PREHISTORIC MASONRY
CHAPTER XXXIII
THE ROYAL SOCIETY AND FREEMASONRY
The hypothesis that Freemasonry was instituted in the 17th century and in the reign of Charles II., by a set of philosophers and scientists who organized it under the title of the " Royal Society," is the last of those theories which attempts to connect the Masonic Order with the House of Stuart that we will have to investigate.
The theory was first advanced by an anonymous writer in the German Mercury, a Masonic journal published about the close of the last century at Weimar, and edited by the celebrated Christopher Martin Wieland.
In this article the writer says that Dr. John Wilkins one of the most learned men of his time, and the brother-in-law of Oliver Cromwell, becoming discontented with the administration of Richard Cromwell, his son and successor, began to devise the means of reestablishing the royal authority. With this view he suggested the idea of organizing a society or club, in which, under the pretence of cultivating the sciences the partisans of the king might meet together with entire freedom.
General Monk and several other military men, who had scarcely more learning than would enable them to write their names, were members of this academy. Their meetings were always begun with a learned lecture, for the sake of form, but the conversation afterward turned upon politics and the interests of the king. And this politico-philosophical club, which subsequently assumed, after the Restoration, the title of the " Royal Society of Sciences," he asserts to have been the origin of the fraternity of Freemasons.
We have already had abundant reason to see, in the formation of Masonic theories, what little respect has been paid by their fram ers to the contradictory facts of history nor does the present hypothesis afford any exception to the general rule of dogmatic assumption and unfounded assertion.
Christopher Frederick Nicolai, a learned bookseller of Berlin, wrote and published, in 1783, an Essay on the Accusations made against the Order of Knights Templar and their Mystery with an appendix on the Origin of the Fraternity of Freemasons. (1)
In this work he vigorously attacks the theory of the anonymous writer in Wieland's Mercury, and the reasons on which he grounds his dissent are well chosen but they do not cover the whole ground.
Unfortunately, Nicolai had a theory of his own to foster, which also in a certain way connects Freemasonry with the real founders of the Royal Society, and the impugnment of the hypothesis of Wieland's contribution in its whole extent impugns also his own.
Two negatives in most languages are equivalent to an affirmative, but nowhere are two fictions resolvable into a truth.
The arguments of Nicolai against the Wieland theory are, however, worth citation, before we examine his own.
He says that Wilkins could scarcely have been discontented with the government of Richard Cromwell, since it was equally as advantageous to him as that of his father. He was (and he quotes Wood in the Athena Oxonienses as his authority) much opposed to the court, and was a zealous Puritan before the rebellion.
In 1648 he was made the Master of Wadham College, in the place of a royalist who had been removed. In 1649, after the decapitation of Charles I, he joined the republican party and took the oath of allegiance to the Commonwealth. In 1656 he married the sister of Cromwell, and under Richard received the valuable appointment of Master of Trinity College, which, however, he lost upon the restoration of the monarchy in the following year.
(1) "Versuch uber die Besschuldigungen, welche dem Tempelherrn orden gemacht worden und uber dessen Geheimniss; nebst einem Anhange uber das Enstehen der Freimaurergesellschaft," Berlin and Stettin, 1783.
"Is it credible," says Nicolai, "that this man could have instituted a society for the purpose of advancing the restoration of the king; a society all of whose members were of the opposite party? The celebrated Dr. Goddard, who was one of the most distinguished members, was the physician and favorite of Cromwell, whom, after the death of the King, he attended in his campaigns in Ireland and Scotland. It is an extraordinary assertion that a discontent with the administration of Richard Cromwell should have given rise in 1658 to a society which was instituted in 1646. It is not less extraordinary that this society should have held its meetings in a tavern. It is very certain that in those days of somber Puritanism the few taverns to be found in London could not have been used as places of meeting for associations consisting of men of all conditions, as is now the custom. There would have been much imprudence in thus exposing secret deliberations on an affair equally dangerous and important to the inspection of all the spies who might be congregated in a tavern."
He asserts that the first meetings of the society were held at the house of Dr. Goddard and of another member, and afterward at Cheapside and at Gresham College. And these facts are proved by the records of the society, as published by its annalists.
