wardens of all the regular particular Lodges on record, with the Grand Master at their head." Twelfth Regulation. $ Thus, in the First General Regulation: " The Grand Master, or his Deputy, hath authority and right, not only to be present in any true Lodge, but also to preide wheresoever he is, with the Master of the Lodge on bis left hand. r 22 THE LANDMARKS, OB Landmark. The statutory law of Masonry requires a month, or other determinate period, to elapse between the presentation of a petition and the elec- tion of a candidate. But the Grand Master has the power to set aside or dispense with this probation, and to allow a candidate to be initiated at once. This prerogative he possessed in common with all Masters,* before the enactment of the law requiring a probation, and as no statute can impair his pre- rogative, he still retains the power, although the Masters of Lodges no longer possess it. THE PREROGATIVE OF THE GRAND MASTER TO GIVE DISPENSATIONS for opening and holding Lodges, is another Landmark. He may grant, in virtue of this, to a sufficient number of Masons, the privilege of meeting together and conferring degrees. The Lodges thus established are called " Lodges under Dispensation." They are strictly creatures of the Grand Master, created by his authority, existing only during his will and pleasure, and liable at any moment to be dissolved at his command. They may be continued for a day, a month, or six months ; but whatever be the period of their existence, they * PRESTON says: " A sufficient number of Masons met together within a certain district, with the consent of the sheriff or chief magistrate of th f place, were empowered at this time, (i.e. anterior to 1717) to make Masons and practice the rites of Masonry without warrant of constitution. The privilege was inherent in them as individuals; and this privilege is still en- joyed by the two old Lodges now extant, which act by immemorial constitu tion." Illustrations, p. 182, ncie. THE UNWRITTEN LAW. 23 are indebted for that existence solely to the grace of the Grand Master.* THE PREROGATIVE OP THE GRAND MASTER TO MAKE MASONS AT SIGHT, is a Landmark which is closely connected with the preceding one.f There has been much misapprehension in relation to this Landmark, which misapprehension has sometimes led to a denial of its existence in jurisdictions where the Grand Master was perhaps at the very time substantially exercising the prerogative, without the slightest remark or opposition.! It is not to be * If, according to the preceding 1 note, the privilege of meeting and confer- ring the degrees was originally inherent in all Masons, as individuals, then it must also have been inherent in the Grand Master, and was therefore his prerogative, as well as that of every other member of the craft. But at the reorganization of the order in 1717, the Masons, as a body, surrendered this prerogative to the Grand Lodge; (see PRESTON, as above,) but they could not surrender the prerogative of the Grand Master, for it was not theirs to surrender. Consequently he still exercises it, and may assemble Masons together either personally or by proxy; in such cases, the Lodge meets, as of old, without a warrant of constitution; and to enable it to do so, the Grand Master issues his dispensation ; that is, he dispenses with the law enacted in 1717, which requires such warrant. t " We think this to be the rule, because we do not think the regulation of June 24th, 1717, restricting the future assemblage of Masons, except in the four old Lodges in London, to Lodges held under warrant, was intended to apply to the Grand Master or the Grand Lodge in session, but rather to the craft, in other respects." Com. of Correspond. G. L. ofN. Y., 1851. Of course not; for if it did, supposing that it legally could, then the Grand Mastei would be deprived of the power of granting dispensations to open Lodges, tor his prerogatives of making Masons at sight and of opening Lodges are founded on the ame principle. * That is, whenever the Grand Master granted h's dispni nation to an onchartered Lodge *.o dispense with the necessary probation, and was 24 THE LANDMARKS, OB supposed that the Grand Master can retire with a profane into a private room, and there, withou assistance, confer the degrees of Freemasonry upoi. him. No such prerogative exists, and yet many be- lieve that this is the so much talked of right of " making Masons at sight." The real mode and the only mode of exercising the prerogative is this : The Grand Master summons to his assistance not less than six other Masons, convenes a Lodge, and with out any previous probation, but on sight of the can- didate, confers the degrees upon him, after which he dissolves the Lodge, and dismisses the brethren. Lodges thus convened for special purposes are called " occasional lodges." This is the only way in which any Grand Master within the records of the insti- tution has ever been known to " make a Ma?on at sight." The prerogative is dependent upon that of granting dispensations to open and hold Lodges. If the Grand Master has the power of granting to any other Mason the privilege of presiding over Lodges working by his dispensation, he may assume this privilege of presiding to himself; and as no one can deny his right to ?evoke his dispensation granted to a number of brethren at a distance, and to dissolve the Lodge at his pleasure, it will scarcely be contended that he may not revoke his dispensa- tion for a Lodge over which he himself has been oresiding, within a day, and dissolve the Lodge aa soon as the business for whi:h he had assembled it present and presiding at the conferring / the degrees, he was viitnail making a Mason at sight THE UNWRITTEN LAW. 25 is accomplished. The making of Masons at sight is only the conferring of the degrees by the Grand Master, at once, in an occasional Lodge,* consti- tuted by his dispensing power for the purpose, and over which he presides in person. Zanfrmnrft THE NECESSITY FOR MASONS TO CONGREGATE IN LODGES is another Landmark.! It is not to be un- derstood by this that any ancient Landmark has directed that permanent organization of subordi- nate Lodges which constitutes one of the features of the Masonic system as it now prevails. But the Landmarks of the Order always prescribed that Masons should from time to time congregate to- gether, for the purpose of either operative or specu- lative labor, and that these congregations should be called Lodges. Formerly these were extemporary meetings called together for special purposes, and then dissolved, the brethren departing to meet again at other times and other places, according to the necessity of circumstances. But warrants of con- stitution, by-laws, permanent officers and annual * These occasional Lodges have been often called by the English Grand Masters since 1717, and frequent records of the fact are to be found in Anderson's Constitutions, Almost all of the princes of the rcyal family, when made Masons, were initiated, passed and raised at sight, and i occasional Lodges. t " A Lodge is a place where Masons assemble and work; hence that assembly or duly organized society of Masons is called a Lodge, and eveiy brother ought to belong to one, and to be subject to its by-laws and the gene ral regulations.'' Old Charges, in. 26 THE LANDMARKS, OB arrears, are modern innovations wholly outside of the Landmarks, and dependent entirely on the special enactments of a comparatively recent period. THE GOVERNMENT OF THE CRAFT, when so con- gregated in a Lodge by a Master and two Wardens. is also a Landmark.* To show the influence of this ancient law, it may be observed by the way, that a congregation of Masons meeting together under any other government, as that for instance of a president and vice-president, or a chairman and sub- chairman, would not be recognized as a Lodge. The presence of a Master and two Wardens is as essential to the valid organization of a Lodge as a warrant of constitution is at the present day. The names, of course, vary in different languages, the Master, for instance, being called " Venerable" in French Masonry, and the Wardens " Surveillants," but the officers, their number,t prerogatives and duties, are everywhere identical. JLantrmarfc THE NECESSITY THAT EVERY LODGE, WHEN CON- * The Old Charges allude to the antiquity of these officers in the follow- ing language : " In ancient times no Master or Fellow could be absent from the Lodge when warned to appear at it, without incurring a severe censure, until it appeared to the Master and Wardens that pure necessity hindered him." Charges, iii. t The number, three, of these offices, is essential to the symbolism of the Order, because they refer, as corresponding officers always did, in the ancient Mysteries, to the sun at its rising, its meridian height, and its setting. So long as Masonry preserves its symbolic character, these officers must ba retained, and their peculiar positions preserved. THE UNWRITTEN LAW. 27 GREGATED, SHOULD BE DULY TILED, is an important Landmark of the institution, which is never neg- lected. The necessity of this law arises from the esoteric character of Masonry. As a secret insti- tution, its portals must of course be guarded from the intrusion of the profane, and such a law must therefore always have been in force from the very beginning of the Order.* It is therefore properly classed among the most ancient Landmarks. The office of Tiler is wholly independent of any special enactment of Grand or Subordinate Lodges, al- though these may and do prescribe for him addi- tional duties, which vary in different jurisdictions. But the duty of guarding the door, and keeping of? cowans and eavesdroppers, is an ancient one, which constitutes a Landmark for his government. THE RIGHT OF EVERY MASON TO BE REPRESENTED in all general meetings of the craft, and to instruct his representatives, is a twelfth Landmark.f For- merly, these general meetings, which were usually held once a year, were called ' General Assemblies,' * The appointment of a Tiler is so evidently a Landmark, and the necessitj of such an officer so apparent, from the very character of the Masonic insti tution, that neither the Old Charges nor the General Regulations make anj allusion to him, except that the latter refer to the qualifications of the Granc 1 Tiler of the Grand Lodge. f This Landmark is recognized by the General Regulations in these words- " The majority of every particular Lodge, when congregated, shall have the privilege of giving instructions to their Master and Wardens before the as sembling of the Grand Chapter or Grand Lodge." Gen. Reg., Art. x. 28 THE LANDMARKS. OR and all the fraternity, even to the youngest Entered Apprentice, were permitted to be present. Now they are called " Grand Lodges/ 7 and only the Mas- ters and Wardens of the Subordinate Lodges are summoned. But this is simply as the representa- tives of their members. Originally, each Mason represented himself ; now he is represented by his officers. This was a concession granted by the fra- ternity about 1717, and of course does not affect the integrity of the Landmark, for the principle of representation is still preserved. The concession was only made for purposes of convenience.* STIjtrtecntfj. THE RIGHT OF EVERY MASON TO APPEAL from the decision of his brethren in Lodge convened, to the Grand Lodge or General Assembly of Masons, is a Landmark highly essential to the preservation of justice, and the prevention of oppression. t A few modern Grand Lodges, in adopting a regulation that the decision of Subordinate Lodges, in cases * See a full relation of the history of this concession in PRESTON. (Oliver's edition, pp. 182-184.) The result of the concession is given in these words: " Matters being thus amicably adjusted, the brethren of the four old Lodges considered their attendance on the future communications of the society as unnecessary, and, therefore, like the other Lodges, trusted implicitly to their Mastei and Wardens, resting satisfied that no measure of importance would be adopted without their approbation." Illust., p. 183. t The Old Charges recognize this right of appeal in these words: " If any complaint be brought, the brother found guilty shall stand to the award and determination of the Lodge, who are the proper and competent judges of all such controversies, unless you carry it by appeal to the Grand Lodge." Charge vi., 1. THE UNWRITTEN LAW. 29 of expulsion, cannot be wholly set aside upon an ap- peal, have violated this unquestioned Landmark, 33 well as the principles of just government. JFourteentfj. THE RIGHT OF EVERY MASON TO VISIT and sit in every regular Lodge is an unquestionable Land- mark of the Order.* This is called " the right of visitation." This right of visitation has always been recognized as an inherent right, which inures to every Mason as he travels through the world. And this is because Lod^> are justly considered as only divisions for conve:.^nce of the universal Ma- sonic family. This right may, of course, be im- paired or forfeited on special occasions by various circumstances ; but when admission is refused to a Mason in good standing, who knocks at the door of a Lodge as a visitor, it is to be expected that some good and sufficient reason shall be fur- nished for this violation, of what is in general a Masonic right, founded on the Landmarks of the Order. * The MS. in possession of the Lodge of Antiquity, and which contains charges written in the reign of James H., between 1685 and 1688, recog- nizes this right of visitation in the welcome which it orders every Mason to give to a strange brother: " Thirteenthly, that every Mason receive and cherish strange Fellows, when they come over the country, and set them on work, if they will work, as the manner is; that is to say, if the Mason have any mould stone in his place, he shall give him a mould stone, and set him on work; and if he have none, the Mason shall refresh him with money unto the next Lodge." All this implies the right to claim and the duty to extend hospitality to a visiting brother, 30 THE LANDMARKS, OB SLanfcmarfc JFiftecnti), It is a Landmark of the Order, THAT NO VISITOR, UNKNOWN TO THE BRETHREN PRESENT, Or to SOme one of them as a Mason, can enter a Lodge without first passing an examination according to ancient usage.* Of course, if the visitor is known to any brother present to be a Mason in good standing, and if that brother will vouch for his qualifications, the examination may be dispensed with, as thr Landmark refers only to the cases of strangers, who are not to be recognized unless after strict trial, due examination, or lawful information. No LODGE CAN INTERFERE IN THE BUSINESS OP ANOTHER LODGE, nor give degrees to brethren who are members of other Lodges.t This is undoubtedly an ancient Landmark, founded on the great prin- ciples of courtesy and fraternal kindness, which are at the very foundation of our institution. It has been repeatedly recognized by subsequent statutory enactments of all Grand Lodges. e * Reference is made to this important Landmark in the Old Charges,vi. 6. in the directions for" behavior to a strange brother," where we find the fol- lowing language: " You are cautioned to examine him in such method as prudence shall direct you, that you may not be imposed upon by an ignorant pretender, whom you are to reject with contempt and derision, and beware of giving him any hints of knowledge." t Thus in the MS. charges of the Lodge of Antiquity: " That no Master or Fellow supplant others of their work; that is, if he hath taken a work or else stand master of anj 7 work, that lie [i.e. any other,] shall not p\rf him out unless he be unable of cnnnjig to make an end of his work.'' THE UNWRITTEN LAW. 31 SLantrnrarfe Sebenteeiiti). It is a Landmark that EVERY FREEMASON is AME- NABLE TO THE LAWS AND REGULATIONS OF THE MA- SONIC JURISDICTION in which he resides, and this although he may not be a member of any Lodge.* Non-affiliation, which is, in fact, in itself a Masonic offence, does not exempt a Mason from Masonic jurisdiction. CERTAIN QUALIFICATIONS OF CANDIDATES FOR IN- ITIATION are derived from a Landmark of the Order.f These qualifications are that he shall be a man shall be unmutilated, free born, and of mature age.J That is to say, a woman, a cripple, or a slave, or one born in slavery, is disqualified for initiation into * The same charges recognize this Landmark in these words : " Tenthly, that every Master and Fellow shall come to the assembly, if it be within fift/ miles of htm, if he have any warning. And if he have trespassed against the craft, dent to every Mason. 34 THE LANDMARKS, OR dan countries, and among Mohammedan Masons, the Koran might be substituted. Masonry does not attempt to interfere with the peculiar religious faith of its disciples, except so far as relates to the belief in the existence of God, and what necessarily results from that belief.* The Book of the Law is to the speculative Mason his spiritual Trestle-board ; without this he cannot labor ; whatever he believes to be the revealed will of the Grand Architect con- stitutes for him this spiritual Trestle-board, and must ever be before him in his hours of speculative labor, to be the rule and guide of his conduct. The Landmark, therefore, requires that a Book of the Law, a religious code of some kind, purporting to be an exemplar of the revealed will of God, shall form an essential part of the furniture of every Lodge. THE EQUALITY OF ALL MASONS is another Land- mark of the Order.f This equality has no refer- ence to any subversion of those gradations of rank which have been instituted by the usages of society 4 * On the subject of the religious, or rather the doctrinal, requirements of Masonry, the Old Charges utter the following explicit language : " Though in ancient times, Masons were charged in every country to be of the religion of that country or nation, whatever it was ; yet it is now thought expedient only to oblige them to that religion in which all men agree, leaving their particular opinions to themselves."- Charge i. t " Masons meet upon the level."- Ritual. $ " Though all Masons are as brethren upon the same level, yet Masonry t.ikas no honor from a man tha he had before ; nay, rather it adds to hii THE UNWRITTEN LAW. 35 The monarch, the nobleman or the gentleman is en titled to all the influence, and receives all the respect which rightly belong to his exalted position. But the doctrine of Masonic equality implies that, as children of one great Father, we meet -in the Lodge upon the level that on that level we are all traveling to one predestined goal that in the Lodge genuine merit shall receive more respect than boundless wealth, and that virtue and knowledge alone should be the basis of ail Masonic honors, and be rewarded with preferment.* When the labors of the Lodge are over, and the brethren have retired from their peaceful retreat, to mingle once more with the world, each will then again resume that social position, and exercise the privileges of that rank, to which the customs of society entitle him. THE SECRECY OF THE INSTITUTION is another and a most important Laridmark.t There is some diffi- honor, especially if he has deserved well of the brotherhood, who must give honor to whom it is due, and avoid ill manners." Old Charges, vi.,3. * " All preferment among Masons is grounded upon real worth and per- sonal merit only." Old Charges, iv. f There are abundant cautions in the Old Charges which recognize the existence of this Landmark, and the necessity of preserving it. Thus in the direction for the behavior of brethren who meet without strangers, it is said . " You will salute one another in a courteous manner, ....... freely giving mutual instruction as shall be thought expedient, without being overseen or overheard ;" and in the presence of strangers : " You shall be cautious ic your words and carriage, that the most penetrating stranger shall act b able to discover or 6nd out what is not proper to be intimated." 3ft THE LANDMARKS, OB culty in precisely defining what is meant by a "seciet society/ 7 If the term refers, as perhaps., in strictly logical language it should, to those asso- ciations whose designs are concealed from the pub- lic eye, and whose members are unknown, which produce their results in darkness, and whose opera- tions are carefully hidden from the public gaze a definition which will be appropriate to many politi- cal clubs and revolutionary combinations in despotic countries, where reform, if it is at all to be effected, must be effected by stealth then clearly Free- masonry is not a secret society. Its design is not only publicly proclaimed, but is vaunted by its dis- ciples as something to be venerated its disciples are known, for its membership is considered an honor to be coveted it works for a result of which it boasts the civilization and refinement of man, the amelioration of his condition, and the reforma- tion of his manners. But if by a secret society is meant and this is the most popular understanding of the term a society in which there is a certain amount of knowledge, whether it be of methods of recognition, or of legendary and traditional learn- ing,* which is imparted to those only who have passed through an established form of initiation, the form itself being also concealed or esoteric, * The Leland MS., containing the answers of the Masons to the questions of King Henry the Sixth, gives a long list of the secrets which the Masons " conceal and hide," the catalogue of secret sciences ending with the nniversalle longage of Masonnes," that is, the peculiar modes of recognition. THE UNWRITTEN LAW. B7 then iii this sense is Freemasonry undoubtedly a secret society. Now this form of secrecy is a form inherent in it, existing with it from its very founda- tion, and secured to it by its ancient Landmarks. If divested of its secret character, it would lose its identity, and would cease to be Freemasonry.* Whatever objections may, therefore, be made to the institution, on account of its secrecy, and however much some unskillful brethren have been willing in times of trial, for the sake of expediency, to divest it of its secret character, it will be ever impossible to do so, even were the Landmark not standing be- fore us as an insurmountable obstacle because sucli change of its character would be social suicide, and the death of the Order would follow its legalized exposure. Freemasonry, as a secret association, has lived unchanged for centuries as an open society it would not last for as many years. THE FOUNDATION OF A SPECULATIVE SCIENCE UPON AN OPERATIVE ART, and the symbolic use and ex- planation of the terms of that art, for purposes of religious or moral teaching, constitute another Landmark of the Order.f The Temple of Solomon * " Finally, keep sacred and inviolable the mysteries of the Order, as these are to distinguish you from the rest of the community, and mark your conse quence among Masons/' Charges to an Ent. Apprentice. t " We work in speculative Masonry, but our ancient brethren worked in both operative and speculative Ritual of F. G. degree. 38 THE LANDMARKS, OR was the cradle of the institution,* and, therefore, the reference to the operative Masonry, which con- structed that magnificent edifice, to the materials and implements which were employed in its con- struction, and to the artists who were engaged in the building, are all component and essential parts of the body of Freemasonry, which could not be subtracted from it without an entire destruction of the whole identity of the Order. Hence, all the comparatively modern rites of Masonry, however they may differ in other respects, religiously pre- serve this temple history and these operative ele- ments, as the substratum of all their modifications of the Masonic system. ELantrnmrfc The last and crowning Landmark of all is, that THESE LANDMARKS CAN NEVER BE CHANGED. t No- thing can be subtracted from them nothing can be added to them not the ^slightest modification can be made in them. As they were received from our * " As this temple (Solomon's) received the second race of servants of the true God, and as the true craftsmen were here proved in their work, we will crave your attention to the circumstances which are to be gathered from holy writ, and from historians, touching this structure, as aa illustra- tion of those secrets in Masonry, which may appear to such of oui brethren as are not learned in antiquity, dark or insignificant, unless they are proved from thence." HDTCHINSON, Spirit of Masonry, p. 83. t Our " first most excellent Grand Master" has declared with a signifi- cance which Masons will understand " Remove not the ancient Landmarks which thy fathers have set." Dr. OLIVER remarks " It is quite clear, how- ever, that the order against removing or altering the Landmarks was univer qally observed in all ages of the craft." Diet, of 8ym. Mas. THE UNWRITTEN LAW. 39 predecessors, we are bound by the most solemn obli- gations of duty to transmit them to our successors. Not one jot or one tittle of these unwritten laws can be repealed ; for in respect to them, we are not only willing, but compelled to adopt the language of the slurdy old barons of England " Nolumus leges rnutari." CHAPTER 1L Sfjc Britten ante. NEXT to the Unwritten Laws, or Landmarks of Masonry, conies its Written or statutory Laws. These are the " regulations/ 7 as they are usually called, which have been enacted from time to time by General Assemblies, Grand Lodges, or other su- preme authorities of the Order. They are in their character either general or local. The General Regulations are those that have been enacted by such bodies as had at the time universal jurisdiction over the craft. By the concurring con- sent of all Masonic jurists, it is agreed, that the regulations adopted previous to the year 1721, shall be considered as general in their nature ; because all the Masonic authorities established since that period, have derived their existence, either directly )r indirectly, from the Grand Lodge of England, which was organized in 1717, and hence the regula- tions adopted by that body, at the period of its organization, and immediately afterwards, or by its predecessors, the annual General Assemblies of the craft, were of universal authority at the time of THE WRITTEN LAW. 41 their adoption. But soon after 1721, other Grand Lodges were established with equal powers to make regulations for their own jurisdictions, and hence the subsequent enactments of the Grand Lodge of England ceased to be of force in those new and in- dependent jurisdictions, and they therefore lost their character of universality. The Local Regulations are all those laws which have been since enacted by the Grand Lodge of England, and the Grand Lodges of other countries, and which are, of course, of authority only in the jurisdictions over which these Grand Lodges exer- cise control. In a general treatise on the laws of Masonry, these local regulations can of course find no place, except when referred to in illustration of any point of Masonic law. The code of General Regulations, or the universal Written Law of Masonry, is therefore contained in a comparatively small compass, and yet this code, with the Landmarks already recapitulated in the preceding chapter, constitute the foundation on which the whole superstructure of Masonic law is erected. From these Landmarks and general regu- lations, and from the dictates of reason and the suggestions of analogy and common sense, we are to deduce all those fundamental principles which make the science of Masonic law. It is necessary, therefore, that all those documents which contain the universal written laws of Masonry should be enumerated, as an appropriate introduc- tion to an accurate inquiry into the science whose 42 THE WRITTEN LAW. principles constitute the subject matter of the pres- ent article. The following documents, and these only, have been admitted to contain the General Regulations and fundamental Constitutions of the Order, and are competent authority for reference in all obscure or disputed points of Masonic law : I. THE OLD YORK CONSTITUTIONS OF 926. The " Old York Constitutions" were so called from the city of York, where they were enacted, and sometimes the " Gothic Constitutions," from the fact that they were written in the old Gothic character. Of these constitutions, which are the oldest now extant, the history is given in a record written in the reign of Edward IV., the substance of which is copied by Anderson. According to this record, we learn that Prince Edwin, having been taught Masonry, obtained from his brother, King Athelstan, a free charter, " for the Masons having a correction among themselves (as it was anciently expressed,) or a freedom and power to regulate themselves, to amend what might happen amiss, and to hold a yearly communication and general assembly. " Accordingly, Prince Edwin summoned all the Masons in the realm to meet him in a congregation at York, who came and composed a General Lodge, of which he was Grand Master ; and having brought with them all the writings and records extant, some THE WRITTEN LAW. 43 in Greek, some in Latin, some in French and other languages, fr6m the contents thereof that assembly did frame the Constitution and Charges of an Eng- lish Lodge, made a law to preserve and observe the same in all time coming, and ordained good pay for the working Masons,' ; &c.* The Constitutions thus framed at the city of York, in the year 926, were seen, approved and con- firmed, as we are informed by Anderson,f in the reign of Henry VI. , and were then recognized as the fundamental law of Masonry. The document containing them was lost for a long time, although, according to Oliver, copies are known to have been taken during the reign of Richard II. ; at the re- vival of Masonry, however, in 1717, not a transcript was to be found. J A copy was, however, discovered in 1838, by Mr. James Orchard Halliwell. in the British Museum, and published. Dr. Oliver has very clearly proved, in an article in the American Quarterly Review of Freemasonry , that this ancient MS., published by Mr. Halliwell, is the original Constitutions, as adopted in 926 by the General Assembly which met at York. These Constitutions contain fifteen articles and fifteen points of Masonic * ANDERSON'S Constitutions, 1st edit., p. 32. t ANDERSON, 2d edit., p. 111. i " It eluded the search of those indefatigable brothers, Desaguliers and Anderson, at the revival of Masonry in the year of grace 1717, although they used all the means at their command, both in ^-his country and else- where for its discovery." OLIVER, on the Old York Constitutions, Avier Quar. Jvt-u. ofF> i eem., vol. L, p. 549. Amer. Quar. Itev. ofFreem., vol. i,, p. 546. 44 THE WRITTEN LAW. law, which are here given, not in the antiquated language in which they were written,' and in which they are published in Halliwell'sbook a language which would be almost wholly unintelligible to the great mass of readers but as they have been very correctly translated and condensed by Dr. Oliver, in the volume already referred to. Besides their importance, they will be read with interest as the oldest Masonic Constitutions extant. The Fifteen Articles. 1. The Master must be steadfast, trusty and true ; provide victuals for his men, and pay their wages punctually.* 2. Every Master shall attend the Grand Lodge when duly summoned, unless be have a good and reasonable excuse. 3. No Master shall take an Apprentice for less than seven years.f 4. The son of a bondman shall not be admitted as an Ap- prentice, lest, when he is introduced into the Lodge, any of the brethren should be offended. 5. A candidate must be without blemish, and have the full and proper use of his limbs ; for a maimed man can do the craft no good.J 6. The Master shall take especial care, in the admission of an Apprentice, that he do his lord no prejudice. * This reference to the wages of operative Masonry is still preserved in the formula of the Senior Warden's response in opening and closing a Lodge ; but the wages of a sp( culative Mason consist in a knowledge of truth. t Speculatively, no candidate shall pass to a higher degree, until be baa served a " sufficient time" and made " due proBciency" iu the preceding degree. | This is repeated in all subsequent regulations, and is still in foree notwithstanding some recent attempts to reduce its rigor. THE WRITTEN LAW. 45 7. He shall harbor no thief or thief s retainer, lest the craft should come to shame. 8. If he unknowingly employ an imperfect man, he shall discharge him from the work when his inability is dis- covered * 9. No Master shall undertake a wok that he is not able to finish to his lord's profit and the credit of his Lodge. 10. A brother shall not supplant his fellow in the work 7 | unless he be incapable of doing it himself; for then he may lawfully finish it, that pleasure and profit may be the mutual result. 11. A Mason shall not be obliged to work after the sun has set in the west. 12. Nor shall he decry the work of a brother or fellow, but shall deal honestly and truly by him, under a penalty of not less than ten pounds. 13. The Master shall instruct his Apprentice faithfully, and make him a perfect workman. 14. He shall teach him all the secrets of his trade. 15. And shall guard him against the commission of per jury, and all other offences by which the craft may be brought to shame. The Fifteen Points. 1. Every Mason shall cultivate brotherly love and the love of God, and frequent holy church. 2. The workman shall labor diligently on work days, that he may deserve his holidays. * This is the foundation of that principle of law by which <\ candidate ma/ be stopped in any part of his progress as. for instance, that an tnUned Apprentice, being objected to, may be refused by the Lodge advancement to the Fellow Craft's degree. t That is, no Lodge shall interfere with the work of another L^dge. These afford illustrations of how the operative allusions in all the old Constitutions are to be interpreted in a speculative sense. 46 THE WRITTEN LAW. 3. Every Apprentice shall keep his Master's counsel, and not betray the secrets of his Lodge. 4. No man shall be false to the craft, or entertain a preju- dice against his Master or Fellows. 5. Every workman shall receive his wages meekly, and without scruple ; and should the Master think proper to dis iniss him from the work, he shall have due notice of the same before H. xii. 6. If any dispute arise among the brethren, it shall be settled on a holiday, that the work be not neglected, and God's law fulfilled. 7. No Mason shall debauch, or have carnal knowledge of the wife, daughter, or concubine of his Master or Fellows. 8. He shall be true to his Master, and a just mediator in all disputes or quarrels. 9. The Steward shall provide good cheer against the hour of refreshment, and each Fellow shall punctually defray his share of the reckoning, the Steward rendering a true and correct account. 10. If a Mason live amiss, or slander his Brother, so as to bring the craft to shame, he shall -have no further mainten- ance among the brethren, but shall be summoned to the next Grand Lodge ; and if he refuse to appear, he shall be expelled. 11. If a Brother see his Fellow hewing a stone, and likely to spoil it by unskillful workmanship, he shall teach him to amend it, with fair words and brotherly speeches. 12. The General Assembly, or Grand Lodge, shall consist of Masters and Fellows, Lords, Knights and Squires, Mayor and Sheriff, to make new laws, and to confirm old ones when necessary. 13. Every Brother shall swear fealty, and if he violate his oath, he shall not be succored or assisted by any of the Fraternity. 14. He shall make oath to keep secrets, to be steadfast and true to all the ordinances of the Grand Lodge, to the THE WRITTEN LAW. 47 King and Holy Church, and to all the several Points herein specified. 1 15. And if any Brother break his oath, he shall be com- mitted to prison, and forfeit his goods and chattels to the King. They conclude with an additional ordinance alia ordinacio which declares That a General Assembly shall be held every year, with the Grand Master at its head, to enforce these regulations, and to make new laws, when it may be expedient to do so, at which all the brethren are competent to be present ; and they must renew their 0. B. to keep these statutes and con- stitutions, which have been ordained by King Athelstan, and adopted by the Grand Lodge at York. And this Assembly further directs that, in all ages to come, the existing Grand Lodge shall petition the reigning monarch to confer his sanction on their proceedings. II. THE CONSTITUTIONS OF EDWARD III. Anderson informs us,* on the authority of an old record, that in the reign of King Edward III., (that is, between the years 1327 and 1377), the Grand Master, with his Wardens, at the head of the Grand Lodge, with the consent of the lords of the realm, who were generally Freemasons, ordained the following Constitutions : 1. That for the future, at the making or admission of q Brother, the constitutions and the charges shall be read. 2. That Master Masons, or Masters of the work, shall be * CfrnsMuficms, 2d edit., p. 7J. 48 THE WRITTEN LAW. examined whether they be able of cunning to serve their respective lords, as well the highest as the lowest, to the honor and worship of the aforesaid art, and to the profit of their lords ; for they be their lords that employ them for their travel. 