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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1797
  • Page 26
  • ESSAYS ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH HISTORY AND CLASSICAL LEARNING.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1797: Page 26

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Essays On Subjects Connected With History And Classical Learning.

mamty , can disapprove of the struggles , both in ancient and modern days , that have been made to obtain it . So little is the confidence we can place in man in such situations , so great the danger that a Tiberius or a Nero should succeed an Augustus , that no expence , no difficulty , should deter us from guarding against it . ' If a king be vested -with a discretionary of dispensing with the lawswhat

power , remains deserving the name of afvee constitution or settled government ? The security of every thing valuable is at an end ; and the inhabitants of Britain would enjoy no pre-eminence over the wretched slaves , who bow with terror and submission to the edicts of a tyrannical despot ' * Yet nearly such was pur condition at the Revolution . The substantial principles of liberty originated with our constitution , and were inseparable froits existence

m very . —They were still contained in great power and abundance in the trunk of the tree , though the arm of the tyrant might have lopped off some of the branches . Nothing was wanting but a safeguard to its undisturbed vegetation . Nor was it long wanting . Our ancestors struggled , and prevailed . Those powers which were hostile to our liberties for abolished

, were ever . I he doctrine of resistance was asserted in theory , and confirmed by precedent . ' A spirit of free enquiry was infused into our political body , which gives a timel y check to the abuse of power , or rouses our fellow countrymen to vengeance on their oppressors , ' fiy the preservation of the protestant reli gion , we probably prevented the horrors of catholic bi gotry and superstition - . —horrors which the

funous zeal of Queen Mary had so recentl y exhibited . In the ri ght of managing and directing the supplies , our ancestors have confei ? ed a privilege , which , if exercised with- resolution and integrity , would overthrow a corrupt administration , or prevent the possibility of its existence . At the Revolution , the terms of the ori ginal contract were expressl y declared , and the reciprocal duties of prince- and people Stated and defined Before that time

. , the executive power had endangered the legislative , by claims of independence and pre-eminence . Then it was , that , by denying the pretended ri ght of dispensing with the laws , the legislature regained its natural authority , and . became the supreme power in the state . But the Revolution , perhaps , deserves as much the attention of the philosopher , for its direct inituence the of human

on progress opinion , as for its immediate effects ' on the government of England . A revolution productive of consequences like these , will be depreciated by none but overweening theorists , or wild enthusiasts . They must either not understand its merits , or be pursuing some visionary scheme of their own . The imagination of man can always paint leasing than

more p pictures any which can . be found in the curious exhibitions of a \ t , or in the beautiful scenes both of rude and cultivated nature . But till mankind shall oe more free from their passions and infirmities , the government estaJiislied at the Revolution , restored to its ori ginal purity by such adfptions and alterations as time and circumstances require , and such

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-01-01, Page 26” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 28 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011797/page/26/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
THE PROPRIETOR TO THE SUBSCRIBERS. Article 4
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 5
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY, FOR JANUARY 1797. Article 6
ON SUICIDE AND MADNESS. Article 14
TO THE EDITOR OF THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE. Article 16
THE GHOST OF STERNE IN LONDON. Article 20
ESSAYS ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH HISTORY AND CLASSICAL LEARNING. Article 24
LETTERS FROM LORD ESSEX TO QUEEN ELIZABETH. Article 31
THE DYING MIRA, A FRAGMENT. Article 32
ANECDOTES. Article 33
REMARKABLE RESEMBLANCE IN TWO TWIN BROTHERS. Article 35
SINGULAR INSTANCE OF A CAPACITY TO ENDURE ABSTINENCE AND HUNGER IN A SPIDER. Article 36
ABSENCE OF MIND. Article 37
FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 38
MASONRY FOUNDED ON SCRIPTURE. Article 38
ROYAL CUMBERLAND SCHOOL. Article 43
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 45
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 45
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 46
POETRY. Article 54
THE AFFLICTED PARENTS, AN ELEGY Article 54
TO THE MEMORY OF LAURA. Article 55
ODE ON CLASSIC DISCIPLINE. Article 55
LINES Article 56
IMITATION OF SHAKSPEAR, Article 56
SONNET. Article 57
TO THE GLOW-WORM. Article 57
SONG. Article 57
EPITAPH ON A BEAUTIFUL BOY. Article 57
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 58
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 60
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 60
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 66
OBITUARY. Article 75
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Page 26

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

Essays On Subjects Connected With History And Classical Learning.

mamty , can disapprove of the struggles , both in ancient and modern days , that have been made to obtain it . So little is the confidence we can place in man in such situations , so great the danger that a Tiberius or a Nero should succeed an Augustus , that no expence , no difficulty , should deter us from guarding against it . ' If a king be vested -with a discretionary of dispensing with the lawswhat

power , remains deserving the name of afvee constitution or settled government ? The security of every thing valuable is at an end ; and the inhabitants of Britain would enjoy no pre-eminence over the wretched slaves , who bow with terror and submission to the edicts of a tyrannical despot ' * Yet nearly such was pur condition at the Revolution . The substantial principles of liberty originated with our constitution , and were inseparable froits existence

m very . —They were still contained in great power and abundance in the trunk of the tree , though the arm of the tyrant might have lopped off some of the branches . Nothing was wanting but a safeguard to its undisturbed vegetation . Nor was it long wanting . Our ancestors struggled , and prevailed . Those powers which were hostile to our liberties for abolished

, were ever . I he doctrine of resistance was asserted in theory , and confirmed by precedent . ' A spirit of free enquiry was infused into our political body , which gives a timel y check to the abuse of power , or rouses our fellow countrymen to vengeance on their oppressors , ' fiy the preservation of the protestant reli gion , we probably prevented the horrors of catholic bi gotry and superstition - . —horrors which the

funous zeal of Queen Mary had so recentl y exhibited . In the ri ght of managing and directing the supplies , our ancestors have confei ? ed a privilege , which , if exercised with- resolution and integrity , would overthrow a corrupt administration , or prevent the possibility of its existence . At the Revolution , the terms of the ori ginal contract were expressl y declared , and the reciprocal duties of prince- and people Stated and defined Before that time

. , the executive power had endangered the legislative , by claims of independence and pre-eminence . Then it was , that , by denying the pretended ri ght of dispensing with the laws , the legislature regained its natural authority , and . became the supreme power in the state . But the Revolution , perhaps , deserves as much the attention of the philosopher , for its direct inituence the of human

on progress opinion , as for its immediate effects ' on the government of England . A revolution productive of consequences like these , will be depreciated by none but overweening theorists , or wild enthusiasts . They must either not understand its merits , or be pursuing some visionary scheme of their own . The imagination of man can always paint leasing than

more p pictures any which can . be found in the curious exhibitions of a \ t , or in the beautiful scenes both of rude and cultivated nature . But till mankind shall oe more free from their passions and infirmities , the government estaJiislied at the Revolution , restored to its ori ginal purity by such adfptions and alterations as time and circumstances require , and such

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