As to the statement that Monk was one of the members of the society-a fact that would be important in strengthening the theory that it was organized by the friends of the monarchy and with a design of advancing its restoration-he shows the impossibility that it could be correct, because Monk was a prisoner in the Tower from 1643 until 1647, and after his release in that year spent only a month in London, not again visiting that city till 1659, when he returned at the head of an army and was engaged in the arrangement of such delicate affairs and was so narrowly watched that it is not possible to be behaved that with his well-known caution he would have taken part in any sort of political society whatever, while the society would have acted very inconsiderately in admitting into its ranks military men who could scarcely write, and that too at a time when distrust had risen to its height.
But a better proof than any advanced by Nicolai, that Monk had nothing to do with the establishment of the Royal Society, whatever may have been its object, is that his name does not appear upon the list of original or early members, taken from the official records and published by Dr. Thompson in his history of the society.
Finally Nicolai asserts very truthfully that its subsequent history has shown that this society was really engaged in scientific pursuits, and that politics were altogether banished from its conferences. But he also contends, but with less accuracy, that the political principles of its members were opposed to the restoration of the monarchy, for which statement there is no positive authority.
Hence Nicolai concludes that " there is no truth in the statements
of the anonymous writer in Wieland's Mercury, except that the
restoration was opposed in secret by a certain society."
And now he advances his own theory, no less untenable than the one
he is opposing, that this society " was the Freemasons, who had
nothing in common with the other, except the date of foundation,
and whose views in literature as well as in politics were of an
entirely opposite character."
This was the theory of Nicolai-not
that Freemasonry originated in the Royal Society, but that it was
established by certain learned men who sought to advance the
experimental philosophy which had just been introduced by Bacon.
But the same idea was sought by the originators of the Royal
Society, and as many of the founders of this school were also among
the founders of the Royal Society, it seems difficult to separate
the two theories so as to make of each a distinct and independent
existence.
But it will be better to let the Berlin bookseller
explain his doctrine in his own language, before an attempt is made
to apply to it the canons of criticism.
He commences by asserting that one of the effects of the labors of
Andrea and the other Rosicrucians was the application of a
wholesome,criticism to the examination of philosophical and
scientific subjects. He thinks even that the Fama Fraternitatis,
the great work of Andrea, had first suggested to Bacon the notion
of his immortal work on The Advancement of Learning. At the same
time in which Bacon flourished and taught his inductive philosophy,
the Rosicrucians had introduced a system of philosophy which was
established on the phenomena of nature.
Lord Bacon had cultivated these views in his book De Augmentis
Scientiarum, except that he rejected the Rosicrucian method of
esoteric instruction. Everything that he taught was to be open and
exoteric. Therefore, as he had written his great work in the Latin
language, for the use of the learned, he now composed his New
Atlantis in English, that all classes might be able to read it.
In this work is contained his celebrated romance of the House of
Solomon, which Nicolai thinks may have had its influence in
originating the society of Freemasons.
In this fictitious tale Bacon supposes that a vessel lands on an
unknown island, called Bensalem, over which in days of yore a
certain King Solomon reigned.
This King had a large
establisliment, which was called the House of Solomon or the
College of the Six Days' Work, in allusion to the six days of the
Mosaic account of the creation.
He afterward describes the immense
apparatus which was there employed in physical researches. There
were deep grottoes and tall bowers for the observation o f the
phenomena of nature ; artificial mineral-waters; huge buildings in
which meteors, the wind, rain and thunder and lightning were
imitated; extensive botanic gardens, and large fields in which all
kinds of animals were collected for the study of their instinct and
habits, and houses filled with all the wonders of nature and art.
There were also a great number of learned men, to whom the
direction of these things was intrusted. They made journeys into
foreign countries, and observations on what they saw. They wrote,
they collected, they determined results, and deliberated together
as to what was proper to be published.
This romance, says Nicolai, which was in accord with the prevailing
taste of the age, contributed far more to spread the views of Bacon
on the observation of nature than his more learned and profound
work had been able to do. The House of Solomon attracted the
attention of everybody. King Charles I was anxious to establish
something like it, but was prevented by the civil wars.
Nevertheless this great idea, associated with that of the
Rosicrucians, continued to powerfully agitate the minds of the
learned men of that period, who now began to be persuaded of the
necessity of experimental knowledge.
