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  • Jan. 1, 1798
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1798: Page 25

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    Article FURTHER MEMOIR OF JOHN WILKES. ← Page 2 of 7 →
Page 25

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

Further Memoir Of John Wilkes.

• ipal writer of a periodical paper called The North Briton , the first number of which appeared June 5 , 17 63 . This paper , fn which he Was assisted bv Charles Churchill , the poet , declared hostilities against the existing Ministers and the Scotch nation . It did not fail to attract the attention of the public , from the acrimonious boldness with which it was written , and was read with avidity , because its invectives were directedagainstanunpopularMinisterThough these

nrincipally . papers are now but little read , they had their share in driving Lord Bute from power , and when George Grenville succeeded him , his apprehensions of the North Briton influenced him rather to crush than conciliate the authors of it . The well known Number forty-five soon gave him and his colleagues an opportunity to attempt the former , and the career of prosecuting and persecuting Mr .. Wilkes soon began . He ivas taken into custody by a general warrant , and committed a close prisoner to the Tower , while his house was entered by the Officers

of Government , his bureaus broke open , ancl ins papers seized , to serve as evidence in the prosecution which was to follow . From his imprisonment he was relieved , on a writ of Habeas Corpus , by the Court of Common Pleas ; but the offensive number of Tbe North Briton was ordered by both Houses of Parliament to be burned b y the common hangman ; and soon after Mr . Wilkes was expelled the House of Commons as the author of that paper . At the same time

he was proceeded against by the House of Lords for a breach of privilege in the person of Warburton , Bishop of Gloucester , who had been mentioned in a Judicurous and indecent poem , called An Essay on Woman , which is well known to be a . travestie of Mr . Pope ' s Essay on Man . Of this poem , which was not written by Mr . Wilkes , a few copies only were printed at a private press in his house , and a journeyman printer employed there , had been bribed to purloin one of them for the criminating purpose to ivhich it was now appropriated .

While both Plouses of Parliament were thus letting loose their vengeance against him , Mr . Wilkes was prosecuted in the Courts below as a libeller and a blasphemer ; and having , after his duel with Mr . Martin , then Secretary of the Treasury , retired to France , he was in a short time , to use the cant term of the law , run to an outlawry . The short-lived Administration of the Marquis of Rockingham now

succeeded , but no inclination was manifested to restore Mr . Wilkes to his country . He flattered himself , however , when his former friend , the Duke of Grafton , became Prime Minister , that his expectations , which had been disappointed by that Nobleman ' s predecessor , would now be realized . But it does not appear to have been the destiny of Mr . Wilkes to receive protection or support from the

leaders of any political party , whether in or out of power , and the Noble Duke , who had so approved his conduct , and lamented his sufferings , when at length it was in his power to have relieved him , deceived and deserted him . With that determined spirit , therefore , which seems never to have forsaken him , he returned to England , and , with an outlawry hanging over his head , offered himself as a candidate to represent the city of London in Parliament , with a very encouraging

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-01-01, Page 25” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011798/page/25/.
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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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Page 25

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

Further Memoir Of John Wilkes.

• ipal writer of a periodical paper called The North Briton , the first number of which appeared June 5 , 17 63 . This paper , fn which he Was assisted bv Charles Churchill , the poet , declared hostilities against the existing Ministers and the Scotch nation . It did not fail to attract the attention of the public , from the acrimonious boldness with which it was written , and was read with avidity , because its invectives were directedagainstanunpopularMinisterThough these

nrincipally . papers are now but little read , they had their share in driving Lord Bute from power , and when George Grenville succeeded him , his apprehensions of the North Briton influenced him rather to crush than conciliate the authors of it . The well known Number forty-five soon gave him and his colleagues an opportunity to attempt the former , and the career of prosecuting and persecuting Mr .. Wilkes soon began . He ivas taken into custody by a general warrant , and committed a close prisoner to the Tower , while his house was entered by the Officers

of Government , his bureaus broke open , ancl ins papers seized , to serve as evidence in the prosecution which was to follow . From his imprisonment he was relieved , on a writ of Habeas Corpus , by the Court of Common Pleas ; but the offensive number of Tbe North Briton was ordered by both Houses of Parliament to be burned b y the common hangman ; and soon after Mr . Wilkes was expelled the House of Commons as the author of that paper . At the same time

he was proceeded against by the House of Lords for a breach of privilege in the person of Warburton , Bishop of Gloucester , who had been mentioned in a Judicurous and indecent poem , called An Essay on Woman , which is well known to be a . travestie of Mr . Pope ' s Essay on Man . Of this poem , which was not written by Mr . Wilkes , a few copies only were printed at a private press in his house , and a journeyman printer employed there , had been bribed to purloin one of them for the criminating purpose to ivhich it was now appropriated .

While both Plouses of Parliament were thus letting loose their vengeance against him , Mr . Wilkes was prosecuted in the Courts below as a libeller and a blasphemer ; and having , after his duel with Mr . Martin , then Secretary of the Treasury , retired to France , he was in a short time , to use the cant term of the law , run to an outlawry . The short-lived Administration of the Marquis of Rockingham now

succeeded , but no inclination was manifested to restore Mr . Wilkes to his country . He flattered himself , however , when his former friend , the Duke of Grafton , became Prime Minister , that his expectations , which had been disappointed by that Nobleman ' s predecessor , would now be realized . But it does not appear to have been the destiny of Mr . Wilkes to receive protection or support from the

leaders of any political party , whether in or out of power , and the Noble Duke , who had so approved his conduct , and lamented his sufferings , when at length it was in his power to have relieved him , deceived and deserted him . With that determined spirit , therefore , which seems never to have forsaken him , he returned to England , and , with an outlawry hanging over his head , offered himself as a candidate to represent the city of London in Parliament , with a very encouraging

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