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  • Sept. 30, 1853
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1853: Page 6

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    Article ON THE LEGEND OF THE HOLY OR SAN GRAAL; ← Page 2 of 26 →
Page 6

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

On The Legend Of The Holy Or San Graal;

have been clearly fixed by the imaginative writers of these poems . Once more the scene is changed , and as the Sacro Catino now at Genoa , it again resumes its character and form , " palpable both to feeling and to sight , " as the sacred paschal dish , to

which is superadded the merit or virtue of being a gift of the Queen of Sheba ( when she came from her distant empire to admire the wisdom of Solomon ) , to the royal treasury of the kings of Judah ; who , in compliance with Solomon ' s command and example , only permitted its rare and solemn use at their annual celebration of the passover . When the line of David

ceased to be regal , it passed to the priesthood and the family of Joseph , who claimed a royal descent , and was by him used when the Saviour condescended to eat his last meal with the disciples under his roof . Being forewarned of the approaching destruction of Jerusalem by Christ's predictions , and troubled in his new belief by the Jews , Joseph , with his friend Nicodemus , and other Christians , carried the sacred vessel to the Roman colony of Cffisarea on the Mediterranean . In their families it remained

to 1101 , when that city was taken and sacked by the Crusaders , and was then transferred , as the most precious portion of the booty , to the Genoese church militants , who had been foremost in the attack . It is evident we have here three distinct and independent fictions , though generally the subject is considered as connected .

It will be interesting to trace the causes of such a prevalent belief , and whilst unravelling the different narratives , to show how each might have been influenced by the other , as well as the points of then' general conformity from hitherto unconsidered facts in very distant countries ; nor Avill the gratification of this inquiry be confined to mere general readersor deep

, scrutinizers into our national antiquities ; there are certain points of the investigation where the search for a lost hoard , and the quest after the Sangreal , connected as it is with the effusion of blood and corruption of the body , will give unlookedfor conformities and . points of contact with the most abstruse mysteries of Masonic Craft , perhaps to the extent of points of

fellowship in fives . We shall find , too , in the investigation of this woven tissue of fiction , ligaments thrown out into the much-abused , the unjustly-vilified Order of the Templars ; its character and credit , at the highest pitch of its prosperity and wealth , described as honourable and pure , and totally inconsistent Avith the horrible charges brought against it . We shall hereby obtain a better scale for the general merit of the Order than the long

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1853-09-30, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091853/page/6/.
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE. Article 1
ON THE LEGEND OF THE HOLY OR SAN GRAAL; Article 5
A CENTURY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 31
HOW ALFRED TIPTOP WON THE PRIZE POEM Article 40
FATHER AND SON. Article 52
SHAKSPEARE'S SONNETS. Article 81
OLDEN HOLIDAY CUSTOMS Article 82
CARNABY THE FIRST. Article 93
THE CRYSTAL PALACE AND THE ARTS Article 101
CRITICAL NOTICES OF THE LITERATURE OF THE LAST THREE MONTHS, Article 112
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 125
POPULAR, DELUSIONS ABOUT MASONRY Article 129
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE. Article 130
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 137
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 137
METROPOLITAN Article 138
PROVINCIAL Article 140
SCOTLAND. Article 159
IRELAND. Article 163
JERSEY AND GUERNSEY Article 167
INDIA. Article 171
FUNERAL OF THE LATE LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR CHARLES NAPIER, G.C.B. Article 172
Obituary. Article 174
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS Article 175
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Page 6

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

On The Legend Of The Holy Or San Graal;

have been clearly fixed by the imaginative writers of these poems . Once more the scene is changed , and as the Sacro Catino now at Genoa , it again resumes its character and form , " palpable both to feeling and to sight , " as the sacred paschal dish , to

which is superadded the merit or virtue of being a gift of the Queen of Sheba ( when she came from her distant empire to admire the wisdom of Solomon ) , to the royal treasury of the kings of Judah ; who , in compliance with Solomon ' s command and example , only permitted its rare and solemn use at their annual celebration of the passover . When the line of David

ceased to be regal , it passed to the priesthood and the family of Joseph , who claimed a royal descent , and was by him used when the Saviour condescended to eat his last meal with the disciples under his roof . Being forewarned of the approaching destruction of Jerusalem by Christ's predictions , and troubled in his new belief by the Jews , Joseph , with his friend Nicodemus , and other Christians , carried the sacred vessel to the Roman colony of Cffisarea on the Mediterranean . In their families it remained

to 1101 , when that city was taken and sacked by the Crusaders , and was then transferred , as the most precious portion of the booty , to the Genoese church militants , who had been foremost in the attack . It is evident we have here three distinct and independent fictions , though generally the subject is considered as connected .

It will be interesting to trace the causes of such a prevalent belief , and whilst unravelling the different narratives , to show how each might have been influenced by the other , as well as the points of then' general conformity from hitherto unconsidered facts in very distant countries ; nor Avill the gratification of this inquiry be confined to mere general readersor deep

, scrutinizers into our national antiquities ; there are certain points of the investigation where the search for a lost hoard , and the quest after the Sangreal , connected as it is with the effusion of blood and corruption of the body , will give unlookedfor conformities and . points of contact with the most abstruse mysteries of Masonic Craft , perhaps to the extent of points of

fellowship in fives . We shall find , too , in the investigation of this woven tissue of fiction , ligaments thrown out into the much-abused , the unjustly-vilified Order of the Templars ; its character and credit , at the highest pitch of its prosperity and wealth , described as honourable and pure , and totally inconsistent Avith the horrible charges brought against it . We shall hereby obtain a better scale for the general merit of the Order than the long

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