The jewels are important instruments, stones and
equipment that are used
to convey lessons in morality.
The
jewels defined
At
first sight it might seem incongruous to speak of “the jewels of the
lodge”, because in its most common usage jewels are
articles of value used for personal adornment, especially when made of gold or
silver and precious stones, which the Oxford English Dictionary defines as
having been the prevailing usage of the word since 1590. Nevertheless the Oxford
Dictionary provides another definition to supplement the prevailing usage,
noting that since 1672 an ornament worn as the badge of an order, or as a mark
of distinction or honour, also has been called a jewel. In
conclusion, the Oxford Dictionary records that in the Middle English, spoken
from about 1100 to 1500, jewel was used in a figurative sense to
describe a precious thing or person as a “treasure” or a “gem”.
This is the sense intended when referring to “the jewels of the lodge”.
The derivation of the word is interesting, because it originated with the Latin iocus
signifying a plaything or a trinket, then came through the Old French juel
into the Middle English juel, which is jewel in
modern English. In speculative craft lodges operating under most jurisdictions
three movable and three immovable jewels are defined, which the brethren are
exhorted to moralise upon. Those six jewels are the square, the level, the plumb
rule, the rough ashlar, the perfect ashlar and the tracing board.
The
Rev Dr George Oliver (1782-1867) was one of the most eminent writers on
freemasonry in the nineteenth century. In his lectures entitled Signs and
Symbols published in 1837, he said these important instruments, stones
and equipment are called jewels because “they have a moral tendency
which renders them jewels of inestimable value”. It is interesting to
note that the square, the level and the plumb rule are called movable jewels in
English and Scottish lodges, because they are transferred to the incoming master
and his wardens each year, whereas in American lodges they are called immovable,
because the square is assigned to the east of the lodge, the level to the west
and the plumb rule to the south. In English and Scottish lodges the ashlars and
tracing board are described as immovable jewels that “lie open in the
lodge for the brethren to moralise on”. The two ashlars and the
tracing board probably are called immovable because during the early speculative
period they tended to be located in particular parts of the lodge. In particular,
the tracing board was hand drawn on the floor before the commencement of each
meeting. However, in American lodges the same jewels are called movable, because
it is said that they may be placed in any convenient position in the lodge,
which varies from lodge to lodge. In contrast, many if not most Irish lodges do
not have a tracing board.
Having
regard to the allegorical importance assigned to the jewels of the lodge, it is
surprising that the authors of the early speculative rituals did not indicate
what they considered to be the most appropriate positions for the immovable
jewels to be placed in the lodge. Nor has the United Grand Lodge of England ever
issued a ruling on the subject. As a consequence, it is difficult for an
enquiring mason to find definitive answers relating to the placements of the
tracing board and the ashlars. In practice they may be seen in various locations,
which often are only a matter of convenience, but might be traditional in
relation to the particular ritual being worked or the custom in the individual
lodge, district or jurisdiction. Again in his lectures the Rev Dr George Oliver
says in regard to the importance and symbolism of the immovable jewels:
“I
will now call your attention to a Board with a few lines, angles and
perpendiculars designed upon its surface. This is the Tracing Board; and though
it may appear rough and of little use, is yet an immovable jewel and contains a
lesson of inestimable value. This board is for the Master to draw his plans on,
for the direction of his workmen; but its mystic reference is to the great
charter of our religious privileges . . . You have now before you an unhewn
block of marble, rough as when taken from the quarry. This is another immovable
jewel, which points to the infant mind, rough and uncultivated as this stone;
and as the marble can alone can be brought into a definite and useful form by
the skill and judicious management of the expert workman, so the mind can only
be trained to the practice of virtue by the sedulous and insidious instruction,
. . . These reflections lead us to contemplate this stone in another and more
perfect form. It has been under the chisel of the expert workman and now assumes
the shape of a true die square, polished according to art, which can only be
tried by the nice application of the square and compass. The mind of man, after
its previous cultivation and progress through the chequered scenes of good and
evil with which life abounds is here represented.”
