← back to chapter
NM Freemason · Skills & Drills · Chapter 43

The Peg System

Drawn from published Masonic monitor content. See site Credits for source citations.

Vocabulary (6)

Peg System
An association between numbers and images. Because there are 26 letters but only 10 digits, the published technique uses a rhyming image for each digit (1-nun, 2-glue, 3-tree, 4-door, and so on) as fixed anchors. Any sequence can then be hung from those anchors.
Rhyming pegs
The published rhyme set Ragain uses by way of example: one-nun, two-glue, three-tree, four-door. Each peg is a vivid image triggered by the rhyme. The reader can use any rhyme set that sticks for him. Ragain is explicit that personal images outperform borrowed ones.
Anchored sequence
Each item to be remembered is yoked to a peg. Ragain's published Masonic example: image 1 is a nun sitting in the Lodge room with you; image 2 is glue keeping the square and compasses from sliding off the Bible; image 3 is a tree-marker placed there by three workmen; image 4 is someone at the door, announcing your arrival.
Strength of the system
Ragain's published assessment: the Peg System is the technique used by the greatest published memory champions because its anchor list can extend indefinitely. Ten digits, then twenty, then a hundred. Useful in Masonry mainly for short ordered lists (officer positions, EA / FC / MM working tools, the steps of the winding stairs) and elsewhere only for material with a strong sequence.
Where to go deeper
Ragain's published direction for the dedicated student of the Peg System: Kevin Horsley, Unlimited Memory: How to Use Advanced Learning Strategies to Learn Faster, Remember More and Be More Productive (TCK Publishing, 2016). Not Masonic-specific; the techniques transfer.
Limits in Masonry
Ragain's published caution: many Masonic lectures are dense prose, not ordered lists. The Peg System helps when the underlying structure is a sequence (officer jewels, points of the winding stairs, the working tools by degree). For free-flowing prose lectures, the Memory Palace and chunked deep processing usually carry further.

Multiple-choice (5)

1. What does the Peg System pair?
  1. Letters and colors
  2. Numbers and rhyming images ✓
  3. Officer titles and tools
  4. Lodge rooms and walls
2. Which is one of Ragain's published example pegs?
  1. 1-pen
  2. 1-nun ✓
  3. 1-sword
  4. 1-flag
3. Where in Masonic study does Ragain say the Peg System is most useful?
  1. Long, free-flowing prose lectures
  2. Short ordered lists: officer positions, working tools, the steps of the winding stairs ✓
  3. The obligation only
  4. Funeral language
4. Whose published book does Ragain name as the deep-dive on the Peg System?
  1. Kim March, The 5 Minute Ritualist
  2. Kevin Horsley, Unlimited Memory ✓
  3. Bob Lingerfelt, Solomon's Memory Palace
  4. Daniel Coyle, The Little Book of Talent
5. Why does Ragain note that pegs alone don't carry through most Masonic lectures?
  1. The lectures are short and don't need a system
  2. The lectures are mostly prose, not ordered lists, so the Memory Palace or chunked deep processing carry further ✓
  3. Pegs are forbidden by jurisdiction
  4. Pegs only work for poetry