3. That when the Master and Wardens meet in a Lodge, if need be, the Sheriff of the county, or the Mayor of the city, or Alderman of the town, in which the congregation is held, should be made fellow and sociate to the Master, in help of him against rebels, and for upbearing the rights of the realm. 4. That Entered Prentices at their making were charged not to be thieves, or thieves-maintainers ; that they should travel honestly for their pay, and love their Fellows as them- selves, and be true to the King of England, and to the realm, and to the Lodge. 5. That at such congregations it shall be enquired, whether any Master or Fellow has broke any of the articles agreed to. And if the offender, being duly cited to appear, prove rebel, and will not attend, then the Lodge shall determine against him that he shall forswear (or renounce) his Masonry, and shall no more use this craft; the which, if he presume for to do, the Sheriff of the county shall prison him, and take all his goods into the king's hands, till his grace be granted him an issue : for this cause principally have these congre- gations been ordained, that as well the lowest as the highest should be well and truly served in this art foresaid through- out all the kingdom of Englan.1. III. REGULATIONS OF 16C3. in the reign of Charles I., Henry Jermyn, Earl of St. Albans, being chosen Grand Master, he held a General Assembly and Feast on St. John the Evangelist's day, 1663, when the following regula- tions were adopted : THE WRITTEN LAW. 49 1. That no person, of what degree soever, be made or accepted a Freemason, unless in a regular Lodge, whereof one to be a Master or a Warden in that limit or division where such Lodge is kept, and another to be a craftsman in the trade of Freemasonry. 2. That no person shah 1 hereafter be accepted a Freemason but such as are of able body, honest parentage, good repu- tation, and an observer of the laws of the land. 3. That no person hereafter who shall be accepted a Free- mason, shall be admitted into any Lodge or assembly, until lie has brought a certificate of the time and place of his ac- ceptation from the Lodge that accepted him, unto the Master of that limit or division where such Lodge is kept ; and the said Master shall enroll the same in a roll of parchment, to be kept for that purpose, and shall give an account of all such acceptations at every General Assembly. 4. That every person who is now a Freemason, shall bring to the Master a note of the time of his acceptation, to the end the same may be enrolled in such priority of place as the Brother deserves ; and that the whole company and Fellows may the better know each other. 5. That for the future the said fraternity of Freemasons shall be regulated and governed by one Grand Master, and as many Wardens as the said society shall think fit to ap- point at every annual General Assembly. 6. That no person shah 1 be accepted, unless he be twenty- one years old or more. IV. THE ANCIENT INSTALLATION CHARGES. These Charges appear from their style to be very old, although their date is uncertain. They were contained in a MS. written in the reign of James II., which extended from 1685 to 1688, which MS., according to Preston, was in possession of the Lodge of Antiquity in London. They are said to have 3 50 THE WRITTEN LAW. been used at the installation of the Master of a Lodge. Probably they are older than the year 1686; but that date is often used as a means of reference. The Charges are as follows : 1. That ye shall be true men to God and the holy church, and to use no error or heresy by your understanding, and by wise men's teaching. 2. That ye shall be .true liegemen to the King of England, without treason or any falsehood, and that ye know no treason but ye shall give knowledge thereof to the king, or to his counsel ; also, ye shall be true one to another, that is to say, every Mason of the craft that is Mason allowed, ye shall do to him as ye would be done unto yourself. 3. And ye shall keep truly all the counsel that ought to be kept in the way of Masonhood, and all the counsel of the Lodge or of the chamber. Also, that ye shall be no thief nor thieves to your knowledge free ; that ye shall be true to the king, lord or master that ye serve, and truly to see and work for his advantage. 4. Ye shall call all Masons your Fellows, or your brethren, and no other names. 5. Ye shall not take your Fellow's wife in villainy, nor de- flower his daughter or. servant, nor put him to disworship. 6. Ye shall truly pay for your meat or drink, wheresoever ye go to table or board. Also, ye shall do no villainy there, whereby the craft or science may be slandered. V. THE ANCIENT CHARGES AT MAKINGS. The MS. in the archives of the Lodge of Antiquity from which I have quoted the preceding charges, adds to them fifteen more, which are said to be '' Charges single for Masons allowed or accepted," *hat is to say, as is added at the end, " Charges and THE WRITTEN LAW. 51 covenants to be read at the mak- ing of a -fc'reemason or Freemasons." They are aa follows : 1. That no Mason take on him no lord's work, nor any other man's, unless he know himself well able to perform the work, so that the craft have no slander. 2. Also, that no Master take work but that he take reason- able pay for it ; so that the lord may be truly served, and the Master to live honestly, and to pay his Fellows truly. And that no Master or Fellow supplant others of their work ; that is to say, that if he hath taken a work, or else stand Master of any work, that he shall not put him out, unless he be un- able of cunning to make an end of his work. And no Master nor Fellow shall take no Apprentice for less than seven years. And that the Apprentice be free born, and of limbs whole as a man ought to be, and no bastard. And that no Master nor Fellow take no allowance to be made Mason without the as- sent of his Fellows, at the least six or seven. 3. That he that be made be able in all degrees ; that is, free born, of a good kindred, true, and no bondsman, and that he have his right limbs as a man ought to have. 4. That a Master take no Apprentice without he have occu- pation to occupy two or thi^e Fellows at the least. 5. That no Master or Fellow put away any lord's work to task that ought to be journeywork. 6. That every Master give pay to his Fellows and servants as they may deserve, so that he be not defamed with false working. And that none slander another behind his back to make him lose his good name. 7. That no Fellow in the house or abroad, answer another ungodly or reproveably without a cause. 8. That every Master Mason do reverence to his elder; and that a Mason be no common player at the cards, dice or hazard; or at any other unlawful plays, through the whi^L the science <\nd craft may be dishonored and slandered 62 THE WRITTEN LAW. 9. That no Fellow go into the town by night, except he have a Fellow with him, who may bear him record that ho was in an honest place. 10. That every Master and Fellow shall come to the assem- bly, if it be within fifty miles of him, if he have any warning. And if he have trespassed against the craft, to abide the re- ward of Masters and Fellows. 11. That every Master Mason and Fellow that hath tres- passed against the craft, shall stand to the correction of other Masters and Fellows to make him accord ; and if they cannot accord, to go to the common law. 12. That a Master or Fellow make not a mould stone, square nor rule, to no lowen, nor let no loweri work work within their Lodge nor Avithout, to mould stone. 13. That every Mason receive and cherish strange Fellows, when they come over the country, and set them on work, if they will work, as the manner is ; that is to say, if the Mason have any mould stone in his place, he shall give him a mould stone, and set him on work ; and if he have none, the Mason shall refresh him with money imto the next Lodge. 14. That every Mason shall truly serve his Master for his pay. 15. That every Master shall truly make an end of his work, task or journey, whitherso it be. VI. THE REGULATION OF 1703. I know not upon what authority Rebold places the date of this Regulation in 1703. He cannot, however, be far wrong, as it is certain that it was adopted at the beginning of the eighteenth century, and during the latter part of the Grand Mastership of Sir Christopher Wren. The Regulation is an important one, and had an extensive influence on the subsequent character of the institution. Pres- THE WRITTEN LAW. 53 ton* says that it was adopted in consequence of the decadence of the Lodges, and for the purpose of in- creasing their members. It is in these words : That the privileges of Masonry should no longer be re- stricted to operative Masons, but extend to men of various professions, provided they were regularly approved and in- itiated into the Order.f VII. THE REGULATION OP 1717. Prestonf informs us that, on St. John the Baptist's day, 1717, at the establishment of the Grand Lodge of England by the four Lodges in London, the fol- lowing Regulation was adopted : That the privilege of assembling as Masons, which had been hitherto unlimited, should be vested in certain Lodges 01 assemblies of Masons, convened in certain places ; and that every Lodge to be hereafter convened, except the four old Lodges at this time existing, should be legally authorized to act by a warrant from the Grand Master for the time being, granted to certain individuals by petition, with the consent * Illustrations of Masonry, p. 180. f There is something in the phraseology of this regulation whic> makes it irreconcilable with the facts of history. It is well known that, ti ^m the earliest periods, a speculative and an operative element were ccmbin. 1 in the institution, and that many distinguished princes, noblemen, prelates and scholars, who were not operative Masons, held high rank and position in the Fraternity. The most of the craftsmen were, however, undoubtedly, opera- tive or stone masons. The object of this regulation, perhaps, really was, to give an entirely speculative character to the institution, and completely to divest it of its operative element. Although not precisely so worded, this seems to have been the universal interpretation, and such has actually teen the result. t Illustrations, p. 182. 54 THE WRITTEN LAW. and approbation of the Grand Lodge in communication ; ami that without such warrant, no Lodge should be hereafter deemed regular or constitutional.* Till. THE REGULATION OF 1720. At a quarterly communication of the Grand Lodge of England, held on the 24th of June, 1720, the following new Regulation was adopted : In future, the new Grand Master shall be named and pro- posed to the Grand Lodge some time before the feast; and, if approved and present, he shall be saluted as Grand Mas- ter elect ; and every Grand Master, when he is installed, shall have the sole power of appointing his Deputy and Wardens, according to ancient custom.f * IX. THE CHARGES APPROVED IN 1722. The Charges now to be inserted were presented to the Grand Lodge by Dr. Anderson and Dr. Desagu- liers, in 1721, and being approved by the Grand Lodge on the 25th of March, 1722, were subse- quently published in the first edition of the Book of Constitutions, with the following title : " The Charges of a Freemason, extracted from the Ancient Recordp of Lodges beyond sea, and of those in England, Scot- * .'RES-TON says that a sufficient number of Masons could, up to the time of the adoption of this regulation, meet together, open a Lodge, and make Masons, with the consent of the sheriff or chief magistrate of the place. The regulation here quoted, which abolished this usage, is the one under which the present system of permanent chartered Lodges is maintained. f This regulation has been very generally repealed by the Grand Lodges of the United States. In England, and in North Carolina and a very few other Grand Lodges in this country, it is still in force. Bnt in the greater number of States, the .>ffice of Deputy, like that of Grand Master, is elective. THE vTRITTEtf LAW. 55 land and Ireland, for the use of the Lodges in London : to be read at the making of new Brethren, or when the Master shall order it." These Charges have always been held in the high- est veneration by the Fraternity, as embodying the most important points of the ancient Written as well as Unwritten Law of Masonry. I. CONCERNING GOD AND RELIGION. A Mason is obliged, by his tenure, to obey the moral law ;f and if he rightly understands the art, he will never be a stupid atheist, nor an irreligious libertine. But though in ancient times Masons were charged in every country to be of the religion of that country or nation, whatever it was, yet 'tis now thought more expedient only to oblige them to * LAURENCE DEKMOTT, the Deputy Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Ancient Masons, or Athol Grand Lodge, as it has been of late very usually called, published a very distorted copy of these Charges in the Ahiman Rezon,or Book of Constitutions, which he compiled for the use of the illegal Grand Lodge with which he was connected. This incorrect version of Der- mott was subsequently copied by Smith, in his Ahiman Rezon of Pennsyl- vania ; by Dalcho, in that of South Carolina ; by Cole, in his Freemason's Library, and by several other American writei-s; and many of the wordy, bat unnecessary, controversies on subjects of Masonic law, which a few years age were becoming the reproach of American Masonry, (although by the investi- gations which they have promoted, they have been of ultimate benefit,) arose from the fact that Dermott's copy of the Charges was repeatedly copied as good law, which, of course, it was not ; because the Grand Lodge to which he was attached was irregular, and because his edition of the Charges was altered from the original. It is a subject of curious speculation, whether Dermott did not derive his Charges from those published by Anderson in 1738. The alterations made by Anderson in that year were never re- peated in subsequent editions. t DERMOTT adds, " as a true Noachida," and he subsequently interpolates that Masons " all agree in the three great articles of Noah," which is incorrect, since the PRECEPTS OF NOAH were seven. 56 THE WRITTEN LAW. that religion in which all men agree, leaving their particulai opinions to themselves ; that is, to be good men and true, or men of honour and honesty, by whatever denominations 01 persuasions they may be distinguished : whereby Masonry becomes the centre of union, and the means of conciliating true friendship among persons that must have remained at a perpetual distance. II. OF THE CIVIL MAGISTRATE, SUPREME AND SUBORDINATE. A Mason is a peaceable subject to the civil powers, wher- ever he resides or works, and is never to be concerned in plots and conspiracies against the peace and welfare of the nation, nor to behave himself undutifully to inferior magis- trates ; for as Masonry hath been always injured by war, bloodshed and confusion, so ancient kings and princes have been much disposed to encourage the craftsmen, because of their peaceableness and loyalty, whereby they practically answered the cavils of their adversaries, and promoted the honor of the Fraternity, who ever flourished in times of peace. So that if a Brother should be a rebel against the state, he is not to be countenanced in his rebellion, however he may be pitied as an unhappy man ; and, if convicted of no other crime, though the loyal brotherhood must and ought to disown his rebellion, and give no umbrage or ground of political jealousy to the government for the time being ; they cannot expel him from the Lodge, and his rela- tion to it remains indefeasible. in. OF LODGES. A Lodge is a place where Masons assemble and work , hence that assembly, or duly organized society of Masons, is called a Lodge, and every Brother ought to belong to one and to be subject to its by-laws and the General Regulations It is either particular or general, and will be best understood b} attending it, arid by the regulations of the General OT THE WRITTEN LAW. 57 Grand Lodge hereunto annexed. In ancient times, no Master or Fellow could be absent from it, especially when warned to appear at it, without incurring a severe censure, until it appeared to the Master and Wardens that pure necessity hindered him. The persons admitted members of a Lodge must be good and true men, free born, and of mature and discreet age, no bondmen, no women, no immoral or scandalous men, but of good report.* IV. OF MASTERS, WARDENS, FELLOWS AND APPRENTICES.f All preferment among Masons is grounded upon real worth and personal merit only; that so the lords may be well served, the brethren not put to shame, nor the royal craft despised ; therefore no Master or Warden is chosen by seni- ority, but for his merit. It is impossible to describe these things in writing, and every Brother must attend in his place, and learn them in a way peculiar to this Fraternity : only candidates may know that no Master should take an Appren- tice unless he has sufficient imployment for him, and unless he be a perfect youth, having no maim or defect in his body, that may render him uncapable of learning the art, of serving his Master's lord, and of being made a Brother, and then a Fellow Craft in due time, even after he has served such a term of years as the custom of the country directs ; and that he should be descended of honest parents ; that so, when otherwise qualified, he may arrive to the honour of being the * DERMOTT alters this clause respecting the qualifications, &c., so as to read thus: " The men made Masons must be free born (or no bondmen), of ma- ture age, and of good report ; hale and sound, not deformed or dismembered at the time of their making ; but no woman, no eunuch." t DERMOTT makes very considerable and important alterations in this Charge, as, for instance, he brings the Master Masons forward as constituting the great body of the craft ; whereas, it will be perceived that Entered Ap- prentices and Fellow Crafts are alone spoken of in that capacity in the authen tic Charges. But Anderson made the same change in his edition of 1738. 3* 58 THE WRITTEN LAW. Warden, and then the Master of the Lodge, the Grand War- den, and at length the Grand Master of all the Lodges, accord- ing to his merit. No Brother can be a Warden until he has passed the part of a Fellow Craft ;* nor a Master, until he has acted as a Warden, nor Grand Warden until he has been Master of a Lodge, nor Grand Master, unless he has been a Fellow Craftf before his election, who is also to be nobly born, or a gentle- man of the best fashion, or some eminent scholar, or some curious architect or other artist, descended of honest parents, and who is of singular great merit in the opinion of the Lodges. And for the bettur and easier, and more honourable discharge of his office, the Grand Master has a power to chuse his own Deputy Grand Master, who must be then, or must have been formerly, the Master of a particular Lodge, and has the privilege of acting whatever the Grand Master, his principal, should act, unless the said principal be present, or interpose his authority by a letter. T]hese rulers and governors, supreme and subordinate, of the ancient Lodge, are to be obeyed in their respective stations by all the brethren, according to the Old Charges and Regulations, with all humility, reverence, love, and alacrity. Y. OF THE MANAGEMENT OF THE CRAFT IN WORKING. All Masons shall work honestly on working days, that they may live creditably on noly days ; and the time appointed * DEBMOTT says : " The Wardens are chosen from among the Master Masons." t DEBMOTT says that " none can act as Grand Master who has not acted as the Master of a particular Lodge." This, it is true, is the modern usage ; but the Old Charges make no such requisition, as it was always competent for the Grand Master to be chosen from the body of the craft This is an instance in which in this country the authority of Dermott has exercised an influence paramount to that of the original constitutions. A large number of the Lodges in America derived their warrants from the Athol Grand Lodge. There is no such provision in the modern constitution of the Grand Lodge of England. THE WEITTEN LAW. 59 by the law of the land, or confirmed by custom, shall b*> observed. The most expert of the Fellow Craftsmen shall be chosen or appointed the Master or overseer of the lord's work:* who is to be called Master by those that work under him. The craftsmen are to avoid all ill language, and to call each other by no disobliging name, but Brother or Fellow ; and ro behave themselves courteously within and without the Lodge. The Master, knowing himself to be able of cunning, shall undertake the lord's work as reasonably as possible, and truly dispend his goods as if they were his own ; nor to give more wages to any Brother or Apprentice than he really may deserve. Both the Master and the Mason receiving their wages justly, shall be faithful to the lord, and honestly finish their work, whether task or journey ; nor put the work to task that hath been acccustomed to journey. None shall discover envy at the prosperity of a Brother, nor supplant him, or put him out of his work, if he be capable to finish the same ; for no man can finish another's work so much to the lord's profit, unless he be thoroughly acquainted with the designs and draughts of him that began it. When a Fellow Craftsman is chosen Warden of the work under the Master, he shall be true both to Master and Fel- lows ; shall carefully oversee the work in the Master's absence to the lord's profit; and his brethren shall obey him. All Masons employed shall meekly receive their wages vithout murmuring or mutiny, and not desert the Master till the work is finished. * DERMOTT says : " A Master Mason only must be the surveyor or Master of the work." Here again the alteration of Dermott has, in modem usage, superseded the original regulation. Fellcvv Crafts are not now eligible to office. 60 THE WRITTEN LAW. A younger Brother shall be instructed in working, to pre- vent spoiling the materials for want of judgment, and for in- creasing and continuing of brotherly love. All the tools used in working shall be approved by the Grand Lodge. No labourer shall be employed in the proper work of Ma- sonry ; nor shall Free Masons work with those that are not free, without an urgent necessity ; nor shall they teach la- bourers and unaccepted Masons, as they should teach a Brother or Fellow. VI. OF BEHAVIOUR, VIZ : 1. In the Lodge while Constituted. Y"ou are not to hold private committees, or separate con- versation, without leave from the Master, nor to talk of any thing impertinent or unseemly, nor interrupt the Master or Wardens, or any Brother speaking to the Master ; nor be- have yourself ludicrously or jestingly while the Lodge is engaged in what is serious and solemn ; nor use any unbe- coming language upon any pretence whatsoever ; but to pay due reverence to your Master, Wardens and Fellows, and put them to worship. If any complaint be brought, the Brother found guilty shall stand to the award and determination of the Lodge, who are the proper and competent judges of all such contro- versies, (unless you carry it by appeal to the Grand Lodge,) and to whom they ought to be referred, unless a lord's work be hindered the meanwhile, in which case a particular refer- ence may be made ; but you must never go to law about what concerneth Masonry, without an absolute necessity ap- parent to the Lodge. 2. BeJiaviour after ilie, Lodge is over and the Brethren not gone. You may enjoy yourself with innocent mirth, treating one another according to ability, but avoiding all excess, or foro THE WRITTEN LAW. 61 big any Brother to eat or drink beyond his inclination, or hindering him from going when his occasions call him, or doing or saying any thing offensive, or that may forbid an easy and free conversation ; for that would blast our har- mony and defeat our laudable purposes. Therefore no private piques or quarrels must be brought within the door of the Lodge, far less any quarrels about religion, or nations, or state policy, we being only, as Masons, of the Catkolick religion above-mentioned ; we are also of all nations, tongues, kindreds, and languages, and are resolved against all poli- ticks, as what never yet conduced to the welfare of the Lodge, nor ever will. This Charge has been always strictly enjoined and observed ; but especially ever since the Refor- mation in Britain, or the dissent and secession of these nations from the communion of Rome. 3. BeJiaviour when Brethren meet without Strangers, but not in a Lodge formed. You are to salute one another in a courteous manner, as you will be instructed, calling each other Brother, freely giv- ing mutual instruction as shallbe thought expedient, without being overseen or overheard, and without encroaching upon each other, or derogating from that respect which is due to any Brother, were he not a Mason ; for though all Masons are as brethren upon the same level, yet Masonry takes no honour from a man that he had before ; nay, rather it adds to his honour, especially if he has deserved well of the Brotherhood, who must give .honour to whom it is due, and avoid ill manners. 4. Behaviour in Iresence of Strangers not Masons. Zou shall be cautious in your words and carriage, that the most penetrating stranger shall not be able to discover or find out what is not proper to be intimated ; and sometimes you shall divert a discourse and manage it prudently for the honour of the worshipful Friternity. 62 THE WRITTEN LAW, 5. Behaviour at Home, and in your Neighbourhood. You are to act as becomes a moral and wise man ; particu- larly not to let your family, friends and neighbours know the concerns of the Lodge, &c., but wisely to consult your own honour and that of the ancient Brotherhood, for reasons not to be mentioned here. You must also consult your health, by not continuing together too late, or too long from home, after Lodge hours are past ; and by avoiding of gluttony or drunkenness, that your families be not neglected or injured, nor you disabled from working. 6. Behaviour towards a Strange Brother. You are cautiously to examine him, in such a method as prudence shall direct you, that you may not be imposed upon by an ignorant false pretender, whom you are to reject with contempt and derision, and beware of giving him any hints of knowledge. But if you discover him to be a true and genuine Brother, you are to respect him accordingly ; and if he is in want, you must relieve him if you can, or else direct him how lie may be relieved. You must employ him some days, or else recommend him to be employed. But you are not charged to do beyond your ability, only to prefer a poor Brother that is a good man and true, before any other poor people in the same circumstances. Finally, all these Charges you are to observe, and also those that shall be communicated to you in another way ; cultivating brotherly love, the foundation and cape-stone, the cement and glory of this ancient Fraternity ; avoiding all wrangling and quarreling, all slander and backbiting, nor permitting others to slander any honest Brother, but defend- ing his character, and doing him all good offices, as far as is consistent with your honour and safety, and no farther. And if any of them do you injury, you must apply to your own or hie Lodge, and from thence you may appeal to the THE WRITTEN LAW. 63 fJrand Lodge at the Quarterly Communication, and from thence to the Annual Grand Lodge, as has been the ancient laudable conduct of our forefathers in every nation ; never taking a legal course but when the case cannot be otherwise decided, and patiently listening to the honest and friendly advice of Master and Fellows, when they would prevent you going to law with strangers, or would excite you to put a speedy period to all lawsuits, that so you may mind the afiair of Masonry with the more alacrity and success ; but with respect to Brothers or Fellows at law, the Master and Brethren should kindly offer their mediation, which ought to be thankfully submitted to by the contending brethren ; and if that submission is impracticable, they must, however, carry on their process or lawsuit without wrath and rancor, (not in the common way) saying or doing nothing which may hinder brotherly love, and good offices to be renewed and continued ; that all may see the benign influence of Ma- sonry, as all true Masons have done from the beginning of the world, and will do to the end of time. X. THE GENERAL REGULATIONS OP 1721. The most complete history that could be given of these General Regulations, is to be found in the title which precedes them in the first edition of Anderson's Constitutions, and which is contained in these words : GENERAL REGULATIONS, first compiled by Mr. George Payne, anno 1720, when he was Grand Master, and approved by the Grand Lodge on St. John Baptist's day, anno 1721, at Station- er's Hall, London, when the Most Noble Prince John, Duke of Montagu, was unanimously chosen our Grand Master for the year ensuing; who chose John Beal, M. D., his Deputy Grand Master ; and Mr. Josiah Yilleneau and Mr. Thomas Morris, Jun., were chosen by the Lodge Grand Wardens 64 THE WRITTEN LAW, And now, by the command of our said Right Worshipful Grand Master Montagu, the author of this book has com pared them with, and reduced them to the ancient records and immemorial usages of the Fraternity, and digested them into this new method, with several proper explications, for the use of the Lodges in and about London and West- minster. In subsequent editions of the Book of Consti- tutions, these Regulations were altered or amended in various points; but the original thirty-nine, as published in the first edition, are all that are now considered as entitled to any authority as part of the universal Written Law of Masonry. Until lately, however, it was difficult to obtain access to the first edition of the Book of Constitutions, pre- pared for and by order of the Grand Lodge, by the Rev. James Anderson, which had been long out of print, and therefore rare, and consequently many erroneous deductions were made, and false prin- ciples laid down in Masonic law, from the fact that the references were made to the new Regulations contained in the subsequent editions. Another fer- tile source of error was. that Laurence Dermott,in his "Ahiman Rezon, or Help to a Brother," published these " Old Regulations," and that in a mutilated form, witn a corresponding column of the "New Regulations," which are, of course, without author- ity, and which, nevertheless, have been sometimes ignorantly quoted as Masonic law. I shall, as in the instance of the " Charges," occasionally call at THE WRITTEN LAW. 6? teiition to these alterations and amendments of the Old Regulations, just as the chart -makers lay down the location of the rocks and breakers which the ship is to avoid.* I. The Grand Master or his Deputy hath authority and right, not only to be present in any true Lodge, but also to preside wherever he is, with the Master of the Lodge on his left hand, and to order his Grand Wardens to attend him, who are not to act in any particular Lodges as Wardens, but in his presence, and at his command ; because there the Grand Master may command the Wardens of that Lodge, or any other brethren he pleaseth, to attend and act as his Wardens pro tempore.^ II. The Master of a particular Lodge has the right and authority of congregating the members of his Lodge into a Chapter at pleasure, upon any emergency or occurrence, as well as to appoint the time and place of their usual forming ; and in case of sickness, death, or necessary absence of the Master, the Senior Warden shall act as Master pro tempore, * The new Regulations, some of which were adopted as early as 1723, were wanting in this ingredient, that they were not adopted according to the pro- visions of the 39th Regulation of 1721, viz : That they should be offered at the Grand Feast to the consideration of all the brethren, even the youngest Apprentice. Seeing this difficulty, the Grand Lodge, in 1723, adopted a new Regulation, declaring that " any Grand Lodge duly met has a power to amend or explain any of the printed Regulations in the Book of Constitutions, while they break not in upon the ancient rules of the Fraternity." But I doubt the constitutionality of any alteration, except at an Annual Commu- nication, which has now taken the place of and represents the Grand Feast At all events, this has been the modern usage, and accordingly, many of these General Regulations have been altered or amended by successive Grand Lodges. f That is, says the new Regulation, only when the Grand Wardens are absent ; for the Grand Master cannot deprive them of their office without showing cause. Such, by universal consent, has been the subsequent inter pretation of this Regulation. 66 THE WRITTEN LAY/. if no Brother is present who has been Master of that Lodge before ; for in that case the absent Master's authority re- verts to the last Master then present; though he cannot act until the said Senior Warden has once congregated the Lodge, or in his absence the Junior Warden.* III. The Master of each particular Lodge, or one of the Wardens, or some other Brother by his order, shall keep a book containing their by-laws, the names of their members, with a list of all the Lodges in town, and the usual times and places of their forming, and all their transactions that are proper to be written. IV. No Lodge shall make more than five new brethren at one time, nor any man under the age of twenty-five, who must be also his own master, unless by a dispensation from the Grand Master or his Deputy. V. No man can be made or admitted a member of a par- ticular Lodge without previous notice one month before given to the said Lodge, in order to make due enquiry into the reputation and capacity of the candidate, unless by the dispensation aforesaid. VI. But no man can be entered a Brother in any particu- lar Lodge, or admitted to be a member thereof, without the unanimous consent of all the members of that Lodgef then present when the candidate is proposed, and their consent is formally asked by the Master; and they are to signify their consent or dissent in their own prudent way, either virtually or in form, but with unanimity ; nor is this inherent privilege subject to a dispensation ; because the members * There is a palpable contradiction in the terms of this Regulation, which caused a new Regulation to be adopted in 1723, which declares that the au- thority of Ihe Master shall, in such cases, devolve on the Senior Warden, and such is now the general sense of the Fraternity. t A subsequent Regulation allowed the Lodges to admit a member, if not ibove three ballots were against him. But in this country this has nevei been considered as good law, and the rule of unanimity has been very strictty enforced. THE WRITTEN LAW. 6V of a particular Lodge are the best judges of it ; and if a frac- tious member should be imposed on them, it might spoil their harmony, or hinder their freedom ; or even break and disperse the Lodge, which ought to be avoided by all good and true brethren. VII. Every new Brother at his making is decently to clothe the Lodge, that is, all the brethren present, arid to deposit something for the relief of indigent and decayed brethren, as the candidate shall think fit to bestow, over and above the small allowance stated by the by-laws of that par- ticular Lodge ; which charity shall be lodged with the Mas- ter or Wardens, or the cashier, if the members think fit to choose one. And the candidate shall also solemnly promise to submit to the Constitutions, the Charges and Regulations, and to such other good usages as shall be intimated to them in time and place convenient. YIII. No set or number of brethren shall withdraw or separate themselves from the Lodge in which they were made brethren, or were afterwards admitted members, un- less the Lodge becomes too numerous ; nor even then, with- out a dispensation from the Grand Master or his Deputy ; and when they are thus separated, they must either imme- diately join themselves to such other Lodge as they shall like best, with the unanimous consent of that other Lodge to which they go (as above regulated,) or else they must obtain the Grand Master's warrant to join in forming a new Lodge. If any set or number of Masons shall take upon themselves to form a Lodge without the Grand Master's warrant, the regular Lodges are not to countenance them, nor own them as fair brethren and duly formed, nor approve of their acts and deeds ; but must treat them as rebels, until they humble themselves, as the Grand Master shall in his prudence direct, and until he approve of them by his warrant, which must be signified to the other Lodges, as the custom is when a new Lodge is to be registered in the list of Lodges. 