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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1794
  • Page 36
  • ANECDOTE OF A WRETCHED PORTRAIT PAINTER.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1794: Page 36

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    Article ON THE UTILITY, CHOICE, AND USE OF PLEASURES, ← Page 5 of 5
    Article ANECDOTE OF A WRETCHED PORTRAIT PAINTER. Page 1 of 1
Page 36

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On The Utility, Choice, And Use Of Pleasures,

a tragedy , its diction pure , sentiments grand , intrigue well conduced , catastrophe natural and judicious ; or a comedy , in which I might learn every time I laugh , to guard " against all subjects of ridicule . An Opera is less a theatrical exhibition than the assemblage of many . Music , words , singing , dancing , machines , decorations : What ex-! How different-operators ! The speclacle is brilliant , it

pence many dazzles and astonishes you ; but if you proceed to the analysis of most operas , you will find either great faults in each part , or that , out of good parts in themselves , a very indifferent whole has been made . There are few but delig ht in music : It is the most exquisite and most innocent of all pleasures ; it is a pleasure of all ages , all states , all places , and of almost all . tastes ; it may be enjoyed in its whole extent at

the expence of another , without being importunate ; and it may be also enjoyed in solitude : It prevents or alleviates the lowness of spirits , and raises the soul from the dejeftion she is sometimes thrown into by the iniquity of man . The . voice , by its sweetness and different inflexions , persuades the mind , and touches the heart ; and some are of opinion , that there is no music so agreeable as the sounds of the voice of a beloved person .

There is a sort of danger in a taste for music which should be carefully avoided ; and this is to be so much taken with it , as to make it one ' s sole or favouiite occupation . This excess is a vice of the taste , and mind ; and the man of quality , who behaves in this respedt as the musician by profession , lies open to the same ridicule as the musician who negleftsmusic : But let not the fear of being too fond of music

hinder your loving and learning it . Whoever does not love music is deprived of the most innocent of p leasures . Whoever does not know it cannot discern all its beauty ; and he has negle & ed a talent , by the help of which he mig ht possess wherewithal to amuse himself , and have an opportunity of amusing others . The principal end of music is to unbend the mind , and give it new strength , in order that it may

afterwards apply itself with better advantage to labour . As to the pleasures of the table , nothing more can bs recommended , in their use , than sobriety and moderation for health's sake ; and , in their choice and quality of preparation , the taste of the nation one lives in , or has been accustomed to , may be judged good and rational . There is no possibility of bei ' . > g an arbiter in such case ; so that all persons may enjoy " the cruditus hixas" of Petrcnius , by consulting only their own fancy and palate . FR AT . AQUIL . ROM " . Edinburgh , April 22 , 1793 .

Anecdote Of A Wretched Portrait Painter.

ANECDOTE OF A WRETCHED PORTRAIT PAINTER .

TFIIS Painter , who affefted to be a free-thinker , was one day talking very unworthily of the Bible ; a Clergyman maintained to him , that he was not only a speculative but a practical believer ; the painter diniedit ; the clergyman said he could prove it ; " you strictl y observe the second commandment , said the parson ; for in your pictures , you make not the likeness of any thing that is in heaven above , or in the earth beneath , or in the water under the earth . " R . J .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-01-01, Page 36” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011794/page/36/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON:. Article 3
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 5
ERRATA. Article 5
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE; OR, GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 6
A DISCOURSE, Article 7
DESCRIPTION OF FREEMASONRY. Article 9
THE PRINCIPLES OF FREE MASONRY EXPLAINED. Article 10
A PRAYER, USED AT THE INITIATION OF A CANDIDATE. Article 24
ADDRESS TO FREEMASONS IN GENERAL. Article 24
THE CEREMONY OBSERVED AT FUNERALS, Article 25
THE FUNERAL SERVICE. Article 27
FOR THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 31
ON THE UTILITY, CHOICE, AND USE OF PLEASURES, Article 32
ANECDOTE OF A WRETCHED PORTRAIT PAINTER. Article 36
ON THE NATURE OF DESIGN AND DECORATION IN ARCHITECTURE. Article 37
ON GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE. Article 39
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 41
ON LONGEVITY. Article 43
THOUGHTS ON THE NEW-YEAR; AND ON THE VICISSITUDES OF LIFE. Article 47
A FRAGMENT ON BENEVOLENCE. Article 49
ON THE SACRED CHARACTERS OF KINGS. Article 50
ON KEEPING A SECRET. Article 53
GENEROUS SENTIMENTS. Article 54
ANECDOTES OF THE LATE HUGH KELLY. Article 55
ANECDOTE OF MARESCHAL DE TURENNE. Article 60
EQUALITY OF THE SEXES. Article 61
DEAN SWIFT. Article 61
THE PRINCE OF WALES. Article 62
DOMESTIC PEACE AND HAPPINESS, Article 63
SINGULAR PROPHECY. Article 64
PARTICULARS OF THE PLAGUE IN PHILADELPHIA. Article 65
TEMPERANCE. Article 69
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 71
PROLOGUE Article 73
EPILOGUE Article 73
POETRY. Article 75
ON THE DECEIT OF THE WORLD. Article 76
ON THE VANITY OF THE WORLD. Article 77
LINES ON AMBITION. Article 77
ELEGIAC STANZAS Article 78
ODE Article 79
TO THE AFFLUENT. Article 80
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 81
MISCELLANEOUS INTELLIGENCE. Article 85
Untitled Article 86
Untitled Article 86
Untitled Article 86
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Page 36