Operative
precedents
The
jewels in modern lodges of speculative craft freemasonry have come down to us
from the usages and customs of operative freemasons in earlier times. In
operative lodges a particular stone was used as an emblem in each of the working
degrees. The candidate was told, at an appropriate stage in the ceremony, that
he represented that stone being wrought from its rough hewn condition, as
brought from the quarries, to a state of perfection suitable for erection as a “living
stone” in that most glorious of all Temples, “that house not
made with hands eternal in the heavens”. Each operative degree after
the first also had a representative jewel, which was a miniature representation
of one of the gauges used to test the stone that symbolised the work of the
degree. In operative lodges the ceremonies reflected the various stages in the
preparation, testing and erection of stones in the temple of King Solomon at
Jerusalem, emphasising their purpose and their importance in the structure. The
symbolic teachings also were based on the work carried out to prepare, test and
set up the stones in the structure.
The
several types of stones and the working tools and gauges used in their
preparation, testing and erection, therefore were of particular significance to
the operative freemason. During his progress through the several degrees, the
candidate in a lodge of operative freemasons was tested on the work he had
prepared in the preceding degree, before being instructed in the work and the
use of the gauges in the next degree. When a Fellow of the Craft had proved his
ability to produce perfect ashlar stones, he was entrusted with a word and also
with a sign representing the square, the level and the plumb rule as proof of
his ability, but not as jewels of the degree. The operative degrees beyond that
of a Fellow of the Craft involved special skills, increasing levels of
supervision and additional responsibilities. The several relevant aspects of
these duties were used symbolically to illustrate moral principles, especially
those relating to the proper modes of conduct that should be followed in public
and private life.
A
Fellow of the Craft in operative freemasonry was a master mason in respect of
his capabilities, but the title of Master Mason was usually reserved for the
mason who had overall responsibility for a job. The Master Mason frequently was
the chief officer of a lodge carrying out work under day labour in England, or
the proprietor of a lodge carrying out work under contract in Scotland. Some of
these operative aspects are reflected in the degrees of other branches of
freemasonry, for which membership of a speculative craft lodge is a prerequisite.
However, the direct relationship between the purpose for which a particular
stone is used and its symbolic meaning no longer has a significant role in the
work of speculative craft freemasonry. Nor does each of the speculative craft
degrees have a jewel like that of the equivalent operative degree.
The
jewels of office worn by the master and wardens in modern lodges of speculative
craft freemasonry are derived from the insignia of office worn by their
counterparts in the old operative lodges, except that the squares are different.
In operative lodges the master’s insignia was a gallows square with arms three
units and four units long, whereas in speculative lodges nowadays the master’s
jewel is a try square with arms of equal length. It might seem to be an anomaly
that the implements called movable jewels in speculative lodges, which are the
square, the level and the plumb rule, are the working tools of a speculative
Fellowcraft Freemason. However, in this context it should be remembered that in
operative lodges a Fellow of the Craft was a fully qualified tradesman and a
master of his craft, who was required to be proficient in the use of those tools.
It also is important not to overlook the fact that possibly from as early as
1745, but certainly from no later than 1760, the square has been included as one
of the three great lights in freemasonry, which must always be
open on the pedestal whilst a lodge is at labour in speculative craft
freemasonry. In a speculative lodge those three great lights are
drawn to the candidate’s attention immediately after he has been obligated as
an Entered Apprentice. The other two great lights are the Volume
of the Sacred Law and a pair of compasses. When the lodge is at labour, the
compasses with its legs extended are placed over the square on the open book.
The square and compasses thus combined undoubtedly would be one of the
best-known emblems of freemasonry.
In
lodges of operative freemasons the rough ashlar typified an Apprentice and the
perfect ashlar typified a Fellow of the Craft. On his entrance, a candidate for
admission to the craft was placed in the northeast corner of the lodge. Later,
Apprentices seeking advancement also stood in the northeast corner, but suitably
qualified Fellow of the Craft seeking promotion stood in the southeast corner.