Accordingly, in 1646, a society of learned men was established, all
of whom were of Bacon's opinion, that philosophy and the physical
sciences should be placed within the reach of all thinking minds.
They held meetings at which--believing that instruction in physics
was to be sought by a mutual communication of ideas-they made many
scientific experiments in common. Among these men were John
Wallis, John Wilkins, Jonathan Goddard, Samuel Foster, Francis
Glisson, and many others, all of whom were, fourteen years
afterward, the founders of the Royal Society.
But proceedings like these were not congenial with the intellectual
condition of England at that period. A melancholy and somber
spirit had overshadowed religion, and a mystical theology, almost
Gnostic in its character had infected the best minds. Devotion had
passed into enthusiasm and that into fanaticism, and sanguinary
wars and revolutions were the result. It was then that such
skillful hypocrites as Cromwell and Breton took advantage of this
weakness for the purpose of concealing and advancing their own
designs.
The taint of this dark and sad character is met with in all the
science, the philosophy, and even in the oratory and poetry of the
period.
Astrology and Theurgy were then in all their glory.
Chemistry, which took the place of experimental science, was as
obscure as every other species of learning, and its facts were
enveloped in the allegories of the Alchemists and the Rosicrucians.
A few learned men, disheartened by this obscuration of intellectual
light, had organized a society in 1646 ; but as they were still
imbued with a remnant of the popular prejudice, they were the
partisans of the esoteric method of instruction, and did not
believe that human knowledge should be exoterically taught so as to
become accessible to all.
Hence their society became a secret one.
The first members of this society were, says Nicolai, Elias
Ashmole, the celebrated antiquary;
William Lilly, a famous
astrologer; Thomas Wharton, a physician; George Wharton; William
Oughtred, a mathematician; Dr. John Hewitt, and Dr. John Pearson,
both clergymen, and several others.
The annual festival of the
Astrologers gave rise to this association.
It had previously held
one meeting at Warrington, in Lancashire, but it was first firmly
established at London.
Its object was to build the House of Solomon in a literal sense but
the establishment was to remain as secret as the island of Bensalem
in Bacon's New Atlantis,- that is, they were to be engaged in the
study of nature, but the instructions were to remain within the
society in an esoteric form ; in other words, it was to be a secret
society.
Allegories were used by these philosophers to express
their ideas. First were the ancient columns of Hermes, by which
Jamblichus pretended that he had enlightened all the doubts of
Porphyry.
You then mounted, by several steps, to a checkered floor
divided into four regions, to denote the four superior sciences,
after which came the types of the six days, which expressed the
object of the society.
All of which was intended to teach the
doctrines that God created the world and preserves it by fixed
principles, and that he who seeks to know these principles, by an
investigation of the interior of nature, approximates to God and
obtains from His grace the power of commanding nature.
This, says
Nicolai, was the essence of the mystical and alchemical doctrine
of the age, so that we may conclude that the society which he has
been describingwas in reality an association of alchemists, or
rather of astrologers.
In these allegories, for which Nicolai may have been indebted to
the alchemical writings of that period, to which he refers, or for
which he may have drawn on his own imagination-we are uncertain
which, as he sees no authorities-we may plainly detect Masonic
symbols, such as the pillars of the porch of the Temple, the
mystical ladder of steps, and the mosaic pavement, and thus it is
that he seems to find an analogy between Freemasonry and the secret
society that he has been describing.
He still further pursues the hypothesis of their identity in the
following remarks:
"It is known," he say, " that all who have the right of citizenship
in London, whatever may be their rank or condition, must be
recognized as members of some company or corporation. But it is
always easy for a man of quality or of letters to gain admission
into one of these companies.
Now, several members of the society
that has just been described were also members of the Company of
Masons. This was the reason of their holding their meetings at
Masons' Hall, in Masons' Alley, Basinghall Street.
They all
entered the company and assumed the name of Free and Accepted
Masons, adopting, besides, all its external marks of distinction.
