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  • June 1, 1795
  • Page 23
  • ON FRIENDSHIP.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, June 1, 1795: Page 23

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Page 23

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

On Friendship.

union . Connected together by foul deeds , they swear fidelity to each other ; sincere tears flow from their ferocious eyes ; -their horrible compact exhibits the outlines of an immaculate , though disfigured , sensation ; they support , they comfort each other ; and generosity blazes even in the dark recesses where they whet their poignards . Behold one of them taken and condemned to the punishment he

deserves ' . he does not betray the tie of mutual confidence . A compassionate courage still subsists in his degraded and guilty mind ; he refuses to name his accomplices , he wishes to preserve them from the tortures he dares with so much intrepidity . He loves them then ; he thinks himself bound by the services he has received : at the foot of the scaffold he does not belie his constancy ; and , struggling between

anguish and fear , he does not betray any cowardly or perfidious weakness ; a remnant , of virtue breaks forth in this wretch , crushed under the executioner ' s bar ; he expires with his ideal g lory ; he descends to the grave , pleased not to have violated , in spite -of torments , the covenant of secrecy and friendship .-How I love to indulge tlie thought of indissoluble sympathy ! —

And why should there npt be an intimate connection between men of sensations ? I will allow there is no relation between inactive and mute matter ; but that hearts ,, formed for each other , should not fly to meet ; that they should not guess , that they should not recognize one another , cannot be adopted-by any one who has felt the attractive and repelling force of love and aversion .

Voltaire has defined friendship to be the marriage of two souls .-That is well expressed . He who only lives for himself cannot be happy ; he who would concenter all in self , will be alone ; whoever ' lives alone , is deprived of the delig ht of sentiment ; for sentiment is only the reaction of two hearts united . Friendship , like love , owes all its energy to strength of mind ; such a sacrifice that such a one cannot conceive , js executed freely and

with rapture by another . Pyrrhus ' s attendants , consoling him for the loss of a friend , among other arguments , represented the inutility of grief . " 1 know it , " replied he ; ' ' but he died before -1 could return him the pleasure hegave me . "—A noble-sentiment , and well expressed !• ' Ajax , when with Philostrates , spoke thus to-Achilles ' : " Which of

thy heroic actions made thee forget danger most ? " " Those , " . replied he , " I undertook for a friend . " - — " And which , " said Ajax ; f- was the easiest ? " " The same , " replied Achilles . " And of thy wotindsj which was the most painful ? " " That which Hector gave me . " " Hector ! I did not know he wounded thee . " " He mortally wounded me—he killed Patroclus I "

It is said , friendship may require , but not extort . That proposition is false . Friendship should extort ; it ought even to be haughty , because that rig ht is reciprocal . Abstracted' from that , friendship is but a mere connection . I know nothing but foul deeds that can put a bar to friendship : hut for our friend , we should hid defiance to taunting and ridicule .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-06-01, Page 23” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01061795/page/23/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 3
HUMANITY OF GELO, KING OF SYRACUSE. Article 7
DISSERTATIONS ON THE POLITE ARTS. Article 8
GENEROUS SENTIMENTS ON THE PROSPERITY OF OTHERS, CONDUCIVE TO OUR OWN HAPPINESS. Article 10
BRIEF HISTORY OF THE RELIGIOUS AND MILITARY ORDER OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS OF ST. JOHN OF JERUSALEM. Article 12
THE FREEMASON. No. VI. Article 17
THE STAGE. Article 19
ON FRIENDSHIP. Article 22
BASEM; OR, THE BLACKSMITH. AN ORIENTAL APOLOGUE. Article 24
SPECIMEN OF MODERN BIOGRAPHY, Article 33
ANECDOTE. Article 34
TESTIMONY OF N. B. HALHEAD, ESQ. M. P. Article 35
SEMIRAMIS. A VISION. Article 37
DETACHED THOUGHTS. Article 39
RULES FOR THE PRESERVATION OF THE SIGHT. Article 43
ON DISCONTENT WITH OUR LOT IN LIFE. Article 45
Untitled Article 47
ESSAY ON JUSTICE. Article 48
ANECDOTE OF SANTEUIL. Article 49
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 50
ANECDOTE OF WILLIAM THE THIRD. Article 55
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 56
POETRY. Article 58
TO MISS S****. Article 58
TO Dr. BROWN, WITH A TONQUIN BEAN*. Article 59
VERSES, Article 59
A PARAPHRASE ON THE LAMENTATION OF DAVID, FOR THE DEATH OF SAUL AND JONATHAN. Article 60
THE MASONS' LODGE. Article 61
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 62
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 63
PROMOTIONS. Article 66
Untitled Article 66
Untitled Article 67
BANKRUPTS. Article 67
INDEX TO THE FOURTH VOLUME. Article 68
ADVERTISEMENT. Article 72
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On Friendship.

union . Connected together by foul deeds , they swear fidelity to each other ; sincere tears flow from their ferocious eyes ; -their horrible compact exhibits the outlines of an immaculate , though disfigured , sensation ; they support , they comfort each other ; and generosity blazes even in the dark recesses where they whet their poignards . Behold one of them taken and condemned to the punishment he

deserves ' . he does not betray the tie of mutual confidence . A compassionate courage still subsists in his degraded and guilty mind ; he refuses to name his accomplices , he wishes to preserve them from the tortures he dares with so much intrepidity . He loves them then ; he thinks himself bound by the services he has received : at the foot of the scaffold he does not belie his constancy ; and , struggling between

anguish and fear , he does not betray any cowardly or perfidious weakness ; a remnant , of virtue breaks forth in this wretch , crushed under the executioner ' s bar ; he expires with his ideal g lory ; he descends to the grave , pleased not to have violated , in spite -of torments , the covenant of secrecy and friendship .-How I love to indulge tlie thought of indissoluble sympathy ! —

And why should there npt be an intimate connection between men of sensations ? I will allow there is no relation between inactive and mute matter ; but that hearts ,, formed for each other , should not fly to meet ; that they should not guess , that they should not recognize one another , cannot be adopted-by any one who has felt the attractive and repelling force of love and aversion .

Voltaire has defined friendship to be the marriage of two souls .-That is well expressed . He who only lives for himself cannot be happy ; he who would concenter all in self , will be alone ; whoever ' lives alone , is deprived of the delig ht of sentiment ; for sentiment is only the reaction of two hearts united . Friendship , like love , owes all its energy to strength of mind ; such a sacrifice that such a one cannot conceive , js executed freely and

with rapture by another . Pyrrhus ' s attendants , consoling him for the loss of a friend , among other arguments , represented the inutility of grief . " 1 know it , " replied he ; ' ' but he died before -1 could return him the pleasure hegave me . "—A noble-sentiment , and well expressed !• ' Ajax , when with Philostrates , spoke thus to-Achilles ' : " Which of

thy heroic actions made thee forget danger most ? " " Those , " . replied he , " I undertook for a friend . " - — " And which , " said Ajax ; f- was the easiest ? " " The same , " replied Achilles . " And of thy wotindsj which was the most painful ? " " That which Hector gave me . " " Hector ! I did not know he wounded thee . " " He mortally wounded me—he killed Patroclus I "

It is said , friendship may require , but not extort . That proposition is false . Friendship should extort ; it ought even to be haughty , because that rig ht is reciprocal . Abstracted' from that , friendship is but a mere connection . I know nothing but foul deeds that can put a bar to friendship : hut for our friend , we should hid defiance to taunting and ridicule .

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