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  • June 1, 1796
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The Freemasons' Magazine, June 1, 1796: Page 39

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. ← Page 2 of 8 →
Page 39

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

Review Of New Publications.

' Cit git Rousseau I chez lui tout fut contraste , II aima les humains , mais se fut pour les fuir : II perdit sa patrie en voulant la servir : Modeste avec orgueil , —il fut pauvre avec faste ;—Ne sxvt pas vivre , —et silt mourir . ' c Here lies Rousseau , the slave of truth and ficlion , Who lived and died a lendid contradiction :

sp With love of man he fled the world , and gave His country wounds whene ' er he meant to save . Haughty , though poor , and modest , yet with pride , He liv'd to folly , and to virtue died . ' , P . 491 . Mr . Owen ' s travels extended a considerable way into Italy , and comprehended Switzerland and a great part of Germany . His letters , therefore , occasionallstrik

comprise a great variety of objecls , and his descriptions are y - ing , though seldom detailed . Travels through 'various Provinces of the Kingdom of Naples in 1789 . By Charles Ulysses , ofSalis Marschlius . Translated from the German by Anthony Aufrere , Esq . Illustrated with engravings . Pages 527 . 8 w . Price 8 _ . Cadell and Davies . Loudon , 1795 .

THE travels of every one naturally derive their complexion and characler from the prevailing sentiments and turn of mind of their author . Some travellers are attentive chiefly to the manners , and modes , and anecdotes , of distinguished persons in high life ; some to the nature of the government of any . country , and the state of civil society ; some to antiquities ; and some to the present state of literature and science , and so on . The general scholar and ¦ observer pays more or less regard to all these , and every other objeft worthy castof

of notice ; but still every traveller is'distinguished by a particular _ thought , by a particular propensity to indulge in one species of observation and reflection rather than another . - . The traveller now before us is a nnan of good parts , and extensive knowledge of various , kinds ; but the subjefts to which he is chiefly drawn , in all the " turnings of his tour , are natural history , the state , of agriculture ,- ' and that of society among the higher , as well as lower ,, ranks in the country . Tarantoand bthe celebrated

Accompanied by the worthy archbishop of , y naturalist Abbe Fortis , he left Naples , upon the 26 th of March , 1789 , and Followed the Apulian road , which leads dire-fly towards the north-east , across the Terra di Lavoro , into the Appenines . As they ^ ourneyed from Molsetta to Taranto , late in the evening of the 1 st of April , they arrived at St . Basil , a country house belonging to the Duke of Martina , after a fatiguing and tedious day ' s journey of forty miles . _ , This nobleman entirely devoting his time to country occupations , afforded our author much entertainment , by a display of his various arrangements for his different flocks and herds .

' During the supper , which , though plentiful , was a perfectly rural Repast , the conversation turned upon the nature of the country , and the state of agriculture . My inquiries upon that , head greatly pleased the duke , who discovered liis extreme partiality for country occupations , and promised to shew me all his new arrangements , and his different flocks and herds . But Inever suspedted that , in order to procure . me this satisfaction ,. he was to send ( as I afterwards found he did ) eight or nine miles * . in the night to his shepherds 2

