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  • Jan. 1, 1797
  • Page 8
  • THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY, FOR JANUARY 1797.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1797: Page 8

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    Article THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY, FOR JANUARY 1797. ← Page 3 of 8 →
Page 8

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The Scientific Magazine, And Freemasons' Repository, For January 1797.

that he was both a weak and an imprudent prince : suc . ii of his regulations as were beneficial being accompanied by others that were detrimental ; and several of his plans of reform being totally repugnant to the customs and genius of his people . He irritated the clergy , by secularizing the estates of the monasteries , and ordering many painted images of saints to be rempved from the churches . He offended the army , by the preference which he publicly shewed to iiis Holstein

troops ; by introducing the Prussian discipline ; and appointing new uniforms to several regiments . He affronted the nobility , by appointing his uncle Prince George of Holstein , generalissimo of the forces ; and by the superior confidence he placed in foreigners . He raised great discontents as well by the war with Denmark , as by his alliances with Prussia ; and inflamed the general odium by the public contempt

he expressed for the Russian nation , for their religion , and for their manners . This impolitic defiance of popular prejudices , destroyed the affection of his subjects . ; fomented the intrigues of the opposite party ; and at length terminated in his dethronement . ' Jn no light does the inconsistency of this unfortunate emperor ' s character more strongly manifest itself than in his behaviour to his

. consort . After his accession , though he frequently gave public marks . of deep-rooted aversion ; yet he . would often behave to her with that deference , which the superiority of her understanding challenged . By an unaccountable act of imprudence , he would , in a full court , iinvest her with the . exterior decorations of sovereignty ; while , in the

character of a colonel , he presented to her the ollicers of his regiment . At the blessing of the waters , when the Russian monarch appears in all the pomp of majesty , the ceremonial part was left to the empress , and he mounted guard as colonel , and saluted her with his pike . Under all these circumstances , the dignity of her deportment was so striking , that it was impossible not to contrast her behaviour with the trilling levity of her husband's conduct ; and to give the preference

where it was so evidently due . Thus this infatuated prince , at ths very time he was fully determined to divorce and imprison his wife , imprude ' ntly displayed to his subjects ljer capacity for empire ; and , while he proclaimed her forfeiture of his own esteem , adopted every method to secure to her that of the whole nation . AfeamvhiJe the breach between them was continually widened : he \ yould occasionally

behave to her with the most brutal contumely ; and once , in particular , at an entertainment he gave in honour of the king at" Prussia , he publicly affronted her to such a degree , that she burst into tears , and retired from table . Thus his insults , no less than his deference , equally attracted odium to himself , and popularity to Catharine . It is also a well-known factthat he more than once avowed an

in-, tention of arresting both her and the great-duke , ( now Paul 1 . ) whom lie proposed to exclude from the succession , and of marrying Elizabeth countess of Voronzof , his favourite mistress . This alarming measure was scarcely adopted before it was immediately conveyed to Catharine , through the imprudence of ths countess . 13 y the same , or other means , as well as by the indiscretion pi' Peter himself , the eajT

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-01-01, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011797/page/8/.
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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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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Scientific Magazine, And Freemasons' Repository, For January 1797.

that he was both a weak and an imprudent prince : suc . ii of his regulations as were beneficial being accompanied by others that were detrimental ; and several of his plans of reform being totally repugnant to the customs and genius of his people . He irritated the clergy , by secularizing the estates of the monasteries , and ordering many painted images of saints to be rempved from the churches . He offended the army , by the preference which he publicly shewed to iiis Holstein

troops ; by introducing the Prussian discipline ; and appointing new uniforms to several regiments . He affronted the nobility , by appointing his uncle Prince George of Holstein , generalissimo of the forces ; and by the superior confidence he placed in foreigners . He raised great discontents as well by the war with Denmark , as by his alliances with Prussia ; and inflamed the general odium by the public contempt

he expressed for the Russian nation , for their religion , and for their manners . This impolitic defiance of popular prejudices , destroyed the affection of his subjects . ; fomented the intrigues of the opposite party ; and at length terminated in his dethronement . ' Jn no light does the inconsistency of this unfortunate emperor ' s character more strongly manifest itself than in his behaviour to his

. consort . After his accession , though he frequently gave public marks . of deep-rooted aversion ; yet he . would often behave to her with that deference , which the superiority of her understanding challenged . By an unaccountable act of imprudence , he would , in a full court , iinvest her with the . exterior decorations of sovereignty ; while , in the

character of a colonel , he presented to her the ollicers of his regiment . At the blessing of the waters , when the Russian monarch appears in all the pomp of majesty , the ceremonial part was left to the empress , and he mounted guard as colonel , and saluted her with his pike . Under all these circumstances , the dignity of her deportment was so striking , that it was impossible not to contrast her behaviour with the trilling levity of her husband's conduct ; and to give the preference

where it was so evidently due . Thus this infatuated prince , at ths very time he was fully determined to divorce and imprison his wife , imprude ' ntly displayed to his subjects ljer capacity for empire ; and , while he proclaimed her forfeiture of his own esteem , adopted every method to secure to her that of the whole nation . AfeamvhiJe the breach between them was continually widened : he \ yould occasionally

behave to her with the most brutal contumely ; and once , in particular , at an entertainment he gave in honour of the king at" Prussia , he publicly affronted her to such a degree , that she burst into tears , and retired from table . Thus his insults , no less than his deference , equally attracted odium to himself , and popularity to Catharine . It is also a well-known factthat he more than once avowed an

in-, tention of arresting both her and the great-duke , ( now Paul 1 . ) whom lie proposed to exclude from the succession , and of marrying Elizabeth countess of Voronzof , his favourite mistress . This alarming measure was scarcely adopted before it was immediately conveyed to Catharine , through the imprudence of ths countess . 13 y the same , or other means , as well as by the indiscretion pi' Peter himself , the eajT

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