Friday 14 November 2014

THE TEMPLE


THE TEMPLE

Brethren, I need not ask but for the purpose of recollection, condescend to answer me;Which Temple is the most popular in the life of Freemasonry?
Right glad am I to find your answers correct. The King Solomon's Temple, of course has the greatest connection with Freemasons. It has great allusions to our teachings and it is quite dramatically rhapsodic to relate our ceremonies in the craft Freemasonry to its contruction.
It, therefore becomes more than necessary that we learned a little about this historic superstructure, which has continued to shape good men into better ones even after its collapse.

The Temple was built on a table of rock which apexed a hill in Jerusalem called Mount Moriah. This particular location,according to Hebrew tradition, was where Adam was created and his boys Cain and Abel sacrificed. It was on same hill that Noah built his altar at the hiatus of the flood, where Abraham offered a his son Isaac a sacrificial lamb to God and it was on same Mount Moriah, David erected his altar. The Mohammedans named it the centre of the world and gate to Heaven, for it was on this same hill that,Mohammed convinced his followers that he had made his famous ascent to Heaven.
Brethren, it cannot be by mere coincidence that KS, H of Tyre and HA chose this same location to erect the first Temple at Jerusalem. Freemasonry,like I have always said, has more than can be seen or heard in a lodge room. Only the seekers decipher the encrypted.

Few realize how high the temple towered in the history of the olden world and how the story of its building haunted the legends and traditions of timed following. Great writers such as Durandus and Bunyan,used it as a symbol of religious truth. Until proven otherwise about some 50yrs ago, many masonic writers of old,thought that our craft had been organized during the building of the Temple,even in detail,that our order has survived from then to now. Archaelogical research has proved that the Temple was built by phoenician Masons since some phoenician Marks were uncovered on the original foundation stones. Though history does not recognize the actual connection between the building of the Temple and our fraternity, we still don't have to minify the relevance of the Temple in our rituals and the dramatic nexus we have manufactured. For we stand as Masons, to all external appearances, just and upright Men, as was the Temple.
However, if we still will accept Vibert's contention that there existed no evidence of our possesion of the Temple until the eighteen century, we still have the question of how it entered our masonic system and why that time to answer. A masonic scholar, Brother Ryland said "no satisfactory reason has so far been offered why the Temple of Solomon and its builders have been selected to play an important part in one division of our legendary history"...well,what I say is, who cares.

Ever since Bro. Rylands wrote the above, Brother A.E Waite came up with a reason that I find befitting, holding that,many of the speculatives who were admitted in the 18th century were mostly Kabbalists in one degree or the other,therefore he believed that we may have borrowed the Temple symbolism from that source. A point I firmly second,because the Kabbalists owned the Temple symbolism some 400years before the 18th century and any inside out student of masonry will accept a basic fact that,symbolism in masonry was greatly influenced by Kabbalists, those guys were very influencial teachers. Be that as it may, we shall always retain the Temple symbolism,for nothing could better explain the ideal of craft masonry than the Temple - the building of a superstructure of morality in good men and the divine brotherhood among men on earth.
The temple was built of stones,wood and metals, which were collected from earth but well prepared,adjusted and joined to result in a solemn aesthetically beautiful house dedicated to the service of God. It has a likewise allusion to the development of self. We are also gathering materials which seem earthly or common, our flesh,appetites and passion. We so hope to also prepare,adjust and join in the holy communion of brotherly love, to build a house not made by hands, in which our human nature will be transfigured. As brothers to Solomon,we too have to build a Temple for God, but whereas the Jews would have Him dwell in Temples of stone, we would fain prepare for Him a Temple of Flesh. We hope that through the morphallaxis of men, the fraternity of men, The Great Architect would continue to cement and adorn us with every virtue that,when finally we are summoned fron this sublunary abode, we may ascend to the Grand Lodge Above, where the world's greatest Architect lives and reigns for ever.

By Bro. Oppong Clifford Benjamin
References : Symbolical Masonry by H.L. Haywood
The Great Teachings of Masonry by H.L Haywood
Speculative Masonry by A.S. MacBride
The Builders by Joseph Fort Newton
Symbolism of the Three Degrees by Oliver Day Street.

