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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1798
  • Page 16
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1798: Page 16

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    Article WISDOM AND FOLLY: A VISION. ← Page 5 of 6 →
Page 16

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

Wisdom And Folly: A Vision.

' I shall not mention any more of the modern pro gees of Mrs ; Novel : they are myriads in number . If you wish for / particular-information , read the register of Folly ' s Deputy-Librarian . ' Just as my Guide had finished speaking , a person made his appearance in a party-coloured jacket and trowsers . Delight , I saw , overspread the countenance of the courtiers , but most of all , pf the Sovereign . The party-coloured man jumped with great agility oyer

the head of a very tall , aukward Fool , that stood with a white wand in his hand , and hit Mrs . Novel a slap on a certain part of her per- ; son which Fools frequently honour with a salutation . Her Majesty burst out into a loud and long fit of laughter , which was joined by a louder and longer of the whole court . Jokes of equaj ingenuity followed with equal applause . One I thought a ;

little severe : a short fat woman , whom I had observed very dexterous in picking the pockets of other Fools , had hidden her acquisition in a BOX : Harlequin , for so the party-coloured man was called :, pulled her box from her pocket , opened if , and publicly returned their own purses to the proprietors ; thus depriving poor Fatty of the . fruits of her dexterity . He then put her head into a curious wooden machine , and pelted her with rotten eggs . He called her some outlandish name , which , methought , sounded like one of the Kings of Egypt . My Guide told me she was on ' e of a gang of thieves , and

that instead of the joke which I thought severe , she would in due time probably meet , along with her accomplices , with another wooden machine that would effectually put an end to her depredations . This'Harlequin , my Guide told me , was admitted b y Wisdom to amuse children , as by Folly to amuse grown persons . A gentleman now came forward , whose name was Monsieur Ballet He had the singular art of teaching people to fiht and kill each other

g to jig time . Characters of a much graver appearance than any I had yet seen , paid their court , for I found that gra-vity was in great request with Folly , when a co-ver fur inanity A personage with a remarkable heavy countenance , walking up with a slow and stately pace , addressed her Majesty with mixed

pomposity and humility . ' Behold , gracious Queen / ' he said , ' the valuable acquirements of a life spent in the service of Folly . ' Here , with exulting countenance , he produced a number of boxes , and opening one , brought out a very large assortment of butterflies ; some complete , the rest in the various stages of their progress from caterpillars : another box contained a great variety of shells : a third

, numbers of those two classes of beings , the louse and the bug . Those , my Guide told me , he had inclosed in one box , in hopes that contiguity might cause acquaintance , and acquaintance love . " Notitiam primosque graclus vicinia fecit ;

Tempore crevit amor , tajda ; quoque jure coissent SED " Not that he had borrowed the idea from Ovid of contiguity producing love : that was a plagiarism of which even his enemies could mot accuse him , he being totally unacquainted with Ovid , or any Latin

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-02-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021798/page/16/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
ACCOUNT OF KIEN-LONG, EMPEROR OF CHINA. Article 4
NOTICE OF SIR ANDREW DOUGLAS. Article 6
A RETROSPECTIVE VIEW OF THE LITERATURE OF 1797. Article 7
WISDOM AND FOLLY: A VISION. Article 12
THE LIFE OF XIMENES, ARCHBISHOP OF TOLEDO. Article 18
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Article 30
A COLLECTION OF CHINESE PROVERBS AND APOTHEGMS, Article 36
AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY. Article 41
COLONEL TITUS's LETTER TO OLIVER CROMWELL. Article 43
THE COLLECTOR. Article 45
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS: Article 50
POETRY. Article 58
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 62
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 66
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Page 16

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

Wisdom And Folly: A Vision.

' I shall not mention any more of the modern pro gees of Mrs ; Novel : they are myriads in number . If you wish for / particular-information , read the register of Folly ' s Deputy-Librarian . ' Just as my Guide had finished speaking , a person made his appearance in a party-coloured jacket and trowsers . Delight , I saw , overspread the countenance of the courtiers , but most of all , pf the Sovereign . The party-coloured man jumped with great agility oyer

the head of a very tall , aukward Fool , that stood with a white wand in his hand , and hit Mrs . Novel a slap on a certain part of her per- ; son which Fools frequently honour with a salutation . Her Majesty burst out into a loud and long fit of laughter , which was joined by a louder and longer of the whole court . Jokes of equaj ingenuity followed with equal applause . One I thought a ;

little severe : a short fat woman , whom I had observed very dexterous in picking the pockets of other Fools , had hidden her acquisition in a BOX : Harlequin , for so the party-coloured man was called :, pulled her box from her pocket , opened if , and publicly returned their own purses to the proprietors ; thus depriving poor Fatty of the . fruits of her dexterity . He then put her head into a curious wooden machine , and pelted her with rotten eggs . He called her some outlandish name , which , methought , sounded like one of the Kings of Egypt . My Guide told me she was on ' e of a gang of thieves , and

that instead of the joke which I thought severe , she would in due time probably meet , along with her accomplices , with another wooden machine that would effectually put an end to her depredations . This'Harlequin , my Guide told me , was admitted b y Wisdom to amuse children , as by Folly to amuse grown persons . A gentleman now came forward , whose name was Monsieur Ballet He had the singular art of teaching people to fiht and kill each other

g to jig time . Characters of a much graver appearance than any I had yet seen , paid their court , for I found that gra-vity was in great request with Folly , when a co-ver fur inanity A personage with a remarkable heavy countenance , walking up with a slow and stately pace , addressed her Majesty with mixed

pomposity and humility . ' Behold , gracious Queen / ' he said , ' the valuable acquirements of a life spent in the service of Folly . ' Here , with exulting countenance , he produced a number of boxes , and opening one , brought out a very large assortment of butterflies ; some complete , the rest in the various stages of their progress from caterpillars : another box contained a great variety of shells : a third

, numbers of those two classes of beings , the louse and the bug . Those , my Guide told me , he had inclosed in one box , in hopes that contiguity might cause acquaintance , and acquaintance love . " Notitiam primosque graclus vicinia fecit ;

Tempore crevit amor , tajda ; quoque jure coissent SED " Not that he had borrowed the idea from Ovid of contiguity producing love : that was a plagiarism of which even his enemies could mot accuse him , he being totally unacquainted with Ovid , or any Latin

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