This is why Apprentices and Fellowcrafts in speculative freemasonry are seated
in the northeast and southeast corners of the lodge respectively. It also is why
the rough and perfect ashlars are often placed in the northeast and southeast
corners of speculative lodges, although sometimes they are placed in front of or
adjacent to the Junior and Senior Wardens respectively. In some constitutions
the jewels of the deacons also are derived from operative practice, for example
the maul of the Senior Deacon and the trowel of the Junior Deacon in Scottish
lodges.
Early
speculative jewels
One
of the earliest known references to the jewels of a freemason’s lodge is to be
found in records connected with operative freemasonry in Scotland. In the Edinburgh
Register House MS dated 1696, which has been endorsed with the title “Some
Questions Anent the Mason Word”, there is a catechism which sets out
fifteen questions that must be put to a mason who claims to have the Word,
as well as the answers he was required to give before he could be acknowledged
as a mason. To the question: “Are there jewells in your lodge?”
the reply was: “Yes three, perpend esler, a square pavement and a broad
ovall.” Every freemason should be familiar with the square pavement,
but not all freemasons may know the other two jewels.
The
perpend esler or ashlar is an important stone used
in the construction of masonry walls, but it is not the perfect ashlar stone
required to be produced by a Fellow of the Craft as a test piece in operative
lodges. Nevertheless the early speculative freemasons called it a perfect
ashlar, possibly mistaking perpend for perfect.
In speculative lodges the perpend ashlar was later replaced with
the finely polished cubical stone used in modern lodges. The square
pavement, to which a great deal of symbolism attaches, is no longer
called a jewel and is usually included in the furniture of the lodge. The broad
ovall is one of a multitude of names by which the broached thurnel
appears to have been known, which will be discussed later. The perpend
ashlar is commonly called a header and is usually three
units long and one unit square in cross-section. It passes through the wall from
the inside face to the outside face, tying the leaves of the wall together for
added strength. The end faces of a perpend ashlar are dressed to
conform with the surface finishes of the exposed faces of the walls, but all
other faces are broached or scabbled to provide a good bond with the courses of
stone through which it passes. The running stone used in wall
construction is similar to the perpend ashlar, but it is broached
for bonding on all faces except those that are to be exposed, which are dressed
accordingly.
At
the end of his training in the stone yard and before he could be released from
his bond, an Indentured Apprentice in operative freemasonry was required to
produce a satisfactory test piece in the form of a rough dressed ashlar,
usually three units long and one unit square in cross-section, suitable for
finishing as a perpend ashlar or a running stone.
Before an Indentured Apprentice could be passed as a Fellow of the Craft, he was
required to prepare a perfect ashlar as a test piece, similar in
shape to a rough dressed ashlar, but fully dressed and properly
polished on all faces. In operative freemasonry in Scotland, when an Indentured
Apprentice had satisfactorily completed his term as an apprentice and had been
released from his bond, his name would be entered in the books and he could take
charge of a small gang of Indentured Apprentices, from which the title Entered
Apprentice in speculative freemasonry was derived. In operative lodges a Fellow
of the Craft with sufficient experience preparing finished ashlar stones, who
had demonstrated his ability to control a small gang of masons, could then
become a Fitter and Marker. He would be engaged in the fitting and marking of
stones in the stone yard, ready for erection on site. Later still, a Fitter and
Marker who had demonstrated sufficient skill in handling stones in the stone
yard might become a Setter Erector, who would be engaged in assembling the
stones in the structure. Freemasons with proven skills in these classes of work
could advance progressively to become foremen, intendents and superintendents.
Later
speculative jewels
In
the early 1700s, when an apprentice was being tested on the catechisms in a
speculative craft lodge he would be asked: “What are the immovable
jewels?” to which the answer was: “The trasel board, rough
ashlar and broached thurnel”. The word trasel, sometimes
corrupted to tarsel, comes from the Old French through the Middle
French trestel, which signified a bar or beam
supported by legs, whence is derived the English trestle. The trasel
board was the trestle table on which sketches were drawn, or over
which the plans were spread. The trasel must not be confused with
the indented tassel, which in the old catechisms is often called
the indented tarsel, in which tarsel comes through
Middle English from the Old French tassel. Among other things, tarsel
or tassel signifies an ornamental piece of fabric, which in modern
English is the tassel or ornamental tuft of threads usually on the
end of a cord. It is interesting to note that a torsel, which is a
plate supporting the end of a beam in a brick wall, is also called a tassel,
but that comes from the French tasseau signifying a bracket.
