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  • July 1, 1793
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  • FROM A PERSIAN IN LONDON TO HIS CORRESPONDENT IN BENGAL.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, July 1, 1793: Page 29

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    Article FROM A PERSIAN IN LONDON TO HIS CORRESPONDENT IN BENGAL. ← Page 3 of 4 →
Page 29

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

From A Persian In London To His Correspondent In Bengal.

And now behold the princes have surrounded them , and hemmed them in on every side , both by land and upon the waters , so that none can go out of that country , nor can any come in . ' And this is the greatest of the Christian ' kingdoms which Allah has afflicted in this way , whose will be done ! But other hets have arisen in the states of those countries

prop , whom the peop le have not hearkened to , but rather reviled and punished , because of the sorrows of that kingdom , and all the mischiefs and the crimes which have been acted in it , which are such , and so many , that I dare not write them with the pen , lest thou say I am possessed with the European spirit of lying ; yet so much will I set down for thine own bosom , Ali , because thou mayest call bank of Couli

to mind the reasonings we held together on the p , what time our prophet proved thee , giving thee over to the cruel avarice of the Christian Pacha . —Know , then , that in the decrees of the will of God , which are fate , it is written , that it is not good for man to live according to his will , and his own Jaw , nor to know equal an absolute liberty ; for where this isthere too is

an power , , fear and guilt , and perpetual contention and disorder . Mahomet , avert from our happy climes this poisonous gift ! poisonous as the breath of the governor , which causes our poppies to wither , and blasts the unripe harvest from our pining fields ; cruel as the merchant's sword , which tnrneth the scale in the markets ! Obedience

is the lot of man—it is good for every cast ; let the commanders bend themselves to heaven , of them much shall be demanded . I will relate , therefore , unto thee what I have gathered of the lot of the people , now alt of one weig ht and measure ; all of which hath been confirmed to me by a man of many years , and once a hih riest in the templesand do thou lay thy finger on thy lip ,

gp , and ponder on our past failings . Instead of knowing happiness , ( as once we thought , if the scourge of the collector ' s and the pacha ' s sword were removed away , we should do ) this people , Ali , are not even free , for each man is become the tyrant , or ' the accuser of another ; the guilty wreak horrible revenges upon the innocent , who cease to be innocent , that is but

they may escape from their persecutions . There no safety in partaking in crimes . —The virtuous man is looked upon with arched eye-brows , and the tongue lolls at his appearance , as who shall say , " Behold a spy , or an enemy ! " He that keepcth himself undefiled is the prey of calumny , and the victim of the common fear . There are none rich by whom the poor are fed ; neither

have the poor enjoyed , but rather wasted the wealth they have ravished . There are no husbandmen in their fields ; then-women weep , and there is no hand to feed their little ones ; in their towns are the instruments of death ; the prisons do not contain the guilty , and the tribunals are the places of slaughter ; the streets resound with the stroke of the axe , and with the preparations for war ; the hi gh roads are covered by armed hordes , who plunder the caravans ; the vineyards are trodden down by bands of robbers ; lust and re-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-07-01, Page 29” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01071793/page/29/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO THE LIBERAL PATRONS OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 3
EXPLANATION OF THE ENGRAVINGS. Article 4
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 4
Untitled Article 6
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE: OR, GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 7
CHARITY THE DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTIC OF MASONS. Article 9
THE HISTORY OF FRANCE. Article 11
THE GENERAL HISTORY OF CHINA: Article 15
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 19
AN EASTERN NOVEL. Article 21
ON THE NATURE AND PROPERTIES OF AIR. Article 25
FROM A PERSIAN IN LONDON TO HIS CORRESPONDENT IN BENGAL. Article 27
ON THE SAGACITY OF A SPIDER; IT'S STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES DELINEATED. Article 30
SEARCH AFTER HAPPINESS. Article 33
MELESICHTON. Article 35
ON EDUCATION. Article 37
For the FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 39
ON RETIREMENT. Article 41
AN ACCOUNT OF THE MONKS, Article 43
DESCRIPTION OF POMPEY's PILLAR Article 45
ON EPITAPHS. Article 47
OF ANIMALS LIVING IN SOLID BODIES. Article 48
ANECDOTE OF THE LATE DR. DODD. Article 50
For the FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 51
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 53
LAW. Article 53
A COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ASIATICS AND FRENCH. Article 55
THE QUEEN OF FRANCE AND THE DAUPHIN. Article 58
FATE OF THE UNFORTUNATE MUNRO. Article 60
THE SPEECH OF MISS POLLY BAKER, Article 61
ANECDOTE OF BISHOP BURNET. Article 63
MEMOIRS OF THE CELEBRATED FARINELLI. Article 64
THE EVILS OF WAR. Article 66
ON SHAM WAREHOUSES, AND PRETENDED MERCHANTS. Article 68
STATE PAPER. Article 69
INCREASE OF BUILDINGS NO PROOF OF THE RICHES OF A KINGDOM. Article 70
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE Article 71
FINE ARTS. Article 73
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 74
SADLER's WELLS. Article 75
MEMOIRS OF PRINCE RUPERT, Article 76
PICTURE OF LONDON AND IT's INHABITANTS, &c. Article 78
POETRY. Article 79
THE HISTORY OF GYGES's RING, Article 80
ODE. Article 81
SONG. Article 82
TO DELIA'S KITTEN. Article 83
THE CURATE. Article 84
ON CONTENTMENT. Article 85
FOREIGN OCCURRENCES. Article 87
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 88
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Page 29

