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  • April 1, 1797
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The Freemasons' Magazine, April 1, 1797: Page 49

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. ← Page 11 of 11
Page 49

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

Review Of New Publications.

He goes back to the commencement of hostilities , talks about the decree of fraternization , the opening of the Scheldt , and after having given as much political information of equal novelty , intimates some sort of acquaintance with Mr . Pitt , by roundly asserting , as if his authority were that of the minister himself , that no man can deprecate the present war more than he does i and that it' has interrupted that state of publictranquillity , which alone could give efficacy to the plans which he had formed , with so fond a zeal and such

commanding sagacity , to ease the burthens of the people , and advance the prosperity of his country . ' The following short extract mi g ht easil y have been mistaken for a transcript from one of tbe premier ' s speeches . ' As I have already observed , the superinducing motives of private ambition aiming at importance , of a dubious intellect resting on the opinion of others , the vexations of a desperate fortuneor the factious habits of a

re-, publican education , can alone induce men to represent our country , amidst all its embarrassments , as in a declining condition . On the contrary , Great Britain continues to maintain its place in the scale of nations t nor do I fear to rest the truth of this assertion on a fair examination of its aftual state and internal , condition . ¦ ' We are now in the fifth year of the most " extraordinary and alarming war in which this nation was ever engaged : nevertheless , Great Britain never

felt , in this period of any former war , so little pressure on its trade , such abundant revenues , and a more general as well as active disposition to support the public measures . In what former war were supplies raised to such an amount , with so much ease , and on terms so advantageous to the country ? Save we not seen a loan of eig hteen millions anxiously contested by two distinct bodies ofmoneyed men ?—while a loan for thc service of the present year , to an equal amount , was raised in the short space of fifteen hours . ^—¦

an unparalleled example of national wealth , and the confidence of a people in those who govern them ! * The taxes which have been imposed to pay the interest of these supplies , are such as must be approved by all who consider their genertl effect and application . Those objects which conduce the least to the real comforts of life , and are more distinctly removed from the natural wants of man , have been collected with curious discrimination , to increase the revenues which the exigencies ot the times imperiously demand . '

The postscript , which is almost half the pamphlet , is addressed to Mr . Erskine : it blends some personal illiberalities with personal compliments , and represents the French Revolution as a ' monstrous compound of every crime of which human nature has been guilty , from thc day of original sin to the present moment ; ' infidelity , blasphemy , and atheism , forming a part of this incongruous mass of abominations . The author talks a great deal about the indignities which have been offered to the christian reli gion , and shews

the humanity which he has" imbibed from it , in the following sentence ,, written in blood , and that would do honour to a fiend . As b y the extinction of kings the British constitution must be destroyed , I should hope that even the threat of such a system of decapitation would ever be considered b y Englishmen as a sufficient cause to prepare for war with the whole world . ' ' Christianity suffers more from such disgraceful advocatesthan from the

, most inveterate hostilities which an enemy can offer . Who will give credit to the gentle and pacific influence of Christianity , if they behold , among its professors , a spirit of such unqualified ferocity ? It makes our hearts bleed , to observe , among the followers of the amiable and excellent author of our reli gion , sentiment ? which would have drawn tears of the deepest sorrow irom his eyes .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-04-01, Page 49” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 27 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01041797/page/49/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY, Article 4
ON LEAVING LEHENA , † IN OCTOBER, 1788. Article 5
ANCIENT AND MODERN FRANCE. Article 7
REMARKABLE INSTANCES OF THE EFFECT OF FEAR. Article 8
AUTHENTIC PARTICULARS RELATIVE TO THE DEATH OF ROBESPIERRE. Article 10
PRESENT STATE OF THE SPANISH THEATRE. Article 13
DESCRIPTION OF THE ISLAND OF TRINIDAD, Article 18
RISE AND FALL OF BEARDS. Article 21
AN ACCOUNT OF THE DEATH OF THE COUNTESS CORNELIA BAUDI, OF CESENA; Article 24
SHORT DESCRIPTION OF AUSTRIA, Article 28
ANECDOTE OF THE EMPEROR THEODOSIUS. Article 31
ON THE PROFLIGATE MANNERS OF THE CITY OF AVIGNON, Article 32
ORIGINAL LETTER OF PETRARCH TO A FRIEND, Article 33
OF THE DESTRUCTION MADE BY DUELLING IN FRANCE, IN THE LAST CENTURY. Article 33
FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 34
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 36
CUMBERLAND FREEMASONS' SCHOOL. Article 36
PRESTONIAN LECTURES. Article 36
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 37
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Article 37
TO GEORGE WASHINGTON, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, THE ADDRESS OF THE GRAND LODGE OF PENNSYLVANIA. Article 38
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 39
POETRY. Article 50
EPILOGUE TO THE SAME. Article 50
THE CHANGES OF NATURE. Article 50
TO A RED BREAST: Article 51
THE LAIRD AND THE LASS O' LALLAN's MILL . Article 51
THE LAPLAND WITCHES. Article 52
LOUISA: A FUNERERL WREATH. Article 52
SONNET IV. Article 52
LE CORDIER. Article 53
THE TWISTER. Article 53
TO THE EVENING STAR. Article 53
THE DESCRIPTION OF A STORM. Article 53
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 54
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 56
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 57
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
OBITUARY. Article 69
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Page 49