68 THE WRITTEN LAW. IX. But if any Brother so far misbehave himself as to render his Lodge uneasy, he shall be twice duly admonished by the Master or Wardens in a formed Lodge ; and if he will not refrain his imprudence, and obediently submit to the advice of the brethren, and reform what gives them offence, he shall be dealt with according to the by-laws of that par- ticular Lodge, or else in such a manner as the Quarterly Com- munication shall in their great prudence think fit ; for which a new Regulation may be afterwards made. X. The majority of every particular Lodge, when congre- gated, shall have the privilege of giving instructions to their Master and Wardens, before the assembling of the Grand Chapter or Lodge, at the three Quarterly Communications hereafter mentioned, and of the Annual Grand Lodge too ; because their Master and Wardens are their representatives, and are supposed to speak their mind. XI. All particular Lodges are to observe the same usages as much as possible ; in order to which, and for cultivating a good understanding among Freemasons, some members out of every Lodge shall be deputed to visit the other Lodges as often as shall be thought convenient. XII. The Grand Lodge consists of, and is formed by the Masters and Wardens of all the regular particular Lodges upon record, with the Grand Master at their head, and his Deputy on his left hand, and the Grand Wardens in their proper places ; and must have a Quarterly Communication about Michaelmas, Christmas and Lady-day, in some conven- ient place, as the Grand Master shall appoint, where no Brother shall be present who is not at that time a member thereof without a dispensation; and while he stays, he shall not be allowed to vote, nor even give his opinion, without leave of the Grand Lodge asked and given, or unless it be duly asked by the said Lodge. All matters are to be determined in the Grand Lodge by a majority of votes, each member having one vote, and the Grand Master having two votes, unless the said Lodge THE WRITTEN LAW. 69 any particular thing .to the determination of the Grand Mas- ter for the sake of expedition. XIII. At the said Quarterly Communication, all matters that concern the Fraternity in general, or particular Lodges, or single brethren, are quietly, sedately and maturely to be dis- coursed of and transacted ; Apprentices must be admitted Masters and Fellow Crafts only here,* unless by a dispensa- tion. Here also all differences, that cannot be made up and accommodated privately, nor by a particular Lodge, are to be seriously considered and decided ; and if any Brother thinks himself aggrieved by the decision of this Board, he may appeal to the Annual Grand Lodge next ensuing, and leave his appeal in writing with the Grand Master, or his Deputy, or the Grand Wardens. Here also the Master or the Wardens of each particular Lodge shall bring and pro- duce a list of such members as have been made, or even admitted in their particular Lodges since the last Communi- cation of the Grand Lodge ; and there shall be a book kept by the Grand Master, or his Deputy, or rather by some Brother whom the Grand Lodge shall appoint for Secretary, wherein shall be recorded all the Lodges, with their usual times and places of forming, and the names of all the mem- bers of each Lodge ; and all the affairs of the Grand Lodge that are proper to be written. They shall also consider of the most prudent and effectual methods of collecting and disposing of what money shall be given to, or lodged with them in charity, towards the relief only of any true Brother fallen into poverty or decay, but of none else ; but every particular Lodge shall dispose of their own charity for poor brethren, according to their own by- * This is an important Regulation, the subsequent alteration of whioh, by universal consent, renders many of the Old Regulations inapplicable to the present condition of Masonry. For whereas formerly Entered Apprentices constituted the general body of the Craft, now it is composed altogether of Master Masons ; hence many Regulations, formerly applicable to Apprentice* can now only be interpreted as referring u. Master Masons. 70 THE WRITTEN LAW. laws, until it be agreed by all the Lodges (in a new regular tion) to carry in the charity collected by them to the Grand Lodge, at the Quarterly or Annual Communication, in order to make a common stock of it, for the more handsome relief of poor brethren. They shall also appoint a Treasurer, a Brother of good worldly substance, who shall be a member of the Grand Lodge by virtue of his office, and shall be always present, and have power to move to the Grand Lodge any thing, especially what concerns his office. To him shall be com- mitted all money raised for charity, or for any other use of the Grand Lodge, which he shall write down In a book, with the respective ends and uses for which the several sums are intended ; and shall expend or disburse the same by such a certain order signed, as the Grand Lodge shall afterwards agree to in a new Regulation ; but he shall not vote in choos- ing a Grand Master or Wardens, though in every other trans- action. As in like manner the Secretary shall bo a member of the Grand Lodge by virtue of his office, and vo*e in every tiling except in choosing a Grand Master or Wardens. The Treasurer and Secretary shall have 'each a ?lerk, who must be a Brother and Fellow-Craft,* but never "nust be a member of the Grand Lodge, nor speak without being allowed or desired. The Grand Master or his Deputy shall always command the Treasurer and Secretary, with their clerks and books, in order to see how matters go on, and to know whf t is expe- dient to be done upon any emergent occasion. Another Brother (who must be a Fellow-Craft),*' should be appointed to look after the door of the Grand Lodge ; but shall be no member of it. But these offices may be *urther ex- plained by a new Regulation, when the necessity and expedi- ency of them may more appear than at present to the fraternity. * Of course, in consequence of the change made in the character of the oody of the Fraternity, alluded to in the last note, these officer, Tst "ow be Master Masons. THE WRITTEN LAW. 71 XIV. If at any Grand Lodge, stated or occasional, Barter ly or annual, the Grand Master and his Deputy should be both absent, then the present Master of a Lodge, that has been the longest a Freemason, shall take the chair, and preside as Grand Master pro tempore ;* and shall be vested with all his power and honor for the time ; provided there is no Brother present that has been Grand Master formerly, or Deputy Grand Master ; for the last Grand Master present, or else the last Deputy present, should always of right take place in the absence of the present Grand Master and his Deputy. XV. In the Grand Lodge none can act as Wardens but the Grand Wardens themselves, if present ; and if absent, the Grand Master, or the person who presides in his place, shall order private Wardens to act as Grand Wardens pro tempore ,-f whose places are to be supplied by two Fellow- Craft of the same Lodge, called forth to act, or sent thither by the particular Master thereof; or if by him omitted, then they shall be called by the Grand Master, that so the Grand Lodge may be always complete. XVI. The Grand Wardens, or any others, are first to ad- vise with the Deputy about the affairs of the Lodge or of the brethren, and not to apply to the Grand Master without tho knowledge of the Deputy, unless he refuse his concurrence in any certain necessary affair ; in which case, or in case of any difference between the Deputy and the Grand Wardens, f In the second edition of the Book of Constitutions, printed in 1738, at page 162, this Regulation is thus explained : " In the first edition, the right of the Grand Wardens was omitted in this Regulation ; and it has been since found that the old Lodges never put into the chair the Master of a particu- lar Lodge, but when there was no Grand Warden in company, present nor former, and that in such a case a Grand officer always took place of any Master of a Lodge that has not been a Grand officer." This, it may be ob- served, is the present usage. f " It was always the ancient usage," says ANDERSON, " that the oldest former Grand Wardens supplied the places of those of the year when ab sent" Const., 2d edit, p. 162. Accordingly, the 15th Regulation never was observed. 72 THE WKITTEN LAW. or other brethren, both parties are to go by concert to the Grand Master, who can easily decide the controversy, and make up the difference by virtue of his great authority. The Grand Master should receive no intimation of business concerning Masonry, but from his Deputy first, except in such certain cases as his Worship can well judge of; for if the application to the Grand Master be irregular, he can easily order the Grand Wardens, or any other brethren thus apply- ing, to wait upon his Deputy, who is to prepare the business speedily, and to lay it orderly before his Worship. XVII. No Grand Master, Deputy Grand Master, Grand Wardens, Treasurer, Secretary, or whoever acts for them, or in their stead pro tempore, can at the same time be the Master or Warden of a particular Lodge ; but as soon as any of them has honorably discharged his Grand office, he returns to that post or station in his particular Lodge from which he was called to officiate above. XVIII. If the Deputy Grand Master be sick, or necessarily absent, the Grand Master may choose any Fellow-Craft he pleases to be his Deputy pro tempore ; but he that is chosen Deputy at the Grand Lodge, and the Grand Wardens too, cannot be discharged without the cause fairly appear to the majority of the Grand Lodge ; and the Grand Master, if he is uneasy, may call a Grand Lodge on purpose to lay the cause before them, and to have their advice and concurrence ; in which case the majority of the Grand Lodge, if they can- not reconcile the Master and his Deputy or his Wardens, are to concur in allowing the Master to discharge his said Deputy or his said Wardens, and to choose another Deputy immedi- ately ; and the said Grand Lodge shall choose other Wardens in that case, that harmony and peace may be preserved. XIX. If the Grand Master should abuse his power, and render himself unworthy of the obedience and subjection of the Lodges, he shall be treated in a way and manner to b agreed upon in a new Regulation ; because hitherto the ancient Fraternity have had no occasion for it, their formei THE WRITTEN LAW. 73 Grand Masters having all behaved themselves worthy of that honourable office. XX. The Grand Master, with his Deputy and Wardens, shall (at least once) go round and visit all the Lodges about town during his Mastership. XXI. If the Grand Master die during his Mastership ; o~ by sickness, or by being beyond sea, or any other way sheald be rendered uncapable of discharging his office, the Deputy, or in his absence the Senior Grand Warden, or in his absence the Junior, or in his absence any three present Masters of Lodges, shall join to congregate the Grand Lodge immedi- ately, to advise together upon that emergency, and to send two of their number to invite the last G~and Master,* to re- sume his office, which now in course reverts to him ; or if he refuse, then the next last, and so backward ; but if no former Grand Master can be found, then the Deputy shall act as principal, until another is chosen ; or if there be no Deputy, then the oldest Master. XXII. The brethren of all the Lodges iri and about London and Westminster shall meet at an Annual Confhiunication and Feast,f in some convenient place, on St. John Baptist's day, or else on St. John Evangelist's day, as the Grand Lodge shall think fit by a new Regulation, having of late years met on St. John Baptist's day ; provided : The majority of Mas- ters and Wardens, with the Grand Master, his Deputy and Wardens, agree at their Quarterly Communication,^ three months before, that there shall be a feast, and a General * The modern usage is Ibr the highest present Grand officer to assume the vacant post. t Very few Grand Lodges now observe this Regulation. The feast of St John is celebrated everywhere by the private Lodges ; but the Annual Com- munications of Grand Lodges generally occur at a different period of the year. % Quarterly Communications are still held by the Grand Lodge of England, and a few Grand Lodges in this country ; but the Regulation is becoming generally obsolete, simply because it has been found impracticable. 74 THE WRITTEN LAW. Communication of all the brethren ; for if either the Grand Master, or the majority of the particular Masters are against it, it must be dropt for that time. But whether there shall be a feast for all the brethren or not, yet the Grand Lodge must rieet in some convenient place annually, on St. John's day ; or if it be Sunday, then on the next day, in order to choose every year a new Grand Master, Deputy and Wardens. XXIII. If it be thought expedient, and the Grand Master, with the majority of the Masters and Wardens, agree to hold a grand feast, according to the ancient laudable custom of Masons, then the Grand Wardens shall have the care of pre- paring the tickets, sealed with the Grand Master's seal, of disposing of the tickets, of receiving the money for the tickets, of buying the materials of the feast, of finding out a proper and convenient place to feast in ; and of every other thing that concerns the entertainment. But that the work may not be too burthensome to the two Grand Wardens, and that all matters may be expeditiously and safely managed, the Grand Master or his Deputy shall have power to nominate and appoint a certain number of Stewards, as his Worship shall think fit, to act in concert with the two Grand Wardens ; all things relating to the feast being decided amongst them by a majority of voices ; except the Grand Master or his Deputy interpose by a particular direction or appointment. XXIV. The Wardens and Stewards shall, in due time, wait upon the Grand Master or his Deputy for directions and orders about the premises ; but if his Worship and his Deputy are sick, or necessarily absent, they shall call to- gether the Masters and Wardens of Lodges to meet on purpose for their advice and orders, or else they may take the matter wholly upon themselves, and do the best they can. The Grand Wardens and the Stewards are to account for all the iioney they receive or expend, to the Grand Lodge, THE WRITTEN .LAW. 75 after dinner, or when the Grand Lodge shall think fit to re- ceive their accounts. If the Grand Master pleases, he. may in due tune summon all the Masters and Wardens of Lodges to consult with them about ordering the grand feast, 'and about any emergency or accidental thing relating thereunto, that may require advice ; or else to take it upon himself altogether. XXV. The Masters of Lodges shall each appoint one ex- perienced and discreet Fellow-Craft of his Lodge, to compose a committee, consisting of one from every Lodge, who shall meet to receive, in a convenient apartment, every person that brings a ticket, and shall have power to discourse him, if they think fit, in order to admit him or debar him, as they shall see cause ; provided, they send no man away before they have acquainted all the brethren within doors with the reasons thereof, to avoid mistakes, that so no true Brother may be debarred, nor a false Brother or mere pretender ad- mitted. This committee must meet very early on St. John's Day at the place, even before any persons come with tickets. XXVI. The Grand Master shall appoint two or more trusty brethren to be porters or doorkeepers, who are also to be early at the place for some good reasons, and who are to be at the command of the committee. XX VIE. The Grand Wardens or the Stewards shall appoint beforehand such a number of brethren to serve at table as they think fit and proper for that work ; and they may ad- vise with the Masters and Wardens of Lodges about the most proper persons, if they please, or may take in such by their recommendation ; for none are to serve that day but Free and Accepted Masons, that the communication may be free and harmonious. XXVIII. All the members of the Grand Lodge must be at the place long before dinner, with the Grand Master, or his Deputy, at their head, who shall retire and form themselves And this is done in order : 76 THE WRITTEN LAW. 1. lo receive any appeals duly lodged, as above regu- lated, that the appellant may be heard, and the affair may be amicably decided before dinner, if possible ; but if it cannot, it mast be delayed till after the new Grand Master is elected ; and if it cannot be decided after dinner, it may be delayed, and referred to a particular committee, that shall quietly adjust it, and make report to the next Quar- terly Communication, that brotherly love may be pre- served. 2. To prevent any difference or disgust which may be feared to arise that day ; that no interruption may be given to the harmony and pleasure of the grand feast. 3. To consult about whatever concerns the decency and decorum of the Grand Assembly, and to prevent all inde- cency and ill manners, the assembly being promiscuous. 4. To receive and consider of any good motion, or any momentous and important affair, that shall be brought from the particular Lodges, by their representatives, the several Masters and Wardens. XXIX. After these things are discussed, the Grand Master and his Deputy, the Grand Wardens, or the Stewards, the Secretary, the Treasurer, the Clerks, and every other person, shall withdraw, and leave the Masters and Wardens of the particular Lodges alone, in order to consult amicably about electing a new Grand Master, or continuing the present, if they have not done it the day before ; and if they are unani- mous for continuing the present Grand Master, his Worship shall be called in, and humbly desired to do the Fraternity tHe honor of ruling them for the year ensuing ; and after dinner it will be known whether he accepts of it or not ; for it should not be discovered but by the election itself. XXX. Then the Masters and Wardens, and all the brethren, may converse promiscuously, or as they please to sort to- gether, until the dinner is coming in, when every Brother takes his seat at table. XXXI. Some time after dinner the Grand Locljre is formed THE WRITTEN L1W. 77 not hi retirement, but in the presence of all the brethren, who yet are not members of it, and must not therefore speak until they are desired and allowed. XXXII. If the Grand Master of last year has consented with the Master and Wardens in private, before dinner, to continue for the year ensuing ; then one of the Grand Lodge, deputed for that purpose, shall represent to all the brethren his Worship's good government, &c. And turning to him, shall, in the name of the Grand Lodge, humbly request him to do the Fraternity the great honour (if nobly born,) if not, the great kindness of continuing to be their Grand Master for the year ensuing. And his Worship declaring his con- sent by a bow or a speech, as he pleases, the said deputed member of the Grand Lodge shall proclaim him Grand Mas ter, and all the members of the Lodge shall salute him in due form. And all the brethren shall for a few minutes have leave to declare their satisfaction, pleasure and congratu- lation. XXXIII. But if either the Master and Wardens have not in private, this day before dinner, nor the day before, desired the last Grand Master to continue in the master- ship another year; or if he, when desired, has not con- sented : Then The last Grand Master shall nominate his successor for the year ensuing, who, if unanimously approved by the Grand Lodge, and if there present, shall be proclaimed, saluted and congratulated the new Grand Master, as above hinted, and immediately installed by the last Grand Master, according to usage. XXXIY. But if that nomination is not unanimously ap- proved, the new Grand Master shall be chosen immediately by ballot, every Master and Warden writing his man's name, and the last Grand Master writing his man's name too ; and the man whose name the last Grand Master shall first take out, casually or by chance, shall be Grand Master for the year ensuing ; and if present, he shall be proclaimed, saluted 78 THE WRITTEN LAW. and congratulated, as above hinted, and forthwith installed by the last Grand Master, according to usage.* XXXV. The last Grand Master thus continued, or the new Grand Master thus installed, shall next nominate and appoint his Deputy Grand Master, either the last .or a new one. who shall be also declared, saluted and congratulated, as above hinted. The Grand Master shall also nominate the new Grand Wardens, and if unanimously approved by the Grand Lodge, shall be declared, saluted and congratulated, as above hinted ; but if not, they shall be chosen by ballot, in the same way as the Grand Master ; as the Wardens of private Lodges are also to be chosen by ballot in each Lodge, if the members thereof do not agree to their Master's nomination. XXXVI. But if the Brother, whom the present Grand Master shall nominate for his successor, or whom the ma- jority of the Grand Lodge shall happen to choose by ballot, is, by sickness or other necessary occasion, absent from the grand feast, he cannot be proclaimed the new Grand Master, unless the old Grand Master, or some of the Masters and Wardens of the Grand Lodge can vouch, upon the honour of a Brother, that the said person, so nominated or chosen, will readily accept of the said office ; in which case the old Grand Master shall act as proxy, and shall nominate the Deputy and Wardens in his name, and in his name also receive the usual honours, homage and congratulation. XXXVII. Then the Grc,nd Master shall allow any Brother, Fellow-Craft, or Apprentice, to speak, directing his discourse to his Worship ; or to make any motion for the good of the Fraternity, which shall be either immediately considered and finished, or else referred to the consideration of the Grand Lodge at their next communication, stated or occasional. When that is over, * I know of no instance on record in which this custom of selecting by lot las been followed. The regulation is now clearly everywhere obsolete. THE WRITTEN LAW. 79 XXXV III. The Grand Master, or his Deputy, or Kome Brother appointed by him, shall harangue all the brethren, and give them good advice ; and lastly, after some other transactions, that cannot be written in any language, the brethren may go away or stay longer, if they please. XXXIX. Every Annual Grand Lodge has an inherent power and authority to make new Regulations,* or to alter these, for the real benefit of this ancient Fraternity: pro- vided always that the old Landmarks be carefully preserved, and that such alterations and new Regulations be proposed and agreed to at the third Quarterly Communication preced- ing the annual grand feast ; and that they be offered also to the perusal of all the brethren before dinner, in writing, even of the youngest Apprentice ; the approbation and consent of the majority of all the brethren present being absolutely necessary to make the same binding and obligatory ; which must, after dinner, and after the 'new Grand Master is in- stalled, be solemnly desired ; as it was desired and obtained for these Regulations, when proposed by the Grand Lodge, to about 150 brethren, on St. John Baptist's day, 1721. The Constitutions, Charges and Regulations here presented to the reader, and which were adopted at various periods, from 926 to 1722, constitute the Written Law of Masonry, and they were at one time co-extensive in authority with the Landmarks of the Order. From these, however, they differ in this respect, that the Landmarks being unrepealable, must ever continue in force ; but the Written Law, having been adopted by the supreme legislative au- thority of the Order at the time, may be altered, amended, or altogether repealed by the same su- * See note on page 60. 80 THE WRITTEN LAW. preme authority a doctrine which is explicitly set forth in the Thirty-ninth General Regulation. Accordingly, portions of this Written Law have, from time to time, been materially modified by dif- ferent Grand Lodges, as will be evident upon in- spection of these laws with the modern Constitutions of any jurisdiction. It may, however, be considered as an axiom of Masonic law, that in every Masonic jurisdiction, where any one of these Regulations has not been formally or implicitly repealed by a subsequent en- actment of a new law, the old Regulation will continue in force, and the Craft must be governed by its provisions. So in all doubtful questions of Masonic law, re- course must be had, in forming an opinion, first to the Landmarks, and then to this code of Written Laws ; and out of these two authorities, the legal dictum is to be established, because all the principles of law are embraced in these two authorities, the Ancient Landmarks and the Ancient Written Law ; and hence they have been necessarily incorporated into this volume, as a fitting introduction, under the appropriate litlo of the FOUNDATIONS OF MASONIC LAW. BOOK II. Hate jRpKaHflg lo (Janbibefps. THE position of a candidate is a transition state from the profane world to the Masonic institution. It is the first step taken which is to place the recipient within the jurisdiction of Masonic Law. It is proper, therefore, to commence a treatise on that subject, with a'consideration of all that re- lates to this peculiar condition, such as the qualifications of candidates, and their method of application and admission, or rejection. These topics will therefore be considered in the present Book. CHAPTER I. of een recognised in every country. OP CANDIDATES. 87 Order which is absolutely essential to the formation of a true Masonic character. The next internal qualification of a candidate is that, in making his application, he must be uninflu- enced by mercenary motives* If the introduction of candidates under the influence of undue solicita- tion is attended with an injurious effect upon the institution, how much more fatal must be the results when the influence exerted is of a mean and ignoble kind, and when the applicant is urged onwards only by the degrading hopes of pecuniary interest or personal aggrandizement. The whole spirit of the Order revolts at the very idea of such a prostitution of its noble purposes, and turns with loathing from the aspirant who seeks its mysteries, impelled, not by the love of truth and the desire of knowledge, but by the paltry inducements of sordid gain. " There was a time," says an eloquent and discern- ing Brother ,t " when few except the good and true either sough fc for or gained admission into Masonic Lodges, for it was thought that such alone could find their affinities there. Masons were then com- paratively few, and were generally known and dis- tinguished for those qualifications which the teach- ings of the Order require on the part of all who apply for admission. They were not of those who would make merchandise of its benefits, by prosti * This qualification is included in the Declaration from PRESTON, already quoted on a preceding page. I Brother W. H. HOWARD, Past Grand Master of California. See his Address in the Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of California, 1857, p. 12, 88 THE QUALIFICATIONS tuting them to the purposes of individual emolu ment. They were not of those who would seek through Masonic appliances to re-invigorate a de- caying reputation, and gain a prominency within the Lodge that was unattainable without it ; or worse still, to use its influences to gain prominency elsewhere." But that which was unknown in the times when Masonry was struggling for its existence, and when prejudice and bigotry barely tolerated its presence, has now become a " crying evil" when Masonry, having outlived its slanderers, and wrought out its own reputation, is to be classed among the most popular institutions of the day. And hence it be- comes incumbent on every Mason closely to inquire whether any applicant for initiation is invited to his pursuit by a love of truth, a favorable opinion which he has conceived of the institution, and a desire, through its instrumentality, of benefiting his fellow creatures, or whether he comes to our doors under the degrading influences of mercenary motives. The presence of these internal qualifications is to be discovered, as I have already said, from the statements of the candidate himself ; and hence by an ancient usage of the Order, which should never be omitted, a declaration to the necessary effect is required to be made by the candidate in the presence of the Stewards of the Lodge, or a committee ap- pointed for that purpose, in an adjoining apartment, previous to his initiation. The oldest form of thi? OF CANDIDATES. 89 declaration used in this country is that contained in Webb's Monitor,* and is in these words : " Do you seriously Declare, upon your honor, before these gentlsmen, that, unbiassed by friends and uninfluenced by mercenary motives, you freely and voluntarily offer yourself a candidate for the mysteries of Masonry? " Do you seriously declare, upon your honor, before these gentlemen, that you are prompted to solicit the privileges of Masonry by a favorable opinion conceived of the insti- tution, a desire of knowledge, and a sincere wish of being serviceable to your fellow creatures ? " Do you seriously declare, upon your honor, before these gentlemen, that you will cheerfully conform to all the ancient established usages and customs of the Fraternity ?" Some Grand Lodges have slightly added to the number of these questions, but the three above cited appear to be all that ancient usage warrants or the necessities of the case require. SECTION H. THE EXTERNAL QUALIFICATIONS. We have already said that the external qualifica- tions of every candidate are based upon his moral and religious character, the frame of his body, the constitution of his mind, and his social position. These qualifications are therefore of a fourfold nature, and must be considered under the distinct heads of Moral, Physical, Intellectual and Political. * Edition of 1808, p. 32. The Declaration previously i 'abashed by FBBS TON differs very slightly from this, i)0 THE QUALIFICATIONS Moral Qualifications. All the old Constitutions, from those of York in 926, to the Charges approved in 1722, refer, in pointed terms, to the moral qualifications which should distinguish a Mason, and, of consequence, a candidate who desires to be admitted into the Fra- ternity.* The Charges of 1722 commence with the emphatic declaration that " a Mason is obliged by his tenure to obey the moral law ; and if he rightly understands the art, he will never be a stupid atheist nor an irreligious liber tine, "f Obe- dience, therefore, to a particular practical law of morality and belief in certain religious dogmas, seem to constitute the moral qualifications of every candidate for admission into the Fraternity. The proper inquiry will then be into the nature of this law of conduct and these dogmas of belief. The term " moral law," in a strictly theological sense, signifies the Ten Commandments which were given to the Jewish nation ; but although it is admit- ted that an habitual violatior of the spirit of these laws' would disqualify a man from being made a Mason, I am disposed to give a wider latitude to * ' Every Mason shall cultivate brotnerly love, arid the love of God, and frequent holy church." Old York Constitutions, point 1. " Ye shall be true men to God and the uoly church, and to use no error or heresy by your anderstanning and by wise men's teaching." Installation Charges of 1686, No. 1. " The persons admitted members of a Lodge must be good and true men, no immoral or scandalous men, but of good report." Charges of 1722, No. 3. All of these are summed up in tbe ritualistic phrase that the candidate must be " under the tongue of good report." + ANDTSHSON'I Constitutions, edit. 1723, p. 50. OF CANDIDATES. 9} the definition, and to suppose that the moral law " denotes the rule of good and evil, or of right and wrong, revealed by the Creator and inscribed on man's conscience even at his creation, and conse- quently binding upon him by divine authority."* Dr. Anderson, the compiler of the first edition of the Book of Constitutions, seems, in the latter part of his life, to have inclined to this opinion ; for, in the second edition of the same work, published in 1738, he modified the language of the Charge above cited, in these words : " A Mason is obliged by his tenure to observe the moral law as a true Noachida/'t thus extending the limits of the law to those Pre- cepts of Noah which are supposed to be of universal obligation among all nations.:]: It "is true that on the publication of the third edition of the Constitu- tions, in 1755, the Grand Lodge of England re- stored the original reading of the Charge ; but the fact that the alteration had once been made by Anderson, is strong presumptive evidence that he was unwilling to restrict the moral code of Masonry to the commandments set forth by the Jewish law- giver. Apart from the fact that many learned and pious Christian divines have doubted how far the * Encyclop. of Eelig. Knowled., art. Law. Boston, 1835. t ANDERSON'S Constitutions, 2d edit., 1738, p. 143. } As these Precepts of the patriarch Noah are frequently referred to as having been the constitutions of our ancient brethren, it may be well to enumerate them. They are seven in number, and are as follows : 1. Re nounce all idols. 2. "Worship the only true God. 3. Commit no murder. 4. Be not defiled by incest. 5. Do not steal. 6. Be just, 7. Eat no flesh with blood in it. 92 THE QUALIFICATIONS Jewish law is to be considered binding, except as it is confirmed by the express sanctions of the New Testament,* the consideration that Masonry, being a cosmopolitan institution, cannot be prescribed within the limits of any particular religion, must lead us to give a more extended application to the words " moral law," contained in the old Charge. Hence, then, we may say, that he who desires to be- come a Mason, must first be qualified for initiation by a faithful observanse of all those principles of morality and virtue which practically exhibit them- selves in doing unto others as he would that they, in like circumstances, should do unto him. This constitutes the golden rule the true basis of all moral law. Tiie man who thus conducts himself will necessarily receive not only the reward of his own conscience, but the approbation and respect of the world ; to which latter consequence, as an evi- dence of a well-spent life, the ritual refers when it requires, as one of the qualifications of a candidate, that he should be " under the tongue of good re- port." The man who submits to' this rule, will of necessity observe the decalogue ; not always because it is the decalogue, but because its dictates are the dictates of right and justice ; and he will thus come strictly within the provisions of the old Charge, * Thus MAJITIN LUTHER says : " The law belongs to the Jews, and binds as no more. From the text it is clear that the Ten Commandments also do not belong to us, because he has not led us out of Egypt, but the Jews only. Moses we will take to be our teacher, but not as our lawgiver, unless ho agrees with the New Testament and the natural law." Vnterricht wie sich die Christen in Mosen schicken sollen. OF CANDIDATES. 93 even in its most limited acceptation, and will of course " obey the moral law." The religious qualifications are embraced in the same Charge, under the expression, that if a Mason " rightly understands the art, he will never be a stupid atheist nor an irreligious libertine/ 7 A belief in God is one of the unwritten Land- marks of the Order, requiring no regulation or statutory law for its confirmation. Such a belief results from the very nature of the Masonic insti- tution, and is set forth in the rituals of. the Order as one of the very first pre-requisites to. the cere- mony of initiation. This Divine Being, the creator of heaven and earth, is particularly viewed in Ma- sonry in his character as the Great Master Builder of the Worlds, and is hence masonically addressed as the GRAND ARCHITECT OF THE UNIVERSE.* But consequent on a belief in him, and indeed inseparably connected with it, is a belief in a resurrection to a future life. This doctrine of a resurrection is also one of the great Landmarks of the Order, and its importance and necessity may be estimated from the fact, that almost the whole de- sign of speculative Masonry, from its earliest ori- gin, seems to have been to teach this great doctrine of the resurrection.f As to any other religious doctrines, Masonry * Very usually abbreviated thus, " G.A.O.T.U." t " This our Order is a positive contradiction to the Judaic blindness and infidelity, and testifies our faith concerning the resurrection of the body.'' HuTcmrsoN, Spirit of Masowy, p. 101. 94 THE QUALIFICATIONS leaves its candidates to the enjoyment of their own opinions, whatever they may be.