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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1798
  • Page 41
  • AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1798: Page 41

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    Article A COLLECTION OF CHINESE PROVERBS AND APOTHEGMS, ← Page 6 of 6
    Article AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 41

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A Collection Of Chinese Proverbs And Apothegms,

Without salted mey-tse how can we give to a sauce the five relishes . —Meaning that it would be absurd to expect the end without the means . The mey-tse are tart fruits like wild apricots : the Chinese candy them , they pickle and also salt them , on purpose to use them in sauces . By the five relishes is perhaps only meant the entire and complete taste . The Chinese seem to consider the number five as the most complete and perfect number , to which they reduce not only the cardinal virtues , the relative duties , the commandments of Fo , & c . but even the elements , and the noble parts of the human body- ]

Your works above shall follow you : you shall carry off nothing else . —[ A fine saying in the books of Fo . The Spaniards say , Buen hazer fiorence , to do lo al perece : a good work flourishes , every thing else perishes . ] A man may be well mounted though he does not ride the horse Ki ; one may be a good disciple though not equal to Yen-tse . —j \ K"i is a celebrated horse . Yen-tse was the most beloved disciple of

Confucius . ] As the liquor takes the figure of the vessel that contains it , so the subjects imitate the prince . As the stone me , can never become white ; so a head defiled with iniquity will always retain its blackness . [ Me is a kind of black earthwhich they rub on the engraved blocks instead of ink . ]

, A ( passion indulged is a kind of drunkenness : its remedy is —? vanquish thyself . A pear is returned for a peach : you shall not reap what you have sowed . [ Applied when a grateful ' return is not made for a favour received . ]

An Historical Essay On Longevity.

AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY .

^ CONCLUDED FliOM P . 10 . ] WE find also many instances of long life among schoolmasters ; SQ that one mig ht almost believe that continual intercourse with youth may contribute something towards our renovation and support . " But poets and artists , in short all those fortunate mortals whose principal occupation leads them to be conversant with the sports of whole lifein the

fancy and self-created worlds , and whose , properest sense , is an agreeable dream , have a particular claim to a place in the history of longevity . We have already seen to what a great age Anacreon , Sophocles , and Pindar attained . Young , Voltaire , Bodmer , Haller , and Metastasip , all lived to be very old . The most extraordinary instances of longevity are to he found , however , only among those classes of mankind who , amidst bodily labour , and in the open air , lead a simple life , such as farmers , gardners , hunter ' s , soldiers , and sailors . In these situations man , still attains to

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-02-01, Page 41” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021798/page/41/.
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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 41

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

A Collection Of Chinese Proverbs And Apothegms,

Without salted mey-tse how can we give to a sauce the five relishes . —Meaning that it would be absurd to expect the end without the means . The mey-tse are tart fruits like wild apricots : the Chinese candy them , they pickle and also salt them , on purpose to use them in sauces . By the five relishes is perhaps only meant the entire and complete taste . The Chinese seem to consider the number five as the most complete and perfect number , to which they reduce not only the cardinal virtues , the relative duties , the commandments of Fo , & c . but even the elements , and the noble parts of the human body- ]

Your works above shall follow you : you shall carry off nothing else . —[ A fine saying in the books of Fo . The Spaniards say , Buen hazer fiorence , to do lo al perece : a good work flourishes , every thing else perishes . ] A man may be well mounted though he does not ride the horse Ki ; one may be a good disciple though not equal to Yen-tse . —j \ K"i is a celebrated horse . Yen-tse was the most beloved disciple of

Confucius . ] As the liquor takes the figure of the vessel that contains it , so the subjects imitate the prince . As the stone me , can never become white ; so a head defiled with iniquity will always retain its blackness . [ Me is a kind of black earthwhich they rub on the engraved blocks instead of ink . ]

, A ( passion indulged is a kind of drunkenness : its remedy is —? vanquish thyself . A pear is returned for a peach : you shall not reap what you have sowed . [ Applied when a grateful ' return is not made for a favour received . ]

An Historical Essay On Longevity.

AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY .

^ CONCLUDED FliOM P . 10 . ] WE find also many instances of long life among schoolmasters ; SQ that one mig ht almost believe that continual intercourse with youth may contribute something towards our renovation and support . " But poets and artists , in short all those fortunate mortals whose principal occupation leads them to be conversant with the sports of whole lifein the

fancy and self-created worlds , and whose , properest sense , is an agreeable dream , have a particular claim to a place in the history of longevity . We have already seen to what a great age Anacreon , Sophocles , and Pindar attained . Young , Voltaire , Bodmer , Haller , and Metastasip , all lived to be very old . The most extraordinary instances of longevity are to he found , however , only among those classes of mankind who , amidst bodily labour , and in the open air , lead a simple life , such as farmers , gardners , hunter ' s , soldiers , and sailors . In these situations man , still attains to

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