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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1798
  • Page 27
  • FURTHER MEMOIR OF JOHN WILKES.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1798: Page 27

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    Article FURTHER MEMOIR OF JOHN WILKES. ← Page 4 of 7 →
Page 27

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Further Memoir Of John Wilkes.

a new gale of favour seems to have sprung up on the occasion ; so that he was ele & ed without any material opposition , and continued to enjov that lucrative appointment to the hour of his death . Such is the outline of that life which has just been closed , and it remains for us to attempt the delineation , of that charafter which gave it all its effect and colour

. Mr . Wilkes cannot , we think , be said to have possessed what are called great talents : nor was he formed for great occasions . Lively parts , a sagacity , which , by some would be denominated cunning , a persevering spirit , a mind fertile in resources , and a certain confidence which invigorated his other qualities , are the predominating features of his charader . - It may also be added , that his mind was stored

with useful as well as elegant knowledge ; and that having been a member of the Senate at an early period of his life , he had been induced to apply himself with considerable attention to the more early history , as well as the existing politics of his country . If it should be thought by any of our readers that the extraordinary circumstances of his life , the bustle he made , the influence lie acquiredandthe effects he producedmust have demanded die

ex-, . , ertion of talents far superior to such as are here allowed him , it may be answered , that the best of all talents is to be found in the description of Tacitus , Par negotiis ike supra . Besides a very satisfactory reference may be made to the coadjutors which Mr . Wilkes possessed

in his favourite business of producing the loud , popular , and wideextended outcry o £ Wilkes and Liberty . They were no others than the very Ministers who wished to destroy him ; but , by their violent and unconstitutional proceedings , gave him an importance which healone could never have obtained . He wished to be the idol of the populace , and his enemies erected the altar . The justice and severity of his

prosecution were so many fortunate circumstances , which he employed with an address peculiar to himself , to attach the cause of British Liberty , ' violated in his person , inseparably to himself , in the minds of the multitude ; nor did he fail of proceeding in his important object , far beyond what he had suffered himself to expect , in the most flattering moment of his hopes .

When we refleft on what was done by the spirit of Wilkes and Liberty , operating more or less on every part of the kingdom , but particularly under the very eye of Government in the City of London ' and the County of Middlesex , we are almost disposed to doubt tlie accuracy of our remembrance . This irit made MrTownsendMr . SawbridgeMr . BullMr ,

sp . , , _ , Oliver , Mr . Hayley , Sir Watkin Lewes , and Mr . Wilkes , Aldermen of London , and commanded a powerful majority in its Corporation and Livery . It elected 'the greater part of those gentlemen , at different times , to represent the City in Parliament ^ It conferred an equal honour on Mr . Wilkes and Serjeant Glynn in the County of Middlesex . It called Mr . Beckford a second time to be Lord Mayor

of London , while it drove Mr . Harley , with , all his personal influence , and the most active support of Government , from the representation of the City , and animated tlie Court of Aldermen to cleft VOL . x .- D

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-01-01, Page 27” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011798/page/27/.
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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 27

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

Further Memoir Of John Wilkes.

a new gale of favour seems to have sprung up on the occasion ; so that he was ele & ed without any material opposition , and continued to enjov that lucrative appointment to the hour of his death . Such is the outline of that life which has just been closed , and it remains for us to attempt the delineation , of that charafter which gave it all its effect and colour

. Mr . Wilkes cannot , we think , be said to have possessed what are called great talents : nor was he formed for great occasions . Lively parts , a sagacity , which , by some would be denominated cunning , a persevering spirit , a mind fertile in resources , and a certain confidence which invigorated his other qualities , are the predominating features of his charader . - It may also be added , that his mind was stored

with useful as well as elegant knowledge ; and that having been a member of the Senate at an early period of his life , he had been induced to apply himself with considerable attention to the more early history , as well as the existing politics of his country . If it should be thought by any of our readers that the extraordinary circumstances of his life , the bustle he made , the influence lie acquiredandthe effects he producedmust have demanded die

ex-, . , ertion of talents far superior to such as are here allowed him , it may be answered , that the best of all talents is to be found in the description of Tacitus , Par negotiis ike supra . Besides a very satisfactory reference may be made to the coadjutors which Mr . Wilkes possessed

in his favourite business of producing the loud , popular , and wideextended outcry o £ Wilkes and Liberty . They were no others than the very Ministers who wished to destroy him ; but , by their violent and unconstitutional proceedings , gave him an importance which healone could never have obtained . He wished to be the idol of the populace , and his enemies erected the altar . The justice and severity of his

prosecution were so many fortunate circumstances , which he employed with an address peculiar to himself , to attach the cause of British Liberty , ' violated in his person , inseparably to himself , in the minds of the multitude ; nor did he fail of proceeding in his important object , far beyond what he had suffered himself to expect , in the most flattering moment of his hopes .

When we refleft on what was done by the spirit of Wilkes and Liberty , operating more or less on every part of the kingdom , but particularly under the very eye of Government in the City of London ' and the County of Middlesex , we are almost disposed to doubt tlie accuracy of our remembrance . This irit made MrTownsendMr . SawbridgeMr . BullMr ,

sp . , , _ , Oliver , Mr . Hayley , Sir Watkin Lewes , and Mr . Wilkes , Aldermen of London , and commanded a powerful majority in its Corporation and Livery . It elected 'the greater part of those gentlemen , at different times , to represent the City in Parliament ^ It conferred an equal honour on Mr . Wilkes and Serjeant Glynn in the County of Middlesex . It called Mr . Beckford a second time to be Lord Mayor

of London , while it drove Mr . Harley , with , all his personal influence , and the most active support of Government , from the representation of the City , and animated tlie Court of Aldermen to cleft VOL . x .- D

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