* The word " liber- tine/ 7 which is used in the old Charges, conveyed, at the time when those Charges were composed, a meaning somewhat different from that which is now given to it. Bailey defines libertinism to be " a false liberty of belief and manners, which will have no other dependence but on particular fancy and passion ; a living at large, or according to a per- son's inclination, without regard to the divine laws."t A " religious libertine" is, therefore, a re- jector of all moral responsibility to a superior power, and may be well supposed to be a denier of the existence of a Supreme Being and of a future life. Such a skeptic is, therefore, by the innate con- stitution of speculative Masonry, unfit for initiation, because the object of all Masonic initiation is to teach these two great truths. Within a few years an attempt has been made by some Grand Lodges to add to these simple, moral, and religious qualifications, another, which requires a belief in the divine authenticity of the Scriptures4 * " Though in ancient times Masons were charged in every country to be of the religion of that country or nation, whatever it was, yet it is now thought more expedient only to oblige them to that religion in which all men agree, leaving their particular opinions to themselves." Charges of 1722, No. 1. f Universal Etymological English Dictionary, anno 1737. $ In 1820, the Grand Lodge of Ohio resolved that " in the first degrees ol Masonry, religious tenets shall not be a barrier to the admission or advance ment of applicants, provided they profess a belief in God and his holy word." Proceedings of G. L. of Ohio, from 1808 to 1847 inclusive. Cilumbus 1557, p. 113. And in 1854 it adopted a resolution dedaiing OP CANDIDATES, VJO It is much to be .regretted that Masons will some- times forget the fundamental law of their institu- tion, and endeavor to add to or to detract from the perfect integrity of the building, as it was left to them by their predecessors. Whenever this is done, the beauty of our temple must suffer. The Land- marks of Masonry are so perfect that they neither need nor will permit of the slightest amendment. Thus in the very instance here referred to, the fundamental law of Masonry requires only a belief in the Supreme Architect of the universe, and in a future life, while it says, with peculiar toleration, that in all other matters of religious belief, Masons are only expected to be of that religion in which all men agree, leaving their particular opinions to themselves. Under the shelter of this wise pro- vision, the Christian and the Jew, the Mohammedan and the Brahmin, are permitted to unite around our common altar, and Masonry becomes, in practice as well as in theory, universal. The~ truth is, that Masonry is undoubtedly a religious institution its religion being 'of that universal kind in which all men agree, and which, handed down through a long succession of ages, from that ancient priesthood who " that Masonry, as we have received it from our fathers, teaches the divine authenticity of the Holy Scriptures.'' Proc. G. L., Ohio, 1854, p. 72. Commenting on this resolution, the Committee of Correspondence of the G. L. of Alabama say : " That some Masons may teach the divine authen- ticity of the Holy Scriptures, is true, because some Masons are Christians ; but Masonry does nothing of the sort, but leaves every man to his own opinion upon that subject, as it does upon his Clitics, his religion, his pro- fession." .Proc. G. L. Ala., 1855, p. 67. 96 THE QUALIFICATIONS first taught it, embraces the great tenets of the exist" ence of God and the immortality of the soul tenets which, by its peculiar symbolic language, it has preserved from its foundation, and still con- tinues, in the same beautiful way, to teach. Beyond this, for its religious faith, we must not and can- not go. It may, then, I think, be laid down as good Ma- sonic law, with respect to the moral and religious qualifications of candidates, that they are required to be men of good moral character, believing in the existence of God and in a future state. These are all the moral qualifications that can be demanded, but each of them is essential. Physical Qualifications. The physical qualifications of a candidate are re- peatedly alluded to in the ancient Charges and Constitutions,- and may be considered under the three heads of Sex, Age, and Bodily Conformation. 1. As to Sex. It is an unquestionable Landmark of the Order, and the very first pre-requisite to ini- tiation, that the candidate shall be " a man." This of course prohibits the initiation of a woman. This Landmark arises from the peculiar nature of our speculative science as connected with an operative art. Speculative Masonry is but the application of operative Masonry to moral and intellectual pur- poses. Our predecessors wrought, according to the traditions of the Order, at the construction of a ma- OF CANDIDATES. 9 '( terial temple, while we arc engaged in the erection of a spiritual edifice the temple of the mind. They employed their implements for merely me- chanical purposes ; we use them symbolically, with a more exalted design. Thus it is that in all our emblems, our language, and our rites, there is a beautiful exemplification and application of the rules of operative Masonry to a spiritual purpose. And as it is evident that King Solomon employed in the construction of his temple only hale and hearty men and cunning workmen, so our Lodges, in imitation of that great exemplar, demand, as an indispensable requisite to initiation into our myste- ries, that the candidate shall be a man, capable of performing such work as the Master shall assign him. This is, therefore, the origin of the Land- mark which prohibits the initiation of females. 2. As to Age. The ancient Regulations do not express any determinate number of years at the expiration of which a candidate becomes legally en- titled to apply for admission. The language used is, that he must be of " mature and discreet age."' 5 *" But the usage of the Craft has differed in various countries as to the construction of the time when this period of maturity and discretion is supposed to have arrived. The sixth of the Regulations, adopted in 1663, prescribes that " no person shall be accepted unless he be twenty-one years old, or more ;" but the subsequent Regulations are less ex- * " The persons admitted members of a Lodge must be ..... of mature and discreet age." CJuirges of 1722, iii. 5 98 THE QUALIFICATIONS plicit. At Frankfort-on-the-Maine, the age required is twenty ; in the Lodges of Switzerland, it has been fixed at twenty-one. The Grand Lodge of Hanover prescribes the age of twenty-five, but per- mks the son of a Mason to be admitted at eighteen.* The Grand Lodge of Hamburg decrees that the lawful age for initiation shall be that which in any country has been determined by the laws of the land to be the age of majority. t The Grand Orient of France requires the candidate to be twenty-one, unless he be the son of a Mason, who has performed some important service to the Order, or unless he be a young man who has served six months in the army, when the initiation may take place at the age of eighteen. In Prussia the required age is twenty-five. In England it is twenty-one, except in cases where a dispensation has been granted for an earlier age by the Grand or Provincial Grand Mas- ter. In Ireland the age must be twenty-one, except in cases of dispensation granted by the Grand Mas- ter or Grand Lodge. In the United States, the usage is general that the candidate shall not be less than twenty-one years of age at the time of his ini- tiation, and no dispensation can issue for conferring the degrees at an earlier period. This variety in the laws relating to this subject conclusively proves that the precise age has never been determined by any Landmark of the Order * Statuten der Grossloge des Konigreiclis Hanover, 1839, 222. f Constitutions Rich der Grossen Loge zu Hamburg, 1845, 459 OF CANDIDATES 99 The design and nature of the institution must in this case be our only guide. The speculative charac- ter of the society requires that none shall be admit- ted to its mysteries except those who have reached maturity and discretion ; but it is competent for any Grand Lodge to determine for itself what shall be considered to be that age of maturity. Perhaps the best regulation is that adopted by the Grand Lodge of Hamburg. Hence the Masons of this country have very wisely conformed to the pro- visions of the law on this subject, which prevail in all the States, and have made the age of twenty- one* the legal one for candidates applying for admission. " An old man in his dotage" is, like " a young man under age," equally incapable of initiation. The reason in both cases is the same. There is an absence of that maturity of intellect which is re- quired for the comprehension of our mysteries. In one instance the fruit is still green ; in the other, it has ripened and rotted, and is ready to fall from the tree. Dotage may be technically defined to be an impotence of body as well as of mind, from excess- ive old age. It is marked by childish desires and pursuits, a loss of judgment and memory, and a senseless and unconnected garrulity of speech. No precise age can be fixed to which these intellectual deficiencies belong. They appear earlier in some mental constitutions than they do in others. The * Twenty-one is the age of majority prescribed by the civil law. iOO THE QUALIFICATIONS Lodge must determine for itself as to whether the candidate comes within the limits of the objection based upon his dotage. Fortunately, it is rarely that a Lodge or its committee will be called upon to decide such questions. Old men in their dotage are not usually candidates for Masonic initiation. And however old an applicant may be, if he is in the possession of his healthy mental faculties, his age alone will constitute no disqualification. It is not the number of his years, but their effect on his mind, that is to be the subject of investigation. 3. As to Bodily Conformation. There is no part of Masonic jurisprudence which has given greater occasion to discussion in recent years than that which refers to the bcdily conformation which is required of the candidate. While some give a strict interpretation to the language of the ancient Constitutions, and rigorously demand the utmost perfection of limbs and members, there are others, more lax in their construction, who reject only such as are from natural deformity or subsequent injury, unable to perform the work of speculative Ma- sonry. In a controversy of this kind, the only way to settle the question is, to make a careful and impartial examination of the authorities on which the law which relates to physical conforma- tion is founded. The first written law that we find on this subject is contained in the fifth article of the Gothic Con {stitutions, adopted at York, in the year 926, and is in these words : OP CANDIDATES. 101 "A candidate must be without blemish, and ha\e the full and proper use of his limbs ; for a maimed man can do the Craft no good."* The next enactment is to be found in the Regula- tions of 1663, under the Grand Mastership of the Earl of St. Albans, and is in these words : " No person hereafter shall be accepted a Freemason but such as are of able body." The next Regulation, in order of time, is that contained in " The Ancient Charges at Makings," adopted about the year 1686, the manuscript of which was in the possession of the Lodge of Anti- quity at London. It is still more explicit than those which preceded it,' and is in the following language : " That he that be made be able in all degrees ; that is, free born, of a good kindred, true, and no bondsman ; and that he have his right limbs as a man ought to have." * As tliis is a matter of great importance, I append the original langnag* of this article of the Gothic, or Old York Constitutions, as published by Mr, Hulliwell : " The mayster schal not, for no vantage, Make no prentes that ys outrage ; Hyt ys to mene, as 5e mowe here, That he have hys lymes hole alle y-fere ; To the craft hyt were gret schame, To make an halt mon and a lame ; For an unparfyt mon of suche blod, Schulde do the craft but lytul good. Thus Je mowe knowe everychon, The craft wolde have a myjhty mon ; A maymed mon he hath no my5ht, Je mowe hyt knowe long 5er nySht." 102 THE QUALIFICATIONS And lastly, similar declarations, with respect to physical ability, are made in the Charges approved in 1722, which are as follows : " No Master should take an Apprentice unless he has suf- ficient employment for him, and unless he be a perfect youth, having no maim or defect in his body that may render him uncapable of learning the art of serving his Master's lord, and of being made a Brother," &c. So far, then, the ancient Written Law of Masonry seems undoubtedly to have contemplated the neces- sity of perfection in the physical conformation of candidates, and the inadmissibility of all who had any defect of limb or member. In the early part of the last century, this opinion must have generally prevailed among the Craft ; for, in the second edi tion of the Book of Constitutions, which was edited by Dr. Anderson, and, after perusal, approved offi- cially by such Masons as Desaguliers, Cowper and Payne, the language of the first edition was so altered as to leave no doubt of the construction that the brethren at that time put upon the clause relat- ing to physical qualifications. The Charge in this second edition is in the following unmistakable words : " The men made Masons must be free born, (or no bond- men,) of mature ag3 and of good report, hail and sound, not deformed or dismembered at the time of their making." When the schism took place in the Grand Lodge of England, in 1739, the Athol, or Ancient Masons, as they called themselves, adopted this construction OF CANDIDATES. 103 of the law, as is evident from the fact that, in their Book of Constitutions, which they published under the title of the " Ahiman Rezon," they incorporated this Charge, word for word, from Anderson's edi- tion of 1738.* From that time until very recently, the same rigid interpretation has been given to the law of physical qualifications, as will 'appear from the fol- lowing analysis of Grand Lodge decisions. The "Ahiman Rezon" of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, published in 1783, adopts the precise language of Anderson's second edition, and there- fore requires the candidates to be " hale and sound, not deformed or dismembered at the time of their making, "f The same language is used in the " Ahiman Re- zon" of North Carolina and Tennessee, published in the year 18054 * See DERMOTT'S " Ahiman Eezon, or a Help to all that are or would be Free and Accepted Masons" Lond. 1778, p. 29. Of course this work, emanating from a body now acknowledged to have been irregular, can have no authority in Masonic law. I quote it, however, to show what was the general feeling of the Fraternity, of both sides, on this subject of physical qualifications. There was here, at least, no difference of opinion. t The Ahiman Eezon, abridged and digested, &c. Published by order of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania. By WILLIAM SMITH., D.D. Phila., 1783, p. 28. $ The Ahiman Eezon and Masonic Ritual. Published by order of the Grand Lodge of North Carolina and Tennessee. Newbern, 1805, p. 18. It is, in fact, a quotation, and so marked, either from Anderson's second edi- tion, or from Dermott. But the same Grand Lodge, in 1851, adopted a qualifying explanation, which admitted maimed or dismembered candidates, provided their loss or infirmity would not prevent them from making ful' proficiency in Masonry- 104 THE QUALIFICATIONS The " Ahiman Kezon" of South Carolina, pub- lished in 1807, is still more rigorous in its phraseo- logy, and requires that " every person desiring admission must be upright in body, not deformed or dismembered at the time of making, but of hale and entire limbs, as a man ought to be."* It is true that the Grand Lodge which issued this work was, at the time, an AtRoI Grand Lodge ; but the subse- quent editions of the work, published after the Grand Lodge of South Carolina had become regu- lar, in 1822 and 1852, retain the same language,t and the law has always been rigidly enforced in that jurisdiction. The more recent opinions of a great number of modern Grand Lodges, or of the enlightened Masons who have composed their Committees on Corres- pondence, concur in the decision that the candidate for Masonry must be perfect and sound in all his limbs. The Grand Lodge of Missouri, in 1823, unani- mously adopted the report of a committee of that body, which required, as a physical qualification of candidates for initiation, that they should be " sound in mind and all their members ;" and at the same time a resolution was enacted, declaring that " the Grand Lodge cannot grant a letter of dispensation * An Ahiman Eezon, for the use of the Grand Lodge of South Carolina. By Bro. FREDERICK DALCHO, M. n. Charleston, 1807, p. 17. f The Ahiman Rezon, or Book of Constitutions of the Grand Lodge of A.ncient Freemasons of South Carolina. Edited by ALBERT G. MACKEV M. D. Charleston, 1852, p. 57. OF CANDIDATES. 105 to a subordinate Lodge, working under its jurisdic tion, to initiate any person maimed, disabled, or wanting the qualifications established by ancient usage.* The Committee of Correspondence of the Grand Lodge of Georgia, in 1848, made this candid ad- mission : " The conviction has been forced upon our minds, even against our wills, that we depart from the ancient Landmarks and usages of Masonry whenever we admit an individual wanting in one of the human senses, or who is in any particular maimed or deformed."t In 1846, the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Indiana, in cautioning his brethren against the laxity with which the regulations relating to physi- cal and other qualifications were sometimes inter- preted, remarked as follows '. "Let not any one who has not all the qualifications required by our Constitutions and Regulations, be admitted. See that they are perfect men in body and mind."{ The Grand Lodge of Maryland, in 1848, adopted a resolution requiring its subordinates, in the initia- tion of candidates, " to adhere to the ancient law, (as laid down in our printed books,) which says he shall be of entire limbs." The Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of New Jersey, (Bro. John P. Lewis,) in his annual address, * Proceedings G. L. of Missouri, 1823, p. 5. f Proceedings G. L. of Georgia, 1848, p. 36. J Proceedings G. L. of Ind., 1846. Proceedings G. L. of Md., Nov., 1848.- 5* 106 THE QUALIFICATIONS in 1849, made the following very pertinent remarks on this subject : " I received from the Lodge at Ashley a petition to initiate into our Order a gentleman of high respectability, who un- fortunately has been maimed. T refused my assent. . . . I have also refused a similar request from the Lodge of which I am a member. The fact that the most distinguished Ma- sonic body on earth has iscently removed one of the Land- marks, should teach us to be careful how we touch those ancient boundaries."* The Grand Lodge of Florida, at one time, was disposed to permit the initiation of maimed candi- dates, with certain restrictions, and accordingly adopted a provision in its constitution to that effect ; but subsequently, to borrow the language of Bro. T. Brown, the Grand Master, " more mature reflection and more light reflected from our sister Grand Lodges, caused it to be stricken from our consti- tution.'^ On the other hand, there appears to be among some Masons a strong disposition to lay aside the ancient Regulation, or at least so to qualify it as to take from it all its distinctive signification, and, by a qualification of the clause, to admit maimed or de- formed persons, provided that their maim or cle formity be not of such a grievous nature as to prevent them from complying with all tlie requisi- * Proceedings G. L. of N.J., 1849. In the last sentence, he alludes to the Grand Lodge of England, which substituted the word " free" for " fren born" in the old C larges. t Proc. G. K oi Fla. Address of Grand Master Brown. OP CANDIDATES. 107 tions of the Masonic ritual.* This tendency to a manifest innovation arose from a mistaken view that the present system of speculative Masonry is founded on one that was formerly altogether opera- tive in its character ; and that as the physical qualifications originally referred solely to operative Masons, they could not be expected now to apply to the disciples of an entirely speculative science. This opinion, erroneous as it is, has been very well set forth by the Committee of Correspondence of the Grand Lodge of North Carolina, in the fol- lowing language : " When Masonry was an operative institution when her members were a fraternity of working men monopolizing the architecture of the world, it was improper to introduce into the Fraternity any who were defective in limb or mem- ber ; for such imperfection would have prevented them from performing the duties of operative Masons. In process of time, the operative feature gave place to the speculative, when the reason for excluding maimed candidates no longer exist- ing, there was no impropriety in receiving them, provided their deformity, maim or infirmity, was not of such a nature as to prevent them from studying and appreciating specula- tive Masonry."f Again : in a similar spirit of lax observance, and with the same mistaken views of the origin of the * Thus the Constitution of the Grand Lodge of Ohio says : " When the physical disabilities of a candidate are not such as to prevent him from being initiated into the several degrees and mysteries of Freemasonry, his admis- sion shall not be construed an infringement of the ancient Landmarks ; but, on the contrary, will be perfectly consistent with the spirit of the institution.' 17th Regulation. t Proc. G. I. of N". C., 1849. Report of Com. of Corresp., p. 101 108 THE QUALIFICATIONS institution, the Committee of the Grand Lodge of Mississippi, in 1845, made the following remarks : " Masonry originated in an age of the world comparatively rude and barbarous, at a time when strength of body was more valued than vigor of intellect. It was instituted by an association of men united together for the prosecution of physical labors. But even at this early period, their ties and obligations were fraternal. This made them solicitous to exclude from the Fraternity all who were likely to become burdensome, rather than useful, and consequently to require that initiates should be whole in body as well as sound iri mind. But the world has changed, and Masonry has changed A subsistence is now more easily obtained by mental endow- ments than by physical perfection. This institution has now become speculative and moral : it has entirely lost its opera- tive character. The reason for requiring bodily perfection in candidates has ceased to exist. "f This supposed change of our institution from an entirely operative to an entirely speculative charac ter a supposition that has no foundation in history or tradition appears to be the only reason that has ever been urged for the abrogation of an ancient law, and the abandonment of an universal usage. The argument has been repeatedly answered and overthrown by distinguished Masonic writers, but never more ably than by Bro. Yates, of New York, and by Bro, Rockwell, of Georgia. Bro. Giles F. Yatcs, as Chairman of a Special Committee of the Grand Lodge of New York, makes the following admirable remarks on the pro- t Proc. G. L. of Miss., 1845, p. 54. Report of Special Com. The report was agreed to. OF CANDIDATES. 109 positions emanating from the Committee of the Grand Lodge of Mississippi : " Freemasonry, in its original institution, was not ' formed by an association of men exclusively for the prosecution of physical labors.' It has always been speculative and moral. The secret societies of antiquity, from which we can trace a lineal descent, were not devoted exclusively to the physical labors attendant upon the erection of buildings, whether of wood or stone. They were the depositories of other arts and sciences besides architecture. They moreover taught sublime truths and duties towards God and regarding the world to come, as well as towards our neighbors, and the * brothers of the mystic tie.' Our ancient brethren were, in effect, more eminently speculative or spiritual than operative or practical Masons. Those take too contracted a view of the subject who infer that, because in the sixteenth century and previous, the York architects in England were the al- most exclusive conservators of certain essentials in our mys- teries ; therefore the reason of the law in question had reference in olden times to operative Masons only. The ra- tionale of the law, excluding persons physically imperfect and deformed, lies deeper, and is more ancient than the source ascribed to it. It is grounded on a principle recog- nized in the earliest ages of the world, and will be found identical with that which obtained among the ancient Jews. In this respect the Levitical law was the same as the Masonic, which would not allow any ' to go in unto the veil' who had a blemish a blind man, or a lame, or a man that was broken footed or broken handed, or a dwarf," &c.* In the proceedings of the Grand Lodge of Georgia, for the year 1852, is to be found an able report, by Bro. W. S. Rockwe 1 !, then the Chairman * Proc. G. L. of N. Y., 1848, p. 37. 110 THE QUALIFICATIONS of the Committee of Correspondence, in which he discusses the question of the admission of maimed candidates. After tracing the existence of this law to remote antiquity, and finding it in the Egyptian and Mosaic rites, he proceeds to discuss its symbolic meaning in the following language : " Aside from the argument derived from the letter of the law, its relaxation destroys, jr. an eminent degree, the sym- bolical relation of the Mason to his Order. The writer of these views has often had occasion to note the consistent harmony of the entire ritual of the Craft in considering the esoteric signification of its expressive symbols. We teach the neophyte that the wonderful structure which rose by the command of Solomon to be the visible dwelling place of the God of Israel, was built ' without the sound of axe or ham- mer, or other tool of iron being heard in the building,' wooden instruments alone being used to fix the stones, of which it was constructed, in their proper place. ' Stone and rock, 1 says Portal, 'on account of the hardness and the use to which they were put, became (among the Egyptians) the symbol of a firm and stable foundation. Relying on the interpreta- tion of the Hebrew, by one of the most celebrated Hebrew scholars of Germany, we shall consider the stone as the sym- bol of faith and truth,. Precious stones in the Bible expressly bear the signification of Truth. Of this the Apocalypse furnishes many examples. The monuments of Egypt call precious stones the hard stones of truth. By contrast to the signification of truth and faith, the stone also received, in Egypt and the Bible, the signification of error and impiety, and was dedicated among the Egyptians to the Infernal Spirit, the author of all falsehood. The stone specially con- secrated to Setli or Typhon, the Infernal Deity, was the cut stone ; and this species of stone received, in the language of the monuments, the name of Seth (Satan). The symbol of Truth was the hard stone ; that of Error, the soft stone, which OF CANDIDATES. Ill could be cut.' The same symbolism appears to have existed among the Hebrews : ' If thou wilt make me an altar of stone, thou shalt not build it of hewn stone,' was the command of Jehovah ; ' for if thou lift thy tool upon it, thou hast polluted it.' (Ex. xx. 25.) ' Thou shalt build the altar of the Lord thy God of whole stones' (Deut. xxvii. 4.) That is, unhewn stones, and of whole stones, (literally perfect stones), trans- lated in our version, ' of stones made ready before it was brought thither,' did Solomon build the Holy of Holies. It was eminently proper that a temple erected for the worship of the GOD of TRUTH, the unchangeable I AM, should be con- structed of whole stones, perfect stones, the universally recognized symbols of this his great and constant attribute. The symbolic relation of each member of the Order to its mystic temple, forbids the idea that its constituent portions, its living stones, should be less perfect, or less a type of their great original, than the inanimate material which formed the earthly dwelling place of the God of their adoration. We, the successors of those who received their initiatory rites at the hands of Moses and Solomon, received also, with this inestimable inheritance, the same symbols, and with the same expressive signification. " Enough has been said to show at how remote a period in the history of Masonry this important Landmark was erected. Can man, in his short-sighted notions of convenience, vary its meaning? can a Mason, the solemnly installed Master of a Lodge of his brethren and equals, consistent with the obli- gations he has voluntarily imposed upon himself, remove it from its place ?"* With this thorough view of the historical and symbolical reasons upon which the ancient usage ia founded, it is astonishing that any Grand Lodge should have declared that when the maim or defect * Proc G. T,.of Geo.,1852. 112 THE QUALIFICATIONS is not such as to prevent the candidate from coin' plying with the ritual ceremonies of Masonry, he may be initiated.* No such qualifying clause is to be found in any of the old Constitutions. Such a liberal interpretation would give entrance in many Lodges to candidates who, though perhaps in pos- session of their legs and arms, would still be marked with some other of those blemishes and deformities which are expressly enumerated by Moses as causes of exclusion from the priesthood, and would thus utterly subvert the whole symbolism of the law.t It cannot be obeyed in a half way manner. If ob- served at all, (and the omission to observe it would be an innovation,) it must be complied with to the letter. In the language of Dr. Clarke, a portion of whose remarks have been quoted by Bro. Rock- well, the law excluding a man having any blemishes or deformities, is " founded on reason, propriety, * Thus, Bro. H. W. WALTER, the D. G. M. of the Grand Lodge of Missis- sippi in 1845, says : " We may safely conclude that a loss or partial depriva- tion of those physical organs which minister alone to the action of the body, do not disqualify ; but that the loss of those upon which the mind depends for its ideas of external objects, certainly would." Proc. G. L. of Miss., 1845, p. 12. I quote this very singular opinion simply to show into what in- extricable confusion we are likely to be led, the instant we begin to make a compromise between the stern dictates of the law and the loose interpreta- tions of expediency. Under this construction a deaf man could not be initia- ted, but one with both legs amputated at the hip joint could. t " We consider this construction altogether gratuitous, and a grave objec- tion to it is its indefiniteness for all practical purposes. If the interpretation be correct, it may pertinently be asked, what degree of disability must be established a quarter, half, three-fourths, or total ? There is no such con- dition or proviso to the rule in question laid down in the Book of Constitu lions."- -GILES P. YATES, Special Report to G. L. of N. Y., 1845, p. 37 OP CANDIDATES. 113 common sense, and absolute necessity." Moreover, in Masonry, it is founded on the Landmarks, and is illustrative of the symbolism of the Order, and will, therefore, admit of no qualifications. The candidate for initiation " must," to use the language of the Gothic Constitutions of 926, " be without blemish, and have the full and proper use of -his limbs." It is usual, in the most correct rituals of the third degree, especially to name eunuchs, as being incap- able of initiation. In none of the old Constitutions and Charges is this class of persons alluded to by name, although of course they are comprehended in the general prohibition against making persons who have any blemish or maim. However, in the Charges which were published by Dr. Anderson, in his second edition, they are included in the list of prohibited candidates.* It is probable from this that at that time it was usual to name them in the point of the OB. referred to ; and this presump- tion derives strength from the fact that Dermott, in copying his Charges from those of Anderson's second edition, added a note complaining of the " moderns" for having disregarded this ancient law, in at least one instance.'!* The question is, how- * " The men made Masons must be free born, (or no bondmen,) of mature age, and of good report, hale and sound, not deformed or dismembered at the time of their making. But no woman, no eunuch." ANDERSON, second edition, p. 144. The Grand Lodge of New York has incorporated this clause into its Constitution : 8, par. 9. It is also found in the " Ahiman Rezon" of South Carolina, and some other States. * DERMOTT says, in the note referred to : ' This is still the law of ancien* il4 THE QUALIFICATIONS ever, not worth discussion, except as a matter of ritual history, since the legal principle is already determined that eunuchs cannot be initiated because they are not perfect men, " having no maim or de- fect in their bodies." Mental Qualifications. The ancient Constitutions are silent, except per- haps by implication, on tne subject of the mental qualifications of candidates ; and we are led to our conclusions simply by a consideration of the charac- ter of the institution and by the dictates of common sense, as to who are capable of appreciating the nature of our system, for they alone, it is to be sup- posed, are competent to become its disciples. The question which is first to be answered is, what amount of talent and of mental cultivation are necessary to qualify a person for initiation ? Dr. Oliver tells us that Masonry is an order " in which the pleasing pursuits of science are blended with morality and virtue on the one hand, and be- nevolence and charity on the other." And Lawrie declares that its object is " to inform the minds of its members by instructing them in the sciences and useful arts." Smith, Hutchinson, Preston, and other more recent writers, all concur in giving a scientific and literary character to the institution. Masons, though disregarded by our brethren, (I mean our sisters) the mo- dem Masons, who (some years ago) admitted Signor SINGSONG, the eunuch, T~Ld-ci,at one of their Lodges in the .Strand, London. And upon a late trial at Westminster, it appeared that they admitted a woman calle^ Madam D'E ." >.-DERIIOTT, Ahiman Rezon, p. 29. OP CANDIDATES. 115 It docs not, however, follow from this that none but scientific and literary men are qualified to bo made Masons. To become a master of Masonic science to acquire the station of a " teacher in Israel" it is certainly necessary that there should be first laid a foundation of profane learning, on which the superstructure of Masonic wisdom is to be erected. But all Masons cannot expect to reach this elevated point ; very few aspire to it ; and there must still remain a great mass of the Frater- nity who will be content with the mere rudiments of our science. But even to these, some prepara- tory education appears to be necessary. A totally ignorant man cannot be even a " bearer of burdens" in the temple of Masonry. The modern Constitutions of the Grand Lodge of England are explicit on this subject ; for, in de- scribing the qualifications of a candidate, they say that " he should be a lover of the liberal arts and sciences, and must have made some progress in one or. other of them." This rule, however, it is well known, is constantly disregarded ; and men with- out any pretensions to liberal education are con stantly initiated in England. In a note to this clause of the Constitution, it is added, that " any individual who cannot write, is consequently ineligible to be admitted into the Order." This rule is perhaps more rigorously ob- served than the other ; and yet I have known a few instances in which men incapable of writing have been initiated. And it was in reference to a fact 116 THE QUALIFICATIONS .of this kind that the Grand Lodge of South Caro- lina, in 1848, declared that though " there is no in- junction in the ancient Constitutions prohibiting the initiation of persons who are unable to read or write ; yet, as speculative Masonry is a scienti- fic institution, the Grand Lodge would discourage the initiation of such candidates as highly inex- pedient." It may be said in reply, that in the early days of Freemasonry, the arts of reading and writing were not generally disseminated among the masses of the people, and that in all probability the great ma- jority of the Craft were not in possession of those literary qualifications. But this latter statement is a gratuitous assumption , of the correctness of which we have no proof. On the contrary, we find throughout all our ancient Regulations, that a dis- tinction was made by our rulers between the Free- masons and those who were not free, indicating that the former were of a superior class ; and may we not suppose that a rudimentary education formed a part at least of that claim to superiority ? Thus, in the conclusion of the fifth chapter of the Charges, approved in 1722, it is said : " No laborer shall be employed in the common work of Masonry, nor shall Freemasons work with those who are not free, without an urgent necessity." But, exclusive of the written law upon the sub- ject, which perhaps was silent, because it deemed so evident and uniformly observed a regulation un- necessary to be written, we are abundantly taught OP CANDIDATES. 