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  • July 1, 1797
  • Page 12
  • AN APOLOGY FOR THE CHARACTER AND CONDUCT OF SHYLOCK.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, July 1, 1797: Page 12

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    Article AN APOLOGY FOR THE CHARACTER AND CONDUCT OF SHYLOCK. ← Page 3 of 5 →
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An Apology For The Character And Conduct Of Shylock.

traffic , but not so by the Jews . Having been long debarred fr ° m every other mode of improving their temporal property , usury has been their hereditary profession , from the capture of Jerusalem to the present time ; and the defence Sh ylock * makes in its favour , however inconclusive it may appear to a Christian moralist , will . I doubt not , in the opinion of those , to whom STOCK is terra firma , and

quarterly interest and dividends (' a breed from barren metal' ) its living produce , be unanswerable : they will admit the full force of his observation , 'that thrift is blessing , if men steal it not . ' Nay , farther , the Divine permission to take usury of a stranger , ' - } - has ' in latter times been pretty generally understood by the Jews as an injunction to do so . Men ' s inclinations are commonly admirable casuists in their own favour ; and that they should strain a precer-t , to overreach those who

i cruelly oppressed them , cannot be thought highly criminal by the most rigid moralist ; for , at the time when the most enlightened rations of Europe were putting Jews , infidels , and heretics to the sword , for the glory of Gor > , the more tolerant disci ples of Moses were content to pillage the purse , without taking the lives of those whom they conceived to be misbelievers . It is in fact no less absurd to condemn a Jew for usury , than a Mohammedan for pol .

ygamy It may be alledged likewise that Shylock was vindictive and cruel . But those who condemn him for his stern unforgiving disposition , do not consider that he had suffered the most intolerable injuries from Antonio—that he had been publicly insulted , been spurned and spit upon by him , been deprived , by his means , ' of his well tvon thrift , ' and been robbed of his daughter and property by one of his associates . Who can reflect on this , and not make great allowance for his

meditating so severe a retaliation ! Besides , in this instance also he ought not to be tried by the mild precepts of Christianity , but by the Jess perfect law of Moses . ' An eye for an eye , and a tooth for a tooth , ' was , with his followers , legal reparation and sound morality . This accorded with their ideas of retributive justice ; they had a right to expect it , and for that riht could lead divine prescription !

g p The account which Solarino gives of Shylock ' s distress , on his daughter ' s elopement with Lorenzo , always excites , as was intended , laughter . But to place this circumstance in a fair point of view , to consider it impartially , let us again reverse the , case ; let us suppose that a dissipated young Israelite stole an only child from a Christian parent , with a considerable treasure , either acquired by his own in-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-07-01, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01071797/page/12/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
PREFACE TO VOLUME THE NINTH. Article 5
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 7
TEMPERATE REFLECTIONS SUITED TO THE PRESENT TIME. Article 8
AN APOLOGY FOR THE CHARACTER AND CONDUCT OF SHYLOCK. Article 10
MEMOIRS OF CHARLES MACKLIN, Article 15
ACCOUNT OF CADIZ. Article 18
REFERENCES TO THE PLATE. Article 22
MEMOIR OF WILLIAM MASON, A.M. Article 23
VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY. Article 25
HISTORY OF THE ARTS AND SCIENCES FOR 1797. Article 26
ADDITIONAL ACCOUNT OF THE GYPSIES. Article 29
ORIGIN OF DRINKING HEALTHS. Article 29
CEREMONIAL OF THE EXECUTION OFRICHARD PARKER, FOR MUTINY. Article 30
A BRIEF SYSTEM OF CONCHOLOGY. Article 34
ESSAY ON THE WRITINGS OF LORD CHESTERFIELD. Article 38
AN ACCOUNT OF THE FISHERIES OF THE RIVER BAN, IN IRELAND. Article 41
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 42
THE INFLUENCE OF FREEMASONRY ON SOCIETY Article 44
NOTICE OF A MASONIC DESIDERATUM. Article 47
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 48
NOTICE. Article 49
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 50
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 56
POETRY. Article 58
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 62
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 63
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 68
DOMESTIC NEWS. Article 71
OBITUARY. Article 78
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 81
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

An Apology For The Character And Conduct Of Shylock.

traffic , but not so by the Jews . Having been long debarred fr ° m every other mode of improving their temporal property , usury has been their hereditary profession , from the capture of Jerusalem to the present time ; and the defence Sh ylock * makes in its favour , however inconclusive it may appear to a Christian moralist , will . I doubt not , in the opinion of those , to whom STOCK is terra firma , and

quarterly interest and dividends (' a breed from barren metal' ) its living produce , be unanswerable : they will admit the full force of his observation , 'that thrift is blessing , if men steal it not . ' Nay , farther , the Divine permission to take usury of a stranger , ' - } - has ' in latter times been pretty generally understood by the Jews as an injunction to do so . Men ' s inclinations are commonly admirable casuists in their own favour ; and that they should strain a precer-t , to overreach those who

i cruelly oppressed them , cannot be thought highly criminal by the most rigid moralist ; for , at the time when the most enlightened rations of Europe were putting Jews , infidels , and heretics to the sword , for the glory of Gor > , the more tolerant disci ples of Moses were content to pillage the purse , without taking the lives of those whom they conceived to be misbelievers . It is in fact no less absurd to condemn a Jew for usury , than a Mohammedan for pol .

ygamy It may be alledged likewise that Shylock was vindictive and cruel . But those who condemn him for his stern unforgiving disposition , do not consider that he had suffered the most intolerable injuries from Antonio—that he had been publicly insulted , been spurned and spit upon by him , been deprived , by his means , ' of his well tvon thrift , ' and been robbed of his daughter and property by one of his associates . Who can reflect on this , and not make great allowance for his

meditating so severe a retaliation ! Besides , in this instance also he ought not to be tried by the mild precepts of Christianity , but by the Jess perfect law of Moses . ' An eye for an eye , and a tooth for a tooth , ' was , with his followers , legal reparation and sound morality . This accorded with their ideas of retributive justice ; they had a right to expect it , and for that riht could lead divine prescription !

g p The account which Solarino gives of Shylock ' s distress , on his daughter ' s elopement with Lorenzo , always excites , as was intended , laughter . But to place this circumstance in a fair point of view , to consider it impartially , let us again reverse the , case ; let us suppose that a dissipated young Israelite stole an only child from a Christian parent , with a considerable treasure , either acquired by his own in-

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