Free is the title which every member of this body assumes in
England; the right or franchise is called Freedom,- the brethren
call themselves Freemen, Accepted means, in this place, that this
private society had been accepted or incorporated into that of the
Masons, and thus it was that chance gave birth to that denomination
of Freemasons which afterward became so famous, although it is
possible that some allusion may also have been intended to the
building of the House of Solomon, an allegory with which they were
also familiar."
Hence, according to the theory of Nicolai, two famous associations,
each of a character peculiar to itself, were at the same period
indebted to the same cause for their existence.
These were the
Royal Society and the Freemasony "
Both," he says, " had the same
object and the difference in their proceedings arose only from a
difference in some of the opinions of their members.
The one
society had adopted as its maxim that the knowledge of nature and
of natural science should be indiscriminately communicated to all
classes of men, while the other contended that the secrets of
nature should be restricted to a small number of chosen recipients.
The former body, which was the Royal Society, therefore held open
meetings; the latter, which was the Society of Freemasons,
enveloped its transactions in mystery."
"In those days," says Nicolai, " the Freemasons were altogether
devoted to the King and opposed to the Parliament, and they soon
occupied themselves at their meetings in devising the means of
sustaining the royal cause.
After the death of Charles I., in
1649, the Royalists becoming still more closely united, and,
fearing to be known as such, they joined the assemblies of the
Freemasons for the purpose of concealing their own identity, and
the good intentions of that society being well known many persons
of rank were admitted into it.
But as the objects which occupied
their attention were no other than to diminish the number of the
partisans of Parliament, and to prepare the way for the restoration
of Charles II. to the throne, it would have been very imprudent to
communicate to all Freemasonry without exception, the measures
which they deemed it expedient to take, and which required an
inviolable secrecy.
Accordingly they adopted the method of
selecting a certain number of their members, who met in secret, and
this committee, which had nothing at all to do with the House of
Solomon, selected allegories, which had no relation to the former
ones, but which were very appropriate to their design. These new
Masons took Death for their symbol.
They lamented the death of
their master, Charles I ; they nursed the hope of vengeance on his
murderers; they sought to re-establish the Word, or his son,
Charles II., for they applied to him the word Logos, which, in its
theological sense, means both the Word and the Son; and the queen,
Henrietta Maria, the relict of Charles I., being thenceforth the
head of the party, they designated themselves the Widow's Sons.
"They agreed also upon private signs and modes of recognition, by
which the friends of the royal cause might be able to distinguish
each other from their enemies.
This precaution was of great
utility to those who traveled, and especially to those of them who
retired with the court to Holland, where, being surrounded by the
spies of the Commonwealth, it was necessary to be exceedingly
diligent in guarding their secret."
Nicolai then proceeds to show how, after the death of Oliver
Cromwell and the abdication of his son Richard, the administration
of affairs fell into the hands of the chiefs of various parties,
whence resulted confusion and dissensions, which tended to render
the cause of the monarchy still more popular.
The generals of the
army were, however, still opposed to any notion of a restoration
and the hopes of the royalis ts centered upon General Monk, who
commanded the army in Scotland, and who, it was known, had begun to
look favorably on propositions which he had received in 1659 from
the exiled King.
It then became necessary to bind their secret committee still more
closely, that they might treat of Scottish affairs in reference to
the interests of the King.
They selected new allegories, which
symbolized the critical state to which they were reduced, and the
virtues, such as prudence, pliancy, and courage, which were
necessary to success.
They selected a new device and a new sign,
and in their meetings spoke allegorically of taking care, in that
wavering and uncertain condition of falling, lest the arms should
be broken."
It is probable that, in this last and otherwise
incomprehensible sentence, Nicolai refers to some of the changes
made in the High Degrees, fabricated about the middle of the 18th
century, but whose invention he incorrectly, but like most Masonic
historians of his day, attributes to an earlier date.
As some elucidation of what he says respecting the fact of failing
and the broken arm, we find Nicolai afterward quoting a small
dictionary which he says appeared about the beginning of the 18th
century, and in which we meet with the following definition :
"Mason's Wound, An imaginary wound above the elbow, to represent a
fracture of the arm occasioned by a fall from an elevated place."
"This," says Nicolai, "is the authentic history of the origin of
the Society of Freemasons, and of the first changes that it
underwent, changes which transformed it from an esoteric society of
natural philosophers into an association of good patriots and loyal
subjects; and hence it was that it subsequently took the name of
the Royal Art as applied to Masonry."
