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  • Oct. 1, 1834
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  • ON FREEMASONRY.
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Oct. 1, 1834: Page 6

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On Freemasonry.

ON FREEMASONRY .

SECOND EPOCH . WHEN the rains of heaven and the loosened waters of the deep had executed the judgment pronounced by the Divine Architect of the universe , and , save the inmates of the ark , all created flesh had perished , the father of the

future race of men sent forth the raven , that he might ascertain of the abatement of the flood , but that dark bird of evil omen , unattached to the human family , returned not to his protection , and the dove , the most domestic creature of the feathered tribe , was selected as his faithful messenger ; finding that the waters covered the earth as with a mantle ,

presenting no place of rest , the tired wanderer , led by the instinct of its nature , regained the shelter of the ark , intimating that the time had not yet arrived for man to quit its security , and take possession of the earth . At the expiration of seven days , Noah again sent forth his messenger of hope , which returned to him , bearing in its beak an olive

leaf , in token of the Creator ' s mercy to mankind , and hence esteemed throughout the nations of the world as the emblem of human concord . The same period having elapsed , the dove was dismissed yet a third time from the ark , and returned no more . Whence Noah concluded the season at hand whenwith his childrenhe should repeople the then

, , desert world . At the expiration of twelve months and ten days from the commencement of the flood , he descended with his family from Ararat , a mountain in Armenia , on which the ark had rested .

Well can imagination paint the feelings of the venerable patriarch when he again beheld that earth , so lately thronged with beautiful though guilty creatures , a silent desert : the vast forest tenantless ; the proud and stately cities swept from the plain—not e ' en a wreck remaining to mark the graves of those whose crimes had drawn such fearful

condemnation on them . In vain he sought for the traces of cultivation , in vain he listened for the voice of life—all was silent , save the breath of GOD upon the hills—HIS thunders o ' er the vallies . Cleansed from her impurities , the earth seemed fair and young ; each wreck of corrupt humanity , of the herds of the field , the monsters of the deep , concealed within her secret caves , or buried beneath her mountains , in awful evidence to after ages , when the en-

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1834-10-01, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_01101834/page/6/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
FREEMASON'S QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 1
PARTHIAN GLANCES*. Article 3
ON FREEMASONRY. Article 6
ON MASONIC NUMBER. Article 15
FREEMASONRY VINDICATED, Article 23
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' REVIEW. Article 29
THE PHILOSOPHER AND HIS PUPIL. Article 36
JOHN FITZ. Article 43
BROTHERLY LOVE AND AFFECTION. Article 48
ON THE NECESSITY OF A BUILDING FUND IN AID OF MASONIC ASYLUMS. Article 49
TO THE GRAND STEWARDS OF THE PRESENT YEAR. Article 53
ON *** ******'s GRAVE. Article 54
NOTITLÆ TEMPLARIÆ, No. 1. Article 55
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASON'S REVIEW. Article 57
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 58
ALL 'S RIGHT. Article 63
SUBJECTS UNDER CONSIDERATION. Article 65
Masonic Obituary. Article 65
PROVINCIAL. Article 67
EDINBURGH. Article 80
DUBLIN. Article 80
ADDRESS, Article 81
VIENNA. Article 83
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 84
OR THE CAUSES OF THE DECAY OF OUR NATIONAL MORALITY, AND ON SOME MODERN SCHEMES FOR ITS RENOVATION. Article 85
THE SLAVE'S FIRST HOUR OF FREEDOM AND HIS LAST. Article 98
THE LIBRARY OF THE VATICAN. Article 99
THE SPIRIT LOVER. Article 102
TO J**E. Article 104
THURLOGH, THE MILESIAN. Article 105
MISCELLANEOUS.. Article 122
TO ELIZABETH. Article 124
LITERATURE, THE DRAMA, &c. Article 124
CONTENTS. Article 127
THE FREEMASONS' QUAYTERLY REVIEW Article 129
•t \. J tf- Article 130
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Page 6

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

On Freemasonry.

ON FREEMASONRY .

SECOND EPOCH . WHEN the rains of heaven and the loosened waters of the deep had executed the judgment pronounced by the Divine Architect of the universe , and , save the inmates of the ark , all created flesh had perished , the father of the

future race of men sent forth the raven , that he might ascertain of the abatement of the flood , but that dark bird of evil omen , unattached to the human family , returned not to his protection , and the dove , the most domestic creature of the feathered tribe , was selected as his faithful messenger ; finding that the waters covered the earth as with a mantle ,

presenting no place of rest , the tired wanderer , led by the instinct of its nature , regained the shelter of the ark , intimating that the time had not yet arrived for man to quit its security , and take possession of the earth . At the expiration of seven days , Noah again sent forth his messenger of hope , which returned to him , bearing in its beak an olive

leaf , in token of the Creator ' s mercy to mankind , and hence esteemed throughout the nations of the world as the emblem of human concord . The same period having elapsed , the dove was dismissed yet a third time from the ark , and returned no more . Whence Noah concluded the season at hand whenwith his childrenhe should repeople the then

, , desert world . At the expiration of twelve months and ten days from the commencement of the flood , he descended with his family from Ararat , a mountain in Armenia , on which the ark had rested .

Well can imagination paint the feelings of the venerable patriarch when he again beheld that earth , so lately thronged with beautiful though guilty creatures , a silent desert : the vast forest tenantless ; the proud and stately cities swept from the plain—not e ' en a wreck remaining to mark the graves of those whose crimes had drawn such fearful

condemnation on them . In vain he sought for the traces of cultivation , in vain he listened for the voice of life—all was silent , save the breath of GOD upon the hills—HIS thunders o ' er the vallies . Cleansed from her impurities , the earth seemed fair and young ; each wreck of corrupt humanity , of the herds of the field , the monsters of the deep , concealed within her secret caves , or buried beneath her mountains , in awful evidence to after ages , when the en-

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