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  • May 1, 1794
  • Page 49
  • SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF M. BRISSOT.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1794: Page 49

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    Article SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF M. BRISSOT. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 49

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

Sketch Of The Life Of M. Brissot.

different works : it is for them that I print this memorial , as the result-, or , rather , as the practical versification of the doctrine which I have published . They have read my writings ; they are . on the point of knowing their author ; they are about to hear his confession . I call Heaven to witness that I make it here with the same . sincerity as if I had one foot in the grave . . icable whoduring the

I was born in 1754 . Tllfi desp journalist , , course of five years , has disgusted his readers by absurdly ringing the changes upon the stoves of my father , would , doubtless , have sported also with the anvil of Demosthenes , the stirrup of Amyot , and of the poet Rousseau , the tan-pits of Massillon , and the cutlery of Diderot . He little imagined that , in 1789 , an article of the declaration of rights of birth

would cover " with shame the partizans of the prejudice , by declaring '( what philosophy never ceased to pronounce ) , that men were born equal ; and that there was no birth either illustrious or obscure . . One has not the choice of a father . If my birth had been at my own option , could I have fixed upon the station of the author of my being / l should not have laced it in a palacebut under the simple and

p , rustic roof of an American husbandman . That is the occupation which would have made me proud : it would have enabled my father to have unfolded his character , and all those qualities which rendered him esteemed by his fellow-citizens , but which were buried under his business , as a T ' raiteur . Being the parent of a numerous family , he

employed all the means resulting from his easy circumstances to give them a good education . I then pursued my studies , the success attending Ihe public course of which seemed to invite me , at an early period , to the bar , the only career in France at that time apparently open to talents and to liberty . Previously to my being called to it , a progress through that disgusting noviciate , which is the forerunner of the initiation of candidates into the order of oratorsbecame necessary ..

, The office of an attorney was my gymnasium ; I laboured in it for the space of five years , as well in the country as in Paris . As I advanced in the study of chicane my disgust against the profession increased ; and this aversion was accompanied by that indignation which the feeling and unpractised minds of young persons naturally experience at the discovery of unprincip led impostures . To relieve my weariness and the sciencesThe stud

disgust I applied myself to literature and to . _ y of tiie languages was , above all others , my favourite pursuit . Chance threw in my way two Englishmen , on a visit to my own country ; I learned their language ; and this circumstance decided my fate . The knowledge of the English tongue and of some others , together with the perusal of well-written foreign books , gave the finishing stroke it to resi entirel

to my disgust against the bar . I quitted gn myself y up to the bent of mv own taste . This step offended my parents , who designed me for the bar of Chatres . My resolution , did not , however , g ive way . I had before my eyes the example of a multitude of men of letters who experienced the same fate . I put my dependence upon some friends , upon my humble talents , ' and upon the exceedingly narrow circle to which mv wants were limited ; for , I always conceived that to

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-05-01, Page 49” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051794/page/49/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 4
THOUGHTS ON MODERN WIT. Article 8
MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS TO QUEEN ELIZABETH. Article 9
QUEEN ELIZABETH TO SIR NICHOLAS THROGMORTON. Article 9
A SPEECH Article 10
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 12
KNIGHTS TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND, Article 16
Untitled Article 17
ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY, &c. IN A LETTER TO J. AND E, FRY. Article 18
THE LIFE OF MRS. ANNE AYSCOUGH, OR ASKEW. Article 22
AN ACCOUNT OF DRUIDISM. Article 26
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 33
ACCOUNT OF JOHN O'GROAT'S HOUSE. Article 38
MEMOIRS OF THE LATE . DR. PAUL HIFFERNAN. Article 39
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF M. BRISSOT. Article 48
ON THE STUDY OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. Article 50
CHARACTER OF REGULUS. Article 55
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 58
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS Article 63
POETRY. Article 70
THE FIELD OF BATTLE. Article 73
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 74
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 75
DEATHS. Article 80
BANKRUPTS. Article 81
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Page 49

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

Sketch Of The Life Of M. Brissot.

different works : it is for them that I print this memorial , as the result-, or , rather , as the practical versification of the doctrine which I have published . They have read my writings ; they are . on the point of knowing their author ; they are about to hear his confession . I call Heaven to witness that I make it here with the same . sincerity as if I had one foot in the grave . . icable whoduring the

I was born in 1754 . Tllfi desp journalist , , course of five years , has disgusted his readers by absurdly ringing the changes upon the stoves of my father , would , doubtless , have sported also with the anvil of Demosthenes , the stirrup of Amyot , and of the poet Rousseau , the tan-pits of Massillon , and the cutlery of Diderot . He little imagined that , in 1789 , an article of the declaration of rights of birth

would cover " with shame the partizans of the prejudice , by declaring '( what philosophy never ceased to pronounce ) , that men were born equal ; and that there was no birth either illustrious or obscure . . One has not the choice of a father . If my birth had been at my own option , could I have fixed upon the station of the author of my being / l should not have laced it in a palacebut under the simple and

p , rustic roof of an American husbandman . That is the occupation which would have made me proud : it would have enabled my father to have unfolded his character , and all those qualities which rendered him esteemed by his fellow-citizens , but which were buried under his business , as a T ' raiteur . Being the parent of a numerous family , he

employed all the means resulting from his easy circumstances to give them a good education . I then pursued my studies , the success attending Ihe public course of which seemed to invite me , at an early period , to the bar , the only career in France at that time apparently open to talents and to liberty . Previously to my being called to it , a progress through that disgusting noviciate , which is the forerunner of the initiation of candidates into the order of oratorsbecame necessary ..

, The office of an attorney was my gymnasium ; I laboured in it for the space of five years , as well in the country as in Paris . As I advanced in the study of chicane my disgust against the profession increased ; and this aversion was accompanied by that indignation which the feeling and unpractised minds of young persons naturally experience at the discovery of unprincip led impostures . To relieve my weariness and the sciencesThe stud

disgust I applied myself to literature and to . _ y of tiie languages was , above all others , my favourite pursuit . Chance threw in my way two Englishmen , on a visit to my own country ; I learned their language ; and this circumstance decided my fate . The knowledge of the English tongue and of some others , together with the perusal of well-written foreign books , gave the finishing stroke it to resi entirel

to my disgust against the bar . I quitted gn myself y up to the bent of mv own taste . This step offended my parents , who designed me for the bar of Chatres . My resolution , did not , however , g ive way . I had before my eyes the example of a multitude of men of letters who experienced the same fate . I put my dependence upon some friends , upon my humble talents , ' and upon the exceedingly narrow circle to which mv wants were limited ; for , I always conceived that to

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