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  • July 1, 1793
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The Freemasons' Magazine, July 1, 1793: Page 36

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    Article MELESICHTON. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 36

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Melesichton.

of Proxinoe and his children aggravatedhis sorrow . Often would hs steal away to the sea-shore ; at the foot of a large rock , full of tremendous caverns , bemoan his wayward fate ; from thence repair toa gloomy vale , where , even at mid-day , no sun-beam entered . There would he sit on the margin of the dark stream and ponder o ' er his ills . Sleep was a stranger to his eye-lids ; untimely age furrowed his brow ; bending to-the stormhe " ligent

, grew neg of life , and sunk under the pressure of accumulated misery . One day , as he was reclining on a bank in this dreary vale , tired and fatigued with thought , he sunk imperceptibl y into a slumber : Iii a dream , he saw the goddess Ceres , crowned with goldensheaves , who approached him with an air of majesty and sweetness ; and thus addressed him : — " Why art thou thus overwhelmed with thfate ? Melesichton

y "— replied , " I am abandoned by my friends ; my estate lost ; law-suits and creditors for ever perplex me ; the thoughts of my birth , and the figure-1 have made iii the world , aggravate my misery ; and to labour at the oar like aslave , is what my spirit can never submit to . " The goddess beheld him with ity and displeasure ing ;

p , say , " Does nobility consist in affluence , ease , and luxury ? No , Melesichton , it consists in the imitation of thy virtuous ancestors ; the just man only is truly noble . Nature is sufficed with little ; enjoy that little with the sweat of th y brow ; live free from dependance ,- . and no man will be nobler than thyself . —Luxury and false ambition are the bane of mankind . —If thou art destitute of the

conveniencies of life , who shall better supply thee than th yself ? Be not terrified , then , at the thought of attaining them by industry anrJ application . " . She said , and instantly presented him with a golden plouo-hshare , and an horn of plenty . All the rural deities passed on , and ; as they passed , they smiled on Melesichton .

Pie waked ; a dawn of comfort enlivened his soul : he told his dream to his faithful partner , who rejoiced with him , and approved of his interpretation . The next day they dismissed their attendants ,- - Proxinoe with Poemenis spun , while Melesichton and Meliboeua 1 tended their sheep . All their fine needle-works were disregarded ; . their own ground produced their daily food , their own hands preitand it

pared , was enjoyed with that true relish which is inseparable from temperance and labour ., Winter was the season forrepose , , when the family , innocently gay , returned thanks to the gods for their harmless unambitious pleasures . In a little time , Melesichton was in better circumstances than before . The company he kept , was within the compass of his true friendsand his famil

, own y . Their humble residence was far from court , where pleasures bear so high a price ; their enjoyments were sweet , innocent , easy to be attained ; and , in the pursuit , attended with no dangers . Still was their diet frugal , and their industry continued . Melesichton ' s friends , now pressed him , since fortune once again

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-07-01, Page 36” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01071793/page/36/.
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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 36

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

Melesichton.

of Proxinoe and his children aggravatedhis sorrow . Often would hs steal away to the sea-shore ; at the foot of a large rock , full of tremendous caverns , bemoan his wayward fate ; from thence repair toa gloomy vale , where , even at mid-day , no sun-beam entered . There would he sit on the margin of the dark stream and ponder o ' er his ills . Sleep was a stranger to his eye-lids ; untimely age furrowed his brow ; bending to-the stormhe " ligent

, grew neg of life , and sunk under the pressure of accumulated misery . One day , as he was reclining on a bank in this dreary vale , tired and fatigued with thought , he sunk imperceptibl y into a slumber : Iii a dream , he saw the goddess Ceres , crowned with goldensheaves , who approached him with an air of majesty and sweetness ; and thus addressed him : — " Why art thou thus overwhelmed with thfate ? Melesichton

y "— replied , " I am abandoned by my friends ; my estate lost ; law-suits and creditors for ever perplex me ; the thoughts of my birth , and the figure-1 have made iii the world , aggravate my misery ; and to labour at the oar like aslave , is what my spirit can never submit to . " The goddess beheld him with ity and displeasure ing ;

p , say , " Does nobility consist in affluence , ease , and luxury ? No , Melesichton , it consists in the imitation of thy virtuous ancestors ; the just man only is truly noble . Nature is sufficed with little ; enjoy that little with the sweat of th y brow ; live free from dependance ,- . and no man will be nobler than thyself . —Luxury and false ambition are the bane of mankind . —If thou art destitute of the

conveniencies of life , who shall better supply thee than th yself ? Be not terrified , then , at the thought of attaining them by industry anrJ application . " . She said , and instantly presented him with a golden plouo-hshare , and an horn of plenty . All the rural deities passed on , and ; as they passed , they smiled on Melesichton .

Pie waked ; a dawn of comfort enlivened his soul : he told his dream to his faithful partner , who rejoiced with him , and approved of his interpretation . The next day they dismissed their attendants ,- - Proxinoe with Poemenis spun , while Melesichton and Meliboeua 1 tended their sheep . All their fine needle-works were disregarded ; . their own ground produced their daily food , their own hands preitand it

pared , was enjoyed with that true relish which is inseparable from temperance and labour ., Winter was the season forrepose , , when the family , innocently gay , returned thanks to the gods for their harmless unambitious pleasures . In a little time , Melesichton was in better circumstances than before . The company he kept , was within the compass of his true friendsand his famil

, own y . Their humble residence was far from court , where pleasures bear so high a price ; their enjoyments were sweet , innocent , easy to be attained ; and , in the pursuit , attended with no dangers . Still was their diet frugal , and their industry continued . Melesichton ' s friends , now pressed him , since fortune once again

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