Thursday 13 November 2014

A LETTER TO A BROTHER ABOUT HIS DRESS CODE


Hello Sweet Brother Amagashie,

I was at Makola yesterday, I inquired the prices of different classes of suits, the most expensive was ghc1400 and some were as cheap as ghc55. You won't get angry to know that, almost all of them looked better than the one you wore to the last half yearly communication. ( Onua fakye me wai, truth is bitter too much).
This was not to sport your feelings, but for three especial reasons, one, to point your attention to your external appearance as a superstructure and not a summer hut. Two, to remind you of the nobility and honour this fraternity has earned, by the good of its members in all forms of presentation, of which, included, our wardrobe.

At large masonic meetings like the recent half yearly communication in Takoradi, Brethren invite their ladies, some even come with their crop of families, others of a more sociable nature, come with their friends, whom they would want to arrest their interest in the fraternity. It therefore necessarily follows that, we appeared noble men in all corners of our superstructure. King Solomon was a fashionable man, why then would you think the women fell practically at his feet?, Come to think of how well he adorned the first temple at Jerusalem. The network, lily work and one hundred pomegranates on each of the chapiters on the pillar. The pillars were not built of aluminium but brass, and he didn't place them within the structure but right at the porchway or entrance, My Brother, you should by now know that, our Solomon, King of Israel, from whom we derive so much precepts, was a man who loved to prove himself a beautiful man, handsome was just inappropriate a word for him. Such, my brother, ought to designate our sense of fashion too, until time or circumstances, this time, makes us better.
And please don't tell me you dressed to match your age, do you know how old the District Grand Master and His officers are?, yet they appeared so sweet that, I could count some winks and smiles flying their direction from..... ( y3ntwa so).

It has truly been said that Masonry does not give you money and no material benefits, well, that is something I don't believe personally,(a letter of another unknown day) but, masonry certainly doesn't make a man poor or grotty in his dressing. I am not suggesting we dressed so heavily that our guests would think of us billionaires, NO, I mean, we dress so elegantly that, they will think of us, a group of baronial guys, that when they finally find our connetion with King Solomon, they will exclaim "OOoOH I thought as much".

First sight impression is the most important perception we sell of ourselves, I need not here dilate on its importance, as it has often been felt and practised by men of the elite class. Like its sister, speech, it has the ability to make the other like or hate you. The power to influence the perceptual sight of the uninitiated at our meetings, lies in the neatness of your suit, your ironed pair of trousers, your well shaved hair, the gentility in your steps, the perfume that diffuses it frangrance in the hall, your well polished black pair of shoes, and most importantly, the little words and smiles that emanate from your mouth and face respectively, please cook all your thoughts in your middle chamber, taste them before you serve the other, so that, when it is heard of you, it can be said to be a speech from a Freemason - a society of highly moralized men.

Brother Amagashie, you thought I had forgotten, I reserved it for last because, for this one only your brothers see it, it is your supposed white gloves. I nearly prompted you at Takoradi, to wear your gloves, until I came closer. Your gloves is of a colour that blends your skin now. Well done. Much said and tiring, you can visit Makola or any boutique for a new set of suit and shame me in our next meeting. I still love one thing about you though, your pair of socks. However, the last time I saw your wife hanged them on the drying line, they were losing their dignity, you may consider replacing those guys too at yout feet.

I am off to the District office for a new apron, do you care for anything, my one and only sweetest Brother Amagashie.

Fraternally Yours
Bro. Oppong Clifford Benjamin
Excelsior Lodge No. 7670 EC.

‪#‎Cliffmasonicletters‬ are open-thought letters not addressed to any Brother or person in particular, but to mention out some disturbing issues in Freemasonry Ghana.

image source: google search

Tuesday 21 October 2014

A LETTER TO AN EA

Dear Bro. Apraku

Right after your initiation, I saw the unsatisfactoriness in your soul. I am sorry we didn't please you. You will have to forgive the lodge and Freemasonry as a whole. But right glad I am to find you contribute actively on the whatsapp group. I am sure you have gathered some interest around. Or you are still anticipating the atonement of your anxiety in the higher degrees?

You may want to stop hoping to see the dead bodies, those rooms which were under lock and keys, contain some old and dirty artifacts, some sticks, stones, ropes, tattered aprons of long ago Masons, yes, we don't have any big fridge which stores the bodies. Masons are clean Men and wouldn't want to come any closer to anything unpleasant.(In one of the degrees ahead, you will learn a sign that affirms how Masons blocked the sight of a bitter scene).

