
THE DUNDEE MANUSCRIPT 1727
THE
MASON'S CONFESSION
commonly called
THE DUNDEE MANUSCRIPT
attributed to the year 1727
Transcribed from the Scots Magazine
for March, 1755. vol.xvii. pp 132-7
The Scots Magazine MDCCLV Volume
XVII.
Ne quid falsi dicere audient. ne quid veri
non audeat.
Edinburgh; Printed by Sands, Donaldson,
Murray and Cochran.
To the author of the Scots Magazine.
SIR.
Some time ago a Mason living at a
considerable distance from me, whom I knew
to have the character of a sensible and
religious man, sent me a long paper, all of
his own handwriting, and subscribed by him;
in which he makes a confession of the oath
word, and other secrets of his craft. When
he wrote that paper, and for a good time
before, he was confined by bodily distress;
and he represents his having been brought
under a conviction of whole affair as a
mystery of iniquity. His narrative is
intermixed with reasonings from many texts
of scripture, and otherwise, about the
iniquity of the matter. He considers the
oath as profane and abominable, what was
sinful for him to take and sinful to keep;
he treats of all the secrets which are
therein sworn to, as a compund of
superstitious ceremonies, lyes, and idle
nonsense; and he renounces the whole as a
horrid wickedness. At the same time, he
urges me to publish the paper for the
conviction of persons engaged in that oath,
and for warning others to beware of the
snare; allowing me to discover his name, his
place of abode and the Lodge he belonged to.
However, I have only drawn out his
narrative, which I here offer you, in his
own words, for a place in your Magazine;
leaving the world to judge of the matter as
they please.
He informs me that the account he gives is
only of what he himself was taught,
according to the usage of the Lodge in which
he entered; without regard to some
circumstantial variations which may take
place in some other lodges, while they agree
in substance. And indeed an absolute
uniformity among them cannot be supposed,
if, according to what follows, the whole
affair must be committed only to their
memories, and share in the common fate of
oral traditions.
A mason's
confession of the oath, word and other
secrets of his craft.
These are to testify, concerning that oath,
word and other secrets held among the
corporation of masons; wherein I was taken
under the same, by sundry of them gathered
together and met at D about the year 1727.
Concerning the Oath
After one comes in at the door, he that
keeps the door, looses the garter of his
right-leg stocking, folds up the knee of his
breeches, and requires him to deliver any
metal thing he has upon him. He is made to
kneel on the right knee, bare; then the
square is put three times round his body and
applied to his breast, the open compasses
pointed to his breast, and his bare elbow on
the Bible with his hand lifted up; and he
swears, "As I shall answer before God at the
great day, and this Company, I shall heal
and conceal, or not divulge and make known
the secrets of the Mason-word, (Here one is
taken bound, not to write them on paper,
parchment, timber, stone, sand, snow, &c.)
under the pain of having my tongue taken out
from beneath my chowks, and my heart out
from beneath my left oxter, and my body
buried within the sea-mark, where it ebbs
and flows twice in the twenty four hours."
Immediately after that oath, the
administrator of it says, "You sat down a
cowan, I take you up a mason." -- when I was
taken under that oath, I knew not what these
secrets were which I was not to divulge,
having had no information before. One person
in the Lodge instructed me a little about
their secrets the same day that I entered,
and was called my author; and another person
in the Lodge, whom I then chused to be my
instructor till that time twelve-month, many
called my intender; ---- There is a yearly
imposing of that oath in admissions among
the said craft through the land on John's
day, as it is termed, being the 27th of
December.
Concerning the word.
After the oath, a word in the scriptures was
shown me, which, said one, is the mason-word.
The word is in I Kings vii,21. They say Boas
is the mason-word, and Jachin a fellow-craft-word.
The former is shewn to an entered apprentice
after he has sworn the oath; and the latter
is shewn to one that has been a prentice at
least for a year, when he is admitted to a
higher degree in their lodge, after he has
sworn the oath again, or declared his
approbation of it.
Concerning the other secrets
I shall next shew a cluster of different
sorts of their secrets.