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

From A Persian In London To His Correspondent In Bengal.

And now behold the princes have surrounded them , and hemmed them in on every side , both by land and upon the waters , so that none can go out of that country , nor can any come in . ' And this is the greatest of the Christian ' kingdoms which Allah has afflicted in this way , whose will be done ! But other hets have arisen in the states of those countries

prop , whom the peop le have not hearkened to , but rather reviled and punished , because of the sorrows of that kingdom , and all the mischiefs and the crimes which have been acted in it , which are such , and so many , that I dare not write them with the pen , lest thou say I am possessed with the European spirit of lying ; yet so much will I set down for thine own bosom , Ali , because thou mayest call bank of Couli

to mind the reasonings we held together on the p , what time our prophet proved thee , giving thee over to the cruel avarice of the Christian Pacha . —Know , then , that in the decrees of the will of God , which are fate , it is written , that it is not good for man to live according to his will , and his own Jaw , nor to know equal an absolute liberty ; for where this isthere too is

an power , , fear and guilt , and perpetual contention and disorder . Mahomet , avert from our happy climes this poisonous gift ! poisonous as the breath of the governor , which causes our poppies to wither , and blasts the unripe harvest from our pining fields ; cruel as the merchant's sword , which tnrneth the scale in the markets ! Obedience

is the lot of man—it is good for every cast ; let the commanders bend themselves to heaven , of them much shall be demanded . I will relate , therefore , unto thee what I have gathered of the lot of the people , now alt of one weig ht and measure ; all of which hath been confirmed to me by a man of many years , and once a hih riest in the templesand do thou lay thy finger on thy lip ,

gp , and ponder on our past failings . Instead of knowing happiness , ( as once we thought , if the scourge of the collector ' s and the pacha ' s sword were removed away , we should do ) this people , Ali , are not even free , for each man is become the tyrant , or ' the accuser of another ; the guilty wreak horrible revenges upon the innocent , who cease to be innocent , that is but

they may escape from their persecutions . There no safety in partaking in crimes . —The virtuous man is looked upon with arched eye-brows , and the tongue lolls at his appearance , as who shall say , " Behold a spy , or an enemy ! " He that keepcth himself undefiled is the prey of calumny , and the victim of the common fear . There are none rich by whom the poor are fed ; neither

have the poor enjoyed , but rather wasted the wealth they have ravished . There are no husbandmen in their fields ; then-women weep , and there is no hand to feed their little ones ; in their towns are the instruments of death ; the prisons do not contain the guilty , and the tribunals are the places of slaughter ; the streets resound with the stroke of the axe , and with the preparations for war ; the hi gh roads are covered by armed hordes , who plunder the caravans ; the vineyards are trodden down by bands of robbers ; lust and re-

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