Some of your words were too loud about your expectations, I saw there and then that you had prepared your mouth for a calabash of blood, not even the two club beers were enough to compensate you. You see, our old men could have served you red wine in calabash and said it was symbolic, that am sure would have been enough to tell your friends you were more powerful than them. Bro. never mind, the communion you had with Brethren over sweating bottles was one great union you just enjoyed. Under normal life workings, you wouldn't have had the opportunity to wine and dine with such distinguished men, amidst them sat me too (you think is easy to wine with an unemployed graduate, dey der).

It didn't come to me as a surprise when you asked which secrets at all you were to keep, we don't decide who becomes President of the nation months before elections and tell Lodge members to keep the name as a secret, we have no hand in the death of any public figure, Otumfour is a Mason and you are free to tell that to any one, is not a secret. We are not the master minds behind the fall and rise of the dollar. My Bro. our secrets, our mode of recognitions. Those signs, tokens and word which designate a Mason, by which you can distinguish a brother in the night as well as in the day, those prompts which help you to distinguish a brother from the popular world. SUCH, my brother, are the secrets you protect with all your life. And when you deem them not worthy of protection, you lose not your life but integrity and membership.
So as you smile to this end, let me keep your happy heart in the easiness of masons and the brotherhood of Men under the Fatherhod of God. Let us again meet on the level and part on the square in peace and harmony.

Until then, its Hausa kooko and Koose. (Oh gye, what are brothers for?)

Your Sweet Brother
Oppong Clifford Benjamin
Excelsior Lodge No. 7670 EC.
‪#‎Cliffmasonicletter‬ are open thought letters addressed to no one in particular. It is just to talk about practical issues in our circles.

Thursday 21 August 2014

A LETTER TO A LODGE MENTOR

Dear W.Bro. Kyeremanteng,

      Last regular meeting you were no where to be found, I had a couple of questions for you. Oh,I just remembered that, the one before the recent meeting too, you were absent and the secretary like always, said "W.Bro. Kyeremanteng is unavoidably absent with an apology of ghc5". Do you know a secret?, I don't even know you.

Brother Mentor, are you sick abed? or you are the busiest person in this touch screen world?. In fact, I am covetous of your position, so much that, I wish to be given such an honourable office in the lodge and never show up. So that newly initiated Brethren will keep divagating from the mainstream Freemasonry. Afterall who will punish or hold me accountable for my rather worsening behaviour.

When I was an Entered Apprentice, I had so many questions about the order. They ranged from the many conspiracy theories I had read online prior to my entry to the inner workings of the initiation ceremony. Each time the question of why I had joined the fraternity came into mind, I answered myself in that unfaithful inner voice "because I want to be a better man". You also wanted to be a better man?, thats sweet, I guess you are now. Oh yes, I don't know you but I think you are the best man ever in the lodge. You alone, give alms in ghc5 note even in your somehow perpetual absenteeism.

Two weeks after my long and silent walk in the order, I had rigorous recourse to the same old map, which led me to those funny writings against the beautiful fraternity. I mean the internet. So even after my membership, I still relied on some uninitiated folks online, to teach and counsel me. One of them corrupted my interest and nearly took me out of the order. On other platforms where open discussions were held, I tried to antagonize their filthy points but I always lost the battle because I didn't even know who I was as a Mason. Those days, I too said, "to hell with Freemasonry" and then at the next turn "I want to be a better man too oo". So Bro. Mentor, you now have another view of why you remain my best man.

One day when I couldn't deceive myself anymore, I decided to talk to the secretary. I was surprised when he said it was your peculiar duty to educate me, answer all my questions and assist me in making daily advancement in masonic knowledge. Do you know I started taking pictures of you?, I saw you to be another masonic professor, I saw you to be the most disciplined Mason, I knew you were one to whom the Duke of Kent had bestowed such honour, well, if that picture still existed, I would have printed it out of my mind and better left it with the Temple care taker, his kids may need it.