117 by tne nature of the institution, as exemplified in its ritual, that persons who cannot read and write are ineligible for initiation. In the first degree, a test is administered, the offering of which would be manifestly absurd, if the person to whom it was offered could neither read nor write ; and in the presentation of the letter G, and all the instructions on that important symbol, it must be taken for granted that the candidate who is invested with them must be acquainted with the nature and power of letters. Idiots and madmen, although again the written law is silent upon the subject, are excluded by the ritual law from initiation, and this from the evident reason that the powers of understanding are in the one instance absent, and in the other perverted, so that they are both incapable of comprehending the principles of the institution, and are without any moral responsibility for a violation or neglect of its duties. It has sometimes been mooted as a question, whether a person, having once been insane, and then restored to health, is admissible as a candidate. The reply to the question depends on the fact whether the patient has been fully restored or not. If he has, he is no longer insane, and does not come within the provisions of the law, which looks only to the present condition, mental, physical or moral, of the candidate. If he has not, and if his apparent recovery is only what medical men call a lucid in- terval, then the disease of insanity, although not 118 THE QUALIFICATIONS actually evident, is still there, but dormant, and the individual cannot be initiated. This is a matter the determination of which is so simple, that I should not have even alluded to it, were it not that it was once proposed to me as a question of Masonic law, which the Lodge proposing it had not been able satisfactorily to solve. Political Qualifications. The political qualifications of candidates are those which refer to their position in society. To only one of these do any of the ancient Constitu- tions allude. We learn from them that the can- didate for the mysteries of Masonry must be " free born." As far back as the year 926, this Regulation was in force ; for the Old York or Gothic Constitutions, which were adopted in that year, contain the fol- lowing as the fourth article : " The son of a bondman shall not be admitted as an Ap- prentice, lest, when he is introduced into the Lodge, any of the brethren should be offended." Subsequently, in the Charges approved in 1722, it is declared that " the persons admitted members of a Lodge must be free born." And there never has been any doubt that this was the ancient law and usage of the Order. In the ancient Mysteries, which are generally sup- posed to be the prototype of the Masonic institution, a similar law prevailed ; and no slave, or mar OF CANDIDATES. 119 In slavery, although afterwards manumitted, could be initiated.* The reason assigned in the old York Constitu- tions for this Regulation, does not appear to be the correct one. .Slaves and persons born in servitude are not initiated, because, in the first place, as respects the former class, their servile condition renders them legally incapable of making a contract ; in the second place, because the admission of slaves among freemen would be a violation of that social equality in the Lodge which constitutes one of the Landmarks of Masonry ; and in the third place, as respects both classes the present slave and the freedman who was born in slavery because the servile condition is believed to be necessarily accom- panied by a degradation of mind and an abasement of spirit which unfit them to be recipients of the sublime doctrines of Freemasonry. It is in view of this theory that Dr. Oliver has remarked, that " children cannot inherit a free and noble spirit ex- cept they be born of a free woman." And the ancient Greeks, who had much experience with this class of beings, were of the same opinion ; for they coined a word, dw^ofpeteia, or slave manners, to desig- nate any great impropriety of manners, because such * " The requisites for initiation were, that a man should be a free born denizen of the country, as well as of irreproachable morals. Heace, neither slaves nor foreigners could be admitted to the peculiar mysteries of any na- tion, because the doctrines were considered of too much value to be entrusted to the custody of those who had no interest in the general welfare of the community." OLIVER, Landmarks, vol. i. p. 110. 120 THE QUALIFICATIONS conduct was supposed to characterize the helots, or slaves. But Masonic writers have also given a less prac- tical reason, derived from the symbolism of the Order, for the restriction of the right of initiation to the free born. It is in this way supposed that the Regulation alludes to the two sons of Abraham Isaac, by his wife Sarah, and Ishmael, by his bond- woman, Hagar. This is the explanation that was given in the old Prestonian Lectures ;* but I am in- clined to believe that the practical reason is the best one. The explanation in the Lectures was de- rived from the usage, for the latter certainly long preceded the former. The Regulations of the Grand Lodge of England carry this idea of freedom of action to its fullest extent, and declare that " it is inconsistent with the principles of Masonry for any Freemason's Lodge to be held for the purposes of making, passing, or raising Masons in any prison or place of confine- ment." This resolution was adopted in consequence )f a Lodge having been held in 1782, in the King's * Thus the oid English Lectures speak of" that grand festival which Abra- am made at the weaning of his son Isaac, when Sarah, seeing Ishmael, the Bon of Hagar, the Egyptian bondwoman, mocking, teazing and perplexing her son, (and fearing, if they were brought up together, that Isaac might im- bibe some of Ishmael's slavish principles,) she remonstrated with Abraham Baying, ' Put away this bondwoman and her son, for such shall not inherit with our free born.' Besides, she well knew, by Divine inspiration, that from Isaac's loins would spring a great and mighty people, who would serve the Lord with freedom, fervency and zeal ; and it is generally remarked, even at this time, that the minds of slaves are less enlightened than those of the free born." OF CANDIDATES. 121 Bench prison. No such Regulation has ever been adopted in this country, perhaps because there has been no occasion for it. The ancient Constitutions are also silent upon the subject ; but there seems little reason for doubting the correctness of the sentiment that Lodges should only be held in places where the utmost freedom of ingress and egress prevails. A few years ago, the Grand Lodge of England undertook to change the language of the old Charges, and to interpolate the word "free" for 4< free born," by which means manumitted slaves, the children of bondwomen, were rendered eligible for initiation. This unwarranted innovation, which was undoubtedly a sacrifice to expediency, has met with the general condemnation of the Grand Lodges of this country. We conclude this chapter on the qualifications of candidates with this summary : The person who desires to be made a Mason must be a man* no woman nor eunuch ;f free born ;J neither a slave nor the son of a bondwoman ; a believer in God and a future existence ; of moral conduct ;|| capable of reading and writing ;Tf not deformed or dismem- bered, but hale and sound in his physical conforma- tion, having his right limbs, as a man ought to have.** * Ch3?gesof 1722, No. iii. f Deduced from analogy and from ANDERSON'S second edit., p. 144. j: Old York Constitutions, art. 4, and all subsequent Constitutions. Charges of 1722 and Landmarks 19 and 20, ante p. 32. || Charges of 1722, No. iii. IT Deduced from ritual observances and the nature of the institution^ ** Regulations of 1663, No. ii. 6 CHAPTEE II. ^petition of A CANDIDATE, qualified in the way described ic the preceding chapter, and being desirous of admis- sion into the Order, must apply to the Lodge near- est to his place of residence, by means of a petition signed by himself, and recommended by at least two members of the Lodge to which he applies. This is the simple statement of the law ; but there are several points in it which require further consideration. In the first place, he must apply by written peti- tion. No verbal nomination of a candidate will be sufficient. The petition must be written, because it is to be preserved by the Secretary in the archives of the Lodge, as an evidence of the fact of applica- tion, which, in the event of a rejection of the appli- cant, or, as he is more usually called, the petitioner may become of some importance. The form of the petition is also to be attended to. I am not of the opinion that a oetition, drawn up in a form differ- ent from that usually adopted, would be liable to rejection for a want of formality ; and yet, as ex perience has caused a particular form to be adopted, THE PETITION OF CANDIDATES. 128 it is better and more convenient that that form should be adhered to. The important and essential points of the petition are, that it shall declare the place of residence, the age, and the occupation of the petitioner.* These declarations are made that the committee to whom the petition is to be re- ferred for inquiry, may be materially assisted in their investigations by this identification of the petitioner. The petition must be signed in the handwriting of the petitioner. This appears to be the general usage, and has the sanction of all ritual writers.t The Grand Lodge of England expressly requires it to be done,J and assigns, in its Constitutions, as a necessary deduction from the requisition, that those * The form laid down by WEBB, in his " Freemason's Monitor," is that usually adopted in this country, and is unobjectionable for brevity and suf- ficiency. It is in these words : " To the Worshipful Master, Wardens and Brethren of Lodge, No.- of Free and Accepted Masons. " The petition of the subscriber respectfully sheweth, that having long entertained a favorable opinion of your ancient institution, he is desirous of being a member thereof, if found worthy. " His place of residence is ; his age, years ; his occupa- tion [Signed] " A. B." t " The declaration to be assented to by every candidate previous to ini- tiation, and to be subscribed by his name at full length." PRESTON, OL ed., p. 32. " All applications for initiations should be made by petition in writ- ing, signed by the applicant." WEBB, p. 31. " Every person .... shall be proposed by a member, in writing, which shall be signed by the can- didate." DALCHO, p. 31. ' The candidate is required to sign the following form of petition." DOVE, Masonic Text Book, p. 150. But it is unnecessary to multiply quotations. J " He must, previous to his initiation, subscribe his name at full length tc a declaration." Constitutions of the G. L. of England, ed. 1845, p. 86. 124: THE PETITION vdio cannot write are ineligible for initiation.* Much carelessness, however, exists in relation to this usage, and it is by no means an uncommon practice for a member to sign a petition on behalf and at the request of the petitioner. This practice is, nevertheless, to be condemned. The signature should always be made by the applicant himself. In this way, if there were no other good reason, we should at least avoid the intrusion of wholly unedu cated persons into the fraternity. The petition must be recommended by at least two members of the Lodge. Preston requires the signature to be witnessed by one person, (he does not say whether he must be a member of the Lodge or not,) and that the candidate must be proposed in open Lodge by a member. t Webb says that " the candidate must be proposed in form, by a member of the Lodge, and the proposition seconded by another member. 7 ^ Cross, whose " Masonic Chart" gradually superseded that of Webb in this country, (principally on account of its numerous illustra- tions, for otherwise it is an inferior work,) says that a recommendation, the form of which he gives, " is to be signed by two members of the Lodge, " and he dispenses with the formal proposition. These gradual changes, none of them, however, substan- * In a note to the Constitutions, as above cited, it is added : " Any indi vidual who cannot write is consequently ineligible to be admitted into the Order." t PRESTON, " Illustrations," p. 32. $ WEBB, " Monitor," p. 32. CROSS. " True Masonic Chart," p. 13. OF CANDIDATES. 125 tially affecting the principle, have at last resulted in the present simpler usage, which is, for two mem- bers of the Lodge to affix their names to the peti- tion, as recommenders of the applicant. The application must be made to the Lodge nearest the candidate's place of residence. This is now the general usage in this country, and may be considered as Masonic custom by almost universal consent. It must, however, be acknowledged, that no express law upon this subject is to be found either in the Ancient Landmarks or the Old Consti- tutions, and its positive sanction as a law in any jurisdiction, must be found in the local enactments of the Grand Lodge of that jurisdiction. Still there can be no doubt that expediency and justice to the Order make such a regulation necessary, be- cause it is only in the neighborhood of his own resi- dence that the character of a candidate can be thoroughly investigated ; and hence, if permitted to apply for initiation in remote places, there is danger that unworthy persons might sometimes be intro duced into the Lodges. Accordingly, many of the Grand Lodges of America have incorporated such a regulation into their Constitutions,* and of course. * " Subordinate Lodges shall not receive a petition for initiation from at. applicant who lives nearer to another Lodge than the one he petitions, with- out first obtaining the unanimous consent of the other Lodge at a regular meeting." Grand Lodge of Illinois. " No candidate shall be received in any Lodge but the one nearest his residence/' G. L. of Ohio. California requires the applicant to have resided in the state for twelve months, and ir. the jurisdiction of the Lodge for three months. Nearly all the Grand Io4g>i have made a similar regulation. 12t) THE PETITION wherever this has been done, it becomes a positive law in that jurisdiction. As a corollary to this last mentioned regulation, ii follows, that a non-resident of a state is not en- titled, on a temporary visit to that state, to apply for initiation. But on this point I speak with much hesitation, for I candidly confess that I find no Landmark nor written law in the Ancient Constitu- tions which forbids the initiation of non-residents. Still, as there can be no question that the conferring of the degrees of Masonry on a stranger is always inexpedient, and frequently productive of injury and injustice, by foisting on the Lodges near the candidate's residence an unworthy and unacceptable person, whose only opportunity of securing admis- sion into the Order was by offering himself in a place where the unworthiness of his character was unknown, there has consequently been, within the last few years, a very general disposition among the Grand Lodges of this country to discountenance the initiation of non-residents. Many of them have adopted a specific regulation to this effect, and in all jurisdictions where this has been done, the law becomes imperative ; for, as the Landmarks are entirely silent on the subject, the local regulation is left to the discretion of each jurisdiction. But a few Grand Lodges have extended their regulations on this subject to what I cannot but conceive to be an indefensible limit, and declared, that residents of their own jurisdiction, who have time been initiated in foreign states, shall be OF CANDIDATES. 127 deemed to be illegally or clandestinely made, and shall not, on their return home, be admitted to the rights of Masonry, or be recognized as Masons. This regulation, I have said, is indefensible, be- cause it is exercising jurisdiction, not simply over Lodges and Masons, but also over the profane, for which exercise of jurisdiction there is and can be no authority. The Grand Lodge of Missouri, for instance, may declare whom its Lodges may, and whom they may not initiate, because every Grand Lodge has supreme jurisdiction over its subordi- nates ; but it cannot prescribe to a profane that he shall not be initiated in the State of New York, if the Grand Lodge of that state permits one of its subordinates to receive him, because this would be exercising jurisdiction, not only over a Lodge in another state, but over persons who are not mem- bers of the craft. If the Grand Lodge of New York should permit the initiation of non-residents, there is no authority to be found in the Landmarks or Constitutions of the Order under which the Grand Lodge of Missouri could claim to interfere with that regulation, or forbid an uninitiated citizen of St. Louis from repairing to New York and ap- plying for initiation. Missouri may declare that it will not initiate the residents of New York, but it cannot compel New York to adopt a similar rule. Well, then, if New York has the power of enact- ing a law permitting the initiation of non-residents, or if, which is the same thing, she has enacted no 128 THE PETITION law forbidding it, then clearly such initiation is legal and regular, and the non-residents so made must everywhere be considered as regular Masons, entitled to all the rights and privileges of the fra- ternity.* The Grand Lodge of Missouri, then, (to follow up the special reference with which this argument was commenced,) cannot, under any color of law or reason, deny the validity of such making, or refuse the rights of Masonry to a candidate so made. How, then, it will be asked, is the evil to be remedied, when an unworthy person, temporarily removing from his own home for that very purpose, shall have applied to a distant Lodge in another jurisdiction, and which, in ignorance of his true character, shall have admitted him ? The answer is plain. On his return to his usual residence, as a Mason, he comes at once under the jurisdiction of the nearest Lodge ; and if his unworthiness and im- morality continues, he may be tried and expelled. The remedy, it is true, entails the additional trouble of a trial on the Lodge, but this is a better course than by declaring his making illegal, to violate the * A well founded conviction of the evils which often result from the initia- tion of non-residents, has sometimes led to the enunciation of doctrines which cannot be sustained by Masonic law. Thus, in 1854, the Committee of Cor- respondence of the Grand Lodge of Michigan recommended the adoption of a resolution protesting against the practice of Lodges in other jurisdictions, conferring degrees on persons not residing in their jurisdiction, and instruct- ing the Lodges in Michigan " to hold no Masonic communication with those who may receive the degreee, in disregard of such protest." The Gran-l Lodge adopted the first and second clauses of this recommendation, but wisely declined to endorse the third Proc. G. L. of Mich., 1854 pp, 26 44, OF CANDIDATES. 129 principles of Masonic jurisprudence, and to act dis- courteously to a neighboring jurisdiction. It was necessary, for the lucidity of the argument, and to avoid circumlocution, to refer to particular Grand Lodges by name. Any others would, for this purpose, have done just as well, and accom- plished the object intended, or I might have refer- red to the Grand Lodges of A and B ; but I have selected those of Missouri and New York from the historical fact, that a few years ago, this very prin- ciple was the subject of an animated controversy between these two highly intelligent bodies.* After all, as the question is a vexed one, and as the prac- tice of initiating non-residents is liable to great abuse, it is to be wished that every Grand Lodge would exercise that power which it rightly pos- sesses, and forbid its own subordinates to initiate * The circumstances of this case were as follows : " A resident of St. Louis, (Mo.,) whose application for initiation had been rejected, was on a temporary visit to New York in the year 1852, admitted into the Order by one of the Lodges of that city. This act was received with much disap- probation by the Masons of Missouri, and the person who had been made in New York, on his return to St. Louis, was refused admission into the Lodges. There was considerable discussion of the subject between the parties most interested, and in the proceedings of the Grand Lodge of Missouri, for that year, there is a well written report emanating from the able pen of ray friend and brother, the Grand Secretary of that jurisdiction. In this report, Bro. Sullivan has contended for the principle, that every Grand Lodge pos- sesses jurisdiction over not only the Masons within its geographical limits, but even over all who are eligible to be made Masons. The Grand Lodge, in accordance with the recommendation of the committee, adopted a resolu- tion, declaring that no Lodge, under its jurisdiction, shall recognize, as a reg- ular made Mason, a resident of the state, who may, during a temporary absence therefrom, receive the degrees in Masonry without the consent ol the Lodge, undei whose jurisdiction he may reside ' G* 130 THE PETITION non-residents, at least without the recommenda- tion and permission of the Lodges nearest to their domicil. The petition must be read on a regular night of meeting. This is done that no member may be taken by surprise, and an unworthy or unacceptable candidate be thus admitted without his knowledge or consent. The rule is derived by implication from the fifth of the Regulations of 1721, which prescribes that the petition shaJl lie over for one month. Now, as it is admitted that a ballot cannot take place, except at a regular communication of the Lodge, this will carry back the time of presenta- tion to the previous regular meeting. The petition having been once read, cannot be withdrawn. It must go through the ordeal of in- vestigation and ballot. This, too, is a regulation derived from constant and universal usage, rather than from any expressed statutory provision. The Ancient Constitutions say nothing on the subject ; but so general has been the custom that it may now be considered as having the force of an unwritten law. Many Grand Lodges have, in fact, adopted it as a specific regulation,* and in others, the practice * " Nor shall any letter applying for initiation into the mysteries of our Order be allowed to be withdrawn without a ballot, or such withdrawal shall be considered a rejection, and notice given to the Grand Lodge." Const. G. L. of So. Ca., Hale xix. sec. 8. " No petition for initiation or membership Bhall be w'thdrawn, af*er having been referred to a committee of inquiry."-, Const. G. L. of Fia., Art. viii. sec. 7. I doubt, however, the correctness of 3X .ending this regulation to petitions of Masons for affiliation. Such a peti tion, I think, may be withdrawn at any stage, with the consent of a majority of the Lodge. But this subject will be hereafter discussed. OF CANDIDATES. 131 is pursued, as it were, by tacit consent. Besides, the analogy of our speculative institution to an operative art, gives sanction to the usage. The candidate for Masonry has always been considered, symbolically, as material brought up for the build- ing of the temple. This material must be rejected or accepted. It cannot be carried elsewhere for further inspection. The Lodge to which it is first brought must decide upon its fitness. To with- draw the petition, would be to prevent the Lodge from making that decision, and therefore no peti- tion for initiation, having been once read, can be withdrawn;* it must go through the necessary forms. In the next place, the petition must be referred to a committee, for an investigation into the charac- ter and the qualifications of the candidate. The law, derived from the ancient Regulations of 1721, is explicit, that there shall be an inquiry into the character of the candidate ; but it is silent as to the mode in which that inquiry shall be made.f It might, it is true, be made by the whole Lodge, every member considering himself as a member of the committee of investigation ; J but as this would * California, like Florida, prohibits the withdrawal only after the petition has been referred to a committee. But as soon as it is read, it becomes the property of the Lodge, and from that moment passes out of the control of the presenter. At no time, I think, after it has been read, can it be withdrawn. t See Regulations of 1721, art. v. ante. p. GG. % In 1855, it waa actually recommended in the Grand Lodge of Virginia that such a course be adopted, and that special committees on the characters Df applicants for initiation being abolished, the Lodge shoul 1 be made a Com aiittee of tb.3 Whole on every petition oresented. 132 THE PETITION be a cumbersome method, and one which would hardly be successful, from the very number of the inquisitors, and the probability that each member would depend upon his associates for the perform- ance of an unpleasant duty, it has been invariably the custom to refer the subject to a special commit- tee, consisting generally of three, who are always chosen by a skillful Master from among those mem- bers who, from peculiar circumstances, are most likely to make the inquiry with promptness, cer- tainty and impartiality. The petition, thus submitted to a committee, can- not be acted on until the next regular meeting, at which time the committee make their report. I say " at the next regular meeting,' 7 meaning thereby that one month must elapse between the reception of the petition and the final action of the Lodge. Some Lodges meet semi-monthly. In this case the petition cannot be read and referred at ooie regular meeting, and final action taken at the next. The Regulation of 1721 is explicit on this subject, that previous notice must be given " one month before." The object of this probationary period is, as it is ex- pressed in the Regulation, that there may be " due inquiry into the reputation and capacity of the candidate." If the report of the committee is unfavorable, the candidate is at once rejected without ballot. This usage is founded on the principles of common sense ; for, as by the Ancient Constitutions, one black ball is sufficient to reject an application, the unfavorable OF CANDIDATES. 133 report of a committee mist necessarily and by con- sequence include two unfavorable votes at least. It is therefore unnecessary to go into a ballot after such a report, as it is to be taken for granted that the brethren who reported unfavorably would, on a resort to the ballot, cait their negative votes. Their report is indeed virtually considered as the casting of such votes, and the applicant is therefore at once rejected without a further and unnecessary ballot. But if the report of the committee be favorable, the next step in the process is to proceed to a bal- lot. This, however, as it places the applicant in a new and important position, must be the subject A a distinct chapter. CHAPTER III. balloting for attUUiatm THE petition of the candidate having been refer- red to a committee, and that committee having imported favorably, the next step in the process is to submit the petition to the members of the Lodge for their acceptance or rejection. The law upon which this usage is founded is contained in the sixth article of the General Regulations of 1721, which declares that " no man can be entered a Brother in any particular Lodge, or admitted a member thereof, without the unanimous consent of all the members of the Lodge then present when the candidate is proposed, and their consent is formally asked by the Master."* No peculiar mode of expressing this opinion is laid down in any of the ancient Constitutions ;t on * ANDERSON'S Oonstitutiorts, first ed., p. 59. t The mode of voting does . t seem to have been prescribed in the firs years after the revival in 1717. But in 1736, on the 6th April, a new Regu- ation, marked in the second edition of the Constitutions as the Fortieth, was adopted, in one clause of which it is declared that " the opinions or votes of the members are always to be signified by each holding up one of his hands, arhich uplifted bands tne Grand Wardens are to count, unless the numbers jf hands be so unequa. as to render the counting useless." (ANDERSON'S BALLOTING FOB CANDIDATES. 135 the contrary, the same sixth article goes on to say that the members " are to signify their consent 01 dissent in their own prudent way, either virtually or in form, but with unanimity." Universal and uninterrupted usage, however, in this country, has required the votes on the application of candidates to be taken by ballot, which has been very wisely done, because thereby the secrecy and consequent independence of election is secured. Before proceeding to any further inquiry into the laws concerning the ballot, it will be proper to explain the mode in which the ballot is to be taken. .In some jurisdictions, it is the custom for the Senior Deacon to carry the box containing the bal- lots around the Lodge room, when each officer and member having taken out of it a white and black ball, it is again carried round empty, and each Const., second ed., p. 178.) And although the Regulation was especially en- acted in reference to the conducting of business in the Grand Lodge, yet it seems to have been made of general application in all Lodges, by the con- cluding sentence, which says : " Nor should any other kind of division be ever admitted among Masons." Although, according to the general opinion of Masonic jurists, the regulations adopted after 1722 are not to be con- sidered as of equal authority with those enacted previous to that period, still a deference to the character of the Grand Lodge of England, whose juris- diction, up to the time of the promulgation of this Fortieth Regulation, had not been seriously impaired, the custom of holding up hands has been prac- tised by a large number of Grand Lodges, and may be considered as good Masonic usage. But this mode of voting never applied to the question on the admission of candidates,which has always been by ballot, as evidently ap- pears from a reference to it in the second edition of the Book of Constitu- tions, (1738), where it is said, "and therefore the Grand Masters have allowed the Lodges to admit a member, if not above three ballots are aga:nst him " Page 155. 136 BALLOTING FOB CANDIDATES. Brother then deposits the ball of that color which he prefers white being always a token of consent, and black of dissent. The box is then inspected by the Master, or by the Master and Wardens, and the result declared, after which the Deacon again goes round and collects the remaining balls. I have always objected to this method, not be- cause the opinion of the Lodge was not thus as effec- tually declared as in any other, but because there seemed to be a want of solemnity in this mode of performing an important duty. I therefore prefer the more formal ceremony practised in some other jurisdictions, and which may be thus described :* The ballot box, containing two compartments, one holding a number of black and white balls, and the other empty, is first exhibited to the Junior Warden, then to the Senior, and afterwards to the Master, that these officers may be satisfied that the compartment which should be empty is really so. This compartment is then closed. A hole, however, in the top of the box communicates with it, which is for the purpose of permitting the balls deposited by the voters to be dropped in. The compartment containing the white and black balls indiscrimi- nately is left open, and the Senior Deacon, hav- ing placed the box upon the altar, retires to his seat. The roll of members is then called by the Secre tary, beginning with the Master ; and as each * See this ceremony described in full in the author's Lexic in of Free masonry, art. Ballot. BALLOTING FOR CANDIDATES. 137 Brother's name is called, he advances to the altar, masonically salutes the East, deposits his ball taker from the compartment lying open before him through the hole in the top of the closed compart ment. and then retires to his seat.* When all the officers and members have voted, the Senior Deacon takes the box from the altar, and submits it to the inspection of the Junior and Senior Wardens and the Master, when, if all the ballots prove to be white, the box is pronounced " clear,' 7 and the candidate is declared elected. If, however, there is one black ball only, the box is pronounced " foul," and the Master orders a new ballot, which is done in the same form, because it may be possible that the negative vote was deposited by mistake or inadvertence. f If, however, on the second ballot, * " The box is placed on the altar, and the ballot is deposited with the solemnity of a Masonic salutation, that the voters may be impressed with the sacred and responsible nature of the duty they are called on to discharge." MACKEY'S Lexicon of Freemasonry, art. Ballot, third ed., p. 54. t In the " Principles of Masonic Law," (p. 200) I had erroneously stated that " if on the second scrutiny, one black ball is again found, the fact is an nounced by the Master, who orders the election to lie over until the next stated meeting," to enable the opposing Brother to call upon him and privately state his reasons. Into this grievous error I must have fallen from the force of habit, as this has long been the usage pursued in South Caro- lina. But that it was an inadvertent error, must be apparent from the fact, that it is a practice contrary to all my stringent notions concerning the secrecy and independence of the ballot, and I have labored, not altogethei without success, in my own jurisdiction, to abrogate the usage. I am con soled in the commission and the acknowledgment of this error by the recol lection that even the great Homer sometimes slept. But I cannot agree with those who deny the propriety of an immediate second ballot, when only one black ball has been deposited. In such a case, the chances of a mistake from careless or hurried handling of the balls, from an obscurity of light or from badly prepared balls, are so great, that we owe it to the candidate. 138 BALLOTING FOR CANDIDATES. the one black ball again appears, the candidate is declared by the Master to be rejected. If, on the first ballot, two or more black balls appear, the candidate is announced as having been rejected, without the formality of a second ballot. Three things are tobe observed in the considera- tion of this subject : 1. The ballot must be unani mous. 2. It must be independent. 3. It must be secret. 1. The unanimity of the ballot has the sanction of the express words of the Regulation of 1721. No one can be admitted into a Lodge upon his applica- tion either for membership as a Mason, or for ini- tiation as a profane, " without the unanimous consent of all the members of that Lodge then present." This is the true ancient usage. Payne, when he compiled that Regulation, and presented it in 1721 to the Grand Lodge of England, for its adoption, would hardly have ventured to propose so stringent a law for the first time. The Society, under its new organization, was then in its infancy, and a legis- lator would have been more likely, if it were left to his option, to have made a Regulation of so liberal a character as rather to have given facility than diffi- culty in the increase of members. But Payne was a conscientious man. He was directed not to make new Regulations, but to compile a code from the old whose character is on trial, that he should have all the advantages of this possibility of mistake. If, however, on the second ballot, when more care will of course be taken, a black ball still appears, the rejection should \>e definitely announced without farther remarks. BALLOTING FOR CANDIDATES. 139 Regulations, then extant. He had no power of en- actment or of change, but simply of compilation.