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Title: The Masonic Poetry of Rudyard Kipling


1
The Masonic Poetry of Rudyard Kipling
  • An Appreciation by John Davies
  • Presented to Lodge St Michael
  • No. 2933

2
A Brief Biography
  • 1865 - Kipling is born in Bombay, India.
  • 1871 - Kipling and his younger sister Alice are
    separated from their parents and sent to
    England to be educated.
  • 1878 - Kipling enters public school in North
    Devon.
  • 1882 - Kipling ends his formal education and
    returns to India to become a trainee journalist.
  • 1886 - Publication of Departmental Ditties.
    Kipling begins to make a name for himself as a
    young writer of some repute.
  • 1887 - Soldiers Three, In Black and White, The
    Phantom Rickshaw, Wee Willie Winkle, The Story of
    the Gadsbys, and the stories later collected in
    The Smith Administration, The City of Dreadful
    Night, and Letters of Marque, were all written
    and published.

3
Masonic Career
  • On 5th April 1886 He was initiated a Freemason in
    the Lodge Hope and Perseverance, No. 782, E.C.,
    at Lahore, by dispensation from the District
    Grand Master, Kipling being only 20 years old at
    the time.
  • His proposer was Wor. Bro. Colonel 0. Menzies
    he was seconded by Bro. C. Brown. He was
    initiated by the W.M., Bro. Colonel G. B.
    Wolseley.
  • He was passed on May 3rd following, there being
    only seven Brethren present, and raised on the
    6th December, 1886.
  • He was for a short time Secretary of the Lodge.
  • In 1887 Kipling became a Mark Master and a Royal
    Ark Mariner.
  • Having left Lahore to reside at Allahabad, on
    April 17th, 1888, he became a member of the old
    Lodge, "Independence with Philanthropy,"
    Allahabad. In March, 1889, he was put on the
    absent list of that Lodge, and resigned in 1895
    from America where he was then residing.
  • From the time he finally left India for the last
    time in 1889 to his death in 1936 there are few
    records of him attending lodge, although he was
    an elected honorary member of several English,
    and especially Sussex lodges.
  • In 1918 he was elected member of the
    Correspondence Circle of Qautuor Coronati Lodge
    no. 2076 but there are no records of him
    presenting any papers .
  • His active participation in regular organised
    freemasonry effectively ended when he left India
    for the last time aged twenty five.

4
  • 1889 - Kipling returns to London and embarks upon
    a decade of rising fame and extreme productivity.
    Kim, The Jungle Book, Stalky and Co., Captains
    Courageous , The Seven Seas and The Days Work are
    all published to great success.
  • 1891- Marries Caroline Balestier and emigrates to
    the USA
  • 1899 - Death of first born child, Josephine, in
    New York.
  • 1900 - Begins sojourn in South Africa. Becomes
    leading proponent of the Boer War.
  • 1907 - Wins Nobel Prize
  • 1908 - Greatly disillusioned by the Liberal
    governments policy in South Africa, Kipling
    returns to England.
  • 1914 - World War one begins. Kipling believes his
    long-held suspicion of the Germans has been
    justified. He once more becomes an enthusiastic
    proponent of the British war effort.
  • 1915 - Kiplings 18 year old son John disappears
    in battle. Kipling never really recovers from the
    loss. Kipling is diagnosed with the ailments that
    would later kill him.
  • 1936 - Rudyard Kipling dies.
  • 1937 - Something of Myself, Kiplings sketchy
    collection of autobiographical writings is
    published.