Out of my own industry and of course, the assistance of some senior Brethren, I started seeing the light and keep searching for further lights.
But I have come to tell you that, two more Masons have been initiated and they don't even know the name of their lodge. Are you surprised?. Okay, in your reply state whether you are or not, so I can communicate to them your state, good works and excellence.
Let me quickly add that, a fellow craft before me, asked me many interesting questions, of them included; why we wore only black suit and white shirt and white gloves, why the lodge had a chequered floor and why etc.

I think am talking too much, as a last general information, am sure you are already aware three EAs have left the lodge, because they don't seem to duly appreciate the society they had become members through a long and tiring ceremony. The WM and other Senior Brethren were as busy as you, so no one could help them crawl in the light, they preferred running in their darkness than be left alone in a supposed light.

Before you make up your mind, let me advise you in my humble little self, never to send those ghc5 again, I think we don't need them more than you.

Fraternally Yours
Bro. Oppong Clifford Benjamin.
Excelsior Lodge No. 7670 EC.

#Cliffmasonicletters ---- are just open thought letters, not referring to anybody in particular but to address a general concern in Freemasonry lodges in Ghana.

Tuesday 12 August 2014

THE PLACE OF BROTHERHOOD IN FREEMASONRY

 by W. Bro. JULIAN REES
   In a fascinating essay written in 1896, the Freemason J.E. Thomas of South Africa wrote: 
            To assist in the ceremonial duties of the Lodge without seeking
            to unfold the symbolism, is to remain satisfied with the externals
            only, those husks which envelope and protect the grain.  Our quest
            is to ascertain the internal truths of which symbolism is but the
            index.  For instance, to what extent are the fraternal relations
            between my fellow Freemasons and myself different to those which
            I hold with my neighbours and friends? 
            With these words, the author places brotherhood firmly at the centre, both of our masonic existence, and of our initiatic quest.
            Brotherhood, the bonding between human beings, exists of course on different levels and in different spheres of human experience.  In the profane world, brotherhood may be more often relied on in times of danger and distress than in the hour of ease and comfort.  There is ample evidence of bonding between men on the field of battle, or between those caught up in a natural disaster.  And after each of the world wars of the twentieth century, the numbers of lodges and consequently of Freemasons increased substantially, testament to the search for fraternal comradeship in their daily lives by men who had experienced it so dramatically in war.  But the answer to Brother Thomas’ question above may be to say that masonic brotherhood transcends danger or necessity, and requires that we exercise the same selfless qualities towards our masonic Brethren in everyday life and in everyday situations.  I should be towards my Brother such a mainstay that my own pillar of strength should mirror his own in any situation in life, whether that situation be a negative or a positive one.  But I believe that, to practise true brotherhood masonically, it is a prerequisite that I first learn to practise it in respect of myself.  Let me explain.
            If I am to achieve the desired close bond of brotherhood with men and women of any group, it requires that I fully understand my Brethren.  And to understand them, to know them, I first have to know myself, to achieve true gnosis as the Greeks call it, most accurately translated as the Act of Knowing.  If I can come to truly know myself, and therefore to understand myself, with all my virtues, vices, merits and failings, then I can begin to validate myself, to acknowledge my uniqueness as a part of the Creation, a part of the Cosmos.  Through this validation, I achieve some measure of self-esteem.  This is neither pride nor prejudice; it is being still at my own centre, and knowing.  ‘Man, know thyself, then thou shalt know the universe’ wrote Pythagoras.  So it is with Brotherhood, since only at that centre of my own being will I be able to look outwards, and be able to esteem my Brother or Sister, to experience their humanity alongside my own.
            In this context, it is also important to understand the principle of tolerance.  In today’s world, in religion as in philosophy, what is true for me may not be that which is true for my Brother.  The plumb-rule, one of the most important symbols in Freemasonry, denotes correctness on many levels, and through that it strives to denote that which is true.  Truth however is elusive.  What was shown to be scientifically true in previous centuries has been superseded by advances in scientific research, and is now no longer true.  It was once deemed impossible for men to explore space.  Advances in material science have superseded that.  On the other hand, a mathematical equation formulated many hundreds of years ago is still true – one has only to think again of Pythagoras.  