He concludes by affirming that the Society of Freemasons continued
to assemble after the Restoration, in 1660, and even made, in 1663,
several regulations for its preservation, but the zeal of its
members was diminished by the changes which science and manners
underwent during the reign of Charles II. Its political character
ceased by the advent of the king, and its esoteric method of
teaching the natural sciencess must have been greatly interrupted.
The Royal Society, whose method had been exoteric and open, and
from whose conferences politics were excluded, although its members
were, in principle, opposed to the Restoration, had a more
successful progress, and was joined by many of the Freemasons, the
most prominent of whom was Elias Ashmole, who, Nicolai says,
changed his opinions and became a member of the Royal Society.
But, to prevent its dissolution, the Society of Freemasons made
several changes in its constitution, so as to give it a specific
design.
This was undertaken and the symbols of the Society were
altered so as to substitute the Temple of Solomon in the place of
Bacon's House of Solomon, as a more appropriate allegory to express
the character of the new institution.
Nicolai thinks that the
building of St. Paul's Church and the persecutions endured by Sir
Christopher Wren may have contributed to the selection of these new
symbols. But on this point he does not insist.
Such is the theory of Nicolai. Rejecting the idea that the origin
of the Order of Freemasonry is to be traced to the founders of the
Royal Society, he claims to have found it in a society of
contemporaneous philosophers who met at Masons' Hall, in Basinghall
Street, and assumed the name of Free and Accepted Masons, and who,
claiming, in opposition to the views of the members of the Royal
Society, that all s6ences should be communicated esoterically,
therefore held their meetings in secret, their real object therefor
being to nourish a political conspiracy for the advancement of the
cause of the monarchy and the restoration of the exiled King.
Nicolai does not expressly mention the Astrologers, but it is very
evident that he alludes to them as the so-called philosophers who
originated this secret society, and to them, therefore, he
attributes the invention of the Masonic system, as it now exists,
after the necessary changes which policy and the vicissitudes of
the times had induced.
Nicholas de Bonneville, the author of the essay entitled The
Jesuits chased out of Freemasonry, entertained a similar opinion.
He says that in 1646 a society of Rosicrucians was formed at
London, modeled on the ideas of the New Atlantis of Bacon. It
assembled in Masons' Hall, where Ashmole and other Rosicrucians
modified the formula of reception of the Operative Masons, which
had consisted only of a few ceremonies used by craftsmen, and
substituted a mode of initiation founded in part on the mysteries
of Ancient Egypt and Greece.
They then fabricated the first degree
of Masonry as ive non, have it, and, to distinguish themselves from
common Masons, called themselves Freemasons. Thory cites this
without comment in his Acta Latomorum, and gives it as a part of
the authentic annals of the Order.
But ingenious and plausible as are these views, both of Nicolai and
Bonneville, they unfortunately can not withstand the touchstone of
all truth, the proofs of authentic history.
It will be seen that we have two hypotheses to investigate-first
that advanced by the contributor to Wieland's Mercury, that the
Society of Freemasons was originated by the founders of the Royal
Society, and that maintained by Nicolai and Bonneville, that it
owes its invention to the Astrologers who were contemporary with
these founders. Both hypotheses place the date of the invention in
the same year, 1646, and give London as the place of the invention.
We must first direct our attention to the theory which maintains
that the Royal Society was the origin of Freemasonry, and that the
founders of that academy were the establishers of the Society of
Freemasons.
This theory, first advanced, apparently, by the anonymous
contributor to Wieland's Mercury, was exploded by Nicolai, in the
arguments heretofore quoted, but something may be added to increase
the strength of what he has said.
We have the explicit testimony of all the historians of that
institution that it was not at all connected with the political
contests of the day, and that it was founded only as a means of
pursuing philosophical and scientific inquiries.