5
  • The Mother-Lodge (From Barrack Room
    Ballads)
  • THERE was Rundle, Station Master,     An
    Beazeley of the Rail,An Ackman,
    Commissariat,     An Donkin o the JailAn
    Blake, Conductor-Sargent,     Our Master twice
    was e,With im that kept the Europe-shop,     O
    ld Framjee Eduljee.
  • OutsideSergeant! Sir! Salute!
    Salaam!InsideBrother, an it doesnt do no
    arm.We met upon the Level an we parted on the
    Square,An I was Junior Deacon in my
    Mother-Lodge out there!
  • Wed Bola Nath, Accountant,     An Saul the
    Aden Jew,An Din Mohammed, draughtsman     Of
    the Survey Office tooThere was Babu
    Chuckerbutty,     An Amir Singh the Sikh,An
    Castro from the fittin-sheds,     The Roman
    Catholick!
  • We adnt good regalia,     An our Lodge was
    old an bare,But we knew the Ancient
    Landmarks,     An we kep em to a hairAn
    lookin on it backwards     It often strikes me
    thus,There aint such things as
    infidels,     Excep, peraps, its us.
  • For monthly, after Labour,     Wed all sit
    down and smoke(We dursnt give no
    banquits,     Lest a Brothers caste were
    broke),An man on man got talkin     Religion
    an the rest,An every man comparin     Of the
    God e knew the best.
  • So man on man got talkin,     An not a
    Brother stirredTill mornin waked the
    parrots     An that dam brain-fever-birdWed
    say twas ighly curious,     An wed all ride
    ome to bed,With Moammed, God, an
    Shiva     Changin pickets in our ead.
  • Full oft on Guvment service     This rovin
    foot ath pressed,An bore fraternal
    greetins     To the Lodges east an
    west,Accordin as commanded     From Kohat to
    Singapore,But I wish that I might see
    them     In my Mother-Lodge once more!
  • I wish that I might see them,     My Brethren
    black an brown,With the trichies smellin
    pleasant     An the hog-darn passin downAn
    the old khansamah snorin     On the
    bottle-khana floor,Like a Master in good
    standing     With my Mother-Lodge once more!
  • OutsideSergeant! Sir! Salute!
    Salaam!InsideBrother, an it doesnt do no
    arm.We met upon the Level an we parted on the
    Square,An I was Junior Deacon in my
    Mother-Lodge out there!

6
LEnvoi to The Seven Seas
  • When Earth's last picture is painted and
    the tubes are twisted and dried,When the oldest
    colours have faded, and the youngest critic has
    died,We shall rest, and, faith, we shall need it
    -- lie down for an aeon or two,Till the Master
    of All Good Workmen shall put us to work
    anew!And those that were good shall be happy
    they shall sit in a golden chairThey shall
    splash at a ten-league canvas with brushes of
    comets' hairThey shall find real saints to draw
    from -- Magdalene, Peter, and PaulThey shall
    work for an age at a sitting and never be tired
    at all!And only the Master shall praise us, and
    only the Master shall blameAnd no one shall
    work for money, and no one shall work for
    fame,But each for the joy of the working, and
    each, in his separate star,Shall draw the Thing
    as he sees It for the God of Things as They Are!

7
My new-cut ashlar (LEnvoi to Lifes Handicap)
  • My new-cut ashlar takes the lightWhere
    crimson-blank the windows flare.By my own work
    before the night,Great Overseer, I make my
    prayer.
  • If there be good in that I wroughtThy Hand
    compelled it, Master, Thine--Where I have failed
    to meet Thy ThoughtI know, through Thee, the
    blame was mine.
  • One instant's toil to Thee deniedStands
    all Eternity's offence.Of that I did with Thee
    to guide,To Thee, through Thee, be excellence.
  • The depth and dream of my desire,The
    bitter paths wherein I stray--Thou knowest Who
    has made the Fire,Thou knowest Who has made the
    Clay.
  • Who, lest all thought of Eden fade,Bring'st
    Eden to the craftsman's brain--Godlike to muse
    oÕer his own TradeAnd manlike to stand with God
    again!
  • One stone the more swings into placeIn
    that dread Temple of Thy worth.It is enough
    that, through Thy Grace,I saw nought common on
    Thy Earth.
  • Take not that vision from my ken--Oh,
    whatsoe'er may spoil or speed,Help me to need no
    aid from menThat I many help such men as need!

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11
  • Beold a crowd upon the beam,     An
    umped above the sea appears Old Aden, like
    a barrick-stove     That no ones lit for years
    an years!
  • (Extract from For to Admire)

12
The Derelict
  • White on my wasted pathWave after wave in wrath
    Frets gainst his fellow, warring where to
    send me.         Flung forward, heaved
    aside,     Witless and dazed I bide The
    mercy of the comber that shall end me.
  • North where the bergs careen,The spray of seas
    unseen Smokes round my head and
    freezes in the falling     South where
    the corals breed,    The footless, floating
    weed Folds me and fouls me, strake on
    strake upcrawling.
  • I that was clean to run    My race against the
    sun Strength on the deep, am bawd to all
    disaster         Whipped forth by night to
    meet         My sisters careless feet, And
    with a kiss betray her to my master!
  • Man made me, and my will         Is to my
    maker still To him and his, our peoples
    at their pier         Lifting in hope to
    spy         Trailed smoke along the sky,
    Falling afraid lest any keel come near!
  • I WAS the staunchest of our fleet    Till the
    sea rose beneath our feetUnheralded, in hatred
    past all measure.    Into his pits he stamped my
    crew,    Buffeted, blinded, bound and
    threw,Bidding me eyeless wait upon his pleasure.
  • Man made me, and my will     Is to my
    maker still, Whom now the currents con, the
    rollers steer     Lifting forlorn to
    spy         Trailed smoke along the sky,
    Falling afraid lest any keel come near!
  • Wrenched as the lips of thirst,Wried, dried,
    and split and burst,Bone-bleached my decks,
    wind-scoured to the graining     And jarred at
    every roll  The gear that was my soul
    Answers the anguish of my beams complaining.
  • For life that crammed me
    full,         Gangs of the prying gull
    That shriek and scrabble on the riven
    hatches!         For roar that dumbed the
    gale,         My hawse-pipes guttering wail,
    Sobbing my heart out through the
    uncounted watches!
  • Blind in the hot blue ring         Through
    all my points I swing Swing and return
    to shift the sun anew.         Blind in my
    well-known sky         I hear the stars go by,
    Mocking the prow that cannot hold one true!