Our task, as Brethren, is to achieve a ‘fusion point’, where the religious or philosophical truth held by my Brother, a truth mutable or immutable depending on the individual viewpoint, becomes united with that truth held by me.  This has less to do with sacrificing my own strongly-held beliefs than with acknowledging the parallel truth of the belief held by my Brother.  Correctness is transitory – truth ought to be absolute, and brotherhood rests on us being tolerant of many truths.  When a person comes to a lodge for initiation, he is basically saying ‘I am going to be your Brother, and you will be my Brethren’, a commitment as basic and profound as any that can be made by a human being.  It is the oneness extolled by Buddhism.  But the tolerance required to do this to perfection is not a passive tolerance.  We are required to practise tolerance actively, in making sure that the brotherhood is all-inclusive.  In a lodge I visited there was a very disputatious Brother.  One of the members expressed the view that this Brother had been sent to us, in order to test our tolerance.
            Let me give you an example of how tolerance can be engendered by close companionship.  There was an offensive confrontation some years ago in Belfast, in an area where a catholic school is situated in a predominantly protestant area.  At that time, for the catholic mothers to take their children to school in the morning, they had to run a gauntlet of hostile protestants, shouting abuse and menacing them, adults and children alike, shameful behaviour by any standards.  Some time later, a television company, in the ‘reality television’ now so popular, devised a programme in which adults from both sides of the sectarian divide in Belfast spent some time, outside Ireland, camping in a desolate and mountainous area, where they had to come to terms with their primitive surroundings.  This environment required that they all worked together in some sort of harmony, without which their day-to-day endurance would not have been possible.  The participants were obliged to cooperate in all their activities, simply to ensure survival.  They were subjected to the severest tests of fortitude and inner strength.  Among them were two mothers – one a parent of a child at that school, the other a mother who had shouted abuse.  These two had come on the programme in ignorance of each other’s part in that episode, but as their relationship to each other slowly developed, they became aware of their previous confrontation, and began to learn to accommodate their differences.  They had begun better to understand the sterile ‘blame culture’, that barren landscape lying between, and alienating them from, each other.  Towards the end of the programme, these two women were teamed together in an abseiling exercise, the protestant woman suspended over a very frightening sheer rock-face, paralysed by fear.  The catholic woman, her former antagonist, paid out the rope from the top and, to encourage the other, called out the words we all long to hear from time to time when we feel abandoned or helpless, the words which resonate to us from the memories of our mother in our childhood.  ‘Trust me,’ she said,  ‘I won’t let you fall’, among the most evocative words one human being can speak to another, spoken here by a woman to her former enemy.  This was active tolerance at its best, in extreme circumstances. 
            Mutuality without tolerance is an unstable building.  Mutuality requires not only physical closeness, but closeness of spirit, impossible if tolerance is missing.  The verb ‘tolerate’ is of course latin in origin, meaning ‘bear’, ‘carry’ or ‘support’.  This aspect of mutuality is illustrated by Laurence Dermott, the first Grand Secretary of the ‘Antients’ Grand Lodge, who wrote in his seminal work Ahiman Rezon 
            For human society cannot subsist without concord, and the
            maintenance of good offices; for, like the working of an arch
            of stone, it would fall to the ground provided one piece did
            not properly support another. 
            The integrity of such an arch is often said to depend on the keystone, but in fact its integrity depends on every stone, the smallest and the newest, together with the largest and the most important.  It is of course in this respect like a chain, whose efficacy depends on every constituent link, and not only those links perceived as the strongest or most important.  This is what we mean when we speak of equality among Brethren.
            At the time when I was initiated into Freemasonry, it was commonplace for the senior members of the lodge to say, with a certain amount of self-importance, ‘When you have been in Freemasonry as long as I have, you will be qualified to express a view on it’.  The implication was, that I should simply listen and learn, and not say too much.  That is, of course, not a valid standpoint, however much humility is needed.  There is a tendency in some masonic jurisdictions for masonic rank to play a large part in our activities.  Grand Rank awarded as an active, administrative rank, awarded in respect of merit or achievement, is necessary and laudable, but the awarding of past ranks in profusion can only lead to corrosion of brotherhood.  One younger Brother ironically described this aspect to me as ‘masonic graffiti’.  The joy of hermetic thought was that the teacher taught, and the student in time became himself a teacher, qualified to teach others.  This did not place him on a higher plane, and those who do so place themselves, are hindering themselves on their masonic journey, since the equality we experience as Brethren is what makes the journey possible.
