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  • Oct. 1, 1795
  • Page 9
  • ON THE ERRORS OF COMMON OPINION.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Oct. 1, 1795: Page 9

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On The Errors Of Common Opinion.

whole world , as to their mouldering dust when kept together . It is not for this , it is not for him that is dead , but for ourselves , who remain alive , that we bury him ; to bury our remembrance of the loss of what we loved : we bury with him his utensils of life , which he then wants no mote . You say , we bury these ,-that they may live again and serve their master as before ; but you accuse us falsely :

these things shall live- tio mote , their time of perishing shall come like ours ; but they shall never be renewed again . Wouldst . thou know why we bury them thus with their master , it is for love and charity . An axe , a gun , and a few other necessary implements , are all we want to make life happy to us , and they are ail our riches ; were these to descend to the relations of the dying man , who knows but the desire of ho

possessing'things so . valuable mig ht incite the heir to parricide :. mig ht hasten the death of one whom he long had hated for possessing what was one clay to be his , and mi g ht , instead of using means to save , himself destroy him . Our fathers have taught us to guard against this cruelty and wietchedness , by thus determining the loss of a !! possessions with the possessor ' s life , that even the wicked have no

temptation to hope the death of those from whom no one can be a gainer . " The preacher went away confounded and ashamed , while the modest Indian returned the congratulations of his friends , with telling them , " It is not I that am better than this man , but our custonrjs are better than his . " To conclude the triumphs over sense and reason of this common

enemy of . the world , common opinion , with that unhappy error , which robs us of all solid happiness to give us a mere shadow of it , let us rememl-er that every body says , there is mote happiness in the expectation of pleasures , than in the possessing them . This is telling us , in other words , that all substantial happiness is out of our reach , and the imagination of it ail we have to- hope for . Precept too . often hoodwinks oar reason , nay and our very senses , and compels us to believe the dictates of neither : thus , in the case before us , we are

dictated to till we think pleasure itself no . pleasure , and the most uneasy of all sensations , expectation , a real blessing and true felicity . " What are your ¦ uneasinesses , "' says a bosom friend ; " and how shall I advise you to relieve them ? - Are you desirous of knowing that happ iness which riches g ive ; keep those-riches in . your coffers ; pleasures pali upon the sense , and when purchased prove nothing ; but while have it in to purchase themyou may always

you . your power , feast on the idea of what you can command at p leasure . Do you not desire riches ? there is but one other passion that can engross alt your thoug ht ; , that is Jove . Are you an adorer of the beauties and perfection of some female acquaintance , piarry her , and the charm will cease . " Thus common opinion teaches the world to laugh at all but ideal happ iness . What lessons of destruction are these to that being , charms of lif

whose true interest it is to know that the two great e ,, riches and beauty , have no real value , but in the actual use and true possession . Money , in the relieving the necessities of others , or procuring p leasures for ourselves , that is , in the parting with , not in the possessing ; and that the charms of a woman are only valuable , as they make the married life the happiest scene of action , and make the greatest pleasure of life as durable as life itself .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-10-01, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01101795/page/9/.
  • 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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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On The Errors Of Common Opinion.

whole world , as to their mouldering dust when kept together . It is not for this , it is not for him that is dead , but for ourselves , who remain alive , that we bury him ; to bury our remembrance of the loss of what we loved : we bury with him his utensils of life , which he then wants no mote . You say , we bury these ,-that they may live again and serve their master as before ; but you accuse us falsely :

these things shall live- tio mote , their time of perishing shall come like ours ; but they shall never be renewed again . Wouldst . thou know why we bury them thus with their master , it is for love and charity . An axe , a gun , and a few other necessary implements , are all we want to make life happy to us , and they are ail our riches ; were these to descend to the relations of the dying man , who knows but the desire of ho

possessing'things so . valuable mig ht incite the heir to parricide :. mig ht hasten the death of one whom he long had hated for possessing what was one clay to be his , and mi g ht , instead of using means to save , himself destroy him . Our fathers have taught us to guard against this cruelty and wietchedness , by thus determining the loss of a !! possessions with the possessor ' s life , that even the wicked have no

temptation to hope the death of those from whom no one can be a gainer . " The preacher went away confounded and ashamed , while the modest Indian returned the congratulations of his friends , with telling them , " It is not I that am better than this man , but our custonrjs are better than his . " To conclude the triumphs over sense and reason of this common

enemy of . the world , common opinion , with that unhappy error , which robs us of all solid happiness to give us a mere shadow of it , let us rememl-er that every body says , there is mote happiness in the expectation of pleasures , than in the possessing them . This is telling us , in other words , that all substantial happiness is out of our reach , and the imagination of it ail we have to- hope for . Precept too . often hoodwinks oar reason , nay and our very senses , and compels us to believe the dictates of neither : thus , in the case before us , we are

dictated to till we think pleasure itself no . pleasure , and the most uneasy of all sensations , expectation , a real blessing and true felicity . " What are your ¦ uneasinesses , "' says a bosom friend ; " and how shall I advise you to relieve them ? - Are you desirous of knowing that happ iness which riches g ive ; keep those-riches in . your coffers ; pleasures pali upon the sense , and when purchased prove nothing ; but while have it in to purchase themyou may always

you . your power , feast on the idea of what you can command at p leasure . Do you not desire riches ? there is but one other passion that can engross alt your thoug ht ; , that is Jove . Are you an adorer of the beauties and perfection of some female acquaintance , piarry her , and the charm will cease . " Thus common opinion teaches the world to laugh at all but ideal happ iness . What lessons of destruction are these to that being , charms of lif

whose true interest it is to know that the two great e ,, riches and beauty , have no real value , but in the actual use and true possession . Money , in the relieving the necessities of others , or procuring p leasures for ourselves , that is , in the parting with , not in the possessing ; and that the charms of a woman are only valuable , as they make the married life the happiest scene of action , and make the greatest pleasure of life as durable as life itself .

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