First, then, three chalk lines being drawn
on the floor, about an equal distance, as at
A.B and C: the master of the Lodge stands at
P., and the fellow-crafts, with the wardens
and entered apprentices, on the
master-mason's left hand at ff and the last
entered apprentice at
p. P.
A.a
B. b
C. c
ff. R.
says the master, "Come forward". says the
prentice "I wot not gin I may." says the
master, "Come forward, warrant you." no
coming over the line with one foot, while he
sets the other square off at a. he lays the
right hand near the left shoulder, and says,
"Good day, gentlemen."
Coming over the second line with one foot,
while he sets the other square off at b. ,
he lays the right hand on the left side and
says, "God be here". Coming over the third
line with one foot, while he sets the other
square off at c. he lays the right hand on
the right knee and says, "God bless all the
honourable brethren". N.B. as the square was
put thrice about his body when on the bare
knee, so he comes over these lines setting
his feet thrice in the form of a square.
question. What say you? answer. Here stand
I. (with his feet in the form of a square)
younger and last entered apprentice. ready
to serve my master from the Monday morning
to the Saturday night, in all lawful
employments.
Q. Who made you a mason? A. God Almighty, a
holy will made me a mason; nineteen fellow-crafts
and thirteen entered prentices made me a
mason. N.B. To the best of my remembrance
the whole lodge present did not exceed
twenty persons; but so I was taught to
answer which I can give no reason for.
Q. Where's your master? A. He's not so far
off but he may be found. Then if the square
be at hand, it is offered on the stone at
which they are working; and if not, the feet
are set in the form of a square as before
shewed, being the posture he stands in while
he repeats his secrets and so the square is
acknowledged to be master, both by tongue
and feet.
Q. How set you the square? A. on two irons
in the wall; if two will not three will; and
that makes both square and level.
N.B. If they ca, in two irons above and one
below, it makes a kind of both square and
level; though ordinarily they ca, in but
one. And the reason it is said set square
and not to hang it is They're not to hang
their master.
Q. What's a mason? A. He's a mason that's a
mason born, a mason sworn and a mason by
trade.
Q. Where keep you the key of your lodge? A.
Between my tongue and my teeth, and under
alap of my liver, where all the secrets of
my heart lies; for if I tell anything in the
lodge, my tongue is to be taken out from
beneath my chowks and my heart out from
beneath my left oxter, and my body to be
buried within the sea-mark, where it ebbs
and flows twice within the twenty-four hours.
Q. What's the key of your lodge? A. A well
hung tongue. Q. Are you a mason? A. Yes. Q.
How shall I know that? A. By signs, tokens
and the points of my entry.
Master Shew me one of these.
Prentice. Shew me the first and I'll shew
you the second.
So the master gives him the sign., with the
left hand up the side. P. Heal and conceal.
N.B. The token or grip is by laying the ball
of the thumb of the right hand upon the
first or uppermost knuckle of the second
finger from the thumb of the other's right
hand.
Q. How many points are there in the word? A.
Five.
Q. What are these five? A. The word is one,
the sign is two, the grip is three, the
penalty is four and heal and conceal is
five.
Q. Where was you entered? A. In a just and
perfect lodge.
Q. What makes a just and perfect lodge? A.
Five fellowcrafts, and seven entered
apprentices.
N.B. They do not restrict themselves to this
number, though they mention it in form of
questions but will do the thing with fewer.
Q. Where should the mason-word be given? A.
On the top of a mountain, from the crow of a
cock, the bark of dog, or the turtle of a
dove.
Q. How many points are there in the square?
A. Five.
Q. What are these five? A. The square, our
master, under God, is one; The level, a two,
the plumb rule, a three, the hand-ruler four
and the gage is five.
The day that a prentice comes under oath, he
gets his choice of a mark to be put upon his
tools by which to discern them, so did I
chuse this, (The figure is in the MS.) which
cost one mark Scots. Hereby one is taught to
say to such as ask the question, where got
you this mark? A. I laid down one and took
up another.
If one should come to a mason working at a
stone, and say, "That stone lies Boss", the
prentice is taught to answer, "It is not so
Bass but it may be filled up again." or "It
is not so boss as your head would be if your
harms were out."
