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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1880
  • Page 25
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1880: Page 25

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    Article BROTHER! WELL MET! ← Page 4 of 4
    Article THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 25

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

Brother! Well Met!

When they got to the humble room in which was the marquis , ancl his fair wife and gentle daughter , they found the old soldier philosophically smoking . He recognized Juviennot , ancl the ladies in their ecstacy would have embraced him when he gave the marquis the passport . It was duly filled up with the names of Citoyen Brune , his wife and daughter ancl domestique , and Puisac gave him three lines , signed by Mirabeau , to himself , which simply said ,

" De pechez vous citoyen et mon ami . —MIRABEAU . " At the gate at early dawn , though no hesitation was shown , the passport , being " en regie , " our friend thought the paper with Mirabeau ' s name might do good , and so he showed it to the sergeant . It was quite sufficient . And so it was all the way . When they got to Calais , as good luck would have it , a courier sent b y the French Government was going over to England ,

and whether the good looks of Adele de Merilhac charmed ( or he might have been a Freemason , too ; they are very ubiquitous , those Freemasons ) deponent can say no more than that , just as Juviennot had said , when he was denounced at the Jacobins he was bowling across the English Channel . He was denounced , ancl was searched for b y the police , but never found . M . de Puisac , finding things going badly , got a diplomatic appointment

through Mirabeau ' s influence , ancl then joined the Merilhacs in England . He is the same Viscomte de Puisac who represented the French Empire at Vienna under Napoleon I . Merilhac is the same General , ancl after Marshal , De Merilhac whose name is recorded in more than one of Napoleon ' s despatches . Juviennot rose to hig h rank , but never gave up Freemasonry , and if you will read over the minutes of the Grand Orient of France , you will find that when Freemasonry revived after the Reign of Terror , first under the Consulate , and then under the Empire , the three names of Merilhac , Puisac , and Juviennot are recorded as present at more than one important seance .

The Ancient Mysteries.

THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES .

( Continued from page 176 . ) TJUT it was not now the Pontif who taught this doctrine of the great soul of - * - * the world . Nature herself appeared to the initiated , ancl a voice was heard pronouncing the following words * : "Moved b y thy prayers , I am come ; I am Nature , the universal parent ; the soverei gn of the elements ; the spring of ages ; the first of the gods ; the queen of the Manes ; under one form I re ° all the

present gods ancl all the goddesses . I dispense the light of heaven ; I agitate the billows of the ocean ; I encompass the infernal regions with silence and horror . All nations acknowledge my power . The Phrygians call me the Mother of the Gods ; the inhabitants of Cyprus , Venus ; those of Athens , Ceres ; but in Egypt , and among the people on whom the sun first sheds his early beams , sages , learned in the ancient doctrine , have called me Isis . Under all these names , ancl with many different ceremonies , I am the only deity whom the universe invokes . " This passage will not permit us to doubt the identit y of the mysteries , which nowhere differed essentially , as we have already ob-

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-11-01, Page 25” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111880/page/25/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
AN ORATION Article 1
THE NAME OF BURNS. Article 3
RABBINICAL PROVERBS AND SAYINGS. Article 4
A SERMON Article 6
RYTHMICAL SAYINGS. Article 11
THE VOICE OF NATURE. Article 16
THE TEMPLE OF MASONRY. Article 18
THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND. Article 19
BROTHER! WELL MET! Article 22
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Article 25
AFTER ALL. Article 29
LITERARY AND ANTIQUARIAN GOSSIP. Article 37
"A JINER." Article 40
BRO. SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN.* Article 42
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Page 25

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

Brother! Well Met!

When they got to the humble room in which was the marquis , ancl his fair wife and gentle daughter , they found the old soldier philosophically smoking . He recognized Juviennot , ancl the ladies in their ecstacy would have embraced him when he gave the marquis the passport . It was duly filled up with the names of Citoyen Brune , his wife and daughter ancl domestique , and Puisac gave him three lines , signed by Mirabeau , to himself , which simply said ,

" De pechez vous citoyen et mon ami . —MIRABEAU . " At the gate at early dawn , though no hesitation was shown , the passport , being " en regie , " our friend thought the paper with Mirabeau ' s name might do good , and so he showed it to the sergeant . It was quite sufficient . And so it was all the way . When they got to Calais , as good luck would have it , a courier sent b y the French Government was going over to England ,

and whether the good looks of Adele de Merilhac charmed ( or he might have been a Freemason , too ; they are very ubiquitous , those Freemasons ) deponent can say no more than that , just as Juviennot had said , when he was denounced at the Jacobins he was bowling across the English Channel . He was denounced , ancl was searched for b y the police , but never found . M . de Puisac , finding things going badly , got a diplomatic appointment

through Mirabeau ' s influence , ancl then joined the Merilhacs in England . He is the same Viscomte de Puisac who represented the French Empire at Vienna under Napoleon I . Merilhac is the same General , ancl after Marshal , De Merilhac whose name is recorded in more than one of Napoleon ' s despatches . Juviennot rose to hig h rank , but never gave up Freemasonry , and if you will read over the minutes of the Grand Orient of France , you will find that when Freemasonry revived after the Reign of Terror , first under the Consulate , and then under the Empire , the three names of Merilhac , Puisac , and Juviennot are recorded as present at more than one important seance .

The Ancient Mysteries.

THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES .

( Continued from page 176 . ) TJUT it was not now the Pontif who taught this doctrine of the great soul of - * - * the world . Nature herself appeared to the initiated , ancl a voice was heard pronouncing the following words * : "Moved b y thy prayers , I am come ; I am Nature , the universal parent ; the soverei gn of the elements ; the spring of ages ; the first of the gods ; the queen of the Manes ; under one form I re ° all the

present gods ancl all the goddesses . I dispense the light of heaven ; I agitate the billows of the ocean ; I encompass the infernal regions with silence and horror . All nations acknowledge my power . The Phrygians call me the Mother of the Gods ; the inhabitants of Cyprus , Venus ; those of Athens , Ceres ; but in Egypt , and among the people on whom the sun first sheds his early beams , sages , learned in the ancient doctrine , have called me Isis . Under all these names , ancl with many different ceremonies , I am the only deity whom the universe invokes . " This passage will not permit us to doubt the identit y of the mysteries , which nowhere differed essentially , as we have already ob-

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