* And, therefore, although this subject of the election of candidates is not referred to in words in any of the ancient Constitutions, we have every reason to suppose that unanimity in the choice was one of the " immemorial usages" referred to in the title of the Regulations of 1721, as the basis on which those Regulations were compiled. It is true that a short time afterwards, it was found that this Regulation was too stringent for those Lodges which probably were more anxious to increase their numbers than to improve their ma- sonic character an infirmity which is still found in some of our contemporary Lodges and then to ac- commodate such brethren, a new Regulation was adopted, allowing any Lodges that desired the privilege to admit a member, if there are not more than three ballots against hirn.t It might be argued that the words of the new Regulation, which are, " to admit a member," while the old Regula- tion speaks of entering a Brother or admitting a * Hence, in the title of these " General Regulations," we are informed that Dr. Anderson " has compared them with and reduced them to the ancient records and immemorial usages of the fraternity." ANDERSON, Const., first ed., p. 58. t " But it was found inconvenient to insist upon unanimity in several cases And therefore the Grand Masters have allowed the Lodges to admit a mem- ber, if not above three ballots are against him ; though some Lodges desire no such allowance." AND. Const., second ed,, p. 155. It seems that this privilege was secured, not by a regulation of the Grand Lodge, but by virtue or '.ne Grand Master's dispensation to set aside the old law, which, it will be Lerooftor seen, he had no power to do. 140 BALLOTING FOB CANDIDATES. member, might seem to indicate that the new privi lege referred only to the application of Masons for affiliation, and not to the petition of candidates for initiation. But it is altogether unnecessary to dis- cuss this argument, since the new Regulation, first published in the second edition of Anderson's Con- stitutions, in the year 1738, has never been deemed of any authority as one of the foundations of Ma- sonic law. It is to be viewed simply, like all the other Regulations which were adopted after the year 1721, as merely a local law of the Grand Lodge of England ; and even as such, it was no doubt an in- fringement of the spirit, if not of the letter, of the Ancient Constitutions. Unanimity in the ballot is necessary to secure the harmony of the Lodge, which may be as seriously impaired by the admission of a candidate contrary to the wishes of one member as of three or more ; for every man has his friends and his influence. Besides, it is unjust to any member, however humble he may be, to introduce among his associates one whose presence might be unpleasant to him, and whose admission would probably compel him to withdraw from the meetings, or even altogether from the Lodge. Neither would any advantage really accrue to a Lodge by such a forced admis- sion ; for while receiving a new and untried mem- ber into its fold, it would be losing an old one. For these reasons, in this country, except in a few jurisdictions, the unanimity of the ballot has always been insisted on ; and it is evident, from what has BALLOTING FOR CANDIDATES. 141 been here said, that any less stringent Regulatioc is a violation of the ancient law and usage. From the fact that the vote which is given on the ballot for a candidate must be one in which the unanimous consent of all present is to be given, it follows that all the members then present are under an obligation to vote. From the discharge of this duty no one can be permitted to shrink. And, therefore, in balloting on a petition, every member, as his name is called, is bound to come forward and deposit either a white or a black ball. No one can be exempted from the performance of this respon- sible act, except by the unanimous consent of the Lodge ; for, if a single member were allowed to de- cline voting, it is evident that the candidate, being then admitted by the affirmative votes of the others, such admission would, nevertheless, not be in com- pliance with the words and spirit of the law. The " unanimous consent of all the members of the Lodge then present," would not have been given one, at least, having withheld that consent by the non-user of his prerogative. It follows also, from this view of the Regu- lation, that no Lodge can enact a by-law which, for non-payment of dues or other cause, should prohibit a member from voting on the petition of a candidate.* A member may forfeit his * It is not very unusual for Lodges to incorporate a Begulation in their by- laws, depriving members who are more than one year in arrears from vot- ing. As long as this is interpreted as referring to ordinary questions before the I.-odge, or to the annual election of officers, there can be no objection ta 142 BALLOTING FOR CANDIDATES. right to vote at the election of officers, or other occasions ; but not only cannot be deprived of his right to ballot on petitions, but is, as we have seen, compelled to exercise this right, whenever he is present and a candidate is proposed. 2. Independence of all responsibility is an essen- tial ingredient in the exercise of the ballot. A Mason is responsible to no human power for the vote that he casts on the petition of a candidate. To his own conscience alone is he to answer for the motives that have led to the act, and for the act itself. It is, of course, wrong, in the exercise of this invaluable right, to be influenced by pique or preju- dice, or by an adverse vote, to indulge an ungener- ous feeling. But whether a member is or is not in fluenced by such motives, or is indulging such feelings, no one has a right to inquire. No Mason can be called to an account for the vote that he has deposited. A Lodge is not entitled indeed to know how any one of its members has voted. No inquiry on this subject can be entertained ; no information can be received. So anxious is the law to preserve this independ- ence of the ballot, as the great safeguard of its purity, that the Grand Lodge, supreme on almost all other subjects, has no power to interfere in reference to the ballot for a candidate ; and notwith- standing that injustice may have been done to an it. But it is evident, from the course of the argument I have pursued, Uia< it would be unconstitutional to apply such a by-law to the case of voting ou the petition of candidates for initiation or affiliation. BALLOTING FOR CANDIDATES. 143 upright and excellent man by his rejection, (and such cases of clear injustice must sometimes occur,) neither the Grand Lodge nor the Grand Master can afford any redress, nor can any dispensation be granted for either reversing the decision of the Lodge, or for allowing less than a unanimous ballot to be required. Hence we perceive that the dis pensation mentioned in the edition of the Book of Constitutions for 1738, permitting a candidate to be admitted with three black balls, was entirely unconstitutional. The right of a Lodge, expressed by the unanimous consent of all the brethren present, to judge of whom it shall admit to its membership, is called " an in- herent privilege," and it is expressly said that it is " not subject to a dispensation. 7 '* The reason as- signed for this is one that will suggest itself at once to any reflective mind, namely, because the members are themselves the best judges of the particular reasons for admission or rejection ; and if an objec- tionable person is thrust upon them, contrary to their wishes, the harmony of the Lodge may be im- paired, or even its continuance hazarded. 3. The secrecy of the ballot is as essential to its perfection as its unanimity or its independence. If the vote were to be given viva voce, it is impossible * This provision is found in the latter clause of the Sixth Regulation ol 1721, and is in these words : " Nor is this inherent privilege subject to a dls pensation, because the members of a particular Lodge are the be.-t judges of it ; and if a fractious member should be imposed on them, it might spoil their liarmony, or hinder their freedom, or even break and disperse the Loage AND. Const., first ed.. p. 59. 144 BALLOTING FOR CANDIDATES. that the improper influences of fear or interest should not sometimes be exerted, and timid members be thus induced to vote contrary to the dictates of their reason and conscience. Hence, to secure this secrecy and protect the purity of choice, it has been wisely established as a usage, not only that the vote shall in these cases be taken by a ballot, but that there shall be no subsequent discussion of the subject. Not only has no member a right to in- quire how his fellows hava voted, but it is wholly out of order for him to explain his own vote. And the reason of this is evident. If one member has a right to rise in his place and announce that he de- posited a white ball, then every other member has the same right ; and in a Lodge of twenty members, where an application has been rejected by one black ball, if nineteen members state that they did not deposit it, the inference is clear that the twentieth Brother has done so, and thus the secrecy of the ballot is at once destroyed. The rejection having been announced from the chair, the Lodge should at once proceed to other business, and it is the sacred duty of the presiding officer peremptorily and at once to check any rising discussion on the subject. Nothing must be done to impair the inviolable secrecy of the ballot. Re-consideration of the Ballot. It almost always happens, when a ballot is un- favorable, that the friends of the applicant are not BALLOTING FOR CANDIDATES. 145 satisfied, and desire a re-consideration, and it some- times Dccurs that a motion for that re-consideration is made. Now, it is a subject worthy of discussion how far such a motion is in order, and how such a re-consideration is to be obtained. I commence with announcing the proposition that a motion to re-consider an unfavorable ballot is en- tirely out of order. In the first place, the elements necessary to bring such a motion within the pro- visions of Parliamentary rules of order are wanting. A motion for re-consideration must always be made by one who has voted in the majority.* This is a wise provision, to prevent time being wasted in re- peated agitations of the same questions, so that it shall never be known when a question is done with.t But the vote on the petition of a candidate being by secret ballot, in which no member is permitted to make his vote known, it is, of course, impossible to know, when the motion for re-consideration is made, whether the mover was one of the majority or the minority, and whether therefore he is or is not entitled, under the Parliamentary rule, to make sucn a motion. The motion would have to be ruled out for want of certainty. But in the particular case of a re-consideration of the ballot, there is another and more strictly * Thus we find the following among the rules of the United States Senate : " When a question has been once made and carried in the affiimative or negative, it shall be in order for any member of the majority to move for the- re-consideration thereof.'' RULE 20. t JEFFERSON'S Manual, sect, xliii, p. 93 7 146 BALLOTING FOE CANDIDATES. Masonic rale, which would make such a motion out of order. To understand the operation of this second rule, it is necessary to make a preliminary explanation. The proceedings of a Lodge are of two kinds that relating to business, and that relat- ing to Masonic labor. Now, in all matters purely . of a business character, in which the Lodge assumes the nature of a mere voluntary association of men, such, for instance, as the appropriation of the funds, every member is entitled to a voice in the delibera- tions, and may make any motion relative to the business in hand, which would not be a violation of the Parliamentary rules of order which prevail in all deliberative societies, and of those few other rules of order which particularly distinguish the Masonic from any other association or society. But all matters relating to Masonic labor are under the exclusive control of the Master. He alone is re- sponsible to the Grand Lodge for the justice and excellence of his work, arid he alone should there- fore be permitted to direct it. If the time when and the manner how labor is to be conducted, be left to the decision of a majority of the Lodge, then the Master can no longer be held responsible for results, in producing which he had, in common with the other members, only one voice. It is wisely therefore provided that the labor of the Lodge shall be wholly and solely controlled and directed by the Master. Now, the ballot is, on a petition for initiation, a part of the labor of a Lodge. The candidate may BALLOTING FOR CANDIDATES. 147 be said symbolically to be the material brought up for the building of the temple. The laws and usages of Masonry have declared that the whole Lodge shall unanimously decide whether this material is ' good and true," and fit for the tools of the work- men.* But as soon as the Lodge has begun to ex- ercise its judgment on the material thus brought before it that is, as soon as it has proceeded to a ballot on the petition it has gone into Masonic labor, and the authority of the Master as the Chief Builder becomes paramount. He may stay the elec- tion he may refuse to sanction it he may set it aside and against his decision there can be no ap- peal, except to the Grand Lodge, to which body, of course, he is responsible, and before which he must show good reasons for the act that he has done. From all this, then, it follows that the Master of the Lodge alone has the power to order a re-con- sideration of the ballot. If, on the annunciation of the result/he is satisfied that an error of inadvert- ence has occurred, by which, for instance, a black * But even here the Master may justly interpose his authority, as the superintendent of the work, and declare that material selected by the Lodge is unfit, and reject it. Suppose, for instance, that a Lodge should have unani- mously elected a blind man to receive the degrees, (this is a supposable case, for such an election and initiation once took place in Mississippi,) will any Masonic jurist deny the right nay more, the duty of the Master to interpose and refuse to proceed to initiation ? And in this refusal he would, on an appeal, be undoubtedly supported by the Grand Lodge. Let it be understood, once for all, that when I speak of the powers and prerogatives of the Master of a Lodge, I always do so with the implicit re- servation, that for the abuse of these powers, he is responsible to the Grand I-iodge. The Master has, it is true, the power to do wrong, but not Vv? right. 148 BALLOTING FOR CANDIDATES. ball lias been deposited, where the depositor intended a white one, or if he supposes it probable or pos- sible that such an error may have been committed, or if he has any other equally good reason, he may order a re-consideration of the ballot. But even this must be done under restriction, that the re-con- sideration is to be ordered at once. If any member has left the room after the first ballot has been taken, it would be clearly wrong in the Master to order a re-consideration, because it might be that the party so leaving had been the very one who had voted for a rejection. Of course it follows, on the same principle, that the Master would not be justi- fied in ordering a re-consideration on any subsequent meeting. The Lodge having been closed, there is no power in Masonry which can order a re-con- sideration. The result cannot be affected except by a new petition. After what has been previously said, it is hardly necessary, in conclusion, to add, that neither the Grand Master nor the Grand Lodge has the power, under any circumstances whatever, to order a re- consideration of a ballot. Everything concerning the admission or rejection of candidates is placed exclusively in the Lodge. The Regulations of 1721 declare this to be " an inherent privilege not subje:t to dispensation." CHAPTER IV. 2TfM eroitsequences of Rejection, WHEN a candidate for initiation into the myste- ries of Freemasonry has been rejected in the manner described in the last chapter, he is necessarily and consequently placed in a position towards the fra ternity which he had not before occupied, and which position requires some examination. In the first place, there can be no re-consideration of his application on a mere vote of re-consideration by the Lodge. This subject has been already suf- ficiently discussed, and I need only here refer to the preceding chapter. In the next place, he can apply to no other Lodge for initiation. Having been once rejected by a certain Lodge, he is forever debarred the privilege of applying to any other for admission. This law is implicitly derived from the Regulations which forbid Ledges to interfere with each other's work* The candidate, as I have already observed, is to be viewed in our 'speculative system as "material brought up for the building of the temple." The act of investigating the fitness or unfitness of that 150 THE CONSEQUENCES material, constitutes a part of Masonic labor, arid when a Lodge has commenced that labor, it is con- sidered discourteous for any other to interfere with it. This sentiment of courtesy, which is in the true spirit of Masonry, is frequently inculcated in the ancient Masonic codes. Thus, in the Gothic Con- stitutions, it is laid down that " a Brother shall not supplant his Fellow in the work ;"* the " ancient Charges at makings," adopted in the time of James II., also direct that " no Master or Fellow supplant others of their work ;"t and the Charges approved in 1722 are still more explicit in directing that none shall attempt to finish the work begun by his Brother.! * See ante p. 45, art. 10. f See ante p. 51, art. 2. $ " None shall discover envy at the prosperity of a Brother, nor supplant him, or put him out of his work, if he be capable to finish the same ; for no man can finish another's work so much to the lord's profit, unless he be thoroughly acquainted with the designs and draughts of him that began it." Charges of 1722, ch. v. See ante p. 59. There has always been a dispo- sition in modern times to evade the stringency of ancient laws, and notwith- standing the warning cry of all in authority, that the portals of our Order are not sufficiently guarded, the tendency of our modern constitutions is ta put facilities rather than obstacles in the way of admission. If the ancient law is not in absolute words abrogated, it is often so construed as to become a mere dead letter. Thu, in the Rules and Regulations of the Grand Lodge of Ohio, (Proceedings from 1808 to 1847, lately published, page 438,) it is enacted as follows : "No Lodge shall initiate into the mysteries of the craft any person whomsoever, without being first satisfied by a test, or otherwise, that the candidate has not made application to some other Lodge, and been rejected ; and if it shall appear that he has been rejected , then the Lodge must be satisfactorily convinced that such rejection has not been on account of any circumstances that ought to preclude him from the benefits of Ma- sonry." The first clause of this Regulation is completely in accordance with the ancient law ; but the second clause virtually annuls the first. One Lodge is thus place T in judgment upon the motives of another ; and having OF REJECTION. 151 There is another and more practical reason why petitions shall not, after rejection, be transferred to another Lodge. If such a course were admis- sible, it is evident that nothing would be easier than for a candidate to apply from Lodge to Lodge, until at last he might find one, less careful than others of the purity of the household, through whose too willing doors he could find admission into that Order, from which the justly scrupulous care of more stringent Lodges had previously rejected him. It is unnecessary to advert more elaborately to the manifold evils which would arise from this rivalry among Lodges, nor to do more than suggest that it would be a fertile source of admitting un- worthy material into the temple. The laws of Masonry have therefore wisely declared that a can- didate, having been once rejected, can apply to no other Lodge for admission, except the one which had rejected him.* determined tlut the former rejection was not based on satisfactory grounds, it proceeds forthwith to admit the rejected candidate. According to this Regulation, any Lodge may interfere with the work of another Lodge, pro- vided always it will first resolve that the said work, in its opinion, was not well done. Such a Regulation is an incentive to rivalry and contention in any jurisdiction. * In 1851, the Committee of Foreign Correspondence of the Grand Lodge of New York presented the Craft with thirty-four maxims of Masonic juris- prudence, which are distinguished for their general legal accuracy. To the Twenty-ninth, however, I cannot attribute this character. The committee there assert that " the majority of a Lodge can, at any regular stated meet- ing thereof, recommend a rejected candidate for initiation to a neighboring Lodge, which can then initiate him, on a petition and reference, and aunanL mous vote." I look in vain through all the Landmarks, usages and constitu- tions of the Order, for any authority under which a Lodge can assume the 152 THE CONSEQUENCES A candidate who has been rejected may, however, again apply to the Lodge which has rejected him. The ancient laws of the Order are entirely silent as to the time when this new application is to be made. Some of the Grand Lodges of this country have enacted local Regulations on this subject, and decreed that such new application shall not be made until after the expiration of a definite period. The Grand Lodge of New York requires a proba- tion of six months, and some other states have ex- tended it to a year. In all such cases, the local Regulation will be of force in the jurisdiction for which it was enacted. But where there is no such Regulation, it is competent for the candidate to re- apply at any subsequent regular communication. In such a case, however, he must apply by an en- tirely new petition, which must again be vouched for and recommended as in the original application, by the same or other brethren, must be again refer- red to a committee of inquiry on character, must lie over for one month, and then be balloted for precisely as it was before. The treatment of this prerogative of recommending a candidate, rejected or not, to " a neighbor ing Lodge" for initiation. Any Lodge, it is true, having elected a candi- date to receive the degrees, and being prevented by subsequent circumstances, such, for instance, as the removal of the candidate, from conferring them, may request another Lodge to do its work for it ; but it is contrary to all the principles of Masonic jurisprudence for a Lodge to depart from its proper Kphere,and become the recommenders or vouchers to another Lodge of a candidate, and he, too, a rejected one. I will say nothing of the implied in- sult to the Lodge to whom the discarded material is recommended dis- carded a,s not being good enough for their own Lodge, but recommended as fit enough for the one to -which he is sent. The constitution of the Grand New York contains T am happj to say, no such provision. OF REJECTION. 153 new petition must be, in all respects, as if no former petition existed. The necessary notice will in this way be given to all the brethren, and if there are the same objections to receiving the candidate as existed in the former trial, there will be ample op- portunity for expressing them in the usual way by the black ball. It may be objected that in this way a Lodge may be harassed by the repeated petition? of an importunate candidate. This, it is true, may sometimes be the case ; but this " argumentum ab inconvenienti" can be of no weight, since it may be met by another of equal or greater force, that if it were not for this provision of a second petition, many good men who had perhaps been unjustly re- fused admission, and for which act the Lodge might naturally feel regret, would be without redress. Circumstances may occur in which a rejected candi- date may, on a renewal of his petition, be found worthy of admission. He may have since reformed and abandoned the vices which had originally caused his rejection, or it may be that the Lodge has since found that it was in error, and in his rejection had committed an act of injustice. It is wisely pro- vided, therefore, that to meet such, not infrequent cases, the candidate is permitted to present a re- newed petition, and to pass through a second or even a third and fourth ordeal. If it prove favor- able in its results, the injustice to him is compen- sated for ; but if it again prove unfavorable, no evil has been done to the Lodge, and the candidate is just where he was, before his renewed application. 154 THE CONSEQUENCES OP REJECTION. All that has been here said refers exclusively to the petitions of profanes for initiation. The law which relates to the applications of Master Masons for admission into a Lodge as members, will be con- sidered when we come to treat of the rights and duties of Master Masons. The subject of balloting, on the applications for each of the degrees, or the advancement of candi- dates from a lower to a higher degree, will also be more appropriately referred to in the succeeding Book, which will be devoted to the consideration of the law relating to individual Masons ; and more especially to that part of it which treats of the rights of Entered Apprentices and Fellow Craits, BOOK III. jRplaiing io Inbifeibua! Masons. MASONS, as individual members of our Order, are to be distinguished, according to the progress they have made, into Entered Apprentices, Fellow Crafts, Master Masons, and Past Masters. Symbolic Masonry recognizes nothing beyond these grades. It is of the rights and prerogatives that they acquire, and of the obligations and duties that devolve upon them as individuals who have attained to these various de- grees, that it is the object of the Third Book of the present treatise to inqiiim > CHAPTER I. THERE was a time, and that at no very remote period, when the great body of the fraternity was composed entirely of Entered Apprentices. The first degree was the only one that was conferred in subordinate Lodges, and the Grand Lodge reserved to itself the right of passing Fellow Crafts and raising Master Masons.* Of course all the business of subordinate Lodges was then necessarily trans- acted in the Entered Apprentice's degree. The Wardens, it is true, were required to be Fellow Crafts,t and the most expert of these was chosen as the Master ;| but all the other offices were filled, * " No private Lodge at this time [1739] had the power of passing or rais- ing Masons, nor could any Brother be advanced to either of these degrees but in the Grand Lodge, with the unanimous consent of all the Brethren in communication assembled." SMITH'S Use and Abuse of Freemasonry, p. 73. This is confirmed by the Old Laws of the Grand Lodge of England, art. xiii.,which ordered that" Apprentices must be admitted Fellow Crafts and Masters only here, [in the Grand Lodge] unless by dispensation from the Grand Master." t " No Brother can be a Warden until he has passed the part of a Fellow Cra.fi." Charges O/1721, 4. j. " The most expert of the Fellow Craftsmen shall be chosen or appointed the Master or Overseer of the lord's work, who is to be called Master by those that work under him." Ibid, 5. 158 OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. and the business and duties of Masonry were per- formed, by the Apprentices. But we learn from Anderson, that on the 22d of November, 1725, a regu- lation was adopted which permitted the Lodges to assume the prerogative formerly vested in the Grand Lodge, of conferring the second and third degrees, and as soon as this became generally the custom, Apprentices ceased to constitute the body of the craft, a position which then began to be occupied by Master Masons ; and the Apprentices lost by this change nearly all the rights and prerogatives which they had originally possessed. This fact must be constantly borne in mind when- ever we undertake to discuss the rights of Entered Apprentices, and to deduce our opinions on the sub- ject from what is said concerning them in the ancient Regulations. All that is written of them in these fundamental laws is so written because they then constituted the great body of the craft.* They were almost the only Masons ; for the Fellow Crafts and Masters were but the exceptions, and hence these Regulations refer to them, not so much * This expression must, however, be taken with some reservation. In the early part of the eighteenth century, when the speculative element predomi- nated in the Order, to the entire exclusion of the operative, Entered Appren- tice, that is to say, initiates, or Masons who had taken but one degree, clearly constituted the body of the craft. But at an earlier period, when the operative was mingled with the speculative character of the institution, the body of the Order were undoubtedly called " Fellows," and would now pro- bably be considered as equivalent to our Fellow Crafts. This subject will be discussed at length in the next chapter. It is sufficient for the present that we consider the condition of the Order at the time of the revival in 1717, and for some years afterwards, when Apprentices only composed the princi- pal membership of the Lodges. OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. 159 as Apprentices, or men of the lowest degree, in con- tradistinction to those who had been advanced to higher grades, but simply as the large constituency of the Masonic fraternity. Hence the Regulations which on this principle and in this view then ap- plied to Entered Apprentices, must now be referred to Master Masons, who have taken their place in the distribution of the labors, as well as the honors and prerogatives of the institution. I shall have occa- sion, before this chapter is concluded, to apply this theory in the illustration of several points of Ma- sonic law. In the modern system the one, that is to say, which is now practised everywhere Entered Ap- prentices are possessed of very few rights, and are called upon to perform but very few duties. They are not, strictly speaking, members of a Lodge, are not required to pay dues, and are not permitted to speak or vote, or hold any office. Secrecy and obedience are the only obligations imposed upon them, while the Masonic axiom, " audi, vide, tace" hear, see, and be silent is peculiarly appropriate to them in their present condition in the fraternity. Our ritual, less changed in this respect than our Regulations, still speaks of initiating Apprentices and making Masons, as synonymous terms. They were so, as we have seen, at one time, but they cer- tainly no longer express the same meaning. An Entered Apprentice is now no more a Mason than a student of medicine is a physician, or a disciple is a philosopher. The Master Masons now constitute 160 OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. the body of the craft ; and to be, at this day, a Mason, properly so called, one must have taken the third degree.* Hence Apprentices are not entitled to the honors of Masonic burial,t nor can they join in paying those honors to a deceased Master Mason. In this respect they are placed precisely in the position of profanes ; and it is a practical proof of what I have just said, that they are not Masons in the strict sense and signification of the word. They are really nothing more than Masonic disciples, permit- ted only to enter the porch of the temple, but with no right to penetrate within its sanctuary. * I must not be understood by this expression to deny the Masonic charao ter of Entered Apprentices. In the ordinary and colloquial use of the word, a Mason is one who has been admitted into the Order of Masonry. In this sense an Apprentice is a Mason ; he is to be styled, by way of distinction from the possessors of the succeeding degrees, an " Entered Apprentice Mason." But in the more legal and technical employment of the title, a Mason is one who is in possession of the rights, privileges and mysteries of Masonry. And in this sense an Apprentice is clearly not yet a Mason ; be is only a neophyte in the incipient stage of Masonry. To avoid confusion, this difference in the colloquial and legal uses of the word must be always borne in mind. We speak carelessly and familiarly of a building in the course of erection as a house, although nothing but the frame-work may be there. But really and strictly, it is only a house when completely finished, and ready for occupation as a place of habitation. t " No Mason can be interred with the formalities of the Order . . . unless he has been advanced to the third degree of Masonry, from which re- striction there can be no exception. Fellow Crafts or Apprentices are no) entitled to the funeral obsequies." PKESTON, OL. edit., p. 89. % This is evident from the fact that on such occasions the Lodge is re- quired to be opened in the Master's degree. See PRESTON, as above. The position of Entered Apprentices in the Order at the present day seems to be strictly in accordance with our ancient traditions. These inform us that the Apprentices were not permitted to pass the portals of the ternole- OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. 161 If this be the case, then it follows clearly that they are not entitled to Masonic charities or relief. And so far ae regards the pecuniary benefits of the Order, we have a still better reason for this exclu- sion ; for surely they who have contributed nothing to the support of the^institution, in the form of con- tributions or arrears, cannot expect, as a right, to receive any eleemosynary aid from its funds. The lesson of charity is, it is true, given in the first de- gree ; but this is a ritualistic usage, which was estab- lished at the time when Entered Apprentices were, as I have already observed, the great body of the craft ; and were really, by this fact, entitled to the name of Masons. The lessons taught on this sub- ject, except in so far -as they are of a general char- acter, and refer to the virtue of charity simply as a part of a system of ethics, must be viewed only as an introductory instruction upon matters that are afterwards to be practically enforced in the third degree. Entered Apprentices formerly had the right of being present at the communications of the Grand Lodge, or General Assembly, and taking part in its deliberations. In fact, it is expressly prescribed, in the last of the Regulations of 1721, that none of these important laws can be altered, or any new General Regulations made, until the alteration or but were occupied in the quarries in fashioning the rude stones by means of the guage and gavel, so as to fit them for the use of the Fellow Crafts. And it was not until they had made due proficiency and proved themselves worthy by their obedience and fidelity, that they were permitted to enter the sacred precincts, and to receive a fuller share of light and instruction. 162 OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. the new regulation is submitted to all the Brethren, " even the youngest Entered Apprentice.""" But this rule is now obsolete, because, being founded on the fact that Apprentices were then the body of the craft, and they being no longer so, the reason of the law having ceased, the law also ceases. Cessante ratione legis, cessat ipsa lex. Entered Apprentices, however, still have several rights, in the due exercise of which they are en- titled to as much protection as the most important members of the craft. These rights may be briefly enumerated as follows : They have a right to sit in the Lodge in which they were initiated, when it is opened in the first degree, and to receive all the instructions which ap- pertain to that degree. This is not a right of visitation such as is exercised by Master Masons, because it cannot be extended beyond the Lodge in which the Apprentice has been initiated. Into that Lodge, however, whenever opened and working, in his degree he can claim admittance, as a right ac- cruing to him from his initiation ; but if admitted into any other Lodge, (the policy of which is doubt- ful) it can only be by the courtesy of the presiding officer. Formerly, of course, when Apprentices constituted the body of the fraternity, they pos- sessed this general right of visitation, f but lost it * See ante p. 79. t Of course when the majority of the members of all Lodges were Appren- tices, or, in other' words, had received only the first degree, it is evident that there could have been few or no visits among the craft, if the right were re stricter! to the possessors of the third degree. OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. 1 f>B as soon as Lodges began to confer the higher de- grees ; and now it is confined to Master Masons, who alone, under modern usage, possess the right of visit. Apprentices have also the right to apply for ad- vancement to a higher degree. Out of the class of Apprentices the Fellow Crafts are made ; and as this eligibility to promotion really constitutes the most important right of this inferior class of our Brethren, it is well worthy of careful consideration. I say, then, that the Entered Apprentice possesses the right of application to be passed to the degree of a Fellow Craft. He is eligible as a candidate ; but here this right ceases. It goes no farther than the mere prerogative of applying. It is only the right of petition. The Apprentice has, in fact, no more claim to the second degree than the profane has to the first. It is a most mistaken opinion to suppose that when a profane is elected as a candi- date, he is elected to receive all the degrees that can be conferred in a Symbolic Lodge. Freemasonry is a rigid system of probation. A second step never can be attained until sufficient proof has been given in the preceding that the candidate is " worthy and well qualified."