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  • Jan. 1, 1797
  • Page 52
  • REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1797: Page 52

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. ← Page 7 of 8 →
Page 52

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Review Of New Publications.

1 A recent circumstance , with which the public is well acquainted , seems to call for this Vindication , and even ( painful as it is ) to impose the measure upon me as a solemn duty , and obligation . I allude to the public statement , made by my son . The world to which he has appealed , will judge and pronounce upon the truth of the allegations , and the weight of the testimonies , which he has laid before them . I beg to assure the public that the refutation ' of Mr . Malone's book shall be brought forward with all possible speed ; in

which , whether the papers imputed to Shakspear are genuine or not , it will be clearly shewn , that he embarked in this enquiry as utterly destitute of the information of a p hilologist , and the acumen of a Critic , as it will , by his gross and repeated personalities , be manifested , that his selfish and interested views have made him throughout lose sig ht of the manners of a gentleman . ' Mr . Ireland , in the course of his Vindication , relates every fact as it occurredand we are convincedfrom the documents he has producedthat he

, , , is perfectly innocent of ' the charge either of deception or duplicity ; and that if the world have been deceived as to the authenticity of the MSS . Mr . Ireland has been deceived also . This pamphlet being only the introduction to a greater work in reply to Mr . Malone , does not enter into any enquiry as to the internal evidence of the papers . Mr . Ireland , however , animadverts in a very proper and spirited manner on the scurrility contained in the " Inquiry" of Mr . Maloneand the labours of the other pseudo-critics . After summing up

, the evidence in his own favour , to clear up his character and integrity , he proceeds to state what the further continuation of the work will be directed to . ' The other part of this work will be allotted to an investigation of the critical attacks , that have been directed against the' papers , hi \ vhich I trust that Mr . Malone will be completely refuted . Perhaps it might be expefted of me , that I should advert to the , other antagonists , who have appeared in

the field of the controversy . Of the first of these publications , entitled , " A Letter to George Steevens , Esq . containing a Critical examination , ' . ' & c . & c . as it has been abundantly refuted in a very able pamphlet , entitled , "A Comparative Review of the opinion , ' . ' & c . & c . I shall say nothing further . One Waldron likewise , has waded into the controversy , a bad aEtov and a worse critic . These are men , on whom I shall not animadvert .- They who mistake their vanity for their capacity , and suppose that they are qualined to

perform what they have presumption to attempt , are a tribe , on whom admonition will be wasted , and rebuke will be superfluous . ' But I have confined my reasoning to Mr . Malone ; because , as he is known to the world by what may be emphatically called his literary labours on other ; occasions , so has he distinguished himself by the bulk of his criticisms on . , this . What Dr . Warburton said of poor Theobald , he would have said with infinitely more justice of this critic : " That what he read he could transcribe ;

but as what he thought , if ever he did . think , he could but ill express , so he , read on ; and by that means got a character of learning , without risquing the imputation of wanting a better talent- " In the part , however , which he has taken in this controversy , he lias brought the only literary quality he has , that of patient , and laborious research , into suspicion . Whether it be the instinctive property of dulness to be dark , 'and bewildered , in proportion to the efforts it makesjo be briht and icuousor that though he has much

g persp , reading , he has not enough for the office he has arrogated , it is certain that his book abounds with so many blunders , and overflows with so much presumption , that it seems a sort of mixed animal , engendered between a perT ' severing dulness on one side , and an envious mind on the other . ' It I succeed in proving what I have asserted , I shall do a . very essential service to literature itself . I shall have ridded the literary world of a sort

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-01-01, Page 52” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011797/page/52/.
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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 52

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

Review Of New Publications.

1 A recent circumstance , with which the public is well acquainted , seems to call for this Vindication , and even ( painful as it is ) to impose the measure upon me as a solemn duty , and obligation . I allude to the public statement , made by my son . The world to which he has appealed , will judge and pronounce upon the truth of the allegations , and the weight of the testimonies , which he has laid before them . I beg to assure the public that the refutation ' of Mr . Malone's book shall be brought forward with all possible speed ; in

which , whether the papers imputed to Shakspear are genuine or not , it will be clearly shewn , that he embarked in this enquiry as utterly destitute of the information of a p hilologist , and the acumen of a Critic , as it will , by his gross and repeated personalities , be manifested , that his selfish and interested views have made him throughout lose sig ht of the manners of a gentleman . ' Mr . Ireland , in the course of his Vindication , relates every fact as it occurredand we are convincedfrom the documents he has producedthat he

, , , is perfectly innocent of ' the charge either of deception or duplicity ; and that if the world have been deceived as to the authenticity of the MSS . Mr . Ireland has been deceived also . This pamphlet being only the introduction to a greater work in reply to Mr . Malone , does not enter into any enquiry as to the internal evidence of the papers . Mr . Ireland , however , animadverts in a very proper and spirited manner on the scurrility contained in the " Inquiry" of Mr . Maloneand the labours of the other pseudo-critics . After summing up

, the evidence in his own favour , to clear up his character and integrity , he proceeds to state what the further continuation of the work will be directed to . ' The other part of this work will be allotted to an investigation of the critical attacks , that have been directed against the' papers , hi \ vhich I trust that Mr . Malone will be completely refuted . Perhaps it might be expefted of me , that I should advert to the , other antagonists , who have appeared in

the field of the controversy . Of the first of these publications , entitled , " A Letter to George Steevens , Esq . containing a Critical examination , ' . ' & c . & c . as it has been abundantly refuted in a very able pamphlet , entitled , "A Comparative Review of the opinion , ' . ' & c . & c . I shall say nothing further . One Waldron likewise , has waded into the controversy , a bad aEtov and a worse critic . These are men , on whom I shall not animadvert .- They who mistake their vanity for their capacity , and suppose that they are qualined to

perform what they have presumption to attempt , are a tribe , on whom admonition will be wasted , and rebuke will be superfluous . ' But I have confined my reasoning to Mr . Malone ; because , as he is known to the world by what may be emphatically called his literary labours on other ; occasions , so has he distinguished himself by the bulk of his criticisms on . , this . What Dr . Warburton said of poor Theobald , he would have said with infinitely more justice of this critic : " That what he read he could transcribe ;

but as what he thought , if ever he did . think , he could but ill express , so he , read on ; and by that means got a character of learning , without risquing the imputation of wanting a better talent- " In the part , however , which he has taken in this controversy , he lias brought the only literary quality he has , that of patient , and laborious research , into suspicion . Whether it be the instinctive property of dulness to be dark , 'and bewildered , in proportion to the efforts it makesjo be briht and icuousor that though he has much

g persp , reading , he has not enough for the office he has arrogated , it is certain that his book abounds with so many blunders , and overflows with so much presumption , that it seems a sort of mixed animal , engendered between a perT ' severing dulness on one side , and an envious mind on the other . ' It I succeed in proving what I have asserted , I shall do a . very essential service to literature itself . I shall have ridded the literary world of a sort

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