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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Oct. 1, 1795
  • Page 27
  • REMARKS ON GENERAL INVITATIONS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Oct. 1, 1795: Page 27

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    Article THE STAGE. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article REMARKS ON GENERAL INVITATIONS. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 27

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

The Stage.

'Tis hers with softest charms the breast to move In drooping anguish and in plaintive love ; Where sweet Ophelia meets with wild disdain , Or senseless wanders for a father slain ; Where Desdemona meekly would assuage The poor abus'd Othello ' s causeless rage

; Or Juliet fondly tempts her love to stay , And doubts the tuneful harbinger of day . Ask we the spell by which she wakes the si gh , And calls the flowing sorrow to the eye ? — 'Tis pow ' rful nature ' s all-prevailing sway , And KEMBLE acts as feeling points the way :

When , through the finer workings of the soul , A temper'd fervour animates the whole , We nature ' s strong presiding influence find , And trace the virtues of a kindred mind ; 'Tis nature prompts her looks , her tones , her tears , And . tells the heart , she is what she appears .

Remarks On General Invitations.

REMARKS ON GENERAL INVITATIONS .

THE first and most common of all invitations are general invitations : We shall be glad to see you , Mr . , to take a dinner with us' —or- — 'When you pass this way , we shall be happy if you ; will step in , and eat a bit of mutton '—or— 'Why do we never see you ? We are always at home , and shall be happy if you will spend a day with us '—or— - 'Well ! when am I to see you ? Will you dine with me soon ?'— -or— ' So ! you never will come and dine with us "

—or— ' Before yougo out of town , I positively insist , that you come and dine with us '—or— ' I am engaged to-morrow , but , any other time , I shall be very happy if you will take pot-luck with us '—or— . * Now do come and dine with us , just in the family-way , ' & c . With many other forms , which it were endless to mention . A man , who has but a dozen of such kinds of friends , has no occasion to keep a table

of his own above once a fortnight—and yet , sir , somehow or other , I have met with various disappointments in accepting such invitations . It was but the other day I walked four miles from my house to-dine ¦ with a friend , who was always at home , ' and who had asked me so often , that I began to be ashamed of my rudeness—but he had just dined , although 1 was at his house half an hour before the time which

jie told me he always kept . I concealed that I had not dined , and , making my bow precipitately , went to a neighbouring public house and dined on a beef-steak . Those who ' are always at home , ' I have found are very seldom in the humour of seeing company , and of those who are ' most ' glad to see one , ' the greater part are engaged abroad . Some are' very happy to see me , " but it happens very unfortunately , that the mistress of the

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-10-01, Page 27” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01101795/page/27/.
  • List
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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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Page 27

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

The Stage.

'Tis hers with softest charms the breast to move In drooping anguish and in plaintive love ; Where sweet Ophelia meets with wild disdain , Or senseless wanders for a father slain ; Where Desdemona meekly would assuage The poor abus'd Othello ' s causeless rage

; Or Juliet fondly tempts her love to stay , And doubts the tuneful harbinger of day . Ask we the spell by which she wakes the si gh , And calls the flowing sorrow to the eye ? — 'Tis pow ' rful nature ' s all-prevailing sway , And KEMBLE acts as feeling points the way :

When , through the finer workings of the soul , A temper'd fervour animates the whole , We nature ' s strong presiding influence find , And trace the virtues of a kindred mind ; 'Tis nature prompts her looks , her tones , her tears , And . tells the heart , she is what she appears .

Remarks On General Invitations.

REMARKS ON GENERAL INVITATIONS .

THE first and most common of all invitations are general invitations : We shall be glad to see you , Mr . , to take a dinner with us' —or- — 'When you pass this way , we shall be happy if you ; will step in , and eat a bit of mutton '—or— 'Why do we never see you ? We are always at home , and shall be happy if you will spend a day with us '—or— - 'Well ! when am I to see you ? Will you dine with me soon ?'— -or— ' So ! you never will come and dine with us "

—or— ' Before yougo out of town , I positively insist , that you come and dine with us '—or— ' I am engaged to-morrow , but , any other time , I shall be very happy if you will take pot-luck with us '—or— . * Now do come and dine with us , just in the family-way , ' & c . With many other forms , which it were endless to mention . A man , who has but a dozen of such kinds of friends , has no occasion to keep a table

of his own above once a fortnight—and yet , sir , somehow or other , I have met with various disappointments in accepting such invitations . It was but the other day I walked four miles from my house to-dine ¦ with a friend , who was always at home , ' and who had asked me so often , that I began to be ashamed of my rudeness—but he had just dined , although 1 was at his house half an hour before the time which

jie told me he always kept . I concealed that I had not dined , and , making my bow precipitately , went to a neighbouring public house and dined on a beef-steak . Those who ' are always at home , ' I have found are very seldom in the humour of seeing company , and of those who are ' most ' glad to see one , ' the greater part are engaged abroad . Some are' very happy to see me , " but it happens very unfortunately , that the mistress of the

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