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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • Sept. 30, 1853
  • Page 7
  • ON THE LEGEND OF THE HOLY OR SAN GRAAL;
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1853: Page 7

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    Article ON THE LEGEND OF THE HOLY OR SAN GRAAL; ← Page 3 of 26 →
Page 7

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On The Legend Of The Holy Or San Graal;

lists of accusations brought against it by its enemies , the monks , in the still subsisting interrogatories which they framed , or even in the admissions of many of the knights themselves , enticed by promises of immunity and pardon , or extorted , if not by the most severe torture , by at least the imminent fear and precedents of a dreadful and ignominious death ; for these , however ,

it will be necessaiy to adduce foreign evidence and undeniable testimony , which the most exact historians of the Order , both condemning and exculpatory , have hitherto overlooked . From the above it will be seen , that the subject necessarily branches out into three divisions , which we shall treat separately and seriatim , under the following heads : —

The first embraces the earliest and our own legends of the San Graal , from its exit from Palestine to being interwoven into the Lays of the Troubadours , and the metrical romances of Arthur and the Round Table . The second will embrace the visionary reveries of those old Troubadours and Minne-Sangerwild and fanciful in ideabut

, , rich in imagery , easy in diction , and often fraught with sentiments drawn from the deepest insight into our common humanity . The principal of these foreign singers of love , Wolfram von Esclienbach , who flourished early in the

thirteenth century , was declared , even after Schiller and Gothe had produced some of their most admired works , by no mean judge of the literature and poetry of his countrymen , F . von Schlegel , to have produced in his " Titurel" and "Parzival " two of the finest poems in the German language . Under the third head we shall examine the more practical ,

certainly less poetical legends of the monks , on the existing Sacro Catino at Genoa , perhaps with a rival or a duplicate at the rich Benedictine Abbey of Reichenau , an island in the Boden See , or Lake of Constanz . These cloistered scribes imagined , no doubt , that they were surer of the approbation of posterityand entitled to full credence for their reveriesfrom

, , the ocular demonstration they could bring of an existing vase of inestimable value , and whose authenticity they believed proved beyond the possibility of a doubt by a long chain of tradition ; by its monetary value beyond the possibility of purchase ; by its long preservation , and the attested miracles of which it was the immediate sphere . Under this headalsowill be found

, , some clue why the sacred Graal was supposed to have chosen a lodgment for some time in Britain ; in this the readers of the Freemasons' Quarterly Magazine are principally concerned , and if proved , it may , on the principle of nullum tempus regi et ecclesim , give the Bishop of Bath and Wells , as ordinary of Glastonbury ,

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1853-09-30, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091853/page/7/.
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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 7

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

On The Legend Of The Holy Or San Graal;

lists of accusations brought against it by its enemies , the monks , in the still subsisting interrogatories which they framed , or even in the admissions of many of the knights themselves , enticed by promises of immunity and pardon , or extorted , if not by the most severe torture , by at least the imminent fear and precedents of a dreadful and ignominious death ; for these , however ,

it will be necessaiy to adduce foreign evidence and undeniable testimony , which the most exact historians of the Order , both condemning and exculpatory , have hitherto overlooked . From the above it will be seen , that the subject necessarily branches out into three divisions , which we shall treat separately and seriatim , under the following heads : —

The first embraces the earliest and our own legends of the San Graal , from its exit from Palestine to being interwoven into the Lays of the Troubadours , and the metrical romances of Arthur and the Round Table . The second will embrace the visionary reveries of those old Troubadours and Minne-Sangerwild and fanciful in ideabut

, , rich in imagery , easy in diction , and often fraught with sentiments drawn from the deepest insight into our common humanity . The principal of these foreign singers of love , Wolfram von Esclienbach , who flourished early in the

thirteenth century , was declared , even after Schiller and Gothe had produced some of their most admired works , by no mean judge of the literature and poetry of his countrymen , F . von Schlegel , to have produced in his " Titurel" and "Parzival " two of the finest poems in the German language . Under the third head we shall examine the more practical ,

certainly less poetical legends of the monks , on the existing Sacro Catino at Genoa , perhaps with a rival or a duplicate at the rich Benedictine Abbey of Reichenau , an island in the Boden See , or Lake of Constanz . These cloistered scribes imagined , no doubt , that they were surer of the approbation of posterityand entitled to full credence for their reveriesfrom

, , the ocular demonstration they could bring of an existing vase of inestimable value , and whose authenticity they believed proved beyond the possibility of a doubt by a long chain of tradition ; by its monetary value beyond the possibility of purchase ; by its long preservation , and the attested miracles of which it was the immediate sphere . Under this headalsowill be found

, , some clue why the sacred Graal was supposed to have chosen a lodgment for some time in Britain ; in this the readers of the Freemasons' Quarterly Magazine are principally concerned , and if proved , it may , on the principle of nullum tempus regi et ecclesim , give the Bishop of Bath and Wells , as ordinary of Glastonbury ,

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