Masonic blogs seem to be coming up everywhere these days, and truthfully, it is refreshing to see.
Another new blog is on the block, Aude, Vide, Tace, takes its name from a Masonic slogan from some time back that translates from latin to "Know, Dare, Be Silent".
The blog is the early journey of a fellow Master Mason from Kansas. His posts are insightful to his modern Masonic journey.
If your surfing the blogosphere, I recommend checking out Aude, Vide, Tace.
Brother,
ReplyDeleteThank you for the kind words about my blog; I'm grateful. It's been a while since I have been in Ms. Wesner's latin class (it was 1980, I think, and I only took it because she was stunningly hot) but I had thought "aude, vide, tace" translated to "see (obeserve), hear(listen), be silent." Thank you for the correction.
Yours Sincerely & Fraternally.
Dear Br:. wayfaring man,
ReplyDeleteyou are right. Only the order of your three imperatives still doesn't match the Latin:
aude -- "hear" (listen)
vide -- "see" (observe)
tace -- "be silent"
Sorry for being a carper.
Fraternally yours,
Br:. L. from Germany
Just so you know, "Aude, Vide, Tace" translates from latin into: "Listen, Watch, Be silent", and NOT into "Know, Dare, Be silent". You guys are all worked up on latin and ancient languages and can't even translate them properly. Meh.
ReplyDeleteAude, Vide, Tace:
ReplyDeleteHear, See, Hold your tongue (be silent).
Nice little blog you have. Keep it up!
Bro. C.H., Canada
Very good i found a lot of this in
ReplyDeletehttp://stores.ebay.com/WidowsChest
and www.hrimports.com
take a look, made by masons they serve around the world.
The motto “Vide Aude Tace” made ist first appearance in the Free-Masons Calendar from 1777. It is derived from a line of “leonine” verse (of a type much used in the Middle Ages) and in full is “Audi, Vide, Tace, Si Vis Vivere In Pace” meaning Hear, see and hold your tongue, if in peace you would live on.
ReplyDeleteBrother Reed USA
Brothers, The original read "Audi, Vide, Tace"... hear (listen), see (watch), be silent. During the early days of our war of independence (1777) it appeared as "Vide, Aude, Tace"... see, dare, be silent: a more apt motto for revolutionaries!
ReplyDelete