* A candidate who has received the first degree is no more assured by this reception thaf he will reach the third, than that he will attain * The Charges of 1722 tell us that " all preferment among Masons is grounded upon real worth and personal merit only," and they proceed to show how by these means alone progress is to be made from the lowest to the highest positions in the Order. See ante p. 57. 164: OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. the Royal Arch. In the very ceremony of ins re ception he may have furnished convincing evidence of his unfitness to proceed further ; and it would be- come the duty of the Lodge, in that case, to debar his future progress. A bad Apprentice will make a worse Master Mason ; for he who cannot comply with the comparatively simple requisitions of the first degree, will certainly be incapable of respond- ing to the more important duties and obligations of the third. Hence, on the petition of an Apprentice to be passed as a Fellow Craft, a ballot should al ways be taken. This is but in accordance with the meaning of the word ; for a petition is a prayer for something which may or may not be refused, and hence, if the petition is granted, it is ex gratia, or by the voluntary favor of the Lodge, which, if it chooses, may withhold its assent. Any other view of the case would exclude that inherent right which is declared by the Regulations of 1721 to exist in every Lodge, of being the best judges of the quali- fications of its own members.* An Apprentice, then, has the right to apply for advancement ; but the Lodge in which he was initi- ated has the correlative right to reject his applica- tion. And thereby no positive right of any person is affected ; for, by this rejection of the candidate for advancement, no other injury is done to him than the disappointment of his expectations. His character as an Entered Apprentice is not impaired. * Regulations of 1721, art. vi., ante,p. G6. OP ENTERED APPRENTICES. 165 He still possesses all the rights and prerogatives that he did before, and continues, notwithstanding the rejection of his application, to be an Apprentice " in good standing," and entitled, as before, to all the rights and privileges of a possessor of that degree. This subject of the petition of an Apprentice for advancement involves three questions of great im- portance : First, how soon, after receiving the first degree, can he apply for the second ? Secondly, what number of black balls is n'ecessary to consti- tute a rejection? And thirdly, what time must elapse, after a first rejection, before the Apprentice can renew his application for advancement ? 1. How soon, after receiving the first degree, can an Apprentice apply for advancement to the second ? The necessity of a full comprehension of the mys- teries of one degree, before any attempt is made to acquire those of a second, seems to have been thoroughly appreciated from the earliest times ; and hence the Old York Constitutions of 926 prescribe that " the Master shall instruct his Apprentice faithfully, and make him a perfect workman."* But if there be an obligation on the part of the Master to instruct his Apprentice, there must be, of course, a correlative obligation on the part of the latter to receive and profit by those instructions. Accordingly, unless this obligation is discharged, and the Apprentice makes himself acquainted with * Sce,ante p. 45. But it is unnecessary to multiply authorities, as the ritual of the first degree has always prescribed study and probation. 166 OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. the mysteries of the degree that he has already re- ceived, it is, by general consent, admitted that he has no right to be intrusted with further and more important information. The modern ritual sustains this doctrine, by requiring that the candidate, as a qualification in passing onward, shall have made " suitable proficiency in the preceding degree." This is all that the general law prescribes.* Suit- able proficiency must have been attained, and the period in which that condition will be acquired, must necessarily depend on the mental capacity of the candidate. Some men will become proficient in a shorter time than others, and of this fact the Master and the Lodge are to be the judges. An examination should therefore take place in open Lodge, and a ballot immediately following will ex- press the opinion of the Lodge on the result of that examination, and the qualification of the candidates. From the difficulty with which the second and third degrees were formerly obtained a difficulty dependent on the fact that they were only conferred in the Grand Lodge it is evident that Apprentices must have undergone a long probation before they had an opportunity of advancement, though the pre- cise term of the probation was decided by no legal * Unfortunately it is too much the usage, when the question is asked whether the candidate has made suitable proficiency in his preceding degree, to reply, " such as time and circumstances would permit." I have no doubt that this is an innovation originally invented to evade the law, which has al- ways required a due proficiency. To such a question, no other answer ought & be given than the positive and unequivocal one that " he has." OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. 167 enactment. Several modern Grand Lodges, how- ever, looking with disapprobation on the rapidity with which the degrees are sometimes conferred upon candidates wholly incompetent, have adopted special regulations, prescribing a determinate period of probation for each degree. This, however, is a local law, to be obeyed only in those jurisdictions in which it is of force. The general law of Masonry makes no such determinate provision of time, and demands only that the candidate shall give evidence of " suitable proficiency."* 2. What number of Hack balls is necessary to con- stitute a rejection ? Here we are entirely without the guidance of any express law, as all the Ancient Constitutions are completely silent upon the subject. It seems to me, however, that in the advancement of an Apprentice, as well as in the election of a profane, the ballot should be unanimous. This is strictly in accordance with the principles of Ma- sonry, which require unanimity in admission, lest improper persons be intruded, and harmony im- paired. Greater qualifications are certainly not required of a profane applying for initiation than of an Apprentice seeking advancement ; nor can I see any reason why the test of those qualifications * The Constitution of the Grand Lodge of England contains the following provision : " No Lodge shall confer more than one degree on any Brother on the same day, nor shall a higher degree be conferred on any Brother at a less interval than four weeks from his receiving a previous degree, nor until he has passed an examination in open Lodge in that degree." A similar regulation prevails in many, if not most, of the Grand Lodges of the United States. 168 OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. should not be as rigid in the one case as in the other. I am constrained therefore to believe, not- withstanding the adverse decision of the Grand Lodge of Wisconsin in 1849,* that on the applica- tion of an Entered Apprentice for advancement to the second degree, the ballot must be unanimously in his favor to secure the adoption of his petition. It may be stated, once for all, that in all cases of balloting for admission in any of the degrees of Masonry, a single black ball will reject. 3. What time must elapse, after a first rejection, before the Apprentice can renew his application for advancement to the second degree ? Here, too, the Ancient Constitutions are silent, and we are left to * The Hon. Wm. R, Smith, at that time Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Wisconsin, said, in 1849, that he considered it not only wrong in itself, but highly unmasonic to deny advancement to an Entered Apprentice or Fellow Craft, " by the operation of a single negative in the ballot box." And he advanced the doctrine that, " without sufficient cause shown to the contrary, the advancement may be demanded by the candidate as a matter of right. He has already submitted to the ordeal of a single negative in the ballot box, and he stands in the Lodge as a man and a Mason, subject to the action of a majority of his Brethren on his merits or his demerits." Proc. G. L. Wise., 1849, p. 11. And the Grand Lodge decided, in accordance with this opin- ion, that an Entered Apprentice should not be refused advancement, except by a vote of a majority of the Lodge. In commenting on this opinion and decision, the Committee of Foreign Correspondence of the G. L. of Florida, of which that able and experienced Mason, John P. Duval, was chairman, remarked : " We always supposed, if any one rule of ancient Masonry was more unquestionable than another, it was unanimity in balloting for initiating, passing and raising." Proc. G. L. of Fla., 1851, p. 31. This view is sus- tained by the Grand Lodges of New York, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island, Iowa, Maryland and Ohio ; and the Grand Lodge of Wisconsin itself, the very next year, in its amended Constitution, adopted a provision declar- ing that " any member of a subordinate Lodge may object to the initiation, jmssing or raising of a candidate, at any time before the degree is confer red." Const. G. L. Wise., part iv., art. iii., sect. 7 ; anno 1850. OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. 1G9 deduce our opinions from the general principles and analogies of Masonic law. As the application for advancement to a higher degree is founded on a right enuring to the Apprentice, by virtue of his re- ception into the first degree that is to say, as the Apprentice, so soon as he has been initiated, be- comes invested with the right of applying for ad- vancement to the second it seems evident that, as long as ho remains an Apprentice " in good stand- ing, 77 he continues to be invested with that right. Now, the re jection of his petition for advancement by the Lod - e does not impair his right to apply again, because it does not, as I have already shown, affect his rig hts and standing as an Apprentice ; it is simply the expression of the opinion that the Lodge does not at present deem him qualified for further progress in Masonry. We must never for- get the difference between the right of applying for advancement and the right of advancement. Every Apprentice possesses the former, but no one can claim the latter until it is given to him by the unani- mous vote of the Lodge. And as, therefore, this right of application or petition is not impaired by its rejection at a particular time, and as the Ap- prentice remains precisely in the same position in his own degree, after the rejection, as he did before, it seems to follow as an irresistible deduction, that he may again apply at the next regular communica- tion ; and if a second time rejected, repeat his ap- plications at all future meetings. I kold that the Entered Apprentices of a Lodge are competent, at 8 170 OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. all regular communications of their Lodge, to peti- tion for advancement. Whether that petition shall be granted or rejected is quite another thing, and depends altogether on the favor of the Lodge. This opinion has not, it is true, been universally adopted, though no force of authority, short of an opposing landmark, could make one doubt its cor- rectness. For instance, the Grand Lodge of Cali- fornia decided that " the application of Apprentices or Fellow Crafts for advancement, should, after they have been once rejected by ballot, be governed by the same principles which regulate the ballot on petitions for initiation, and which require a proba- tion of one year."* This appears to be a singular decision of Masonic law. If the reasons which prevent the advancement of an Apprentice or Fellow Craft to a higher de- gree, are of such a nature as to warrant the delay of one year, it is far better to prt 5er charges against the petitioner, and to give him the opportunity of a fair and impartial trial. In many cases, a candi- date for advancement is retarded in his progress from an opinion on the part of the Lodge that he is not yet sufficiently prepared for promotion by a knowledge of the preceding degree an objection which may sometimes be remove 1 before the recur- * Proceedings G. L. of California, 1857. Several Grand Lodges have prescribed a certain period which must elapse before a rejected Apprentice can apply a second time for advancement. These are, however, only local regulations, and are unsupported by the ancient Landmarks or the general principles of Masonic law, being rather, as I tt ink I have ehcwn, in opptwi tion to the latter. OF ENTERED APPRENTICES. 171 rence of the next monthly meeting. In such a case, a decision like that of the Grand Lodge of Cali- fornia would be productive of manifest injustice. I hold it, therefore, to be a more consistent rule, that the candidate for advancement has a right to apply at every regular meeting, and that whenever any moral objections exist to his taking a higher degree, these objections should be made in the form of charges, and their truth tested by an impartial trial. To this, too, the candidate is undoubtedly entitled, on all the principles of justice and equity. Whatever may be the rights of an Entered Ap- prentice, they are liable to forfeiture for misconduct, and he may be suspended, expelled, or otherwise masonically punished, upon adequate cause and sufficient proof. An Apprentice may therefore be tried, but the trial must be conducted in the first degree ; for every man is entitled to trial by his peers. But as none but Master Masons can inflict punishment, since they alone now constitute the body of the craft, the final decision must be made in the third degree. He is also entitled to an appeal to the Grand Lodge, from the sentence of his Lodge, because the benign spirit of our institution will al- low no man to be unjustly condemned ; and it is made the duty of the Grand Lodge to see that the rights of even the humblest member of the Order shall not be unjustly invaded, but that impartial justice is administered to all. This question of the trial of Entered Apprentices will, however, be re- sumed on a subsequent occasion, when we arrive at the topic of Masonic trials. CHAPTER II. U) Crafts, IT was stated in the preceding chapter that there was a time, in the early part of the eighteenth cen- tury, when Apprentices composed the body of the craft, and when the membership in the subordinate Lodges seldom extended, except as to the presiding officers, beyond the possessors of that degree. But it was also remarked that this statement was to be taken with some reservation, as there appears cer- tainly to have been a still earlier period in the his- tory of the Order, when Apprentices did not occupy this elevated and important position, and when the body of the membership was composed of Fellow Crafts. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and at still more remote periods, the operative element constituted an important ingredient in the organiza- tion of the institution.* The divisions of the mem- * So much was this the case that Preston informs us that, in the very be- ginning of the 18th century, it was found necessary, for the purpose of in- creasing the number of members, to adopt a proposition by which " the privileges of Masonry should no longer be restricted to operative Masons, but extend to men of various professions, provided that they were regularly OF FELLOW CRAFTS. 173 bers into grades at that time were necessarily assimilated to the wants of such an operative insti- tution. There were Masters to superintend the work, Fellow Crafts, or, as they were almost always called, Fellows, to perform the labor, and Appren?- Hoes, to be instructed in the principles of ihe art. Hence, in all the oldest records, we find constant allusions to the Felloics, as constituting the main oody of the fraternity ; and the word " Fellow/' at that time, appears to have been strictly synonymous with " Freemason.' 7 Thus, Elias Ashmole, the cele- brated antiquary, says in his " Diary," that on the 16th of October, 1646, he "was made a Freemason at Warrington, Lancashire, with Colonel Henry Mainwaring, of Kerthingham, in Cheshire, by Mr. Richard Penket, the Warden, and the Fellow Crafts." And again, under the date of March 10th, 1682, when speaking of another reception -which took place on that day at Masons' Hall, in London, he says : " I was the Senior Fellow among them it being thirty-five years since I was admitted. There were present, besides myself, the Fellows after named," and he proceeds to give the names of these Fellows, which it is unnecessary to quote. approved and initiated into the Order." PRESTON, p. 180. This quotation from Presfcon is an instance of that carelessness in the statement of facts which was the " easily besetting sin" of our early Masonic waters, and which will prove the greatest embarrassment to him who shall undeitake to write, what is yet to be written, a Philosophical History of Freemasonry. Preston must have known, if he had reflected at all on the subject, that the restric lion against the admission of professional and literary men had been pre- viously removed, or how could such men as Ashmole have been initiated? 174 OF FELLOW CRAFTS. Throughout the whole of the Ancient Charges and Regulations, -until we get to those emendations of them which were adopted in 1721 and 1722, we find no reference to the Aoprentices, except as a subor- dinate and probationary class, while the Fellow Crafts assume the position of the main body of the fraternity, that position which, in the present day, is occupied by the Master Masons. Thus, in the Old York Constitutions of 926, it is said, " No man shall be false to the craft, or enter- tain a prejudice against his Master or Fellows."* And again : " No Mason shall debauch .... the wife .... of his Master or Fellows ;"t where clearly " Master" is meant to designate the presid- ing officer simply, who might or might not, for all that we know, have been in possession of a higher degree, while " Fellows" denote the whole body of members of the Lodge. But these Constitutions are still more explicit in the use of the term, when they tell us that the " General Assembly or Grand Lodge shall consist of Masters and Fellows, Lords, Knights," &c.J * Old York Const., point 4. In the original, from HalliwelPs manuscript, the law is thus expressed, and I quote it because the Apprentices are here described as a distinct class : " Ny no pregedysse he shall not do To his mayster, ny his fellowes also ; And that the prentes be under awe, That he wolde have the same law." f Point 7. In the original thus : " Thou sehal not by thy maystres wyf ly, Ny by thy felowes." j Point 12. In the original : " Ther as the seinble y-holde schal bo, Ther schal be maystrys and felowes also." OF FELLOW CRAFTS. 175 In the' " Ancient Installation Charges,"* which are of a date between 1685 and 1688, the word " Follow 7 ' is very exactly defined as signifying a " Mason/ 1 for it is there said : " Ye shall call all Masons your Fellows, or your Brethren, and no other names." And in the " Ancient Charges at Makings," which will be found in the First Book of this volume,t we are told that it is the duty of " the Master to live honestly, and to pay his Fellows truly." Again : that " every Master and Fellow shall come to the assembly, if it be within fifty miles of him, if he have any warning." And lastly, that '* every Mason shall receive and cherish strange Vellows, when they come over the country." During all this time, the Apprentices are seldom alluded to, and then only as if in a subordinate posi- tion, and withovt the possession of any important prerogatives. Thus, they are thrice spoken of only in the York Constitutions of 926> where the Master * See them in this wot .1, p. 49. f On page 51. In re publishing these Charges, on the page just quoted, it was merely stated thai they were contained in a MS. in the Lodge of An- tiquity in London. But ; t should also have been added that they are to be also found in the Libraij of the British Museum, among the Landsdowne MSS., which are a large collection of papers and letters that were collected by Lord Burleigh, who, in 1572, was Lord Treasurer of England, under Queen Elizabeth. These papers are known as the " Burleigh Papers ;" and one of them, marked in the catalogue of the Landsdowne MSS. as No. 98, Article 48, is a curious legend of the origin of Freemasonry, which terminates with those Ancient Cha> *es which I have cited on page 51. The " Ancient Charges at Makings" art therefore certainly to be traced back as far as the middle of the sixteenth century, and it is x"- bable that they existed at a much earlier period 176 OF FELLOW GRAFTS. is directed to take no Apprentice " for less , A an seven years ;" to take care, in the admission ->f an Apprentice, " that he do his lord no prejudice ;' ; and to " instruct his Apprentice faithfully, and make him a perfect workman." And in the " Ancient Charges at Makings/ 7 it is implied that either a Master or Fellow may take an Apprentice. These citations from the Ancient Regulations need not be extended. From them we may collect the facts, or at least the very probable suppositions, that in the very earliest history of the Order, the operative character predominating, the Fellow Crafts, under the designation of " Fellows," consti- tuted the main body of the fraternity, while the Masters were the superintendents of the work ; that at a later period, about the beginning of the eighteenth century, the speculative character pre- dominating, the Apprentices arose in dignity and became the body of the fraternity,* while the Fel- low Crafts and Master Masons were intrusted with the offices ; and that still later, at some time in the course of the eighteenth century, which certainly was not very long after the year 1725, the Ap- prentices and Fellow Crafts descended into a sub- ordinate position, just such an one as the former * T)r. OLIVER, in his " Dissertation on the State of Freemasonry in the Eighteenth Century," corroborates this view. He says : " Thus our brethren of the eighteenth century seldom advanced beyond the first degree. Few were passed, and still fewer were raised from their ' mossy bed.' The Mas ter's degree appears to have been much less comprehensive than at present ; and for some years after the revival of Masonry, the third degree was iinap proacbable to those who lived at a distance from London." OF FELLOW CRAFTS. 177 class had originally occupied, and the Master Masors alone composed the body of the craft. At the present day, Fellow Crafts possess no more rights and prerogatives than do Ervtered Ap- prentices. Preston, indeed, in his charge to a can- didate who has been passed to that degree, says that he is entitled in the meetings to express his " sentiments and opinions on such subjects as are regularly introduced in the lecture, under the super- intendence of an experienced Master, who will guard the landmark against encroachment," If this only means that in the course of instruction he may respectfully make suggestions for the purpose of eliciting further information, no one will, I pre- sume, be willing to deny such a privilege. But the traditional theory that Apprentices weie not per- mitted to speak or vote, but that Fellow Crafts might exercise the former right, but not the latter, has no foundation in any positive law that I have been enabled to discover. I have never seen this prerogative of speaking assumed by a Fellow Craft in this country, and doubt whether it would be per- mitted in any well regulated Lodge. It was certainly the usage to permit both Appren- tices and Fellow Crafts to vote, as well as to speak, but there never was such a distinction as that al- luded to in the text. The Old Regulations of the Grand Lodge of England provided that " the Grand Master shall allow any Brother, a Fellow Craft, or Entered Prentice, to speak, directing his discourse to his worship in the chair ; or to make any motion 8* 178 OF FELLOW CRAFTS. for the good of the fraternity, which shall be either immediately considered, or else referred to the con- sideration of the Grand Lodge, at their next communication, stated or occasional." But this regu- lation has long since been abrogated. Fellow Crafts formerly possessed the right of being elected Wardens of their Lodge,* and even of being promoted to the elevated post of Grand Master,f although, of course and the language of the Regulation implies the fact a Fellow Craft who had been elected Grand Master, must, after his election, be invested with the Master's degree. At the present day, Fellow Crafts possess no other rights than those of sitting in a Lodge of their degree, of applying for advancement, and of being tried by their peers for Masonic offences, with the necessary privilege of an appeal to the Grand Lodge. But, as in the exercise of these rights, all that has been said in the preceding chap- ter, as relating to Entered Apprentices, is equally applicable to Fellow Crafts, the discussion need not be repeated. * " No Brother can be a Warden until he has passed the part of a Fellow Ci-aft." Charges 0/1722. In the manner of constituting a new Lodge, as practised by his Grace the Duke of Wharton, (ANDERSON'S Const., first ed. p. 72,) it is said : " Then the Grand Master desires the hew Master to enter immediately upon the exercise of his office, in chusing his Wardens ; and the new Master, calling forth two Fellow Craft, presents them to the Grand Master." t " No Brother can be .... Grand Master unless he has been a Fellow Craft before his election." Charges of 1722. CHAPTER III. t f&aster WHEN an iir'tiate has been raised to " the sublime degree of a Master Mason," he becomes, strictly speaking, under the present regulations of our institution, an active member of the fraternity, invested with certain rights, and obligated to the performance of certain duties, which are of so extensive and complicated a nature as to demand a special consideration for each. Of the rights of Master Masons, the most im- portant are the following : 1. THE RIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP, 2. THE RIGHT OF AFFILIATION ; 3. THE RIGHT OF VISIT; 4. THE RIGHT OF AVOUCHMENT; 5. THE RIGHT OF RELIEF; 6. THE RIGHT OF DEMISSION ; 7. THE RIGHT OF APPEAL ; 8. THE RIGHT OF BURIAL ; 9. THE RIGHT OF TRIAL. Each of these important rights, except the last, will be made the topic of a distinct section. The 180 EIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. consideration of the Right of Trial, as it forms a natural concomitant to the doctrine of Masonic crimes and punishments, will therefore be more properly considered in a subsequent part of this work, where it will find its legitimate place. SECTION I. OF THE RIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP The first right which a Mason acquires, after the reception of the third degree, is that of claiming membership in the Lodge in which he has been ini- tiated. The very fact of his having received that degree, makes him at once an inchoate member of the Lodge that is to say, no further application is necessary, and no new ballot is required ; but the candidate, having now become a Master Mason, upon signifying his submission to the regulations of the Society, by affixing his signature to the book of by-laws, is constituted, by virtue of that act, a full member of the Lodge, and entitled to all the rights and prerogatives accruing to that position. The ancient Constitutions do not, it is true, ex- press this doctrine in so many words ; but it is dis- tinctly implied by their whole tenor and spirit, as well as sustained by the uniform usage of the craft, in all countries. There is one passage in the Regu- lations of 1721 which clearly seems to intimate that there were two methods of obtaining membership in a Lodge, either by initiation, when the candidate is said tc be " entered a, "Brother," or by what is BIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. 181 now called " affiliation," when the applicant is said to be " admitted to be a member." But the whole phraseology of the Regulation shows that the rights acquired by each method were the same, and that membership by initiation and membership "by affilia- tion effected the same results.* The modern Con stitutions of the Grand Lodge of England are explicit on the subject, and declare that " every Lodge must receive as a member, without further proposition or ballot, any Brother initiated therein, provided such Brother express his wish to that effect on the day of his initiation. "t The Constitution of the Grand Lodge of New York announces a similar doctrine ;J and, in fact, I have not met with the by-laws of any particular Lodge in which it is not laid down as a principle, that every initiate is entitled, by his reception in the third degree, to claim the privilege of member- ship in the Lodge in which he has been initiated. The reason of this universal Regulation, (so uni- versal that were it not for the fact that membership itself, as a permanent characteristic, is of modern origin, it might almost claim to be a Landmark,) is at once evident. He who has been deemed worthy, after three ordeals, to receive all the mysteries that * The passage referred to is to be found in Art. vi. of the Regulations of 1721. See ante, p. 66. The preceding Regulation says : " No man can be made or admitted a member," where clearly it is meant that a man " is made " a member by initiation, and " admitted " by affiliation, upon petition. t Const, of G. L. of England, of Private Lodges, 16, p. 64. f " Initiation makes a man a Mason ; but he must receive the Master Mason's degree, and sign the by-laws, before he becomes a member of the Lodge." OcmsL G. L. of N. Y., 8, subd. 15. 182 RIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. it is in the power of a Lodge to communicate, can- not, with any show of reason or consistency, be withheld from admission into that household, whose most important privileges he has just been permitted to share. If properly qualified for the reception of the third degree, he must be equally qualified for the rights of membership, which, in fact, it is the object of the third degree to bestow ; and it would be needless to subject that candidate to a fourth ballot, whom the Lodge has already, by the most solemn ceremonies, three times declared worthy " to be taken by the hand as a Brother." And hence the Grand Lodge of England has wisely as- signed this as a reason for the law already quoted, namely, that " no Lodge should introduce into Masonry a person whom the Brethren might con- sider unfit to be a member of their own Lodge."* But this inchoate membership is to be perfected, it will be recollected, by the initiate, only upon his affixing his signature to the by-laws. He does not by his mere reception into the third degree, become a member of the Lodge. He may not choose to perfect that indication ; he may desire to affiliate with some other Lodge ; and in such a case, by de- clining to affix his signature to the by-laws, he re- mains in the condition of unaffiliation. By having been raised to the third degree, he acquires a claim to membership, but no actual membership. It is left to his own option whether he will assert or for- feit that claim. If he declines to sign the by-law,s * Const. Grand Lodj^c of England, ut supra. HIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. 18b he forfeits his claim ; if he signs them, he asserts it, and becomes ipso facto a member. Now, the next question that arises is, how long does the right of asserting that claim inure to the candidate ; in other words, how long is it after his reception that the recipient may still come forward, and by affixing his signature to the by-laws, avail himself of his right of membership, and without further application or ballot, be constituted a mem- ber of the Lodge in which he has been initiated ? Although the landmarks and ancient Constitu- tions leave us without any specific reply to this question, analogy and the just conclusions to be de rived from the reason of the law, are amply sufficient to supply us with an answer. The newly made candidate, it has already been intimated, possesses the right to claim his member- ship without further ballot, on the reasonable ground that, as he was deemed worthy of reception into the third degree, it would be idle to suppose that he was not equally worthy of admission into full membership ; and we have seen that this was the reason assigned by the Grand Lodge of England for the incorporation of this provision into its constitution. Now, this is undoubtedly an excellent and un- answerable reason for his admission to membership, immediately upon his reception. But the reason loses its force if any time is permitted to elapse between the reception of the degree and the admis- sion to membership. No man knows what a da\ 184 BIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. may bring forth. He that was worthy on Honda} , may on Tuesday have committed some act by which his worthiness will be forfeited. It may be true, as the Roman satirist expresses it, that no man becomes suddenly wicked ;* and it may be reasonable to sup- pose that, for some time after his initiation, the habits and character of the initiate will remain un- changed, and therefore that for a certain period the members of the Lodge will be justified in believing the candidate whom they have received to continue in possession of the same qualifications of charac- ter and conduct which had recommended and ob- tained his reception. But how arc we to determine the extent of that period, and the time when it will be unsafe to predicate of the recipient a continuance of good character ? It is admitted that after three months, it would be wrong to draw any conclusions as to the candidate's qualifications, from what was known of him on the day of his reception ; and ac- cordingly many Lodges have prescribed as a regu- lation, that if he does not within that period claim his right of membership, and sign the by-laws, that right shall be forfeited, and he can then only be ad- mitted upon application, and after ballot. But why specify three months, and not two, or four, or six ? Upon what principle of ethics is the number three to be especially selected? The fact is, that the moment that we permit the initiate to extend the privilege of exercising his right beyond the time which is concurrent with his reception, the reasor * ' Nemo repenfe fuit turpissimus." JUVENAL. RIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. 185 of the law is lost. The candidate having been deemed worthy of receiving the third degree, must, at the time if his reception of that degree, also be presumed to be worthy of membership. This is in the reason of things. But if a month, a week, or a single day is allowed to elapse, there is no longer a certainty of the continuance of that worthiness ; the known mutability and infirmity of human character are against the presumption, and the question of its existence should then be tested by a ballot. Again, one of the reasons why a unanimous ballot is required is, that a " fractious member" shall not be imposed on the Lodge, or one who would " spoil its harmony. 7 '* Now, if A is admitted to receive the third degree on a certain evening, with the unanimous consent of all the Lodge, which must, of necessity, include the affirmative vote of B, then on the same evening he must be qualified for admission to membership, because it is not to be presumed that B would be willing that A should receive the third degree, a\id yet be unwilling to sit with him in the Lodge as a fellow-member ; and therefore A may be admitted at once to membership, without a needless repetition of the ballot, which, of course, had been taken on his application for the degree. But if any length of time is permitted to elapse, and if, after a month, for instance, A comes forward to avail him- self of his right of admission, then he shall not be admitted without a ballot because, between the time of his reception at the preceding meeting, and * Regulations of 1721, art. I t: 186 RIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. the time ^f his application at the subsequent ono, something may have occurred between himself and B, a member of the Lodge, which would render him objectionable to the latter, and his admission would then " spoil the harmony" of the Lodge, and " hinder its freedom." The Regulation, therefore, adopted by the Grand Lodge of England, which prescribes that the candi- date, to avoid a ballot, must express his wish to be received a member on the day of his initiation, that is, of his reception into the third degree,* seems to be the only proper one. Any Regulation that ex- tends the period, and permits the candidate to sign the by-laws and become a member without a ballot, provided he does so within two or three months, or any other determined period extending beyond the day of his reception, is contrary to the spirit and tenor of the law, and is calculated to be sometimes of a mischievous tendency. If the candidate does not assert his right on the day of his reception into the third degree, he loses it altogether ; and must, to acquire membership, submit to a petition and ballot, as in the case of any other affiliation. Before proceeding to an examination of the rights and duties of membership, it is proper that we should briefly discuss the question whether a Mason * The modern Constitutions of the G. L. of England constantly use the word " initiation" as synonymous with " reception into the third degree." Thus, on p. 66 : " Each Lodge shall procure for every Brother initiated therein a Grand Lodge certificate." But Grand Lodge certificates are only granted to Master Masons, and therefore the term initialed, in this article ; must signify raised to the third degree. EIGHT OP MEMBERSHIP. 