[338.] "By figure of a man is always meant that of the male and female together."--Ibid., p. 116.

[339.] Histoire de la Monarchie Prussienne, VI. 76.

[340.] Lecouteulx de Canteleu, op. cit., p. 105.

[341.] Ibid., p. 106; Lombard de Langres, Les Sociétés Secrètes en Allemagne, p. 67.

[342.] Monsignor George F. Dillon, The War of Anti-Christ with the Church and Christian Civilization, p. 24 (1885).

[343.] Brother Chalmers I. Paton, The Origin of Freemasonry: the 1717 Theory Exploded, p. 34.

[344.] Lecouteulx de Canteleu, op. cit., p. 107; Robison's Proofs of a Conspiracy, p. 27; Dillon, op. cit, p. 24; Mackey, Lexicon of Freemasonry, p. 148.

[345.] Preston's Illustrations of Masonry, p. 209 (1804); Anderson's New Book of Constitutions (1738).

[346.] Ars Quatuor Coronatorum, XXV. p. 31. See account of some of these convivial masonic societies in this paper entitled "An Apollinaric Summons."

[347.] Religious Thought and Heresy in the Middle Ages, p. 373. A "Past Grand Master," in an article entitled "The Crisis in Freemasonry," in the English Review for August 1922, takes the same view. "It is true ... that the Craft Lodges in England were originally Hanoverian clubs, as the Scottish lodges were Jacobite clubs."