Dr. Thompson, who derives his information from the early records of
the society, says that " it was established for the express purpose
of advancing experimental philosophy, and that its foundation was
laid during the time of the civil wars and was owing to the
accidental association of several learned men who took no part in
the disturbances which agitated Great Britain." (1)
(1) "History of the Royal Society," by Thomas Thompson, M.D.,
F.R.S., LL.D. London, 1812, p. 1
He adds that "about the year 1645 several ingenious men who
resided in London and were interested in the progress of
mathematics and natural philosophy agreed to meet once a week to
discourse upon subjects connected with these sciences. These
meetings were suspended after the resignation of Richard Cromwell,
but revived in 1660, upon the Restoration."' (1)
They met at first in private rooms, but afterward in Gresham
College and then in Arundel House. Their earliest code of laws
shows that their conferences were not in secret, but open to
properly introduced visitors, as they still continue to be.
Weld, the librarian of the society, says that to it "attaches the
renown of having from its foundation applied itself with untiring
zeal and energy to the great objects of its institution." (2) He
states that, although the society was not chartered until 1660, "
there is no doubt that a society of learned men were in the habit
of assembling together to discuss scientific subjects for many
years previous to that time." (3)
Spratt, in his history of the society, says that in the gloomy
season of the civil wars they had selected natural philosophy as
their private diversion, and that at their rneetings " they chiefly
attended to some particular trials in Chemistry or Mechanics."
The testimony of Robert Boyle, Wallis, and Evelyn, contemporaries
of the founders, is to the same effect, that the society was simply
philosophical in its character and without any political design Dr.
Wallis, who was one of the original founders, makes this statement
concerning the origin and objects of the society in his Account of
some Passages in my own Life. (4)
" About the year 1645, while I lived in London (at a time when, by
our civil wars, academic studies were much interrupted in both our
Universities), besides the conversation of divers eminent divines,
as to matters theological, I had the opportunity of being
acquainted with divers worthy persons inquisitive into natural
philosophy and other paths of human learning, and
particularly what has
(1) "History of the Royal Society," by Thomas Thompson, M.D.,
F.R.S., LL.D., London, 1812, p.1
(2) "A History of the Royal Society," with Memoirs of its
Presidents, by Charles Richard Weld, Esq., 2 vols., London, 1848,
I. 27
(3) Ibid
(4) In Hearne's edition of Langsteff's chronicle.
been called the New Philosophy or Experimental Philosophy. We did,
by agreements, divers of us meet weekly in London on a certain day
to treat and discourse of such affairs." Wallis says that the
subjects pursued by them related to physics, astronomy, and natural
philosophy, such as the circulation of the blood, the Copernican
system, the Torricellian experiment, etc.
In all these authentic accounts of the object of the society there
is not the slightest allusion to it as a secret organization, nor
any mention of a form of initiation, but only a reception by the
unanimous vote of the members, which reception, as laid down in the
bylaws consisted merely in the president taking the newly elected
candidate by the found and saluting him as a member or fellow of
the society.
The fact is that at that period many similar societies had been
instituted in different countries of Europe, such as the Academia
del Corriento at Florence and the Academy of Sciences at Paris,
whose members, like those of the Royal Society of London, devoted
themselves to the development of science.
This encouragement of scientific pursuits may be principally
attributed to many circumstances that followed the revival of
learning; the advent of Greeks into Western Europe, imbued with
(Grecian literature; Bacon's new system of philosophy, which alone
was enough to awaken the intellects of all thinking men ; and the
labors of Galileo and his disciples. All these had prepared many
minds for the pursuit of philosophy by experimental and inductive
methods, which took the place of the superstitious dogmas of
preceding ages.
It was through such influences as these, wholly unconnected with
any religious or political aspirations, that the founders of the
Royal Society were induced to hold their meetings and to cultivate
without the restraints of secrecy their philosophical labors, which
culminated in 1660 in the incorporation of an institution of
learned men which at this day holds the most honored and prominent
place among the learned societies of the world.
But it is in vain to look in this society, either in the mode of
its organization, in the character of its members, or in the nature
of their pursuits, for any connection with Freemasonry, an
institution entirely different in its construction and its
objects.
The theory, therefore, that Freemasonry is indebted for
is origin to the Royal Society of London must be rejected as
wholly without authenticity or even plausibility. But the theory
of Nicolai, which attributes its origin to another contemporaneous
society, whose members were evidently Astrologers, is somewhat more
plausible, although equally incorrect. Its consideration must,
however, be reserved as the subject of another chapter
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