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- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!news.Brown.EDU!news.Brown.EDU!news
- From: SL500000@brownvm.brown.edu (Robert Mathiesen)
- Newsgroups: alt.pagan
- Subject: Re: Documented Evidence
- Date: Fri, 1 Jan 1993 15:57:03 EST
- Organization: Brown University - Providence, Rhode Island USA
- Lines: 56
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1i2b79INNvr@cat.cis.Brown.EDU>
- References: <1i24m7INNrk8@cat.cis.Brown.EDU> <9301011509.AA20770@chaos.intercon.com>
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-
- The key, I think, to keeping a family tradition alive is precisely a will-
- ingness to be different -- you've put your finger right on it, Amanda!
-
- The one and only *text* handed down in my family is one sentence long, as
- follows: "Mathiesens [or whatever the current last name is] are different!"
- There's a handed-down gloss as well: "This means not just different from
- other families, but also different from each other, too. Find your own way
- to be different." This is the only thing I really made a great effort to
- pass on to my own children, and it took with both of them. Everything else
- is technique or technology, and anything that works can never be lost for-
- ever. You can always rediscover it for yourself. It's only the stuff that
- doesn't work that can get lost once and for all time. Maybe that's as it
- should be. (Values and interests are another matter, of course; but they're
- harder to suppress.)
-
- My wife's family did it not with a *text* about being different,
- but with a passed-on sense that they were Jordans (the last name) and
- that this entailed an obligation to care about the family's past, and
- specifically about the inherited papers. All other descendants of my
- wife's great great grandfather whom we have met share this trait, and
- all have parts of the family documentation, which they value highly.
- They are all trading xerocopies back and forth now, and my wife is
- putting the whole corpus on line. Pretty soon everyone will have it
- all.
-
- Your words about your own family are eloquent beyond any need for me to
- add comments of my own. One thing only: if your family had Masonic
- connections and was in the Old South during 1850-1900, almost certainly
- any fondness for esoteric interests would have led them to explore
- General Albert Pike's version of Scottish Rite Masonry (Southern
- Jurisdiction).
-
- Now Pike wrote a lot, and there are also a few biographies of him. The
- biographers are all embarrassed by his esoteric interests and keep
- resolutely silent about them, or misrepresent them as merely scholarly
- excursions into comparative religions; but they will give you the titles
- of his books, which you can then find and read for yourself. His best-
- known work has a title something like "Morals and Dogmas of Freemasonry,"
- which sounds orthodox and theological, but is no such thing -- a bit of
- protective coloration, I think. This one has been reprinted recently,
- and you can buy your own copy for about $50. (I don't have the exact
- details at hand. Shall I make an effort to find out for you? I'll be
- talking to someone who knows in about a week.) It's about the size of a
- Webster's unabridged, but the print isn't so small, so it will keep your
- hours filled for quite some time.
-
- With the aid of Pike's books you may well be able to restore some of the
- writing that once graced the pages of your family's now empty Book of
- Shadows. Those Masonic emblems on the tombstones may turn out to be highly
- significant indicators of very precise levels of attainment within Pike's
- system.
-
- Good hunting. I'd love to hear how the search progresses over the months and
- years to come. This is important work. -- Robert
-
- (Robert Mathiesen, Brown University, SL500000@BROWNVM)
-