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  • Oct. 1, 1793
  • Page 46
  • ON THE BENEFITS OF LITERATURE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Oct. 1, 1793: Page 46

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    Article ON THE BENEFITS OF LITERATURE. ← Page 2 of 2
Page 46

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

On The Benefits Of Literature.

Men , who turn' their attention to the boundless field of inquiry , and still more who recollect the innumerable errors and cap _ rices of mind , are apt to imagine that the labour is without benefit , and endless . But this cannot be the case , if truth' at last have any real existence . Errors will , during the whole period of their reign , combat each otherprejudices that have passed unsuspected for ages

; , will have their era of detection ; but , if in any science we discover one solitary truth , it cannot be overthrown . Such are the arguments that may be advanced in favour of Literature . But , even should we admit them in their full force , atid at the same time suppose that truth is the omnipotent artificer by which mind can infallibly be regulated , it would yet by no means

sufficiently follow , that Literature is alone adequate to all the purposes' of human improvement . Literature , and particularly that literature by which prejudice is superseded , and the mind is strung to a firmer tone , exists only as the portion of a few . The multitude , at least in the present state of human society , cannot partake of its illuminations . For that purpose it would be necessary , that the general system of policy should become favourable , that every individual should have leisure for reasoning and reflection , and that

there should beno species of public institution , which , having ialsehood for its basis , should counteract their progress . This state of society , if it did not precede the general dissemination of truth , would at least be the immediate result of it . But in representing this state of society as the ultimate result , we should incur an obvious fallacy . The discovery of truth is a pursuit of such vast extentthat it is scarcely possible to prescribe

, bounds to it . Those great lines , which seem at present to mark the limits of human understanding , will , like the mists that rise from a fake , retire farther and farther the more closely we approach them . A certain quantity of truth will be sufficient for the subversion of tyranny and usurpation ; and this subversion , by a reflected forcewill assist our understandings in the discovery of truth . ' In

, the mean time it is not easy to define the exact portion of discovery that must necessarily precede political melioration . The period of partiality and injustice will be shortened , in proportion as political rectitude occupies a principal share in our disquisition . When the most considerable part of a nation , either for numbers or influence , becomes convinced of the flagrant absurdity of its institutions , the

whole will soon be prepared tranquilly , and by a sort of common consent , to supersede them .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-10-01, Page 46” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01101793/page/46/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' 'MAGAZINE: OR, GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 3
THE LIGHT AND TRUTH OF MASONRY EXPLAINED, BEING THE SUBSTANCE OF A CHARGE Article 8
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 11
ANECDOTES OF DR. GOLDSMITH. Article 13
THOUGHTS ON THE FOUNDERING OF SHIPS. Article 19
SIR PETER PARKER, BART. D.G.M. Article 20
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF THOMAS DUNCKERLEY, ESQ. P.G.M. Article 23
ANECDOTE OF M. DE MONTESQUIEU. Article 28
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 29
Untitled Article 29
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, Article 32
Untitled Article 33
FAITH. Article 34
MERMAIDS NOT FABULOUS, Article 35
ON THE DISCIPLINE OF THE UNIVERSITY. Article 41
INSTANCE OF THE SEVERITY OF THE PENAL LAWS Article 43
ON THE BENEFITS OF LITERATURE. Article 45
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 47
THE GENERAL HISTORY OF CHINA: Article 51
A PICTURE OF PIETY AND ŒCONOMY. Article 56
ANTIENT CHARTERS. Article 58
ON FRIENDSHIP. Article 60
Untitled Article 62
COMMENTS ON STERNE. Article 63
DR. JOHN HUNTER, THE LATE JUSTLY CELEBRATED ANATOMIST. Article 68
TRAITS IN THE LIFE OF THE LATE UNFORTUNATE QUEEN OF FRANCE. Article 70
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 73
POETRY. Article 76
THE FORSAKEN FAIR. Article 78
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 79
THE QUEEN OF FRANCE's LAMENTATION, BEFORE HER EXECUTION. Article 80
FOREIGN OCCURRENCES. Article 81
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 82
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Page 46

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

On The Benefits Of Literature.

Men , who turn' their attention to the boundless field of inquiry , and still more who recollect the innumerable errors and cap _ rices of mind , are apt to imagine that the labour is without benefit , and endless . But this cannot be the case , if truth' at last have any real existence . Errors will , during the whole period of their reign , combat each otherprejudices that have passed unsuspected for ages

; , will have their era of detection ; but , if in any science we discover one solitary truth , it cannot be overthrown . Such are the arguments that may be advanced in favour of Literature . But , even should we admit them in their full force , atid at the same time suppose that truth is the omnipotent artificer by which mind can infallibly be regulated , it would yet by no means

sufficiently follow , that Literature is alone adequate to all the purposes' of human improvement . Literature , and particularly that literature by which prejudice is superseded , and the mind is strung to a firmer tone , exists only as the portion of a few . The multitude , at least in the present state of human society , cannot partake of its illuminations . For that purpose it would be necessary , that the general system of policy should become favourable , that every individual should have leisure for reasoning and reflection , and that

there should beno species of public institution , which , having ialsehood for its basis , should counteract their progress . This state of society , if it did not precede the general dissemination of truth , would at least be the immediate result of it . But in representing this state of society as the ultimate result , we should incur an obvious fallacy . The discovery of truth is a pursuit of such vast extentthat it is scarcely possible to prescribe

, bounds to it . Those great lines , which seem at present to mark the limits of human understanding , will , like the mists that rise from a fake , retire farther and farther the more closely we approach them . A certain quantity of truth will be sufficient for the subversion of tyranny and usurpation ; and this subversion , by a reflected forcewill assist our understandings in the discovery of truth . ' In

, the mean time it is not easy to define the exact portion of discovery that must necessarily precede political melioration . The period of partiality and injustice will be shortened , in proportion as political rectitude occupies a principal share in our disquisition . When the most considerable part of a nation , either for numbers or influence , becomes convinced of the flagrant absurdity of its institutions , the

whole will soon be prepared tranquilly , and by a sort of common consent , to supersede them .

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