            In today’s world, I hope to learn from a new aspirant as much as, or more than, he may learn from me.  It is true that I can instruct him in the form of ritual, allegory and symbol of which he may not yet be aware.  But if I fail to take note of how he invests those forms with his own unique interpretation, I shall be the loser, and Freemasonry will lose not only its diversity, but its vitality as well.  From this it follows that, as a member of my lodge, however ‘experienced’ I may be, I am dependant on the most newly-initiated Brother.  This is true.  If I claim, as some do, that I have nothing to learn from a new, ‘inexperienced’ Freemason, then I am making a grave mistake, for myself as well as for the Brotherhood.
            But central to all of this is the notion that I must first attend to my own moral progress.  A manuscript was discovered in 1696 in the Bodleian Library in Oxford, setting out the purported examination of a member of the masonic fraternity by King Henry VI: 
            Do Masons love one another mightily as is said?
            Yes, verily; and that cannot be otherwise, for the better men are,
            the more they love one another. 
            And can we come nearer to understanding the nature of this brotherly love?  Many masonic jurisdictions world wide lay great stress on the practice of charity to those in need, a charity which most often expresses itself by financial assistance.  In those jurisdictions Freemasons of course also support those of their own members who need assistance, often believing that the exercise of brotherly love requires no more.  The brotherhood of Freemasons, to be perfectively effective, does require more.  It requires the seizing, daily, of opportunities to cultivate a spirit of true brotherhood in those ways that do not involve financial assistance, by lightening a Brother’s burden, by gladdening his heart, by gentle words of encouragement.
            Paradoxically, although the pursuit of self-knowledge and moral progress and development is an individual pursuit, to engage in it within a group such as a lodge  or other masonic fraternity, increases its effectiveness, as though the force of the whole is greater than the sum of its several parts.  It is as though each member of the group acts as a catalyst for the transforming power of  Freemasonry for all of his Brethren.  It is this that truly sets Freemasonry apart from other fraternal pursuits, and this is possibly the best answer to Brother Thomas’ quotation cited at the beginning.
            If the pursuit of brotherhood with my Brethren requires first a pursuit of that brotherhood, that humanity, which is individual to me, then I need to look at that centre from which that humanity springs, the centre within myself.  I am reminded that different jurisdictions in Freemasonry use different words for this centre, if not different concepts.  For too long, the question of belief in a Supreme Being has tragically divided Freemasons, when it is indeed that essence which ought to unite.  How does my new-made Brother view his own humanity and his place in the cosmos?  In my own masonic jurisdiction, a belief in a Supreme Being is a sine qua non of membership, an immutable condition.  An aspirant came before my lodge committee for interview, and was asked if he had such a belief.  After a long pause, he said ‘It depends what you mean by “believe”’.  He told me afterwards, without irony, that it was like asking if a wave believed in the sea.  He regarded himself as a part of the Creation.  How should he question, therefore, the very life-force of which he was himself a part? 
            I believe that, in this sense, Brethren from different jurisdictions, so-called believers and so-called unbelievers, might like to examine this question in a common discourse.  We might like to consider whether it is simply language that divides us.  Pierre Mollier, Grand Librarian of the Grand Orient of France, remembers a senior member of the Grand Orient saying to him, ‘Pour le Grand Orient, le vrai athéisme n’existe pas’, and if we can, collectively, come to acknowledge the spark of Being – divinity or humanity –  within ourselves, we will already have made a great leap forward.  Brotherhood, I believe, requires that, in the process of validating each other’s humanity in the way I have spoken about, we seek out that spark in our Brother which does make him unique and estimable.
            We call ourselves Free-Masons.  In the same way that we need air to breathe, we need to be free, and that freedom exists, for Freemasons, on so many levels.  It can be freedom of conscience, freedom of thought, freedom from dogma, freedom of positive purpose, freedom of speech, freedom from political or ideological coercion.  I believe there is another freedom, perhaps the most important of them all, and that is, the freedom to serve our Brethren.  According to tradition, there was supposed to be an inscription on the Round Table of King Arthur which read: 
            In seeking to serve others, we become free.

