[13] Signs and Symbols, Churchward, chap. xvii.
[14] Here again the literature is voluminous, but not entirely satisfactory. A most interesting book is Signs and Symbols of Primordial Man, by Churchward, in that it surveys the symbolism of the race always with reference to its Masonic suggestion. Vivid and popular is Symbols and Legends of Freemasonry, by Finlayson, but he often strains facts in order to stretch them over wide gaps of time. Dr. Mackey's Symbolism of Freemasonry, though written more than sixty years ago, remains a classic of the order. Unfortunately the lectures of Albert Pike on Symbolism are not accessible to the general reader, for they are rich mines of insight and scholarship, albeit betraying his partisanship of the Indo-Aryan race. Many minor books might be named, but we need a work brought up to date and written in the light of recent research.
[15] Exod. 20:25.
[16] Antiquities of Cornwall, Borlase.
[17] Lost Language of Symbolism, Bayley, chap, xviii; also in the Bible, Deut. 32:18, II Sam. 22:3, 32, Psa. 28:1, Matt. 16:18, I Cor. 10:4.
[18] Tree and Pillar Cult, Sir Arthur Evans.
[19] I Sam. 2:8, Psa. 75:8, Job 26:7, Rev. 3:12.
[20] Freemasonry in China, Giles. Also Gould, His. Masonry, vol. i, chap. i.
[21] Chinese Classics, by Legge, i, 219-45.
[22] Essay by Chaloner Alabaster, Ars Quatuor Coronatorum, vol. ii, 121-24. It is not too much to say that the Transactions of this Lodge of Research are the richest storehouse of Masonic lore in the world.