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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VI   November, 1928   No.11

FOREIGN COUNTRIES

by: Carl H. Claudy

A reprint of Chapter XXX of "Foreign Countries," published and 
copyrighted by the Masonic Service association in 1925.

Our ancient operative brethren desired to become Masters so that, 
when they travelled in foreign countries, they could still practice 
their craft.  Speculative Freemasons still desire to "travel in 
foreign countries" and study their craft that they may receive such 
instruction as will enable them to do so, and when travelling, to 
receive a Master's Wages.

But the "Foreign Countries" do not mean to us the various 
geographical and political divisions of the Old World, nor do we use 
the Word we learn as a means of identification to enable us to build 
material temples and receive coin of the realm for our labor.  
"Foreign Countries" is to us a symbol.

Like all the rest of the symbols, it has more than one 
interpretation; but, unlike many, none of these is very difficult to 
trace or understand.

Freemasonry itself is the first "foreign country" in which the 
initiate will travel; a world as different from the familiar workaday 
world, as France is different from England, or Belgium from Greece.  
Everything is different in the Masonic world; the standards are 
different, the "Money" is different, the ideas are different.  In the 
familiar world, money, place and power are the standards by which we 
judge our fellows.  In the fraternity all are on the level, and there 
are neither rich nor poor.  In the world outside there are laws to 
prevent, and police  and penalties to enforce obedience; in the 
fraternity the laws are not "thou shalt not" but "thou shalt" and the 
fundamental of them all is the golden rule, the law of brotherly 
love.  Men conform to the laws of Freemasonry not because they must 
but because they will.  Surely such a land is a "foreign country" to 
the stranger within its borders; and the visitor must study it, learn 
its language and its customs, if he is to enjoy it.

Many learn but a few phrases and only enough of its customs to 
conform.  There are thousands of Americans who went all over France 
during the war with a pack of cigarettes, a friendly smile and "no 
comprende!" as their sole knowledge of the language; but did they 
learn to know France?  A Lodge member may know the words of the 
opening and closing and how to act in a lodge, learn to call his 
fellows "brother" and pay his dues; but will that get him all there 
is in the foreign country in which he finds him-self?

America north and south is a mighty continent . . . It has many 
countries.  To know one is not to know all.  The man at home in 
Mexico will find Newfoundland strange, and the Canadian will not feel 
at home in Chile if he knows nothing of that country.

So it is with the vast continent of Freemasonry.  It has many 
"foreign countries within it; and he is the wise and happy Freemason 
who works patiently at the pleasant task of visiting and studying 
them.  There are the foreign countries of philosophy, of 
jurisprudence and of history.  No Freemason is really worthy of the 
name who does not understand something of how his new land is 
governed, of what it stands for and why.

And there is the foreign country of Symbolism of which this little 
book is far less a guide than a gateway.

As  a Master Mason, a man has the right to travel in all the foreign 
countries of Freemasonry.  There is none to say him nay.  If he will 
but "learn the work" and keep himself in good standing, he may visit 
where he will.  But it is not within the door of other lodges than 
his own that he will find the boundary line and the guide posts of 
those truly Masonic "Foreign Countries" to which he has been given 
the passport by his brethren.  He will find gateways to those lands 
in the library, in the study club, in books and magazines; and, most 
and best of all, in the quiet hour alone, when what he has read and 
learned comes back to him to be pondered over and thought through.
The "foreign country" of symbolism has engaged the thoughtful and 
serious consideration of hundreds of able Masonic students, as has 
that of the history of our Order.  Not to visit them both; aye, not 
to make oneself a citizen of them both, is to refuse the privileges 
one has sought and labored to obtain.  One asks for a petition, prays 
one's friend to take it to his lodge, knocks on the door, takes 
obligations, works to learn and finally receives the Master's Degree.  
One receives it, struggles for it, hopes for it . . . why?  That one 
may travel in the far lands and receive the reward there awaiting. . 

Then why hesitate?  Why wait?  Why put it off?  Why allow others to 
pass on and gain; while one stands, the gate open, the new land 
beckoning, and all the Masonic world to see?

That is the symbolism of the "foreign countries" . . .  that is the 
meaning of the phrase which once meant, to operative Masons, exactly 
what it says.  To the Freemason who reads it aright it is a clarion 
call to action, to study, to an earnest pressing forward on the new 
highway.  For time is short and the night cometh when no man can 
work!

To the young Freemason, particularly, is the symbol a ringing appeal.  
To those who are old in the Craft, who have set their pace, 
determined their course and become satisfied with all they have 
managed to learn of the fraternity, with what little they have been 
able to take from it, "foreign countries" means countries which are 
foreign and nothing more.  But to the young man just starting out as 
a Freemason . . . Oh, my brother, heed you the symbolism of the 
phrase and make your entry through the gateway, your limbs strong to 
travel, your mind open to learn.  For if you truly travel in the 
Masonic foreign countries, you will receive Master's Wages beyond 
your greatest expectations.  The way is open to the Freemason; not an 
easy way, perhaps, or a short way, but a clear way.  Not for the old 
Mason, the man set in his ways, the man content with the literal 
meaning of the words, the "book Mason," the pin- wearer, not for them 
the foreign countries of symbolism, and Masonic knowledge.

But you, you who are new, you to whom Freemasonry is yet a wonder and 
a vision. a mystery and a glory . . . for you the gate is wide, for 
you the path is clear; for you the foreign countries beckon . . . 
hang you not back!

For at the end of the journey, when the last foreign country of 
Freemasonry has been travelled and learned and loved, you shall come 
to a new gate, above which there is a new name written . . . and when 
you have read it you will know the True Word of a Master Mason.