Although most of the practical aspects of these jewels have been omitted from
the speculative explanations, the philosophical aspects of the instructions that
were given in operative days have been incorporated and expanded upon.
It
is generally accepted that the rough ashlar refers to a rough hewn
stone as brought from the quarries, which in olden times usually was cut one
eighth to one sixteenth of an inch larger than the required finished measure.
However, the meaning of the broached thurnel in the catechism is
uncertain. It seems most likely to have been derived from the usages and customs
of the operative masons in Scotland. In Scotland, broach meant to rough-hew,
to groove or to scarify and a broaching
thurmal, broaching thurmer or broaching turner
was the chisel that operative masons used to carry out broaching work. A common
form of the broaching thurmal is a narrow serrated chisel similar
in many respects to the scutch, which is a cutting and dressing
tool used by a bricklayer. The name probably derives from escousser,
an Old French word meaning to shake off. It is evident that the
three immovable jewels referred to in the old catechisms of an apprentice
logically symbolised three aspects of his employment. The first aspect comprised
the instructions he received for the work he was to carry out, which were
represented by the trasel board. The second aspect related to the
tools that he would use to execute the work, represented by the broached
thurnel. The third aspect was his finished product, represented by the rough
ashlar. Another possible derivation of thurnel is as a
variation of the French tournelle, meaning a turret,
referring to the shape of the chisel, tournelle in various forms
having been a commonly used word in England from about 1400 until at least the
1750s.
Yet
another derivation of thurnel has also been suggested and seems to
be very appropriate, because it was a word that was in general use in England
from the early 1400s until at least the late 1700s. That word was the German thurm,
which means a tower Moreover, as the French tournelle and the
German thurm almost certainly have a common ancestry, deriving
from the Old French and the Medieval French tur meaning a tower,
it seems likely that the Scottish thurmal or thurmer
evolved from the same source. In any event, the cutting face of one form of the
chisel generally used as a broaching thurmal is somewhat similar
in appearance to a small castellated turret when viewed from above. Very early
French tracing boards and some contemporary English tracing boards depicted a
cubical stone surmounted by a pyramid, not unlike the squat stone churches with
stocky spires often seen in Europe. This also was called a broached
thurnel in early English speculative lodges and is still depicted on
French tracing boards, although long ago it disappeared from English tracing
boards. French freemasons have always referred to this stone as “la
pierre cubique a pointe”, which literally means a pointed square
stone. The original French ritual, still in use, explains that it is a
model of a spire or turret, whose various outlines provide a means of teaching
the apprentice how to develop the forms of the square, the triangle, the cube
and the pyramid. Whatever may have been the derivation and intended symbolism of
the broached thurnel in early English speculative lodges and the broaching
thurmal in old Scottish lodges, it had disappeared from use by 1720.
As
the rough ashlar had always been a feature in lodges of operative
freemasons, its use in lodges of speculative craft freemasons followed as a
natural consequence. However, the sequence of events that brought about the
replacement of the perpend ashlar by the cubical perfect
ashlar as a jewel in modern speculative lodges was progressive in
nature, varying from location to location and even from lodge to lodge, with no
clear boundaries between one usage and another. The available records scarce,
whilst those that are available seldom record the dates when one custom lapsed
or another was introduced. Nor has any clear reason emerged to explain why the perpend
ashlar was replaced by the cubical perfect ashlar. All
that can be said with certainty is that the cubical perfect ashlar
seems to have been in general use in English speculative craft lodges by about
1800. As the perpend ashlar is an emblem of perfection and
strength, coupled with the bonds of brotherly love, it is a more expressive
symbol than the cubical perfect ashlar. It therefore provided a
more complete illustration of the improvement that an apprentice is required to
make from his rough and unpolished state, if he is to achieve that state of
discipline and education that is essential for his advancement and which is the
hallmark of the experienced craftsman. Because the bonding of men in a strong
friendship is one of the important objectives of speculative craft freemasonry,
the omission of the perpend ashlar from the jewels of modern
speculative lodges seems strange and a significant loss of symbolism is the
result. Taking into account the approximate time when the perpend ashlar
disappeared as a symbol, it seems likely to have been one of the consequences of
the disagreements between the Antients and the Moderns
prior to the formation of the United Grand Lodge of England.