187 can be a member of more than one Lodge at the same time. The Ancient Constitutions make no allusion to this double membership, either by way of commendation or prohibition ; but it must be ad- mitted that in all those old documents the phraseo logy is such as to imply that no Mason belonged to more than one Lodge at a time. On the other hand, however, a Regulation was adopted by the Grand Lodge of England, in February, 1724, pre- scribing that " no Brother shall belong to more than one Lodge within the bills of mortality,"* that is, in the city of London. Now, two deductions are to be made from the adoption of such a Regulation at so early a period as only two years after the ap- proval of the " Old Charges," which are considered by many as almost equivalent to Landmarks. These deductions are, first, that at that time Masons were in the habit of joining more than one Lodge at a time, and secondly, that although the Grand Lodge forbade this custom in the Lodges of the city, it had no objection to its being continued in the country. But the Regulation does not seem ever to have been enforced ; for, in 1738, Dr. Anderson found occasion to write, " But this Regulation is neglected, for several reasons, and is now obsolete" a remark that is repeated in 1756, in the third edition of the Book of Constitutions.'!" I doubt the expediency of any Mason being an active member of more than one Lodge, and I am * See ANDERSON'S Constitutions, edit. 1738, p. 154. t Book of Const, edit. 1756, p. 313. 188 RIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. sure of its inconveniency to himself.* Yet, if any one is disposed to submit to this inconvenience, I know of no Landmark or ancient Regulation that forbids him. The Old Charge, which says that every Mason should belong to a Lodge, does not imply that he may not belong to two ; but in that case, suspension or expulsion by one Lodge would act as suspension or expulsion by both. As, how- ever, this matter constitutes no part of Ancient Masonic Law, it is competent for any Grand Lodge to make a local Regulation on the subject, which will of course be of force in its own jurisdiction. t * " It is as true in Masonry as elsewhere that no man can serve two mas- ters. Whenever tried, the impossibility of rendering a divided allegiance perfect in each case, becomes at once apparent. The call of one body may lie in exactly a contrary direction from that of the other, given at the same instant of time. A member of two or more Lodges may be summoned tc appear before each, with which he is thus connected, on the same evening. How, then, is he to fulfill his duties ? Which summons should he obey ?"- Com. For. Corres. G. L. of Illinois, 1845, p. 54. f Thus the Grand Lodge of Virginia says : " Any Brother may be a mem- ber of as many Lodges as choose to admit him." Method. Digest in DOVE'S Masonic Text-Book, p. 252. The Grand Lodge of South Carolina says : " No Brother shall be a member of two Lodges at the same time within three miles of each other, without a dispensation from the Grand Master." Rules and Regulations, xix. 16. The Grand Lodge of New York prescribes that " no Mason can be in full membership in more than one Lodge at the same time." Const., tit. v., 25. I find also the following Regulations in other Grand Lodges : " No Brother shall be a member of more than one subordinate Lodge at the same time." Const. G-. L. New Hamp " No Lodge shall admit to membership any Brother who is already a mem- ber of a Lodge undr the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge." Const. G. L. Maryland. " No Brother can be a member of more than one Lodge at the same time." Const. Or. L. Missouri. " No Brother shall be a member of more than one Lodge." Const. G. L. Michigan. The Grand Lodges of England and Ireland, and I think of Scotland, permit Masons to be members of more than one Lodge, but not to hold office in each, except by 'RIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. 189 Where there is no such local Regulation^ a Mason may be a member of as many Lodges as he pleases, and which will admit him. Honorary membership is quite a recent invention, and is now conferred only as a mark of distinction on Brethren of great talents or merits, who have been of service, by their labors or their writings, to the fraternity. It confers no powers on the re- cipient like those which are the results of active or full membership, and amounts to no more than a testimonial of the esteem and respect entertained by the Lodge which confers it for the individual upon whom it is conferred. The Virginia Committee on Masonic Jurispru- dence in 1856, give a different definition of honor- ary membership. They say : " We mean by honorary member one who is entitled to all the privileges and honors conferred by Lodge membership, while he is exempt from all the requirements of such Lodge, as set forth in its by-laws ; he pays no dues, attends no summons, except voluntarily,"* &c. If by the ex- sation. Dr. OLIVER calls the rule forbidding this double membership " an absurd law." On the whole, after due investigation, I am led to believe that formerly it was by no means unusual, as is now the case in Europe, for Masons to belong to more Lodges than one, but that recently a disposition has been exhibited among our Grand Lodges to discountenance the practice. As I have already said, it is to be regarded altogether as a mere matter of local regulation. If not prohibited by a special Regulation of a Grand Lodge, it is not forbidden by the Landmarks and Ancient Constitutions. * The cases to which the Virginia Committee confine honorary member- ship seem to show that they viewed it as differing in no respect from active or full membership. It should, they think, be conferred only on a poor Brother who cannot afford to pay arrears ; on a Past Master, who is needed 190 RIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. pression, " who is entitled to all the privilege* and honors conferred by Lodge membership," the com- mittee, as the words purport, intend to convey the idea that such a member may vote on all questions before the Lodge, as well as on petitions and at elections, may hold office, and represent the Lodge in the Grand Lodge, I can see no difference between a Mason occupying such a position of honoraiy membership and one holding membership in two Lodges at the same time. Such an honorary mem- ber is nothing more than an active member, excused by the Lodge from the payment of annual dues. I have just shown that there is no constitutional ob- jection to such a condition of things, if the local regulations of the jurisdiction permit it, however its expediency may be doubted. But this is not the kind of honorary membership which is gene- rally understood by that title. Lexicographers cer- tainly give a very different definition of the word. Johnson, for instance, defines honorary as " confer- to organize a new Lodge, and yet who is unwilling to leave his own ; on old members of a dormant Lodge, whose names are necessary after their affilia tion with other Lodges, for the purpose of reviving the dormant one ; and on Masons called by duty to be absent for a length of time in a foreign country, in which case honorary membership, instead of a demit, is to be granted. It is strange, with this last case in view, that the Committee should have closed this part of their report with the declaration that they " disapprove of the practice of electing to honorary membership, when that election exempts the brother from all or any of the requirements of Masonry." I can conceive of no greater drone in the Masonic hive than the Mason who, be- cause be is about to leave home for a temporary period, would require a do- mit, that he might be exempted from the payment of annual dues during his absence. Certainly such a Mason is the last man to be entitled to an honorarium from the Order. EIGHT OP MEMBERSHIP. 191 ring honor without gain," and he cites the follow- ing example of the word from Addison : " Tlie Romans abounded with little honorary rewards, that without conferring wealth and riches, gave only place and distinction to the person who received them." Webster also says that the word honorary signifies " possessing a title or place, without per- forming services or receiving a reward, as an honor- ary member of a society." In this view, honorary membership will be a pleasing token of the estima- tion in which a distinguished Brother is held, and will be conferred honoris causa, for the sake of the honor which it conveys, without bringing with the acquisition any rights or prerogatives, which should belong alone to active membership.* If this title of merit is hereafter to be adopted, as it seems pro- bable that it will be, as a usage of the fraternity, it is almost needless to say that it should be conferred only on one who is affiliated by active membership in some other Lodge. Unaffiliated Masons should receive none of the honors of the craft. The Committee of Foreign Correspondence of the Grand Lodge of North Carolina, in 1851, used this language : " We condemn this principle [honor- ary membership] as un-masonic and improper. No * The Constitution of the Grand Lodge of New York recognizes the con dition of honorary membership, and defines honorary members as b,^mg " members of a Subordinate Lodge by adoption" a definition which 1 confess I am at a loss to comprehend. It prescribes that it may be conferred on a poor Brother who is unable to pay dues, which, if he is invested with the right of voting and holding office, is, as I have said above, only active nenr> bership, without the payment of arrearages. 192 EIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. ancient precedent can be given no ancient lan- guage cited to justify it. It is following too much after the devices and delusions of the world. We are taught that worldly honor should not be made to bear upon a person's advancement in the honors oi Masonry. It is only the Mason who can best ivorlc who should be advanced and made honorable in the Order." Granted, and this is exactly what is proposed to be done by the establishment of honor- ary membership. Masons who have wrought dili- gently in the Order, and for the Order, who by their labors have instructed their brethren and elevated the character of the institution, should " be advanced and made honorable in the Order ;" and I know of no easier and yet more gratifying method of doing so than by electing them as honor- ary members. Other societies, literary and profes- sional, have adopted this system of rewarding thos^ who have faithfully labored in their respective vineyards ; and I can see no valid objections, but many excellent reasons, why Masonry should adopt the same course. If to reward merit be one of the k ' devices and delusions of the world," the sooner we allow it to lead us onward, the better for us and the institution. Having thus disposed of the questions of double and of honorary membership, it is proper that we should now inquire into the prerogatives, as well as the duties which result from active membership in a Masonic Lodge. Every Master Mason, who is a member of a Lodge, RIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. 193 has a right to speak and vote on all questions that come before the Lodge for discussion, except OIL trials in which he is himself interested. Rules of order may be established restricting the length and number of speeches, but these are of a local nature, and will vary with the by-laws of each Lodge. A Mason may also be restricted from voting on ordinary questions where his dues for a certain period generally twelve months have not been paid ; and such a Regulation exists in almost every Lodge. But no local by-law can deprive a member who has not been suspended, from voting on the ballot for the admission of candidates, because the Sixth Regulation of 1721 distinctly requires that each member present on such occasion shall give his consent before the candidate can be admitted.* And if a member were deprived, by any by-law of the Lodge, in consequence of non-payment of his dues, of the right of expressing his consent or dis- sent, the ancient Regulation would be violated, and a candidate might be admitted without the unani- mous consent of all the members present. Every member of a Lodge is eligible to any office in the Lodge, except that of Worshipful Master. Eligibility for this latter office is only to be acquired by having previously held the office of a Warden.t * " But no man can be entered a Brother of any particular Lodge, or ad- mitted to be a member thereof, without the unanimous consent of all the members of that Lodge then present when the candidate is proposed." Reg. 0/1721, art. vi. t " No Brother can be a Warden until he has passed the part of a Fellow Craft ; nor a Master until he has acted as a Warden."- Charges of 1722, 194 EIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. But in the instance of new Lodges, the Grand Mas- ter may, by his dispensation, authorize any compe- tent Master Mason to discharge the duties of Master In cases of emergency also, in old Lodges, where none of the Past officers are willing to serve, the Grand Master may issue his dispensation authoriz- ing the Lodge to select a presiding officer from the floor. But this can only be done with the consent of all the Wardens and Past Masters ; for, if any one of them is willing to serve, the Lodge shall not be permitted to elect a Brother who has not pre- viously performed the duties of a Warden. The payment of dues is a duty incumbent on all the members of a Lodge, which, although of com- paratively recent date, is now of almost universal usage. Formerly, that is to say, before the revival of Masonry in 1717, Lodges received no warrants ; but a sufficient number of Brethren, meeting to- gether, were competent to make Masons, and prac- tice the rites of Masonry.* After the temporary business which had called them together had been performed, the Lodge was dissolved until some simi- lar occasion should summon the Brethren again ' ogether. There was then no permanent organiza- tion no necessity for a Lodge fund and conse- quently no Regulation requiring the payment of annual dues. When Lodges, however, became per- .''. Fellow Crafts then constituted the body of the fraternity. Master Masons have now taken their place, and whatever is said in the Old Const) tntions of the former, is at tin's day, in general, applicable to the lattei . * PKESTON, lUustralimis, p. 182 BIGHT OF MEMBERSHIP. 195 manently established by warrants of Constitution, permanent membership followed, and of course the payment of some contribution was required from each member as a fund towards defraying the ex- penses of the Lodge. It is not a general Masonic duty, in which the Mason is affected towards the whole body of the craft, as in the duty of moral deportment, but is to be regarded simply in the light of a pecuniary contract, the parties to which are the Lodge and its members. Hence it is not prescribed or regulated by any of the Ancient Con- stitutions, nor is it a matter with which Grand Lodges should ever interfere. However, as the non-payment of dues to a Lodge has of late years been very generally considered as a Masonic offence, (which, by the way, it is not always,) and as punish- ment of some kind has been adopted for its enforce- ment, this subject will be again resumed when we arrive at that part of the present work which treats of Masonic crimes and punishments. The other rights and duties of Master Masons, which are in part connected with the condition of membership, such as the right of demission, of visil and of relief, are so important in their nature as tc demand for each a separate section. 196 RIGHT OP AFFILIA110N. SECTION II. OF THE RIGHT OF AFFILIATION. Masonic membership is acquired, as I have already said, in two ways ; first, by initiation into a Lodge, and secondly, by admission, after initiation, into another Lodge, upon petition and ballot. The for- mer method constituted the subject of discussion in the previous section ; the latter, which is termed " affiliation/' will be considered in the present. All the rights and duties that accrue to a Master Mason, by virtue of membership in the Lodge in which he was initiated, likewise accrue to him who has been admitted to membership by affiliation. There is no difference in the relative standing of either class of members : their prerogatives, their privileges, and their obligations are the same. It is therefore unnecessary to repeat what has been said in the preceding section in reference to the rights of membership, as everything that was there written respecting members admitted upon their re- ception of the third degree, equally applies to those who have been admitted by application. There is, however, a difference in these methods of admission. It has been seen that those who acquire membership in a Lodge, by virtue of having received therein the third degree, obtain thaj; mem- bership as a matter of right, without petition and without ballot. But a Master Mason, who is desir- ous of affiliating with a Lodge in which he was not initiated, or in which, after initiation, he had at tlia RIGHT OP AFFILIATION. 197 legal time declined or neglected to assert his right of membership, must apply by petition. This peti- tion must be Tead at a regular communication of the Lodge, and be referred to a committee of investi- gation, which committee, at the next regular com- munication, (a month having intervened) will report on the character and qualifications of the candidate ; and if the report be favorable, the Lodge will pro- ceed to ballot. As in the case of initiation, the ballot is required to be unanimously in favor of the applicant to secure his election. One black ball is sufficient to reject him. All of these Regulations, which are of ancient date and of general usage, are founded on the fifth and sixth of the Regulations of 1721, and are, it will be seen, the same as those which govern the petition and ballot for initiation. The Regulations of 1721 make no difference in the cases of profanes who seek to be made Masons, and Masons who de- sire affiliation or membership in a Lodge.* In both cases " previous notice, one month before," must be given to the Lodge, " due inquiry into the reputation and capacity of the candidate" must be made, and " the unanimous consent of all the mem- bers then present" must be obtained. Nor can this unanimity be dispensed with in one case any more * The fifth Regulation of 1721 says : " No man can be made or admit- ted a member of a particular Lodge," &c., clearly showing that the Mason who is made in a Lodge, and the one who applies for affiliation, are both placed in the same category. The phraseology of the sixth Regulation is to the same effect : " No man can be entered a Brother in any particular IxxJge or admitted to be a member thereof," &c. 198 KIUHT OP AFFILIATION. than it can in the other. It is the inherent privi- lege of every Lodge to judge of the qualifications 01 its own members, " nor is this inherent privilege subject to a dispensation." I have said noth.ng here of the necessity that the petition should be recommended by one or more members of the Lodge. Such is a very general usage, but not a. universal one ; and I can find no authority for it in any of the ancient Constitutions, nor is anything said upon the subject by Preston, or any other written authorities that I have consulted. On the contrary, it appears to me that such a re- commendation is not essentially necessary. The demit from the Lodge of which the candidate was last a member, is itself in the nature of a recom- mendation ; and if this accompanies the petition for admission, no other avouchrnent should be re- quired. The information in respect to present character and other qualifications is to be obtained by the committee of investigation, who of course are expected to communicate the result a of what they have learned on the subject to the Lodge. Some of our modern Grand Lodges, however, governed perhaps by the general analogy of appli- cations for initiation, have required, by a specific Regulation, that a petition for membership must be recommended by one or more members of the Lodge ; and such a Regulation would of course be Masonic Law for the jurisdiction in which it was in force ; but I confess that I prefer the ancient usage, which eeems to have made the presentation of a demit from RIGHT OF AFFILIATION. 199 some other Lodge the only necessary recommendation of a Master Mason applying for affiliation.* There is one difference between the condition of a profane petitioning for admission, and that of a Master Mason applying for membership, which claims our notice. A profane, as has already been stated, t can apply for initiation only to the Lodge nearest to his place of residence ; but no such Regulation exists in refer- ence to a Master Mason applying for membership. He is not confined in the exercise of this privilege within any geographical limits. No matter how distant the Lodge of his choice may be from his residence, to that Lodge he has as much right to ap- ply as to the Lodge which is situated at the very threshold of his home. A Mason is expected to affiliate with some Lodge. The ancient Constitu- tions specify nothing further on the subject. They simply prescribe that every Mason should belong to a Lodge, without any reference to its peculiar lo- cality, and a Brother therefore complies with the obligation of affiliation when he unites himself with any Lodge, no matter how distant ; and by thus contributing to the support of the institution, he * These demits or certificates appear formerly to have been considered as necessary letters of introduction or recommendation, to be used by all Masons when arriving at a new Lodge. Thus the Regulations of 1663, 3, prescribe " that no person hereafter who shall be accepted a Freemason, shall be admitted into any Lodge or assembly until he has brought a certifi cate of the time and place of his acceptation from the Lodge that accepted Win, unto the Master of that limit or division where such Lodge is kept." t- See ante,p. K9. QOO EIGHT OF AFFILIATION. discharges his duty as a Mason, and becomes entitled to all the privileges of the Order.* This usage for, in the absence of a positive law on the subject, it has become a Regulation, from the force of custom only is undoubtedly derived from the doctrine of the universality of Masonry. The whole body of the craft, wheresoever dispersed, being considered, by the fraternal character of the institution, as simply component parts of one great family, no peculiar rights of what might be called Masonic citizenship are supposed to be acquired by a domiciliation in one particular place. The Mason who is at home and the Mason who comes from abroad are considered on an equal footing as to all Masonic rights ; and hence the Brother made, in Europe is as much a Mason when he comes to America, and is as fully qualified to discharge in America all Masonic functions, without any form of naturalization, as though he had been made in this country. The converse is equally true. Hence no distinctions are made, and no peculiar rights acquired by membership in a local Lodge. Affilia- tion with the Order, of which every Lodge is equally a part, confers the privileges of active Masonry. Therefore no law has ever prescribed that a'Mason must belong to the Lodge nearest to his residence, but generally that he must belong to * The Charges of 1722 simply say, after describing what a Lodge is, that " every Brother ought to belong to one." And it must be remembered that, previous to that period, there could have been no Regulation on this subject is there were no permanent organizations of Lodges. RIGHT OF AFFILIATION. 201 ft Lodge ; and consequently the doctrine is, as it ha? been enunciated above, that a Master Masoji may apply for affiliation, and unite himself with any Lodge which is legal and regular, no matter how near to, or how far from his place of residence. Some Grand Lodges have adopted a Regulation requiring a Mason, living in their respective juris- dictions, to unite himself in membership with some Lodge in the said jurisdiction, and refusing to accord the rights of affiliation to one who belongs to a Lodge outside of the jurisdiction. But I have no doubt that this is a violation of the spirit of the ancient law. A Mason living in California may retain his membership in a Lodge in the State of New York, and by so doing, is as much an affiliated Mason, in every sense of the word, as though he had acquired membership in a California Lodge. I do not advocate the practice of holding member- ship in distant Lodges ; for I believe that it is highly inexpedient, and that a Mason will much more efficiently discharge his duties tc the Order by acquiring membership in the Lodge which is nearest to his residence, than in one which is at a great distance ; but I simply contend for the prin- ciple, as one of Masonic jurisprudence, that a Master Mason has a right to apply for membership in any Lodge on the face of the globe, and that member- ship in a Lodge carries with it the rights of affilia- tion wherever the member may go.* * As it is here contended that a Mason may live in one place and bo a member or a Lodge in another, the question naturally arises, whether 1 he 202 EIGHT OF AFFILIATION. The effect of the rejection of the application of a Master Mason for affiliation is different from that of a profane for initiation. It has already been said that when a profane petitions for initiation and his petition is rejected, he can renew his peti- tion only in the same Lodge. The door of every other Lodge is closed against him. But it is not so with the Master Mason, the rejection of whose application for affiliation or membership by one Lodge does not deprive him of the right to apply to another. The reason of this rule will be evident upon a little reflection. A Master Mason is in what is technically called " good standing ;"' that is to say, he is a Mason in possession of all Masonic rights and privileges, so long as he is not deprived of that character by the legal action of some regularly con- stituted Masonic tribunal. Now, that action must be either by suspension or expulsion, after trial and conviction. A Mason who is neither suspended nor expelled is a Mason in " good standing.' 7 Rejection, therefore, is not one of the methods by which the good standing of a Mason is affected, because re- jection is neither preceded by charges nor accom- panied by trial ; and consequently a Mason whose application for affiliation lias been rejected by a Lodge, remains in precisely the same position, so far as his Masonic standing is affected, as he was before Lodge, within whose precincts he resides, but of which he is not a member can exercise its discipline over him, should he commit any offence requiring Masonic punishment. There is no doubt that it can ; but this question will be fully discussed when we ?ome, in a subsequent part of this woi'k, to the subject of Lodge jurisdiction. RIGHT OF VISIT. 203 his rejection. lie possesses all the rights and privi- leges that he did previously, unimpaired and und 1 '- minished. But one of these rights is the right of applying for membership to any Lodge that he may desire to be affiliated with ; and therefore, as this right remains intact, notwithstanding his rejection, he may at any time renew his petition to the Lodge that rejected him, or make a new one to some other Lodge, and that petition may be repeated as often as he deems it proper to do so. The right of a member to appeal to the Grand Lodge from the decision of the Master, on points of order, or from that of the Lodge in cases of trial, is a very important right; but one that will be more appropriately discussed when we come hereafter to the consideration of the appellate jurisdiction of Grand Lodges. SECTION III. THE RIGHT OF VISIT. The Right of Visit, may be defined to be that pre- rogative which every affiliated Master Mason in good standing possesses of visiting any Lodge into which he may desire to enter. It is one of the most important of all Masonic privileges, because it is based on the principle of the identity of the Masonic institution as one universal family, and is the ex- ponent of that well known maxim that " in every clime a Mason may find a home, and in every land a Brother. 77 204 BIGHT OF VISIT. Fortunately for its importance, this right is not left to be deduced from analogy, or to be supported only by questionable usage, but is proclaimed in dis- tinct terras in some of the earliest Constitutions. The Ancient Charges at Makings, that were in force in 1688, but whose real date is supposed to be much anterior to that time, instruct us that it is the duty of every Mason to receive strange Brethren " when they come over the country," which Regula- tion, however the latter part of it may have refer- red, in an operative sense, to the encouragement of traveling workmen in want and search of employ- ment, must now. in the speculative character which our institution has assumed, be interpreted as signi- fying that it is the duty o every Lodge to receive strange Brethren as visitors, and permit them to participate in the labors and instructions in which the Lodge may, at the time of the visit, be engaged. Modern authorities have very generally concurred in this view of the subject. In June, 1819, in con- sequence of a complaint which had been preferred to the Grand Lodge of England against a Lodge in London, for having refused admission to some Brethren who were well known to them, on the ground that, as the Lodge was about to initiate a candidate, no visitor could be admitted until that ceremony was concluded, the Board of General Pur- poses resolved " that it is the undoubted right of every Mason who is well known or properly vouched, to visit any Lodge during the time it is opened for general Masonic business, observing the proper EIGHT OF YISIT. 205 forms to be attended to on such occasions, and so that the Master may not be interrupted in the per formance of his duty. 77 * The Grand Lodge of New York concurs in this view, by declaring " that the right to visit, masonic- ally, is an absolute right,"t and it qualifies the pro- position by adding that this right " may be forfeited or limited by particular regulations.' 7 This subject of the forfeiture or restriction of the right will be hereafter considered. In the jurisdiction of Ohio, it is held that every Mason in good standing " has a right to visit Lodges when at labor, and that a Lodge cannot refuse such a visitor, without doing him a wrong. J In Mississippi, South Carolina, Michigan, and a very large majority of American Grand Lodges, the doctrine of the absolute right of visit is inculcated, while the contrary opinion is maintained in Mary- land, California, and perhaps a few other States. The doctrine announced in Maryland is, that " each Lodge is a family by itself, separate and dis- tinct from all the rest of the world, and has an un- questionable right to say who shall not be their associates." * See OLIVER'S ed. of PRESTON, note to p. 75. t Const. G. L. of New York, 1858, viii., s. 8. t Com. of Corresp. G. L. of Ohio, 1856, p. 482. Rep. of Com. of For. Corresp., 1854, p. 10. It is evident, however, that this involves a very contracted view of the universality of Masonry, and that by making each Lodge a distinct and independent family, the cosmopolitan character of the institution is completely denied. Fortunately this theory ii nowhere else recognized. 206 RIGHT OF VISIT. The doctrine in California appears to be, that u the right (so called) to visit masonically is not an absolute right, but is a favor, to which every lawfiu Mason in good standing is entitled, and which a Lodge may concede or refuse at its discretion. 77 There is in the phraseology of this Regulation such a contradiction of terms as to give an objection- able ambiguity to the statute. If the right of visit "is not an absolute right/ 7 then every Mason in good standing is not entitled to it. And if it is a favor to which " every lawful Mason in good stand- ing is entitled," then no Lodge can " concede or re- fuse it at its discretion. 77 There seems almost to be an absurdity in declaring by statute that every Mason has a right to ask for that which may, with- out cause assigned, be refused. The right mentioned in the old adage that " a cat may look at a king, 7 ' has more substantiality about it than this mere right of asking, without any certainty of obtaining. The true doctrine is, that the right of visit is one of the positive rights of every Mason ; because Lodges are justly considered as only divisions for convenience of the universal Masonic family. The right may, of course, be lost or forfeited on special occasions, by various circumstances ; but any Mas- ter who shall refuse admission to a Mason, in good standing, who knocks at the door of his Lodge, is expected to furnish some good and satisfactory reason for his thus violating a Masonic right. If the admission of the applicant, whether a member or visitor, would, in his opinion, be attended with EIGHT OP VISIT. 207 injurious consequences, such, for instance, as impair- ing the harmony of the Lodge, a Master would then, I presume, be justified in refusing admission. But without the existence of some such good reason, Masonic jurists have always decided that the right of visitation is absolute and positive, and inures to every Mason in his travels throughout the world. Wherever he may be, however distant from his resi- dence and in the land of the stranger, every Lodge is, to a Mason in good standing, his home, where he should be ever sure of the warmest and truest welcome. We are next to inquire into the nature of the re- strictions which have been thrown around the exer- cise of this right of visit. In the first place, to entitle him to this right of visit, a Master Mason must be affiliated with some Lodge. Of this doctrine there is no question. All Masonic authorities concur in confirming it. But as a Mason may take his demit from a particular Lodge, with the design of uniting again with some other, it is proper that he should be allowed the op- portunity of visiting various Lodges, for the pur- pose where there are more than one in the same place of making his selection. But that no en- couragement may be given to him to protract the period of his withdrawal of Lodge membership, this privilege of visiting must be restricted within the narrowest limits. Accordingly, the Grand Lodge of England has laid down the doctrine in its Con- stitutions in the following words : 208 EIGHT OF VISIT. " A Brother, who is not a subscribing member to some Lodge, shall not be permitted to visit any one Lodge in the town or place in which he resides, more than once during his secession from the craft."* A similar usage appears very generally, indeed universally, to prevail ; so that it may be laid down as a law, fixed by custom and confirmed in most jurisdictions by statutory enactment, that an un- affiliated Mason cannot visit any Lodge more than once.f By ceasing to be affiliated, he loses his general right of visit. Again : a visiting Brother, although an affiliated Mason, may, by bad conduct, forfeit his right of visit. The power to reject the application of a visitor for admission, is not a discretionary, but a constitutional one, vested in the Master of the Lodge, and for the wholesome exercise of which he is responsible to the Grand Lodge. If, in his opin- ion, the applicant for admission as a visitor, is not in a condition, or of fitting moral character, to en- title him to the hospitalities of the Lodge, he may refuse him admission ;J but the visitor so rejected will have his right of appeal to the Grand Lodge, in whose jurisdiction he has been refused, and the * Constitutions of the G. L. of Eng., p. 91. f The Grand Lodge of New York extends the number of visits ot un- affiliated Masons to two. But the rule laid down in the text is the more general one. J Thus the Grand Lodge of New York has very wisely enacted that no visitor shall be admitted, unless it be known " that his admission will not disturb the harmony of the Lodge, or embarrass its work." Const. G. L,