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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1798
  • Page 24
  • COMPARISON BETIVEEN THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1798: Page 24

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    Article COMPARISON BETIVEEN THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. ← Page 6 of 6
    Article FURTHER MEMOIR OF JOHN WILKES. Page 1 of 7 →
Page 24

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Comparison Betiveen The Ancients And Moderns In Science And Literature.

derful sight . Some time since a young woman lost her senses , and never recovered them , on suddenly being brought to the Falls . ' I will now mention the disadvantages of Upper Canada ; the ' country is subject to intermittents , long continued , and very distressing to new-comers . This is the case with every part of America in its wilderness state . It is subject to wolves , bears , foxes , & c . which destroy cattle and

your , sheep , poultry ; but the greatest inconvenience is , no servants are to be had ; yourself and famil y must do all the work : where a man is young and has a large family , that difficulty isremoved . My sons are merchants , at the head of Lake Antorio distill , und mean to brew . I found the U pper Country sickly ; I got a fever there : howeverwith the use of the barkI recovered intend

, , am . I living some time at Montreal , for tbe present , , where society is < rood . I have a house on the bank of St . Lawrence , very pleasant , where vessels of 500 tons lay their broadsides close to the shore , and unload without any wharf , perhaps a thing not to be paralleled in any part of the world . Copper , lead , and iron , are to be met with every where in the Upper Country .

Further Memoir Of John Wilkes.

FURTHER MEMOIR OF JOHN WILKES .

QUCH an extensive biography as an entire life of John Wilkes must necessaril y occupy would demand a space which the limits of our Magazine cannot afford . It would involve , among various other mutters of notoriety , an history of the Administrations of Lord Bute , Mr . George Grenville , ancl the Duke of Grafton . Nevertheless , as the historians of the day as it passes by us , we cannot suffer such a man to descend into his grave without-observation . We therefore offer to our readers the following sketch of his life and character .

In the early part of his career , Mr . Wilkes was known as Member , of Parliament for Aylesbury , and Colonel of the Buckinghamshire Militia ; as a man of a cultivated mind , lively talents , and dissipated manners ; and as one of the Club of Medmenham Abbey , near Marlow , of which so many idle stories have been related . This club , consisted of Sir Francis Dash wood , afterwards Lord Le Despenser , Lord Sandwich

, Paul Whitehead , and a few more lively spirits * who , under the title of tbe Monks of Medmenham , used occasionally , to pass a few days together at the Abbey in a course of conviviality , which , if it could not be altogether considered as the feast of reason , was-not without the flow of soul . As a writer , Mr . Wilkes was first known by a publication , entitled Observations on the Papers relative to the Rupture ivitb Spain , laid before both Houses of Parliament in January , 17 62 ; but lie soon became an object of very general attention as the conductor and prin-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-01-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 4 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011798/page/24/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 4
PREFACE TO VOLUME THE TENTH. Article 5
REFLECTIONS ON THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE YEAR M,DCC,XCVIII. Article 7
AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY. Article 10
A RETROSPECTIVE VIEW OF THE LITERATURE OF THE YEAR 1797. Article 13
A COLLECTION OF CHINESE PROVERBS AND APOTHEGMS, Article 16
ON THE INVASION. Article 17
COMPARISON BETIVEEN THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Article 19
DESCRIPTION OF CANADA. Article 21
FURTHER MEMOIR OF JOHN WILKES. Article 24
ACCOUNT OF THE GRAND SEIGNOR, SULTAN SELIM III. Article 30
THE COLLECTOR. Article 32
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 38
SYMBOLIC MASONRY. Article 41
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 42
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 43
POETRY. Article 51
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 55
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 58
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 59
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 60
OBITUARY. Article 71
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Comparison Betiveen The Ancients And Moderns In Science And Literature.

derful sight . Some time since a young woman lost her senses , and never recovered them , on suddenly being brought to the Falls . ' I will now mention the disadvantages of Upper Canada ; the ' country is subject to intermittents , long continued , and very distressing to new-comers . This is the case with every part of America in its wilderness state . It is subject to wolves , bears , foxes , & c . which destroy cattle and

your , sheep , poultry ; but the greatest inconvenience is , no servants are to be had ; yourself and famil y must do all the work : where a man is young and has a large family , that difficulty isremoved . My sons are merchants , at the head of Lake Antorio distill , und mean to brew . I found the U pper Country sickly ; I got a fever there : howeverwith the use of the barkI recovered intend

, , am . I living some time at Montreal , for tbe present , , where society is < rood . I have a house on the bank of St . Lawrence , very pleasant , where vessels of 500 tons lay their broadsides close to the shore , and unload without any wharf , perhaps a thing not to be paralleled in any part of the world . Copper , lead , and iron , are to be met with every where in the Upper Country .

Further Memoir Of John Wilkes.

FURTHER MEMOIR OF JOHN WILKES .

QUCH an extensive biography as an entire life of John Wilkes must necessaril y occupy would demand a space which the limits of our Magazine cannot afford . It would involve , among various other mutters of notoriety , an history of the Administrations of Lord Bute , Mr . George Grenville , ancl the Duke of Grafton . Nevertheless , as the historians of the day as it passes by us , we cannot suffer such a man to descend into his grave without-observation . We therefore offer to our readers the following sketch of his life and character .

In the early part of his career , Mr . Wilkes was known as Member , of Parliament for Aylesbury , and Colonel of the Buckinghamshire Militia ; as a man of a cultivated mind , lively talents , and dissipated manners ; and as one of the Club of Medmenham Abbey , near Marlow , of which so many idle stories have been related . This club , consisted of Sir Francis Dash wood , afterwards Lord Le Despenser , Lord Sandwich

, Paul Whitehead , and a few more lively spirits * who , under the title of tbe Monks of Medmenham , used occasionally , to pass a few days together at the Abbey in a course of conviviality , which , if it could not be altogether considered as the feast of reason , was-not without the flow of soul . As a writer , Mr . Wilkes was first known by a publication , entitled Observations on the Papers relative to the Rupture ivitb Spain , laid before both Houses of Parliament in January , 17 62 ; but lie soon became an object of very general attention as the conductor and prin-

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