THE EARLIEST USE OF THE WORD 'FREEMASONS'


 by Dr ANDREW PRESCOTT

First published in the Yearbook of the Grand Lodge of Scotland, 2004.

It has hitherto been thought that the earliest appearance of the English word ‘freemason’ was in 1376. At the symposium organised by Lodge Hope of Kurrachee No. 337 at Kirkcaldy in May 2003, Professor Andrew Prescott, Director of the Centre for Research into Freemasonry, University of Sheffield, drew attention to some earlier records of the word. This is the relevant section of his address at Kirkcaldy.
 
It is commonly assumed that the stonemasons of the middle ages are obscure, anonymous people who have escaped the historical record, but medieval administrative records, such as building accounts, contain an enormous amount of information about stonemasons and their craft. For example, the journal of the clerk of the works at Eton for 1444-5 records the name of every stonemason, carpenter, dauber, smith and labourer employed on the works, and gives details of the hours worked by each man. These records are usually in Latin or French. The general Latin terms used for stonemasons were cementarius or lathomus. The French word masoun, usually spelt mazon, first appears in the twelfth century. There were many different grades and specialisms among the stonemasons, and these were described either by qualifying the general word for stonemason, so that the Eton records refer to lathomos vocati hardehewers (the stonemasons known as hardhewers), or by the use of specialist words, such as the Latin cubitores for cutters or imaginatores for image makers.
 
The freemasons were such a specialist grade of stonemason, who specialised in the carving of freestone, which was, in the words of Douglas Knoop and Gwilym Jones, ‘the name given to any fine-grained sandstone or limestone that can be freely worked in any direction and sawn with a toothed saw’. Freestone was used for the decoration of capitals and cornices, the cutting of tracery, and the carving of images and gargoyles. The London Assize of Wages of 1212 refers in Latin to sculptores lapidum liberorum (sculptors of freestone). The Statute of Labourers of 1351, which attempted to regulate wages and contracts in the wake of the labour shortage caused by the Black Death, uses an equivalent French term: mestre meson de franche peer (master mason of freestone). Freemasons as a distinct grade of stonemasons can thus be traced back to the early thirteenth century, but for today’s Free and Accepted Masons, there is naturally a particular interest in trying to locate the first appearance of the word ‘freemason’ in English.
 
In 1376, John of Northampton was elected Mayor of London. Northampton was determined to break the hold of the existing merchant oligarchy on London’s government and to give less wealthy citizens a greater voice in the city’s affairs. One means by which he sought to do this was by changing the method of electing the city’s common council. It was ordained the councillors should henceforth be nominated by particular trades in the city rather than by wards. The nominations made by the various crafts to the common council in 1376 are recorded in two of the city’s official records, the Plea and Memoranda Rolls and the London Letter Books (the relevant volume is the one designated by the letter ‘H’). Four representatives of the stonemasons were nominated to the common council: Thomas Wrek, John Lesnes, John Artelburgh and Robert Henwick. In the Plea and Memoranda Roll, they are described as ‘masons’. In the Letter Book they were at first described as ‘freemasons’, but this word has been struck through by the scribe and replaced with the word ‘masons’. This has hitherto been the earliest identified appearance of the word in English. Probably the alteration was the result of scribal error, but in the politically charged atmosphere of Northampton’s mayoralty the change may have been more significant, perhaps suggesting that the representatives were originally been drawn from a particular group of stonemasons.
 
However, the word ‘freemason’ also appears in the records of the Corporation of London much earlier in the fourteenth century. The coroners’ rolls of the city contain an account of an escape from Newgate prison in 1325. This is summarised in the Calendar of the Coroners’ Rolls of the City of London, 1300-1378, edited by Reginald Sharpe and published in 1913 (pp. 130-1). The coroner and sheriffs of the city held an inquiry into the gaol break. Jurors from the wards of Farringdon, Castle Baynard, Bread Street and Aldgate, stated that on 8 September 1325, at about midnight, Adam Nouneman of Hockcliffe in Bedfordshire, John Gommere, Robert de Molseleye, John de Elme, Alan Mariot and John de Parys, Stephen de Keleseye, William le Soutere, Walter, son of Beatrice Gomme, and John Bedewynde escaped through a hole in the western wall of Newgate prison. Some of the prisoners were recaptured, but others sought sanctuary in the churches of St Sepulchre’s church near Newgate and St Bride’s in Fleet Street. The jurors also declared that the escaped prisoners were assisted by various men, presumably also at that prisoners in Newgate. Those who abetted the escape were said to have included one Nicholas le Freemason. Convicted criminals were at that time allowed to escape punishment provided they agreed to leave the kingdom and live abroad. Four of those involved in this prison escape duly left the country from Dover and Southampton, but there is no record of what happened to Nicholas le Freemason.
 