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

Review Of New Publications.

He goes back to the commencement of hostilities , talks about the decree of fraternization , the opening of the Scheldt , and after having given as much political information of equal novelty , intimates some sort of acquaintance with Mr . Pitt , by roundly asserting , as if his authority were that of the minister himself , that no man can deprecate the present war more than he does i and that it' has interrupted that state of publictranquillity , which alone could give efficacy to the plans which he had formed , with so fond a zeal and such

commanding sagacity , to ease the burthens of the people , and advance the prosperity of his country . ' The following short extract mi g ht easil y have been mistaken for a transcript from one of tbe premier ' s speeches . ' As I have already observed , the superinducing motives of private ambition aiming at importance , of a dubious intellect resting on the opinion of others , the vexations of a desperate fortuneor the factious habits of a

re-, publican education , can alone induce men to represent our country , amidst all its embarrassments , as in a declining condition . On the contrary , Great Britain continues to maintain its place in the scale of nations t nor do I fear to rest the truth of this assertion on a fair examination of its aftual state and internal , condition . ¦ ' We are now in the fifth year of the most " extraordinary and alarming war in which this nation was ever engaged : nevertheless , Great Britain never

felt , in this period of any former war , so little pressure on its trade , such abundant revenues , and a more general as well as active disposition to support the public measures . In what former war were supplies raised to such an amount , with so much ease , and on terms so advantageous to the country ? Save we not seen a loan of eig hteen millions anxiously contested by two distinct bodies ofmoneyed men ?—while a loan for thc service of the present year , to an equal amount , was raised in the short space of fifteen hours . ^—¦

an unparalleled example of national wealth , and the confidence of a people in those who govern them ! * The taxes which have been imposed to pay the interest of these supplies , are such as must be approved by all who consider their genertl effect and application . Those objects which conduce the least to the real comforts of life , and are more distinctly removed from the natural wants of man , have been collected with curious discrimination , to increase the revenues which the exigencies ot the times imperiously demand . '

The postscript , which is almost half the pamphlet , is addressed to Mr . Erskine : it blends some personal illiberalities with personal compliments , and represents the French Revolution as a ' monstrous compound of every crime of which human nature has been guilty , from thc day of original sin to the present moment ; ' infidelity , blasphemy , and atheism , forming a part of this incongruous mass of abominations . The author talks a great deal about the indignities which have been offered to the christian reli gion , and shews

the humanity which he has" imbibed from it , in the following sentence ,, written in blood , and that would do honour to a fiend . As b y the extinction of kings the British constitution must be destroyed , I should hope that even the threat of such a system of decapitation would ever be considered b y Englishmen as a sufficient cause to prepare for war with the whole world . ' ' Christianity suffers more from such disgraceful advocatesthan from the

, most inveterate hostilities which an enemy can offer . Who will give credit to the gentle and pacific influence of Christianity , if they behold , among its professors , a spirit of such unqualified ferocity ? It makes our hearts bleed , to observe , among the followers of the amiable and excellent author of our reli gion , sentiment ? which would have drawn tears of the deepest sorrow irom his eyes .

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