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15
  •      And the hewers of wood and the Masons of
    Mark,With focsle hands of the Sidon run    And
    Navy So it was ordered and so it was done,
    Lords from the Royal Ark,Came and sat down and
    were merry at messAs Fellow-Craftsmenno more
    and no less.
  • The Quarries are hotter than Hirams
    forge, No one is safe from the dog-whips
    reach.Its mostly snowing up Lebanon gorge, And
    its always blowing off Joppa beachBut once in
    so often, the messenger bringsSolomons mandate
    Forget these things!Brother to Beggars and
    Fellow to Kings,Companion of Princesforget
    these things!Fellow-Craftsman, forget these
    things!
  • Banquet Night
  • ONCE in so often, King Solomon
    said,   Watching his quarrymen drill the
    stone,We will club our garlic and wine and
    bread    And banquet together beneath my
    ThroneAnd all the Brethren shall come to that
    messAs Fellow-Craftsmenno more and no less.
  • Send a swift shallop to Hiram of
    Tyre,   Felling and floating our beautiful
    trees,Say that the Brethren and I desire   Talk
    with our Brethren who use the seas.And we shall
    be happy to meet them at messAs
    Fellow-Craftsmenno more and no less.
  • Carry this message to Hiram
    Abif  Excellent Master of forge and mineI
    and the Brethren would like it if    He and the
    Brethren will come to dine(Garments from Bozrah
    or morning-dress)As Fellow-Craftsmenno more and
    no less.
  • God gave the Hyssop and Cedar their
    place  Also the Bramble, the Fig and the
    ThornBut that is no reason to black a mans
    face    Because he is not what he hasnt been
    born.And, as touching the Temple, I hold and
    professWe are Fellow-Craftsmenno more and no
    less.
  • So it was ordered and so it was
    done,    And the hewers of wood and the Masons
    of Mark,With focsle hands of the Sidon
    run    And Navy Lords from the Royal Ark,Came
    and sat down and were merry at messAs
    Fellow-Craftsmenno more and no less.

16
  • IF you can keep your head when all about
    you Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,If
    you can trust yourself when all men doubt
    you,But make allowance for their doubting
    tooIf you can wait and not be tired by
    waiting,Or being lied about, don't deal in
    lies,Or being hated, don't give way to
    hating,And yet don't look too good, nor talk too
    wise
  • If you can dream - and not make dreams
    your masterIf you can think - and not make
    thoughts your aimIf you can meet with Triumph
    and DisasterAnd treat those two impostors just
    the sameIf you can bear to hear the truth
    you've spokenTwisted by knaves to make a trap
    for fools,Or watch the things you gave your life
    to, broken,And stoop and build 'em up with
    worn-out tools
  • If you can make one heap of all your
    winnings And risk it on one turn of
    pitch-and-toss,And lose, and start again at your
    beginningsAnd never breathe a word about your
    lossIf you can force your heart and nerve and
    sinewTo serve your turn long after they are
    gone,And so hold on when there is nothing in
    youExcept the Will which says to them 'Hold
    on!
  • If you can talk with crowds and keep your
    virtue,' Or walk with Kings - nor lose the
    common touch,if neither foes nor loving friends
    can hurt you,If all men count with you, but none
    too muchIf you can fill the unforgiving
    minuteWith sixty seconds' worth of distance
    run,Yours is the Earth and everything that's in
    it,And - which is more - you'll be a Man, my son!