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On The Utility, Choice, And Use Of Pleasures,

a tragedy , its diction pure , sentiments grand , intrigue well conduced , catastrophe natural and judicious ; or a comedy , in which I might learn every time I laugh , to guard " against all subjects of ridicule . An Opera is less a theatrical exhibition than the assemblage of many . Music , words , singing , dancing , machines , decorations : What ex-! How different-operators ! The speclacle is brilliant , it

pence many dazzles and astonishes you ; but if you proceed to the analysis of most operas , you will find either great faults in each part , or that , out of good parts in themselves , a very indifferent whole has been made . There are few but delig ht in music : It is the most exquisite and most innocent of all pleasures ; it is a pleasure of all ages , all states , all places , and of almost all . tastes ; it may be enjoyed in its whole extent at

the expence of another , without being importunate ; and it may be also enjoyed in solitude : It prevents or alleviates the lowness of spirits , and raises the soul from the dejeftion she is sometimes thrown into by the iniquity of man . The . voice , by its sweetness and different inflexions , persuades the mind , and touches the heart ; and some are of opinion , that there is no music so agreeable as the sounds of the voice of a beloved person .

There is a sort of danger in a taste for music which should be carefully avoided ; and this is to be so much taken with it , as to make it one ' s sole or favouiite occupation . This excess is a vice of the taste , and mind ; and the man of quality , who behaves in this respedt as the musician by profession , lies open to the same ridicule as the musician who negleftsmusic : But let not the fear of being too fond of music

hinder your loving and learning it . Whoever does not love music is deprived of the most innocent of p leasures . Whoever does not know it cannot discern all its beauty ; and he has negle & ed a talent , by the help of which he mig ht possess wherewithal to amuse himself , and have an opportunity of amusing others . The principal end of music is to unbend the mind , and give it new strength , in order that it may

afterwards apply itself with better advantage to labour . As to the pleasures of the table , nothing more can bs recommended , in their use , than sobriety and moderation for health's sake ; and , in their choice and quality of preparation , the taste of the nation one lives in , or has been accustomed to , may be judged good and rational . There is no possibility of bei ' . > g an arbiter in such case ; so that all persons may enjoy " the cruditus hixas" of Petrcnius , by consulting only their own fancy and palate . FR AT . AQUIL . ROM " . Edinburgh , April 22 , 1793 .

Anecdote Of A Wretched Portrait Painter.

ANECDOTE OF A WRETCHED PORTRAIT PAINTER .

TFIIS Painter , who affefted to be a free-thinker , was one day talking very unworthily of the Bible ; a Clergyman maintained to him , that he was not only a speculative but a practical believer ; the painter diniedit ; the clergyman said he could prove it ; " you strictl y observe the second commandment , said the parson ; for in your pictures , you make not the likeness of any thing that is in heaven above , or in the earth beneath , or in the water under the earth . " R . J .

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