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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • May 1, 1798
  • Page 12
  • LETTER II.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1798: Page 12

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    Article HAWKESWORTH'S NOTES on ROBERTSON'S HISTORY OF SCOTLAND. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article LETTER II. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 12

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

Hawkesworth's Notes On Robertson's History Of Scotland.

who with a few attendants waited for her . ' Hawkesworth : — ' This is strangel y told ; for , by the first part , it appears tnat Douglas was in the castle , ami having let out the Queen ami one maid , shut the gate after her ; and , by the sequel , that he was waiting for her at the boat . ' Robertson , ibid . ' She instantly mounted on horseback , and rode full speed towards Niddrie , Lord Beaton ' s seat , in West Loihian . '

Hawkesworth : — ' Did she mount before she got on shore ?' Robertson , page 435 . ' He , ( i . e . Hamilton ) took his stand in a wooden gallery , which h-id a window towards the street ; spread a feather-bed on the floor , to hinder the noise of his feet from being heard ; hung up a black cloth behind him , that his shadow might not be observed from withoutaud after all this preparationcalmly

; , expected the Regent ' s approach , who had lodged during the night in a house not far . distant . ' - Hawkesworth : — . Whoever could see his shadow , could ha--e seen him ; and as no man ' s feet make a noise while he stands still , the precaution of vlie feather-bed , after lie had taken his stand , seems ridiculous , and is , probably , false . '

Letter Ii.

LETTER II .

TO THE PEOPLE OP GREAT BRITAIN .

yEItOW COUNTRYMEN , IN an hour when every one of us is called upon to contribute to the defence of his country , will you suffer a plain man to address a few words to yon , on a subject our hearts are all s . - - deeply interested in ? With a foreign and inveterate enemy threatening invasion , and subtle emissaries working to weaken and divide us at home , it

is full time for every man to rouse his attention , to examine their progress , to beware no less , perhaps more , of the danger from within than the menaces from abroad . When day by day you are assailed by publications which libel 3-our government and your religion , which press and insult ou with representations of whatever evils are your portion in the common lot of humanity , and attack the foundation of your best hopes—what will you , in common sense , think of them ? Is this humanity ? Is it the love of mankind?—No .

These are of milder temper . When the Author of Christianity gave a new religion , he did it to unite and console , fs then their morality more pure ? Look to their dilig . -nce in exasperating the sense of difficulty and distress , and to their zeal in breaking the most sacred ties of man to man . Whit means do they leave untried , to goad you on to a fury suited to their purposes ? In the moment of contest for all that is dearthey exposeand piobeand lacerate every wound , and

, , , relax everv weakened ( ibie , in hopes to produce a convulsion that sh'il ! lay the whole body of the slate an exhausted subject , for the attempts of giving new life by cold-blooded experimentalists . Against such men can it be neces .. urv to warn you iarthei ? It was not thus your ancestors gave you a constitution which the experience of a century has blessed in your behalf . They founded it iu moderation ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-05-01, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051798/page/12/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
MEMOIR OF THE COUNTESS OF DERBY, Article 3
DESCRIPTION OF THE SOURCE OF THE RHINE, Article 4
WISDOM AND FOLLY. Article 7
HAWKESWORTH'S NOTES on ROBERTSON'S HISTORY OF SCOTLAND. Article 10
LETTER II. Article 12
PROCEEDINGS OF A GREAT COUNCIL OF JEWS, Article 14
COLVILLE. Article 17
THE LIFE OF XIMENES, ARCHBISHOP OF TOLEDO. Article 23
A BRIEF ENQUIRY INTO THE LEARNING OF SHAKSPEARE. Article 29
SCIENTIFIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 33
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 45
POETRY. Article 47
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 49
IRISH PARLIAMENT. Article 55
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 56
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 57
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Hawkesworth's Notes On Robertson's History Of Scotland.

who with a few attendants waited for her . ' Hawkesworth : — ' This is strangel y told ; for , by the first part , it appears tnat Douglas was in the castle , ami having let out the Queen ami one maid , shut the gate after her ; and , by the sequel , that he was waiting for her at the boat . ' Robertson , ibid . ' She instantly mounted on horseback , and rode full speed towards Niddrie , Lord Beaton ' s seat , in West Loihian . '

Hawkesworth : — ' Did she mount before she got on shore ?' Robertson , page 435 . ' He , ( i . e . Hamilton ) took his stand in a wooden gallery , which h-id a window towards the street ; spread a feather-bed on the floor , to hinder the noise of his feet from being heard ; hung up a black cloth behind him , that his shadow might not be observed from withoutaud after all this preparationcalmly

; , expected the Regent ' s approach , who had lodged during the night in a house not far . distant . ' - Hawkesworth : — . Whoever could see his shadow , could ha--e seen him ; and as no man ' s feet make a noise while he stands still , the precaution of vlie feather-bed , after lie had taken his stand , seems ridiculous , and is , probably , false . '

Letter Ii.

LETTER II .

TO THE PEOPLE OP GREAT BRITAIN .

yEItOW COUNTRYMEN , IN an hour when every one of us is called upon to contribute to the defence of his country , will you suffer a plain man to address a few words to yon , on a subject our hearts are all s . - - deeply interested in ? With a foreign and inveterate enemy threatening invasion , and subtle emissaries working to weaken and divide us at home , it

is full time for every man to rouse his attention , to examine their progress , to beware no less , perhaps more , of the danger from within than the menaces from abroad . When day by day you are assailed by publications which libel 3-our government and your religion , which press and insult ou with representations of whatever evils are your portion in the common lot of humanity , and attack the foundation of your best hopes—what will you , in common sense , think of them ? Is this humanity ? Is it the love of mankind?—No .

These are of milder temper . When the Author of Christianity gave a new religion , he did it to unite and console , fs then their morality more pure ? Look to their dilig . -nce in exasperating the sense of difficulty and distress , and to their zeal in breaking the most sacred ties of man to man . Whit means do they leave untried , to goad you on to a fury suited to their purposes ? In the moment of contest for all that is dearthey exposeand piobeand lacerate every wound , and

, , , relax everv weakened ( ibie , in hopes to produce a convulsion that sh'il ! lay the whole body of the slate an exhausted subject , for the attempts of giving new life by cold-blooded experimentalists . Against such men can it be neces .. urv to warn you iarthei ? It was not thus your ancestors gave you a constitution which the experience of a century has blessed in your behalf . They founded it iu moderation ,

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