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THE ARCANE SCHOOLS - Fort Myers Beach Masonic Lodge No. 362

THE ARCANE SCHOOLS - Fort Myers Beach Masonic Lodge No. 362

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eward is attained, and the purified and elevated intellect is invested<br />

with the reward in the direction how to seek God and God's truth,--to<br />

believe this is to believe and to know the true design of Speculative<br />

Masonry, the only design which makes it worthy of a good or a wise<br />

man's<br />

study.<br />

Its historical details are barren, but its symbols and allegories are<br />

fertile with instruction.<br />

XXVII.<br />

The Legend of the Third Degree.<br />

The most important and significant of the legendary symbols of<br />

Freemasonry<br />

is, undoubtedly, that which relates to the fate of Hiram Abif, commonly<br />

called, "by way of excellence," the Legend of the Third Degree.<br />

The first written record that I have been able to find of this legend<br />

is<br />

contained in the second edition of Anderson's Constitutions, published<br />

in<br />

1738, and is in these words:--<br />

"It (the temple) was finished in the short space of seven years and six<br />

months, to the amazement of all the world; when the cape-stone was<br />

celebrated by the fraternity with great joy. But their joy was soon<br />

interrupted by the sudden death of their dear master, Hiram Abif, whom<br />

they decently interred, in the lodge near the temple, according to<br />

ancient<br />

dusage." [157]<br />

In the next edition of the same work, published in 1756, a few<br />

additional<br />

circumstances are related, such as the participation of King Solomon in<br />

the general grief, and the fact that the king of Israel "ordered his<br />

obsequies to be conducted with great solemnity and decency." [158] With<br />

these exceptions, and the citations of the same passages, made by<br />

subsequent authors, the narrative has always remained unwritten, and<br />

descended, from age to age, through the means of oral tradition.<br />

The legend has been considered of so much importance that it has been<br />

preserved in the symbolism of every masonic rite. <strong>No</strong> matter what<br />

modifications or alterations the general system may have undergone,--no<br />

matter how much the ingenuity or the imagination of the founders of<br />

rites<br />

may have perverted or corrupted other symbols, abolishing the old and<br />

substituting new ones,--the legend of the Temple Builder has ever been<br />

left untouched, to present itself in all the integrity of its ancient<br />

mythical form.

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