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-06-01, Page 39” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01061796/page/39/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS , &c. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, AND CABINET OF UNIVERSAL LITERATURE. Article 4
HONOUR AND GENEROSITY. Article 7
HAPPINESS: A FRAGMENT. Article 8
A PARABLE Article 12
EXTRACTS FROM THE MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF EDWARD GIBBON, ESQ. Article 13
SKETCHES OF THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF THE NORTH-AMERICAN INDIANS. Article 17
THE SECRECY IMPOSED ON THE MYSTERIES OF MASONRY, Article 22
SUNDAY SCHOOLS. Article 25
ORIGIN OF THE CUSTOM Article 26
EXCERPT A ET COLLECTANEA. Article 27
A RECENT REMARKABLE CIRCUMSTANCE, Article 29
SKETCHES OF CELEBRATED CHARACTERS. Article 30
CURIOUS FACTS. Article 34
BUONAPARTE, THE FRENCH COMMANDER IN ITALY. Article 35
HISTORY OF THE COINAGE OF MONEY IN ENGLAND; Article 36
DESCRIPTION OF THE ABBEY OF EINFINDLEN, Article 37
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 38
LITERATURE. Article 45
BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 46
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 47
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 51
POETRY. Article 54
ODE ON HIS MAJESTY'S BIRTH-DAY. Article 55
A PROPHECY ON THE FUTURE GLORY OF AMERICA. Article 56
TO SLEEP. Article 57
SONNET TO A LADY IN A QUAKER'S DRESS . Article 57
PROLOGUE TO THE TRAGEDY OE ALMEYDA. Article 58
EPILOGUE TO ALMEYDA, Article 59
ODE, Article 60
EPITAPH, Article 61
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 61
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
HOME NEWS. Article 63
NEW TITLES. Article 68
Untitled Article 69
OBITUARY. Article 70
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 75
INDEX TO THE SIXTH VOLUME. Article 76
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Page 39

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

Review Of New Publications.

' Cit git Rousseau I chez lui tout fut contraste , II aima les humains , mais se fut pour les fuir : II perdit sa patrie en voulant la servir : Modeste avec orgueil , —il fut pauvre avec faste ;—Ne sxvt pas vivre , —et silt mourir . ' c Here lies Rousseau , the slave of truth and ficlion , Who lived and died a lendid contradiction :

sp With love of man he fled the world , and gave His country wounds whene ' er he meant to save . Haughty , though poor , and modest , yet with pride , He liv'd to folly , and to virtue died . ' , P . 491 . Mr . Owen ' s travels extended a considerable way into Italy , and comprehended Switzerland and a great part of Germany . His letters , therefore , occasionallstrik

comprise a great variety of objecls , and his descriptions are y - ing , though seldom detailed . Travels through 'various Provinces of the Kingdom of Naples in 1789 . By Charles Ulysses , ofSalis Marschlius . Translated from the German by Anthony Aufrere , Esq . Illustrated with engravings . Pages 527 . 8 w . Price 8 _ . Cadell and Davies . Loudon , 1795 .

THE travels of every one naturally derive their complexion and characler from the prevailing sentiments and turn of mind of their author . Some travellers are attentive chiefly to the manners , and modes , and anecdotes , of distinguished persons in high life ; some to the nature of the government of any . country , and the state of civil society ; some to antiquities ; and some to the present state of literature and science , and so on . The general scholar and ¦ observer pays more or less regard to all these , and every other objeft worthy castof

of notice ; but still every traveller is'distinguished by a particular _ thought , by a particular propensity to indulge in one species of observation and reflection rather than another . - . The traveller now before us is a nnan of good parts , and extensive knowledge of various , kinds ; but the subjefts to which he is chiefly drawn , in all the " turnings of his tour , are natural history , the state , of agriculture ,- ' and that of society among the higher , as well as lower ,, ranks in the country . Tarantoand bthe celebrated

Accompanied by the worthy archbishop of , y naturalist Abbe Fortis , he left Naples , upon the 26 th of March , 1789 , and Followed the Apulian road , which leads dire-fly towards the north-east , across the Terra di Lavoro , into the Appenines . As they ^ ourneyed from Molsetta to Taranto , late in the evening of the 1 st of April , they arrived at St . Basil , a country house belonging to the Duke of Martina , after a fatiguing and tedious day ' s journey of forty miles . _ , This nobleman entirely devoting his time to country occupations , afforded our author much entertainment , by a display of his various arrangements for his different flocks and herds .

' During the supper , which , though plentiful , was a perfectly rural Repast , the conversation turned upon the nature of the country , and the state of agriculture . My inquiries upon that , head greatly pleased the duke , who discovered liis extreme partiality for country occupations , and promised to shew me all his new arrangements , and his different flocks and herds . But Inever suspedted that , in order to procure . me this satisfaction ,. he was to send ( as I afterwards found he did ) eight or nine miles * . in the night to his shepherds 2

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