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  • July 1, 1797
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    Article MEMOIR OF WILLIAM MASON, A.M. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 24

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Memoir Of William Mason, A.M.

The Loves forsook their Cyprian bow ' rs , And round his temples wreath'd their fiow ' rs ; The Graces danc ' tl their mystic maze , 'Our Father struck him with his rays j And all our Sisters , . one by one , Gave him full draughts cf Helicon 1 Thus hound our servant at the shrine ,

Ordain'dhe was , and made divine . ' January 30 , 17 62 , he was presented by the King to theCanonryof Driffield , in the Cathedral of York , with the precentorship of the said church , in the room of Dr . Newton , made Bishop of Bristol . In the year 1767 he lost his wife by a consumption at the Bristol Wells , a most amiable and accomplished woman , whose death he has deplored in one of the few good epitaphs to be found in our language , and which is inscribed en an elegant marble-monument in Bristol Cathedral . It follows :

' Take , holy earth , all that my soul holds dear , Take that blest gift which Heav ' n so lately gave , , To Bristol's fount I bore ' with trembling care Her faded form : she bo \ v'd to taste tiie wave And died . D . ies youth , does beauty , read the line ? Does sympathetic fear their breasts alarm ? Speak , de-td Maria , breathe a strain divine ; to charm

E ' en from the grave thou shaft have pow ' r . Bid ihem be chaste , be innocent like thee , Bid them in duty ' s sphere-as meekly move ; And if so fair , from vanity as free , As firm in friendship and as fond in love , Tell them , tho' ' tis an awful thing to die , ( 'Twas even to thee ) yet the dread path once trod , Heaven lifts its everlasting portals high , And bids ' the pure in heart behold their God . '

He devoted himself from this event entirely to parochial duties and literary amusements . Being exceedingly fond of Nature , he cultivated the gardens and * grounds of Aston in an uncommon manner . This having engaged him in a course of elegant study , he published the result of it in a most beautiful poem , called ' The English Garden . ' As a writer his reputation is of the very first class , and not one of his acknowledged works can be read without satisfaction . His' Elfrida

and Caractacus' transcend any poems of the same kind , . written in imitation of the antient drama , in our own or any foreign language . In the first the diction is elegant and sweet ; in the latter it is daring and sublime . The former , in his own opinion , was the most popular ; the latter , however , is acknowledged to be the most perfect , and is supposed , indeed , to stand unrivalled .

In these performances are sentiments and expressions which would do honour to the description and simplicity of Shakspeare . His elegies have been generally and deservedly admired , and they are , in fact , not at all inferior to any compositions of the kind in the English tongue , and will stand on a par with the best elegiac p ieces in the Homan language . The splendour of genius and accuracy of judgment conspicuous in

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-07-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01071797/page/24/.
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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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Page 24

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

Memoir Of William Mason, A.M.

The Loves forsook their Cyprian bow ' rs , And round his temples wreath'd their fiow ' rs ; The Graces danc ' tl their mystic maze , 'Our Father struck him with his rays j And all our Sisters , . one by one , Gave him full draughts cf Helicon 1 Thus hound our servant at the shrine ,

Ordain'dhe was , and made divine . ' January 30 , 17 62 , he was presented by the King to theCanonryof Driffield , in the Cathedral of York , with the precentorship of the said church , in the room of Dr . Newton , made Bishop of Bristol . In the year 1767 he lost his wife by a consumption at the Bristol Wells , a most amiable and accomplished woman , whose death he has deplored in one of the few good epitaphs to be found in our language , and which is inscribed en an elegant marble-monument in Bristol Cathedral . It follows :

' Take , holy earth , all that my soul holds dear , Take that blest gift which Heav ' n so lately gave , , To Bristol's fount I bore ' with trembling care Her faded form : she bo \ v'd to taste tiie wave And died . D . ies youth , does beauty , read the line ? Does sympathetic fear their breasts alarm ? Speak , de-td Maria , breathe a strain divine ; to charm

E ' en from the grave thou shaft have pow ' r . Bid ihem be chaste , be innocent like thee , Bid them in duty ' s sphere-as meekly move ; And if so fair , from vanity as free , As firm in friendship and as fond in love , Tell them , tho' ' tis an awful thing to die , ( 'Twas even to thee ) yet the dread path once trod , Heaven lifts its everlasting portals high , And bids ' the pure in heart behold their God . '

He devoted himself from this event entirely to parochial duties and literary amusements . Being exceedingly fond of Nature , he cultivated the gardens and * grounds of Aston in an uncommon manner . This having engaged him in a course of elegant study , he published the result of it in a most beautiful poem , called ' The English Garden . ' As a writer his reputation is of the very first class , and not one of his acknowledged works can be read without satisfaction . His' Elfrida

and Caractacus' transcend any poems of the same kind , . written in imitation of the antient drama , in our own or any foreign language . In the first the diction is elegant and sweet ; in the latter it is daring and sublime . The former , in his own opinion , was the most popular ; the latter , however , is acknowledged to be the most perfect , and is supposed , indeed , to stand unrivalled .

In these performances are sentiments and expressions which would do honour to the description and simplicity of Shakspeare . His elegies have been generally and deservedly admired , and they are , in fact , not at all inferior to any compositions of the kind in the English tongue , and will stand on a par with the best elegiac p ieces in the Homan language . The splendour of genius and accuracy of judgment conspicuous in

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