Q. When doth mason wear his flower? A.
Between Martinmas and Yule.
Q. What is mason's livery? A. A yellow cap
and Blue breeches meaning the compasses.
Q. How many Jewels are there in your lodge?
A. Three.
Q. What are these three? A. A square
pavement, a dinted ashlar, and a broached
dornal.
Q. What's the square pavement for? A. For a
master-mason to draw his ground draughts on.
Q. What's the dinted ashlar for? A. To
adjust the square.
Q. What's the broached dornal for? A. For
me, the younger and last-entered prentice to
learn to broach upon.
Q. How high should a mason's seige be? A.
Two steeples, a back, and a cover, knee-high
all together.
N.B. One is taught, that the cowans stage is
build up of whin stones, that it may soon
tumble down again; and it stands half out in
the lodge, that his neck may be under the
drop in rainy weather to come in at his
shoulders and run out at his shoes.
Q. Where lies the cappel-tow? A. Eighteen or
nineteen foot and a half from the lodge door;
and at the end of it lies the cavell-mell,
to dress the stones with.
---
N.B. There is no such thing among them as a
cappel-tow.
Q. Where place ye in the lodge? A. On the
sunny side of a hill, that the sun may
ascend on't when it rises.
-----
N.B. A lodge is a place where masons
assemble and work, Hence that assembly or
society of masons is called a lodge.
Q. How stands your lodge? A. East and West,
as kirks and chapels did of old.
Q.Why so? A. Because they are holy; and so
we ought to be.
Q. How many lights are there in your lodge?
A. Three.
Q. What are these three? A. The south-east,
south and south-west.
Q.How many levels are there in your lodge?
A. Three.
Q. What are these three? A. The sun, the sea
and the level.
N.B. I can give no reason why the sun and
the sea are called two of their levels, but
so they will have it.
To be particular in shewing how the master-mason
stands at the south-east corner of the lodge,
and the fellow-crafts next to him, and next
to them the wardens, and next the entered
prentices, and how their seiges stand
distant from another, and the tools they
work with, is not worth while.
Q. Where lay you the key of your lodge? A.
Two feet from the lodge door, beneath a
green divot.
N.B. This is meant of their oath under which
the secrets of the lodge are hid from the
drop; that is from the un-entered prentice,
or any others not of their society, whom
they call drops.
Q. How long should a prentice wear his shirt?
A. Till there be nine knots in it; three up
the back, and three down each arm.
There are likewise various other signs,
which they distinguish or discern themselves
by. As, if one were in a company, and to
send for another mason, he does it by
sending a piece of paper, with a square
folded in at the corner, and suppose he
squeese it in his hand, when it is opened
out, the mark where the square point was
folded in, is the thing that's noticed. Or,
if he send his glove, then the square put on
the first knuckle of the second finger, with
the thumb nail, or some other thing.
To find another by drinking, one says,
"Drink". The other answers "No". He saith
the second time, "Drink". The other answers,
"After you is good manners" Again he saith
"Drink I warrant you". And then he takes it.
Coming to a house where masons may be, he is
to knowck three knocks on the door, a lesser,
a more, a more. One gives the sign of the
right hand up the left side; or if riding,
he is to strike the horse over the left
shoulder. If in a land where their language
is not known, he is to kneel with one knee,
holding up his hand before the masons.
If one coming into a company, wants to know
whether there be a mason in the same; as he
comes in, he makes himself to stumble, and
says, "The days for seeing, the night's for
hearing; God be thanked we all have our
formal mercies. "There is no difference
between a dun cow and a dun humble cow."
Then, if a mason be in the company, he says,
"What says the fellow? He answers, "I say
nothing but what I may say again. There is
no difference between a dun cow and a dun
humble cow."
A mason's horse is found out among others by
the left foot stirrup being laid up.
