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The Freemasons' Magazine, July 1, 1795: Page 32

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    Article HISTORY OF MASONRY. ← Page 9 of 10 →
Page 32

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History Of Masonry.

morality and good fellowship ; each knew his peculiar business , and the grand design was vigorously pursued at a prodigious expence . When the workmen were all duly marshalled , Solomon , who had heen still adding immense quantities of gold , silver , precious stones , and other rich materials to those which David had laid up before his death ; put them into proper hands , to be wrought into an infinite variety of ornaments . The vast number of hands employedand the

, diligence , skill , and dexterity of the master of the work , the overseers and fellow-crafts , were such , that he was able to level the footstone of this vast structure in the fourth year of his reign , the third after the death of David , and the 480 th after the children of Israel passed the Red Sea . This magnificent work was begun in Mount Moriahon Monday the second day of the month Zifwhich answers

, , to the twenty-first of our April , being the second month of the sacred year ; and was carried on with such speed , that it was finished in all its parts in little more than seven years , which happened on the eighth day of the month Bui , which answers to the twenty-third of our October , being the seventh month of the sacred year , and the eleventh of King Solomon . What is still more astonishingisthat every

, , piece of it , whether timber , stone , or metal , was brought ready cut , framed ancl polished to Jerusalem ; so that no other tools were wanted , or heard , than what were necessary to join the several parts together . All the noise of axe , hammer , and saw , was confined to Lebanon , the quarries and plains of Zeredathah , that nothing might be heard

among the Masons of Sion , save harmony and peace . The length of the temple , o > - holy place , from wall to wall , was sixty cubits of the sacred measure ; the breadth twenty cubits , or one third of its length ; and the height thirty cubits to the upper cieling , distinct from the porch : so that the temple was twice as long and large every way as the tabernacle . The porch was izo cubits high ; its length twenty ; and breadth ten cubits . The symmetry of the

three dimensions in the temple is very remarkable ; and the harmony of proportions is as pleasing to the eye , as harmony in music is to the ear . The oracle , or most holy place , was a perfect cube of twenty cubits , thereby figuratively displaying the peifection of happiness : for Aristotle says , " That he who bears the shocks of fortune valiantly , and demeans himself uprightly , is truly good , atid of a

square posture without reproof . " Beside , as the square figure is the most firm in building , so this dimension of the oracle was to denote the constancy , duration , and perpetuity of heaven . The wall of the puter court , or that of the Gentiles , was 7 , 700 feet in compass ; and all the courts ancl apartments would contain 300 , 000 people : the whole was adorned with 1 453 columns of Parian marbletwisted

, , , sculptured and voluted ; with 2 , 906 pilasters , decorated with magnificent capitals ; and about double that number of windows ; beside the beauties of the pavement . The oracle and sanctuary were lined with massy . gold , adorned with sculpture , and studded with diamonds , and other kinds of precious stones .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-07-01, Page 32” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01071795/page/32/.
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Title Category Page
MASONIC DIRECTORY, NUMBER I. Article 1
Untitled Article 9
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Article 11
LONDON : Article 11
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 12
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 12
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 13
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 16
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 18
TO SIR GEORGE STAUNTON, BART. Article 19
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 24
THE FREEMASON. Article 33
THE STAGE. Article 35
THE MURDERER OF CHARLES I. Article 37
DISSERTATIONS ON THE POLITE ARTS. No. II. Article 37
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 42
HUMOUROUS ACCOUNT OF A RELIGIOUS CEREMONY, PERFORMED AT ROME. Article 45
BASEM; OR, THE BLACKSMITH. AN ORIENTAL APOLOGUE. Article 47
FRENCH VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY. Article 53
FEMALE CHARACTERS. THE DOMESTIC AND THE GADDER. Article 55
CHARACTER OF MECOENAS, Article 57
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 59
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 67
POETRY. Article 69
MASONIC SONG *. Article 70
ANOTHER. Article 70
TO HOPE. Article 71
PROLOGUE TO WERTER, Article 72
TO A YOUNG LADY, CURLING AND POWDERING HER HAIR. Article 73
ON THE BENEVOLENCE OF ENGLAND. Article 74
THE SONG OF CONSTANCY. Article 74
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 75
PROMOTIONS. Article 81
Untitled Article 81
Untitled Article 81
BANKRUPTS. Article 82
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Page 32

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

History Of Masonry.

morality and good fellowship ; each knew his peculiar business , and the grand design was vigorously pursued at a prodigious expence . When the workmen were all duly marshalled , Solomon , who had heen still adding immense quantities of gold , silver , precious stones , and other rich materials to those which David had laid up before his death ; put them into proper hands , to be wrought into an infinite variety of ornaments . The vast number of hands employedand the

, diligence , skill , and dexterity of the master of the work , the overseers and fellow-crafts , were such , that he was able to level the footstone of this vast structure in the fourth year of his reign , the third after the death of David , and the 480 th after the children of Israel passed the Red Sea . This magnificent work was begun in Mount Moriahon Monday the second day of the month Zifwhich answers

, , to the twenty-first of our April , being the second month of the sacred year ; and was carried on with such speed , that it was finished in all its parts in little more than seven years , which happened on the eighth day of the month Bui , which answers to the twenty-third of our October , being the seventh month of the sacred year , and the eleventh of King Solomon . What is still more astonishingisthat every

, , piece of it , whether timber , stone , or metal , was brought ready cut , framed ancl polished to Jerusalem ; so that no other tools were wanted , or heard , than what were necessary to join the several parts together . All the noise of axe , hammer , and saw , was confined to Lebanon , the quarries and plains of Zeredathah , that nothing might be heard

among the Masons of Sion , save harmony and peace . The length of the temple , o > - holy place , from wall to wall , was sixty cubits of the sacred measure ; the breadth twenty cubits , or one third of its length ; and the height thirty cubits to the upper cieling , distinct from the porch : so that the temple was twice as long and large every way as the tabernacle . The porch was izo cubits high ; its length twenty ; and breadth ten cubits . The symmetry of the

three dimensions in the temple is very remarkable ; and the harmony of proportions is as pleasing to the eye , as harmony in music is to the ear . The oracle , or most holy place , was a perfect cube of twenty cubits , thereby figuratively displaying the peifection of happiness : for Aristotle says , " That he who bears the shocks of fortune valiantly , and demeans himself uprightly , is truly good , atid of a

square posture without reproof . " Beside , as the square figure is the most firm in building , so this dimension of the oracle was to denote the constancy , duration , and perpetuity of heaven . The wall of the puter court , or that of the Gentiles , was 7 , 700 feet in compass ; and all the courts ancl apartments would contain 300 , 000 people : the whole was adorned with 1 453 columns of Parian marbletwisted

, , , sculptured and voluted ; with 2 , 906 pilasters , decorated with magnificent capitals ; and about double that number of windows ; beside the beauties of the pavement . The oracle and sanctuary were lined with massy . gold , adorned with sculpture , and studded with diamonds , and other kinds of precious stones .

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