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  • May 1, 1794
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1794: Page 56

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    Article CHARACTER OF REGULUS. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 56

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

Character Of Regulus.

Happy would it have been for himself , and for several hundred thousands of his fellow-creatures , if he had observed injhe cause of Rome the same moderation as in his own private concerns ; but with sorrow must we own , that when Carthage lay at his feet , supplicating for peace , Regulus refused to grant it , except on the most oppressive terms . Shocking and inhuman was this action , but it is not

certain to what cause we are to attribute it : whether to orders which Regulus received on this head from the government at Rome , or to the erroneous principles of patriotism , by which he himself probably was misled . Permit me , my dear fellow-students , on this occasion to express my wishesthat none of you may ever forgetthat patriotism is a

, , virtue far inferior to philanthropy . In your private concerns , may you continue to abhor all sentiments of avarice and ambition ; nor think yourselves at liberty to encourage the far more hurtful ambition and avarice of the public , if any of you should ever be called to preside at the helm of the British state .

Permit me also to breathe a wish , that the present British government may be influenced by a Christian , not a Roman spirit , in putting a speedy end to all the miseries of this present war ; a war which has . stained with blood the seas and shores of the four quarters of the globe . May this dismal havoc be soon changed into a just and moderate , and therefore most wise and most honourable peace 1 I cannot forbear communicating to some lines of a of

you copy verses , which my dear pupil composed some weeks ago on the evening of the first day of May . O gentle . breeze , which from th' Egerian grot Mildly exhal'st , sweet as the censer's fume ; Extend thy gracious influence ! breathe forth O ' er Germany ' s waste plains , the blood-stain'd banks Of Oder and sad Albis ! 0 breathe forth 1

More welcome thou to that afflicted land , More fragrant thou than vernal Zephyrus , Tho' scatt ' ring dews benign , and flow ' rs of thousand hues . Come , gentle breeze ! calm all this storm of war ; Breathe forth thy balm , to heal fall ' n Gallia's wounds , » ¦ And smooth in Albion ' s seas each swelling wave .

But let me spare the blushes of my dear pupil ( I had almost called him my dear son ) , and return to our Roman studies . In the hand of Providence any instrument is sufficient for any work . The arrival of one man at Carthage ( nor was he of any considerable rank , figure , or name ) changed the whole scene . The Roman pride and power were laid level with the dust by one Spartan , and this at time when

a Sparta itself was in a very low state . - O my dear sir , ( in saying this Crito addressed himself to the eldest of the young gentlemen ) , how very similar is this catastrophe of Regulus to that of Nicias ; the account of which 1 remember your reading at Cambridge with much pleasure , in the favourite part of your favourite author Thucydides ? One single Spartan was then able to overthrow all the Athenian , as now all the Roman power . If you Should extend your travels to Syracuse , with what pleasing melanchol y will you there survey the scenes of the misfortunes- of

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-05-01, Page 56” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051794/page/56/.
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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 56

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

Character Of Regulus.

Happy would it have been for himself , and for several hundred thousands of his fellow-creatures , if he had observed injhe cause of Rome the same moderation as in his own private concerns ; but with sorrow must we own , that when Carthage lay at his feet , supplicating for peace , Regulus refused to grant it , except on the most oppressive terms . Shocking and inhuman was this action , but it is not

certain to what cause we are to attribute it : whether to orders which Regulus received on this head from the government at Rome , or to the erroneous principles of patriotism , by which he himself probably was misled . Permit me , my dear fellow-students , on this occasion to express my wishesthat none of you may ever forgetthat patriotism is a

, , virtue far inferior to philanthropy . In your private concerns , may you continue to abhor all sentiments of avarice and ambition ; nor think yourselves at liberty to encourage the far more hurtful ambition and avarice of the public , if any of you should ever be called to preside at the helm of the British state .

Permit me also to breathe a wish , that the present British government may be influenced by a Christian , not a Roman spirit , in putting a speedy end to all the miseries of this present war ; a war which has . stained with blood the seas and shores of the four quarters of the globe . May this dismal havoc be soon changed into a just and moderate , and therefore most wise and most honourable peace 1 I cannot forbear communicating to some lines of a of

you copy verses , which my dear pupil composed some weeks ago on the evening of the first day of May . O gentle . breeze , which from th' Egerian grot Mildly exhal'st , sweet as the censer's fume ; Extend thy gracious influence ! breathe forth O ' er Germany ' s waste plains , the blood-stain'd banks Of Oder and sad Albis ! 0 breathe forth 1

More welcome thou to that afflicted land , More fragrant thou than vernal Zephyrus , Tho' scatt ' ring dews benign , and flow ' rs of thousand hues . Come , gentle breeze ! calm all this storm of war ; Breathe forth thy balm , to heal fall ' n Gallia's wounds , » ¦ And smooth in Albion ' s seas each swelling wave .

But let me spare the blushes of my dear pupil ( I had almost called him my dear son ) , and return to our Roman studies . In the hand of Providence any instrument is sufficient for any work . The arrival of one man at Carthage ( nor was he of any considerable rank , figure , or name ) changed the whole scene . The Roman pride and power were laid level with the dust by one Spartan , and this at time when

a Sparta itself was in a very low state . - O my dear sir , ( in saying this Crito addressed himself to the eldest of the young gentlemen ) , how very similar is this catastrophe of Regulus to that of Nicias ; the account of which 1 remember your reading at Cambridge with much pleasure , in the favourite part of your favourite author Thucydides ? One single Spartan was then able to overthrow all the Athenian , as now all the Roman power . If you Should extend your travels to Syracuse , with what pleasing melanchol y will you there survey the scenes of the misfortunes- of

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