To know if one or more masons be in a
company which one meets on the way, he says,
"Who walks". Then, if one be there, he says,
"A man walks." If more be there the answer
is "Men walk" Then says he "Good men and
masters met you be: God bless all your
company." Or he gives the sign, by the right
hand above the breast, which is call the
fellow-crafts due guard. and the grip, by
clasping his fingers at the wrist, next at
the elbow; or placing himself hand to hand,
foot to foot, knee to knee, ear to ear and
says "Great you, great you, God greateth you,
and make you a good master-mason: I'm a
young man going to push my fortune; If you
can furnish me you will do well."
I shall now give an account of what they
call the Monday's lesson. ---- When the
prentice comes to his master's kitchen-door,
he is to knock three knocks; a lesser, a
more and a more. If none answers, he is to
lift the sneck, and go in and wash the
dishes and sweep the house.
Q. How far is the prentice to carry off the
ashes? A. As far off until he see the smoke
come out of the chimney head.
After that he goes to his master's chamber
door, and knocks three knocks; a lesser, a
more, and a more and says, "Master are you
waking? If he answer, "Not so sound but what
I may be wakened." then he goes in. His
master asks him "What's a morn is it? He
answers, "It is a fair morning; the wind's
in the west, and the sun's in the east' past
five, going six." His master says, "Who told
you that?" The prentice answers, "he met
with a hather man" "Ay (says his master),
sorrow is ay soon up at the morn.
Q. How doth the prentice give his master his
shirt? A. He gives it with the left sleeve
foremost, and the neck of it next to him,
with the breast of it upermost, in readiness
to put on. In like manner he gives him the
rest of his cloaths. After that , he gives
him water to wash himself; then he offers
him a cloth to dry himself; he will not have
that; he offers him his shirt-tail; he will
not have that; then he bids him do his next
best. After that he follows his master up
street, down street, with his right foot at
his master, a left, sword point, within
stroke of a nine inch gage till he come
within sixteen feet and an half of the lodge-door,
there he prentice leaves him. And he goes to
sort up the lodge, and put the things in
order; after which, he calls in the men to
work.
And this is the amount of that inventer
matter; or all I can remember that is
material in it.
P.S. There was printed, in the year 1747
(ix.404) A protestation and declinature from
the society of Operative masons in the lodge
at Torphichen, to meet at Livingston kirk.
Dec 27, 1739: subscribed, of that dat, at
Kirknewton, by James Chrystie: with a
subscribed adherence, at the same place of
the same date, by James Aikman, Andrew
Purdie and John Chrystie: and with another
subscribed adherence, at Dalkeith, July 27,
1747, by John Miller.
In that paper, they renounce the mason-oath,
as finding the same "sinful and unlawful".
both as to its matter and form, and
therefore not binding upon their
conscience." They declare, that it is
imposed and administered, "With such rites:,
ceremonies and circumstances as are in
themselves sinful and unwarrantable and a
symbolising with idolaters; such as;
kneeling upon their bare knees, and the
naked arm upon the Bible;" --- That "it is
and must be to intrant be sworn rashly;
without allowing a copy of the said oath and
time duly and deliberately to consider the
lawfulness of it; the matter thereof, or
things, sworn to therein, never being under
their serious consideration previous to the
swearing of that oath; seeing the person
swearing knows what he is swearing to;" --
That they "do look upon the dreadful
wickedness, superstition, idolatory,
blasphemy and profanation of the name and
ordinance of God, which is contained in and
annexed to that oath, altogether unbecoming
the name and professions of Christians; by
the which unlawful means of secrecy, many
are rashly and inconsiderately precipitated
and slily drawn into that sinful confederacy
and wickedness above said, ere ever they can
be aware of it." --- What "it is an
appending the seal of a solemn oath,
containing horrid, dreadful and uncommon
imprecations, to a blank, yea to worse, to
ridiculous nonsense and superstition:
nonsense, (and that with this aggravation,
of profaning the sacred scriptures, by
intermixing them therewith), only fit for
the amusement of children in a
winter-evening; most of the secrets being
idle stuff or lyes, and other parts of it
superstitions, only becoming heathens and
idolaters." -- Moreover, they declare, that
the secrecy is broke and disclosed, by "what
is already published to the world in print;
concerning which, (they say) there have been
many lyes and equivocations, in denying the
same, though they contain in the substance
of the mystery.