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doubt this garment also served as a coverlet at night, as was the custom of the Middle Ages, sheets and blankets being luxuries enjoyed only by the rich and titled (_History of Agriculture and Prices in England_, T. Rogers). On their heads they wore large felt or straw hats, and tight leather breeches and long boots completed the garb. [87] Gloves were more widely used in the olden times than now, and the practice of giving them as presents was common in mediaeval times. Often, when the harvest was over, gloves were distributed to the laborers who gathered it (_History of Prices in England_, Rogers), and richly embroidered gloves formed an offering gladly accepted by princes. Indeed, the bare hand was regarded as a symbol of hostility, and the gloved hand a token of peace and goodwill. For Masons, however, the white gloves and apron had meanings hardly guessed by others, and their symbolism remains to this day with its simple and eloquent appeal. (See chapter on "Masonic Clothing and Regalia," in _Things a Freemason Should Know_, by J.W. Crowe, an interesting article by Rylands, _A. Q. C._, vol. v, and the delightful essay on "Gloves," by Dr. Mackey, in his _Symbolism of Freemasonry_.) Not only the tools of the builder, but his clothing, had moral meaning. [88] _Tiler_--like the word _cable-tow_--is a word peculiar to the language of Masonry, and means one who guards the Lodge to see that only Masons are within ear-shot. It probably derives from the Middle Ages when the makers of tiles for roofing were also of migratory habits (_History of Prices in England_, Rogers), and accompanied the Free-masons to perform their share of the work of covering buildings. Some tiler was appointed to act as sentinel to keep off intruders, and hence, in course of time, the name of Tiler came to be applied to any Mason who guarded the Lodge. [89] Much has been written of the derivation and meaning of the word _cowan_, some finding its origin in a Greek term meaning "dog." (See "An Inquiry Concerning Cowans," by D. Ramsay, _Review of Freemasonry_, vol. i.) But its origin is still to seek, unless we accept it as an old Scotch word of contempt (_Dictionary of Scottish Language_, Jamieson). Sir Walter Scott uses it as such in Rob Roy, "she doesna' value a Cawmil mair as a cowan" (chap. xxix). Masons used the word to describe a "dry-diker, one who built without cement," or a Mason without the word. Unfortunately, we still have cowans in t
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