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  • Oct. 1, 1795
  • Page 16
  • DETACHED THOUGHTS ONBOOKS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Oct. 1, 1795: Page 16

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    Article DETACHED THOUGHTS ONBOOKS. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 16

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

Detached Thoughts Onbooks.

Some books arc the common topics of conversation for a month or two , or three—but are never heard of after . Wherefore should I encumber myself with twenty thousand , vflicn a hundred will answer all my purposes , and be full as much , as 1 cat . digest ? I do not know that even a hundred are — -if we exclude

necessary the endless- writers of idle imagination and vain disputation of all ages and countries : but admit them , even with choice arid deliberation , and twenty thousand were not sufficient . The same things are said over and over—and there remains no ^ thing new . to be said , to the point of truth- —though arguments " and controversy , from given and suppositious , premises , will hist till the ' ¦ ' ¦

end of the . world . .. -. The different styles and manners of writers ' will always Entitle some to a deserved preference—but the matter is the same ., tlibugh diversely said . ; . „ , . ' , The sentiment or sentence upon which we" commonly 'build , is short—and may . be comprised iu . tho fewest words- —soii'Te ' two , or three , or half a dozen , or half a . score—twenty , at inosti- ^ Fron .

such simple foundations , we raise ania-dng ' supersh-uctiiresl—But it is all flourish and exposition—save , what is spent in Wraifo-Hog and downri ght contradiction— or falsehoodin the very ' teatli of Truth—Which-generally makes the greatest partof . the ' book . Is it good ?— -yoii may venture to conclude it ' common . , To call . itsuch-a-one ' s saying , is childish . — It is like simpleton ' repetition of the thing tritearidiBakintr

a s so — " his father , or . his . grandmother , a present of it . ^ ° Over shoes , over boots !— ' as my father says . ' It-never rains , but it pours 1—' as my grandmother-used to . say . " All truth ,, ail science , is reducible to axioms;—many labouring aj : the same point , will resolve it after the same manner , and , ' frequently , almost in . the same words : —thence sentences arid '' topics ' arose ; ¦ which

soon became general , and were ,, in substanre , in everyone ' s mouth—the learned still regarding and prc-sei-v . i . ug . Eiieni in cboicesen- _ fences— -the unlearned , vulgarizing a great number of them . in « v *' : common proverbs . Many common sayings with us , were no less co-mifioh among the nations and people Who lived two or three thousand years ago . ° Can any man be so doltish , as to imagine that the wit '" of ' Solomon - and the son of Sirach was all their own ? .

INO , surely—the s-pirit of their writings was known , several-centuries before they were bom - .- —they , indeed , had the merit of collecting and digesting the scattered truths of ages . ; arid of putting them ia a more elegant form . ° - They did well— -and we are bound in gratitude to revere their memory , for the pains they bestowed . , The sentences of the wise and viiiuoti-swere common to sect

