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  • Oct. 1, 1795
  • Page 37
  • ON THE DIFFERENT MODES OF REASONING
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Oct. 1, 1795: Page 37

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Page 37

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

On The Different Modes Of Reasoning

Let a beautiful woman , youpg , elegant , and full of gallantry , such as liistory represents the celebrated Cleopatra , who by the infi pityof her charms , the magic of her wit , the voluptuousness of her caresses , makes her lover daily taste all the delights that could be found in variety—in whose arms , to use the emphatic language of Diyden , " desire springs from enjoyment ; " let such . a woman appear in an assembly of prudes , whose chastity is secured by age and ugliness , how will her beauties

and talents be despised!—Sheltered from seduction , beneath the Medusean shield of deformity , these prudes have no idea of the pleasure arising from the flattering infatuation and fond solicitations of a lover ; they cannot conceive the difficulty which a beautiful woman finds in resisting the importunity of the man she loves , and the vanity of making him the confident of all her secret charms : they will therefore fall with fury upon this lovel y woman , and place her weakness * mong crimes of the blackest dye .

But let a prude , in her turn , appear in a circle of coquettes , she will there meet with as little respect as superciliousness can shew fo levity , and as much contempt as beauty can express for deformity . To be revenged on her prudery they will tell her , that the beauty who yields to love , and the ordinary woman who resists that passion , are both prompted by the same motive ; the one seeks an admirer of ber charmsthe other toavoid the means of her disgrace and censer

, ; quently there is no difference , but what beauty makes , between the prude and the woman of galjantry . . Thus the different opinions , passions , and prejudices of mankind exult over each other . The ostentatious minister of State , who will ¦ not know merit in a mean condition , is despised in his turn by men of sense and learning ,

" Foolish mortal ! '" cry they;—* - " on what dost thou pride thyself ? — -Art thou vain of the crowds that kneel before thee ? - ^ -Know ! whatever thy folly may suppose , this homage is not paid to thee , but to thy place . Thou , of thyself , art nobody : what lustre thou hast is reflected by the favour of thy Sovereign . Behold the vapours that arise from the mud of those marshes ; sustained in the air , they are changed into gaudy clouds : the }* shinelike theewith a splendor

, , borrowed from the sun ; but should that luminary for a moment withdraw his beams , their brightness is lost , and they sink into the mud whence they rose . " As contrary passions excite reciprocal contempt , a different turn of mind produces nearly the same effect . Necessitated to relish only such ideas as are analogous to our own

, it is impossible for us to admire a turn of mind very different . For this reason the mathematician has commonly a greater esteem for the metaphj'sician than the poet , while the poet has . a higher opinion of the orator than of either . Thus , with the best intentions , illustrious men of different tastes set little value on each other . To be convinced of the reality of this

contempt , which is always reciprocal , let us listen \ . o the language of men of genius . Like several mountebanks dispersed in a market-place , each calls .admirers to himself and thinks that he alone can deserve them

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-10-01, Page 37” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01101795/page/37/.
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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 37

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

On The Different Modes Of Reasoning

Let a beautiful woman , youpg , elegant , and full of gallantry , such as liistory represents the celebrated Cleopatra , who by the infi pityof her charms , the magic of her wit , the voluptuousness of her caresses , makes her lover daily taste all the delights that could be found in variety—in whose arms , to use the emphatic language of Diyden , " desire springs from enjoyment ; " let such . a woman appear in an assembly of prudes , whose chastity is secured by age and ugliness , how will her beauties

and talents be despised!—Sheltered from seduction , beneath the Medusean shield of deformity , these prudes have no idea of the pleasure arising from the flattering infatuation and fond solicitations of a lover ; they cannot conceive the difficulty which a beautiful woman finds in resisting the importunity of the man she loves , and the vanity of making him the confident of all her secret charms : they will therefore fall with fury upon this lovel y woman , and place her weakness * mong crimes of the blackest dye .

But let a prude , in her turn , appear in a circle of coquettes , she will there meet with as little respect as superciliousness can shew fo levity , and as much contempt as beauty can express for deformity . To be revenged on her prudery they will tell her , that the beauty who yields to love , and the ordinary woman who resists that passion , are both prompted by the same motive ; the one seeks an admirer of ber charmsthe other toavoid the means of her disgrace and censer

, ; quently there is no difference , but what beauty makes , between the prude and the woman of galjantry . . Thus the different opinions , passions , and prejudices of mankind exult over each other . The ostentatious minister of State , who will ¦ not know merit in a mean condition , is despised in his turn by men of sense and learning ,

" Foolish mortal ! '" cry they;—* - " on what dost thou pride thyself ? — -Art thou vain of the crowds that kneel before thee ? - ^ -Know ! whatever thy folly may suppose , this homage is not paid to thee , but to thy place . Thou , of thyself , art nobody : what lustre thou hast is reflected by the favour of thy Sovereign . Behold the vapours that arise from the mud of those marshes ; sustained in the air , they are changed into gaudy clouds : the }* shinelike theewith a splendor

, , borrowed from the sun ; but should that luminary for a moment withdraw his beams , their brightness is lost , and they sink into the mud whence they rose . " As contrary passions excite reciprocal contempt , a different turn of mind produces nearly the same effect . Necessitated to relish only such ideas as are analogous to our own

, it is impossible for us to admire a turn of mind very different . For this reason the mathematician has commonly a greater esteem for the metaphj'sician than the poet , while the poet has . a higher opinion of the orator than of either . Thus , with the best intentions , illustrious men of different tastes set little value on each other . To be convinced of the reality of this

contempt , which is always reciprocal , let us listen \ . o the language of men of genius . Like several mountebanks dispersed in a market-place , each calls .admirers to himself and thinks that he alone can deserve them

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