The Mysteries of Free Masonry eBook

William Morgan
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 425 pages of information about The Mysteries of Free Masonry.

The Mysteries of Free Masonry eBook

William Morgan
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 425 pages of information about The Mysteries of Free Masonry.

[16] By this tremendous imprecation, the candidate, of his “own free will and accord,” volunteers (in case of a violation) to come forth to the resurrection of damnation and receive the sentence, “Depart thou accursed into everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels.”

[17] See the Apocryphal books, 1 Esdras, chapters iii. and iv.

[18] Diplomas of this degree, “In the name of the holy and undivided Trinity,” recommend the bearer as a true and faithful soldier of Jesus Christ.

* * * * *

HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE KIDNAPPING OF WILLIAM MORGAN.

Captain Morgan was born in Virginia, and was a mason by trade.  He commenced the business of a brewer at York, Upper Canada, in 1821, but having lost all his property by fire, he removed to New York State, and worked at his trade both in Rochester and Batavia.  In the year 1826 rumors were heard that Morgan, in connection with other persons, was preparing and intended to publish a book which would reveal the secrets of Freemasonry, and an excitement of some kind existed in relation to the publication of the book.  In the month of September he was seized under feigned process of the law, in the day time, in the village of Batavia, and forcibly carried to Canandaigua.  Captain Morgan was at this time getting ready his book, which purported to reveal the secrets of Freemasonry.  This contemplated publication excited the alarm of the fraternity, and numbers of its members were heard to say that it should be suppressed at all events.  Meetings of delegates from the different Lodges in the Western counties has been held to devise means for most effectually preventing the publication.  The zealous members of the fraternity were angry, excited, and alarmed, and occasionally individuals threw out dark and desperate threats.  About this time an incendiary attempt was made to fire the office of Col.  Miller, the publisher of the book.  The gang who seized Morgan at Batavia were Masons.  They took him to Canandaigua; after a mock trial he was discharged, but was immediately arrested and committed to prison on a debt.  The next night, in the absence of the jailer, he was released from prison by the pretended friendship of a false and hollow-hearted brother Mason.  Upon leaving the prison door he was seized in the streets of Canandaigua, and notwithstanding his cries of murder, he was thrust with ruffian violence into a carriage prepared for that purpose.  At Batavia he had been torn from his home—­from his wife and infant children.  At Canandaigua he was falsely beguiled from the safe custody of the law, and was forcibly carried, by relays of horses, through a thickly populated country, in the space of little more than twenty-four hours, to the distance of one hundred and fifteen miles, and secured as a prisoner in the magazine of Fort Niagara.  This was clearly proved on the trial of persons concerned

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The Mysteries of Free Masonry from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.