, every of philosophy ; and approved by all—' —It mattered not who spake them , nor from what school they came ; so that tho lesson was general , and the truth incontrovertible . The E picureans rejected not the apophthegms ' of _| V Stoics ' - , ne . i-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-10-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01101795/page/16/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON : Article 1
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
Untitled Article 2
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
SOME ACCOUNT OF MR. BAKEWELL, OF DISHLEY. Article 4
ON THE ERRORS OF COMMON OPINION. Article 6
THE HAPPY WORLD. A VISION. Article 10
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 13
DETACHED THOUGHTS ONBOOKS. Article 15
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 18
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 25
ANECDOTE. Article 25
THE STAGE. Article 26
REMARKS ON GENERAL INVITATIONS. Article 27
AMERICAN ANECDOTES. Article 28
TO THE EDITOR. Article 31
ON THE LOVE OF NOVELTY. Article 34
ON THE DIFFERENT MODES OF REASONING Article 36
THE CHARACTER OF WALLER, AS A MAN AND A POET. Article 39
A METHOD OF ENCREASING POTATOES, Article 41
NEW SOUTH WALES, Article 42
TO THE EDITOR. Article 44
LIFE OF THE DUKE OF GUISE. Article 47
SINGULAR INSTANCE OF FACILITY IN LITERARY COMPOSITION. Article 48
A SWEDISH ANECDOTE. Article 49
ACCOUNT OF THOMAS TOPHAM, THE STRONG MAN. Article 50
SPEECH OF QUEEN ELIZABETH, ON MONOPOLIES. Article 51
DIRECTIONS AND OBSERVATIONS RELATIVE TO FOOD. Article 52
TO THE EDITOR. Article 54
THE WORM AND BUTTERFLY. Article 56
Untitled Article 57
ANECDOTE. Article 57
THE SENSITIVE PLANT AND THISTLE. A FABLE. Article 58
FRENCH ARROGANCE PROPERLY REBUKED. Article 58
A CAUTION TO THE AVARICIOUS. Article 58
A WELL-TIMED REBUKE. Article 59
NAVAL ANECDOTE. Article 59
TO THE EDITOR. Article 59
POETRY. Article 60
IMPROMPTU, Article 60
THE SUNDERLAND VOLUNTEERS. Article 61
IMPROMPTU, Article 61
MONSIEUR. TONSON. A TALE. Article 62
SONNET. Article 65
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 65
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 66
HOME NEWS, Article 67
PROMOTIONS. Article 72
Untitled Article 72
Untitled Article 73
BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Detached Thoughts Onbooks.

Some books arc the common topics of conversation for a month or two , or three—but are never heard of after . Wherefore should I encumber myself with twenty thousand , vflicn a hundred will answer all my purposes , and be full as much , as 1 cat . digest ? I do not know that even a hundred are — -if we exclude

necessary the endless- writers of idle imagination and vain disputation of all ages and countries : but admit them , even with choice arid deliberation , and twenty thousand were not sufficient . The same things are said over and over—and there remains no ^ thing new . to be said , to the point of truth- —though arguments " and controversy , from given and suppositious , premises , will hist till the ' ¦ ' ¦

end of the . world . .. -. The different styles and manners of writers ' will always Entitle some to a deserved preference—but the matter is the same ., tlibugh diversely said . ; . „ , . ' , The sentiment or sentence upon which we" commonly 'build , is short—and may . be comprised iu . tho fewest words- —soii'Te ' two , or three , or half a dozen , or half a . score—twenty , at inosti- ^ Fron .

such simple foundations , we raise ania-dng ' supersh-uctiiresl—But it is all flourish and exposition—save , what is spent in Wraifo-Hog and downri ght contradiction— or falsehoodin the very ' teatli of Truth—Which-generally makes the greatest partof . the ' book . Is it good ?— -yoii may venture to conclude it ' common . , To call . itsuch-a-one ' s saying , is childish . — It is like simpleton ' repetition of the thing tritearidiBakintr

a s so — " his father , or . his . grandmother , a present of it . ^ ° Over shoes , over boots !— ' as my father says . ' It-never rains , but it pours 1—' as my grandmother-used to . say . " All truth ,, ail science , is reducible to axioms;—many labouring aj : the same point , will resolve it after the same manner , and , ' frequently , almost in . the same words : —thence sentences arid '' topics ' arose ; ¦ which

soon became general , and were ,, in substanre , in everyone ' s mouth—the learned still regarding and prc-sei-v . i . ug . Eiieni in cboicesen- _ fences— -the unlearned , vulgarizing a great number of them . in « v *' : common proverbs . Many common sayings with us , were no less co-mifioh among the nations and people Who lived two or three thousand years ago . ° Can any man be so doltish , as to imagine that the wit '" of ' Solomon - and the son of Sirach was all their own ? .

INO , surely—the s-pirit of their writings was known , several-centuries before they were bom - .- —they , indeed , had the merit of collecting and digesting the scattered truths of ages . ; arid of putting them ia a more elegant form . ° - They did well— -and we are bound in gratitude to revere their memory , for the pains they bestowed . , The sentences of the wise and viiiuoti-swere common to sect

, every of philosophy ; and approved by all—' —It mattered not who spake them , nor from what school they came ; so that tho lesson was general , and the truth incontrovertible . The E picureans rejected not the apophthegms ' of _| V Stoics ' - , ne . i-

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