We cannot by any means be sure that this is the earliest appearance of the English word ‘freemason’. The word almost certainly appears somewhere else, hidden away in the great mass of unpublished medieval administrative records which remain largely unexplored by masonic scholars. Moreover, Nicholas’s name may represent a French form of the word ‘freemason’, and this illustrates the difficulty in firmly identifying the earliest English use of the word. We are on slightly firmer ground with literary texts, and at least one medieval English poem dating from before 1376 contains the word ‘freemason’.
 
The romance Floris and Blancheflour is in Middle English, but was probably adapted from a French original sometime between 1250 and 1300. It is a good example of the kind of literary entertainment which was extremely popular among well-off people in medieval England. A Christian lady was captured by the Saracens in Spain who made her a lady-in-waiting to their queen. The Queen and the lady-in-waiting both have babies on the same day. The Saracen queen has a boy named Floris (flower) and the Christian lady a girl named Blancheflour (white flower).  The children were brought up together, but the King, disturbed by their love for one another, decided that they should be separated. Blancheflour was sold as a slave, and was bought by an emir in Babylon who intended to marry her. Floris travels to Babylon to seek his love. Arriving at Babylon, Floris is told by Daris, the keeper of the bridge into the city, that Blauncheflour is kept in a high tower in the city, and that the emir would soon claim her as a wife. Daris describes the tower as follows (the following modern version of the text is by Professor Peter Baker of the University of Virginia):
 
It is a hundred fathoms high; whoever beholds it from far or near can see that it is a hundred fathoms altogether. Without an equal, it is made of limestone and marble; there’s not another such place in all the world. The mortar is made so well that neither iron nor steel can break it. The finial placed above is made with such pride that one has no need to burn a torch or lantern in the tower: the finial that was set there shines at night like the sun. Now there are forty two noble bowers in that tower; the man who could dwell in one of them would be happy, for he would never need to long for greater bliss.
 
Floris is perplexed and distressed, and begs Daris for advice as to how he can reach Blauncheflour in the impentrable tower. Daris is ready with a plan:
 
Dear son, you have done well to place your trust in me. The best advice I know – and I know no other advice – is to go to the tower tomorrow as if you were a good craftsman. Take the square and measure in  your hand as if you were a freemason (‘Take on þy honde squyer and scantlon, As þow were a free mason’). Look up and down the tower. The porter is cruel and villainous; he’ll come to you immediately and ask what kind of man you are and accuse you of some crime, claiming you to be a spy. And you will answer sweetly and mildly and say to him that you are a craftsman come to look at the beautiful tower, meaning to make one like it in your land.
 
The scheme works, and Floris and Blauncheflour are reunited. After many further trials and tribulations, in which the couple are threatened with beheading and death by fire, there is the inevitable happy ending, with the couple marrying and Blauncheflour becoming Floris’s queen after the death of his father.
 
Thus Floris and Blancheflour contains an English reference to a freemason which apparently dates from the late thirteenth century. Inevitably, however, the textual situation is more complicated than it appears at first sight, and the word freemason may perhaps have been added to the poem sometime during the fourteenth century. One of the earliest surviving copies of this poem is in the Auchinleck manuscript, one of the great treasures of the National Library of Scotland (a digital facsimile and edition of which is now available on the National Library’s website). The Auchinleck manuscript dates from the 1330s. In this copy of Floris and Blancheflour, the word mason is used rather than freemason:
 
And nim in þin hond squir and scantiloun
Als þai þou were a masoun;
 
The most complete copy of the poem is in British Library, Egerton MS. 2862, a manuscript which previously belonged to George Granville Leveson Gower, 2nd  Duke of  Sutherland and dates from the late fourteenth century. Here the word ‘free mason’ is used, rather than mason. This suggests that the term freemason did not appear in the thirteenth century text of Floris and Blauncheflour, but was only inserted in the poem sometime after 1330. In order to establish the exact circumstances of the appearance of the word ‘freemason’ in Floris and Blauncheflour, further investigation of the textual and manuscript traditions of this poem is necessary.