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  • April 1, 1881
  • Page 15
  • WAS SHAKESPEARE A FREEMASON ?
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The Masonic Magazine, April 1, 1881: Page 15

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Page 15

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

Mysticism.

There was , nevertheless , a great number of minds whom materialism could not satisfy , but who , without rejecting religious tradition , desired to maintain a respect for it , a certain liberty of discussion and interpretation . These persons founded the first Masonic association which gave their fame to the popular corporations , and to what we call to-day , " compaginonage . " Freemasonry established the most exalted of these institutions in Scotland

, and it was on account of the relations of Franco with that country , from Mary Stuart until Louis XIV ., that we saw so strongly implanted in France the mystic institutions which preceded the Rose Croix . During this time Italy had seen , from the date of the fourteenth century , a long series of hardy thinkers established , among whom we must rank Marsilins Ficinus , Picus de la Mirandola , Meursius , Nicholas de Cusa , Giordano

Bruno , and other great minds favorized by the toleration of the Medici , and whom we may now term the " Neoplatonicians of Florence . " The taking of Constantinople , in exiling so many illustrious " savants , " whom Italy welcomed , also exercised a great influence on this philosophical movement which brought the Alexandrian ideas , and led again to the study of Plotinnsof Proclnsof Porph etc . the first assailants of rising

, , yry , , Christianity . We ought to observe here , that the greater part of the learned medical men and materialists of the middle age , such as Paracelsus , Albert the Great , Jerome Cardan , Roger Bacon , and others , had attached themselves more or less to this teaching , which gave a new " formula " to that which was then called " occult science , " that is to say , astrology , the cabala , chiromancy , alchemy , physiognomy , etc .

It is from these diverse elements , and in part also from Hebraic science , which spread itself from the date of the "Renaissance , " that those different mystic schools were formed which were seen to develop themselves at the end of the seventeenth century , the Rose Croix especially , of whom the Abbe Villars was tho indiscreet disciple , and later , as some say , the victim . Subsequently , the Convulsionaries and certain sects of Jansenists appeared ; while towards 1770 , the Martinists , the Swedenborgians , and lastly the Illumines , whose doctrines , founded originally in Germany by Weishanpt , soon spread itself in France , where it was absorbed in the Masonic institution . *

Was Shakespeare A Freemason ?

WAS SHAKESPEARE A FREEMASON ?

( Concluded from page 384 . ) TJASSING other references to " Aprons , Rules , and Hammers , " it will be pro-- * - fitable to examine well the references to Masonic emblems , showing as they do not only a thorough knowledge of the symbolic teaching conveyed , but an equall y thorough appreciation of their lessons , which are strengthened and enforced with singular effect and beauty of expression . Turn to Antony and

Cleopatra . What can be finer , clearer , or more in harmony with Masonic interpretation than Antony ' s reply to Octavia—I have not kept my square ; but that to come Shall all be done by rule .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1881-04-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01041881/page/15/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
HISTORY OF THE AIREDALE LODGE, No. 387, Article 1
THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY AND CRITICISM. Article 6
CURIOUS LIST OF LODGES, A.D. 1736. Article 8
AUTUMN. Article 13
MYSTICISM. Article 14
WAS SHAKESPEARE A FREEMASON ? Article 15
A TWILIGHT SONG ON THE RIVER FOWEY. Article 19
A TALE OF VENICE IN 1781. Article 20
A NEW HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 21
OLD BOOKS. Article 24
SPRING. Article 29
CONISHEAD PRIORY. Article 30
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 34
FAITH AND LOVE. Article 36
AFTER ALL. Article 36
NURSERY DECORATION AND HYGIENE. Article 41
BRO. THOMAS TOPHAM, THE STRONG MAN. Article 43
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Page 15

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

Mysticism.

There was , nevertheless , a great number of minds whom materialism could not satisfy , but who , without rejecting religious tradition , desired to maintain a respect for it , a certain liberty of discussion and interpretation . These persons founded the first Masonic association which gave their fame to the popular corporations , and to what we call to-day , " compaginonage . " Freemasonry established the most exalted of these institutions in Scotland

, and it was on account of the relations of Franco with that country , from Mary Stuart until Louis XIV ., that we saw so strongly implanted in France the mystic institutions which preceded the Rose Croix . During this time Italy had seen , from the date of the fourteenth century , a long series of hardy thinkers established , among whom we must rank Marsilins Ficinus , Picus de la Mirandola , Meursius , Nicholas de Cusa , Giordano

Bruno , and other great minds favorized by the toleration of the Medici , and whom we may now term the " Neoplatonicians of Florence . " The taking of Constantinople , in exiling so many illustrious " savants , " whom Italy welcomed , also exercised a great influence on this philosophical movement which brought the Alexandrian ideas , and led again to the study of Plotinnsof Proclnsof Porph etc . the first assailants of rising

, , yry , , Christianity . We ought to observe here , that the greater part of the learned medical men and materialists of the middle age , such as Paracelsus , Albert the Great , Jerome Cardan , Roger Bacon , and others , had attached themselves more or less to this teaching , which gave a new " formula " to that which was then called " occult science , " that is to say , astrology , the cabala , chiromancy , alchemy , physiognomy , etc .

It is from these diverse elements , and in part also from Hebraic science , which spread itself from the date of the "Renaissance , " that those different mystic schools were formed which were seen to develop themselves at the end of the seventeenth century , the Rose Croix especially , of whom the Abbe Villars was tho indiscreet disciple , and later , as some say , the victim . Subsequently , the Convulsionaries and certain sects of Jansenists appeared ; while towards 1770 , the Martinists , the Swedenborgians , and lastly the Illumines , whose doctrines , founded originally in Germany by Weishanpt , soon spread itself in France , where it was absorbed in the Masonic institution . *

Was Shakespeare A Freemason ?

WAS SHAKESPEARE A FREEMASON ?

( Concluded from page 384 . ) TJASSING other references to " Aprons , Rules , and Hammers , " it will be pro-- * - fitable to examine well the references to Masonic emblems , showing as they do not only a thorough knowledge of the symbolic teaching conveyed , but an equall y thorough appreciation of their lessons , which are strengthened and enforced with singular effect and beauty of expression . Turn to Antony and

Cleopatra . What can be finer , clearer , or more in harmony with Masonic interpretation than Antony ' s reply to Octavia—I have not kept my square ; but that to come Shall all be done by rule .

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