Sujet : Re: Deep focus on Freemason forms found in Forbidden Planet
De : petertrei (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Cryptoengineer)
Groupes : rec.arts.sf.written rec.arts.sf.moviesDate : 03. Jun 2024, 21:37:20
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v3l9i0$1n8m$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 6/3/2024 11:18 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
On Mon, 3 Jun 2024 04:38:14 -0000 (UTC), Don <g@crcomp.net> wrote:
Petertrei wrote:
<snip>
<snip much more>
Cookie's apron is cringe-worthy. But sometimes you must pander to
readers. In this case to readers who, at best, recognize only one
symbol: the apron.
And a cook wearing an apron is so totally unheard that it /must/ be a
symbol of something, right? No cook in all of recorded history ever
wore an apron unless it was symbolic?
Given their origin (historical or mythological, doesn't matter), I
would say that a bricklayers' apron and a cook's apron are similar but
nonetheless distinct.
Operative Mason's aprons are quite large, and made of heavy leather
or cloth. Early Freemason's aprons were similar:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Times_of_the_Day#/media/File:Four_Times_of_the_Day_-_Night_-_Hogarth.jpg
Modern operative mason's aprons are still like that:
https://dungarees.com/carhartt-103439-apron?&cs=BRN&size=OFA&cid=1161The modern speculative Mason's intiatory apron is made of white
lambskin, and much squarer. In American lodges, most sideliners
will be wearing a cloth apron from the lodge stock.
https://dallasmasons.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/1-10.jpgThe young man with the glasses in the front row is wearing a
lambskin apron, and the man to the right of him is wearing a stock
apron. The more fancy ones with blue embroidery are officers.
Cookie's apron isn't all that far from that, but is too large, and
lacking a flap.
Still, Occam's Razor suggests he's wearing it for cooking related
reasons.
pt