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  • Aug. 1, 1793
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1793: Page 6

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    Article OF COURAGE, FORTITUDE, and FEAR. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 6

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

Of Courage, Fortitude, And Fear.

disagreeable ; the term virago conveys an offensive idea . Tha female warriors of antiquity , whether real or fabulous , Camilla , Thalestris , and the whole community of Amazons , were unamiable personages . But female courage exerted in defence of a child , a husband , br a near relation , would be true fortitude , and deserve the highest encomiums . The motives to fortitude are many and powerful . This virtue

tends greatly to the happiness of the individual , by giving composure and presence of mind , and keeping the other passions in due subordination . To public good it is essentia ]; for without it , the independence and liberty of nations would be impossible . It gives to a character that elevation which poets , orators , and historians ' , have in all ages vied with one another to celebrate . Nothing so

effectually inspires it as rational piety ; the fear of God is the best security against every other fear . A true estimate of human life ; it ' s shortness and uncertainty ; the numberless evils and temptations to which by a long continuance in this world we must unavoidably be exposed ; ought by no means to discourage or throw any gloom on our future prospects : they should teach usthat many things are

, more formidable than death ; and nothing is lost , but much gained , when , by the appointment of Providence , a well-spent life is brought , io an honourable conclusion . Let it be considered too , that pusillanimity and fearfulness can never avail us any thing . On the contrary , they debase our nature ,

poison all our comforts , and make us despicable in the eyes of others ; they darken our reason , disconcert our schemes , enfeeble our efforts , extinguish our hopes , and add tenfold poignancy to all the evils of life . In battle , the brave soldier is in less danger thaii the coward ; in less danger even of death and wounds , because better prepared to defend himself ; in far less danger of infelicity ; and has before him the animating hope of victory and honour . So in

life , the man of true fortitude is in less danger of disappointment than others are , because his understanding is clear , and his mind disencumbered ; he is prepared to meet calamity without the fear of sinking under it ; and he has before him the near prospect of another life , in which they who patiently bear the evils of this will obtain a glorious reward .

Fear , when it gains an ascendancjr in the mind , renders life a burden . The object of fear is evil ; and to be exempt from fear , or at least not enslaved to it , gives dignity to our nature , and invigorates all our faculties . Yet there are evils which we ought to fear . Those that arise from ourselves , or which it is in our power to preventit would be madness to depiseand audacity not to

, , guard against . External evils , which we cannot prevent , or could not avoid without ' a breach of duty , it is manly and honourable to hear with fortitude . Out of many instances of the fatal effects of fear recorded in writers , the following is selected as one of the most singular . " George Grochantzy , a Polander , who hadinlisted as a soldier in the service of the king of Prussia , deserted during the last

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-08-01, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081793/page/6/.
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE: OR, GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 1
LETTER II. From a Gentleman at PHILADELPHIA to his Friend in GLASCOW, on the Subject of FREE MASONRY. Article 3
OF COURAGE, FORTITUDE, and FEAR. Article 5
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 8
A CHARGE DELIVERED TO THE FAITHFUL LODGE, No. 499, Article 11
ORATION ON MASONRY, Article 16
ESSAY ON STRIFE. Article 23
AN EASTERN NOVEL. Article 25
THE GENERAL HISTORY OF CHINA: Article 30
HISTORICAL DEDUCTION OF THE BRITISH DRAMA. Article 33
THE SPEECH OF COUNT T****, Article 36
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 38
REMARKS ON PULPIT AND BAR ORATORY. Article 38
COUNT LARGORYSKY. Article 39
THE PROPHECY OF SIBILLA TIBURTINA. Article 41
THE PROPHECY OF SIBILLA TIBURTINA ON OUR SAVIOUR. Article 43
CHARACTERS IN HARRY THE EIGHTH'S TIME. Article 44
OF ANIMALS LIVING IN SOLID BODIES. Article 46
MEMOIRS OF FRANCIS LORD RAWDON, Article 50
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 55
AN EXTRAORDINARY ANECDOTE OF GENERAL PUTNAM. Article 58
THE BASTILE OF SAXONY. Article 59
Untitled Article 61
AN ACCOUNT OF THE ROYAL CUMBERLAND FREEMASONS' SCHOOL. Article 62
THE CHARACTER OF SALADINE, Article 66
DESCRIPTION OF THE TERRESTRIAL CHRYSIPUS, Article 69
ON HAPPINESS. Article 72
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 74
SADLER's WELLS. Article 75
DUNKIRK, NOW BESIEGED BY THE DUKE OF YORK. Article 76
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 77
POETRY. Article 80
SYMPATHY TO DELIA. Article 81
AN IMPROMPTU. Article 81
THE DESERTERS. A TALE. Article 82
A LETTER FROM A LADY DYING TO HER HUSBAND. Article 83
THE SWEETS OF FRIENDSHIP. Article 83
ACROSTIC. Article 83
FOREIGN OCCURRENCES. Article 84
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 85
Untitled Article 87
Untitled Article 87
Untitled Article 87
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Of Courage, Fortitude, And Fear.

disagreeable ; the term virago conveys an offensive idea . Tha female warriors of antiquity , whether real or fabulous , Camilla , Thalestris , and the whole community of Amazons , were unamiable personages . But female courage exerted in defence of a child , a husband , br a near relation , would be true fortitude , and deserve the highest encomiums . The motives to fortitude are many and powerful . This virtue

tends greatly to the happiness of the individual , by giving composure and presence of mind , and keeping the other passions in due subordination . To public good it is essentia ]; for without it , the independence and liberty of nations would be impossible . It gives to a character that elevation which poets , orators , and historians ' , have in all ages vied with one another to celebrate . Nothing so

effectually inspires it as rational piety ; the fear of God is the best security against every other fear . A true estimate of human life ; it ' s shortness and uncertainty ; the numberless evils and temptations to which by a long continuance in this world we must unavoidably be exposed ; ought by no means to discourage or throw any gloom on our future prospects : they should teach usthat many things are

, more formidable than death ; and nothing is lost , but much gained , when , by the appointment of Providence , a well-spent life is brought , io an honourable conclusion . Let it be considered too , that pusillanimity and fearfulness can never avail us any thing . On the contrary , they debase our nature ,

poison all our comforts , and make us despicable in the eyes of others ; they darken our reason , disconcert our schemes , enfeeble our efforts , extinguish our hopes , and add tenfold poignancy to all the evils of life . In battle , the brave soldier is in less danger thaii the coward ; in less danger even of death and wounds , because better prepared to defend himself ; in far less danger of infelicity ; and has before him the animating hope of victory and honour . So in

life , the man of true fortitude is in less danger of disappointment than others are , because his understanding is clear , and his mind disencumbered ; he is prepared to meet calamity without the fear of sinking under it ; and he has before him the near prospect of another life , in which they who patiently bear the evils of this will obtain a glorious reward .

Fear , when it gains an ascendancjr in the mind , renders life a burden . The object of fear is evil ; and to be exempt from fear , or at least not enslaved to it , gives dignity to our nature , and invigorates all our faculties . Yet there are evils which we ought to fear . Those that arise from ourselves , or which it is in our power to preventit would be madness to depiseand audacity not to

, , guard against . External evils , which we cannot prevent , or could not avoid without ' a breach of duty , it is manly and honourable to hear with fortitude . Out of many instances of the fatal effects of fear recorded in writers , the following is selected as one of the most singular . " George Grochantzy , a Polander , who hadinlisted as a soldier in the service of the king of Prussia , deserted during the last

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