17
  • A Pilgrim's Way
  • I do not look for holy saints to guide me on my
    way,Or male and female devilkins to lead my feet
    astray.If these are added, I rejoice---if not, I
    shall not mind,So long as I have leave and
    choice to meet my fellow-kind.For as we come and
    as we go (and deadly-soon go we!)The people,
    Lord, Thy people, are good enough for me!
  • Thus I will honour pious men whose virtue shines
    so bright(Though none are more amazed than I
    when I by chance do right),And I will pity
    foolish men for woe their sins have bred(Though
    ninety-nine per cent. of mine I brought on my own
    head).And, Amorite or Eremite, or General
    Averagee,The people, Lord, Thy people, are good
    enough for me!
  • And when they bore me overmuch, I
    will not shake mine ears,Recalling many thousand
    such whom I have bored to tears.And when they
    labour to impress, I will not doubt nor
    scoffSince I myself have done no less
    and---sometimes pulled it off.Yea, as we are and
    we are not, and we pretend to be,The people,
    Lord, Thy people, are good enough for me!
  • And when they work me random wrong, as
    oftentimes hath been,I will not cherish hate too
    long (my hands are none too clean).And when they
    do me random good I will not feign surprise.No
    more than those whom I have cheered with wayside
    charities.But, as we give and as we
    take---whate'er our takings be---The people,
    Lord, Thy people, are good enough for me!
  • But when I meet with frantic folk who sinfully
    declareThere is no pardon for their sin, the
    same I will not spareTill I have proved that
    Heaven and Hell which in our hearts we haveShow
    nothing irredeemable on either side of the
    grave.For as we live and as we die---if utter
    Death there be---The people, Lord, Thy people,
    are good enough for me!
  • Deliver me from every pride---the Middle, High,
    and Low---That bars me from a brother's side,
    whatever pride he show.And purge me from all
    heresies of thought and speech and penThat bid
    me judge him otherwise than I am judged.
    Amen!That I may sing of Crowd or King or
    road-borne company,That I may labour in my day,
    vocation and degree,To prove the same in deed
    and name, and hold unshakenly(Where'er I go,
    whate'er I know, whoe'er my neighbor be)This
    single faith in Life and Death and to
    Eternity"The people, Lord, Thy people, are good
    enough for me

18
  • RAHERE, King Henry's jester, feared by
    all the Norman Lords For his eye that pierced
    their bosoms, for his tongue that shamed their
    swordsFeed and flattered by the Churchmen -
    well they knew how deep he stoodIn dark Henry's
    crooked counsels - fell upon an evil mood.

    Rahere
  • Suddenly, his days before him and behind
    him seemed to stand Stripped and barren, fixed
    and fruitless as those leagues of naked sand
    When St. Michael's ebb slinks outward to the
    bleak horizon-bound,And the trampling
    wide-mouthed waters are withdrawn from sight and
    sound.
  • Then a Horror of Great Darkness sunk his
    spirit and anon,(Who had seen him wince and
    whiten as he turned to walk alone) Followed
    Gilbert the Physician, and muttered in his ear,
    "Thou hast it, O my brother?" "Yea, I have it,"
    said Rahere.
  • "So it comes," said Gilbert smoothly,
    "man's most immanent distress.'Tis a humour of
    the Spirit which abhorreth all excessAnd,
    whatever breed the surfeit - Wealth, or Wit, or
    Power, or Fame (And thou hast each) the Spirit
    laboureth to expel the same.
  • "Hence the dulled eye's deep
    self-loathing - hence the loaded leaden brow
    Hence the burden of Wanhope that aches thy soul
    and body now.Ay, the merriest fool must face it,
    and the wisest Doctor learnFor it comes - it
    comes," said Gilbert, " as it passes - to
    return."
  • But Rahere was in his torment, and he
    wandered, dumb and far,Till he came to reeking
    Smithfield where the crowded gallows
    are..(Followed Gilbert the Physician) and
    beneath the wrynecked dead,Sat a leper and his
    woman, very merry, breaking bread.
  • He was cloaked from chin to ankle -
    faceless, fingerless, obsceneMere corruption
    swaddled man-wise, but the woman whole and
    cleanAnd she waited on him crooning, and Rahere
    beheld the twain,Each delighting in the other,
    and he checked and groaned again.
  • So it comes, - it comes," said Gilbert,
    "as it came when Life began.'Tis a motion of the
    Spirit that revealeth God to man.In the shape of
    Love exceeding, which regards not taint or
    fall,Since in perfect Love, saith Scripture, can
    be no excess at all.
  • Hence the eye that sees no blemish -
    hence the hour that holds no shame.Hence the
    Soul assured the Essence and the Substance are
    the same.Nay, the meanest need not miss it,
    though the mightier pass it byFor it comes - it
    comes," said Gilbert, "and, thou seest, it does
    not die!"

19

  • The Appeal

  • IF I have given
    you delight    
    By aught
    that I have done,
    Let me
    lie quiet in that night    

    Which shall be yours anon

  • And for the
    little, little, span   
    The
    dead are borne in mind,

    Seek not to question other than    

    The books I leave behind.
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