Speculative
tracing boards
Tracing
boards were an important piece of equipment in all operative lodges. The
inventory of stores recorded in the Fabric Rolls of the York
Minster in 1399 includes “ij tracying bordes”. In lodges of
operative freemasons the locations of the tracing boards was entirely a matter
of convenience to suit the work, but at least one would have been kept in the
office of the Super Intendent of Work in the stone yard and another at the
building site. During the construction of large buildings, such as cathedrals,
there usually were drafting offices as well as the site offices. The practical
tuition given in conjunction with the ceremonial work of an operative lodge,
which customarily commenced at noon on the sixth day of the week, was carried
out with the aid of a plan sketched on the floor or a drawing laid on a trestle
board. The sketched plans and the trestle board were usually placed in the
centre of the lodge room, so that those under instruction could gather round
them.
In
operative lodges the tracing board was used to give practical instruction to the
candidates in the development of the required shapes of stones, as well as to
prepare the required templates to mark out the stones appropriate for the work
of the degree. It was also used to illustrate the setting out of the work and to
show how the stones should be assembled in the structure. In the early
speculative lodges it was customary to draw a plan on the floor of the lodge
room using chalk, charcoal and any other suitable medium, much as would have
been done in an operative lodge. Like the drawings of the operative freemasons,
they were placed in any convenient location where the members could gather
around. This practice continued until painted or printed pictures of the “floor
drawings” or “floorcloths” first became available in
about 1744 in France and in about 1760 in England. The location of modern
tracing boards at the western end of the squared pavement, or in any other
position offering a clear view, is acceptable and is in keeping with ancient
practice.
The
oldest known set of speculative tracing boards in Great Britain belongs to Lodge
Faithful, which was founded at Norwich in 1753 and now meets at Harleston in
Norfolk. These tracing boards are dated 1800 and depict the modern form of rough
ashlar and perfect ashlar appearing on the tracing board
of the First Degree. The modern ashlars are also depicted on a set of tracing
boards that was painted by William Dight in 1808 for the Lodge of Unanimity and
Sincerity, which meets at Taunton. A set of tracing boards painted for the
Chichester Lodge in 1811 by Josiah Bowring, a portrait painter of London, also
depicts the modern ashlars. These boards appear to be the prototypes of the
famous set of boards that John Harris painted in 1821, from which most modern
tracing boards have been derived. The rough ashlar depicted on the
tracing boards is usually placed at the foot of the Corinthian column
representing the Junior Warden, who traditionally is in charge of the
apprentices at labour. For a similar reason the perfect ashlar is
usually placed at the foot of the Doric column representing the Senior Warden,
who traditionally is in charge of the craftsmen at labour.
During
the evolution of modern speculative freemasonry there seems to have been a
tendency to rearrange the symbolism and related rituals of operative freemasonry,
in what might best be described as a perceived orderliness and regularity. This
might have been the underlying objective in replacing a perpend ashlar with a
cubic perfect ashlar, which possibly was influenced by a work entitled The
First and Chief Groundes of Archytecture, which was published by Ihon
Shute, Paynter and Archytecte in 1563 and reprinted in 1912. The
early speculative freemasons included many erudite scholars who wrote our
rituals in the best literary English of their day. Among them, no doubt, there
would have been some familiar with Ihon Shute’s work, in which he offers the
injunction that “Ye shall make a four square stone like unto a dye”.
He then gives a description of the origin and rise of the architectural orders,
which was repeated almost word for word in some of the old masonic lectures,
much of which has been incorporated with very little change into our modern
rituals.