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  • Oct. 1, 1796
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Oct. 1, 1796: Page 27

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    Article ON THE CHARACTER AND VIRTUES OF THE FAIR SEX. ← Page 3 of 4 →
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On The Character And Virtues Of The Fair Sex.

reinstated in his government . Cleombrotus then sought refuge at the altar of Minerva , where he sat perplexed and silent . Chelonis , who- had thought it her duty to console her distressed father , IIOAV deemed it incumbent on her to share in the misery of her degraded husband . Shelled to him in the habit of sorrow , " seated herself by him , threw her arm round him , had one of her children on each sideand thus suppliantly implored her father to pardon her husband .

, The king did indeed spare the . life of his son-in-laAv , but condemned _ iim to banishment . He requested , however , his daughter still to continue with her father : this she refused to do ; aiid , putting one child into the arms of her husband , and faking the other herself , she accompanied him into exile . The historian adds , with his usual goodness of heart , ' if Cleombrotus had not been entirely corrupted

by vain-glory , he would have deemed banishment Avith tlie company of his wife a greater happiness than a kingdom without her . ' Pint . Franchf . ed . /> . S 03 , / . A . vol . I . To the same author Ave are indebted for a treatise on ' The virtuous . Deeds of "Women ; ' in Avhich he sets forth , first , the public exploits atchieved by AA'omen associatedand then the actions of a

, more piaVate nature performed by several individuals . ' With respect to the virtue of-women ( says Plutarch ) , I am not of the same opinion as Thucydides : for he declares that woman to be most excellent , of whom least mention is made by those abroad , either to her reproach or commendation : as if he thought that the name , as Avell as the personof a good womanought to be confinedand not

, , , suffered to go out . Gorgias appears more nice and happy in prescribing , that a woman ' s renown , but not her person , should be known to all . And admirable is the law of the Romans , which allows the due praises of women , no less than of men , to be publicly rehearsed after their death . '

In the Cyropjedia are introduced two very striking and beautiful characters ; the Avife of Tigranes , whose eyes Avere fixed , and whose thoughts were intent , on him only , who had said he would g ive even his life as a ransom that she should not be a slave ( b . iii . p . 18 7 & 190 , Hutch , ed . ); and Panthea , the faithful and affectionate Avife of Abradates . Though the Cyropa _ dia be a work of imagination , yet the author evidently had in his mind some real personagesas

Age-, silaus , Cyrus the younger , and Socrates : it is not , theref re , improbable , that the characters of these Avomen are drawn from life , and that the circumstances related of them had actuall y happened . In any point of vie \ v , they reflect honour on , the sex , and prove Xenophon to be among the asserters of female excellence . In the fifth book of his RepublicPlato maintains the propriety of

, admitting Avomen to participate in the guardianship of a citv . He argues upon the principle , that genius is indiscriminately diffused through both sexes , though the Avomen , be in all things Aveaker than the men . That Avomen , by education , may be rendered capable of discharging all civil employments equally with men , cannot be doubted : but whether society ' Avould , upon the whole , derive advan-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-10-01, Page 27” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01101796/page/27/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
TO READERS , CORRESPONDENTS , &c. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, AND CABINET OF UNIVERSAL LITERATURE, Article 3
EXTRACT FROM THE RECORDS OF THE SWAN LODGE. Article 6
ACCOUNT OF THE PILGRIMAGE TO MECCA. Article 7
Untitled Article 9
CEREMONY OF OPENING WEARMOUTH BRIDGE; Article 10
HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE OF WILLIAM OF WYKEHAM. Article 21
ON THE CHARACTER AND VIRTUES OF THE FAIR SEX. Article 25
THE GENIUS OF LIBERTY. Article 28
SINGULAR ACCOUNT OF THE DEVIL's PEAK AND ELDEN HOLE, IN DERBYSHIRE. Article 30
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF THE CHARACTERS, CUSTOMS, AND MANNERS, OF THE SAVAGES OF CAPE BRETON. Article 31
EXCERPTS ET COLLECTANEA. Article 34
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 38
LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 47
POETRY. Article 48
TRANSLATION Article 49
ALONZO THE BRAVE, AND FAIR IMOGINE. Article 50
TO HARMONY. Article 52
THE FAREWEL TO SUMMER. Article 53
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 54
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 57
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 60
OBITUARY. Article 69
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Page 27

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

On The Character And Virtues Of The Fair Sex.

reinstated in his government . Cleombrotus then sought refuge at the altar of Minerva , where he sat perplexed and silent . Chelonis , who- had thought it her duty to console her distressed father , IIOAV deemed it incumbent on her to share in the misery of her degraded husband . Shelled to him in the habit of sorrow , " seated herself by him , threw her arm round him , had one of her children on each sideand thus suppliantly implored her father to pardon her husband .

, The king did indeed spare the . life of his son-in-laAv , but condemned _ iim to banishment . He requested , however , his daughter still to continue with her father : this she refused to do ; aiid , putting one child into the arms of her husband , and faking the other herself , she accompanied him into exile . The historian adds , with his usual goodness of heart , ' if Cleombrotus had not been entirely corrupted

by vain-glory , he would have deemed banishment Avith tlie company of his wife a greater happiness than a kingdom without her . ' Pint . Franchf . ed . /> . S 03 , / . A . vol . I . To the same author Ave are indebted for a treatise on ' The virtuous . Deeds of "Women ; ' in Avhich he sets forth , first , the public exploits atchieved by AA'omen associatedand then the actions of a

, more piaVate nature performed by several individuals . ' With respect to the virtue of-women ( says Plutarch ) , I am not of the same opinion as Thucydides : for he declares that woman to be most excellent , of whom least mention is made by those abroad , either to her reproach or commendation : as if he thought that the name , as Avell as the personof a good womanought to be confinedand not

, , , suffered to go out . Gorgias appears more nice and happy in prescribing , that a woman ' s renown , but not her person , should be known to all . And admirable is the law of the Romans , which allows the due praises of women , no less than of men , to be publicly rehearsed after their death . '

In the Cyropjedia are introduced two very striking and beautiful characters ; the Avife of Tigranes , whose eyes Avere fixed , and whose thoughts were intent , on him only , who had said he would g ive even his life as a ransom that she should not be a slave ( b . iii . p . 18 7 & 190 , Hutch , ed . ); and Panthea , the faithful and affectionate Avife of Abradates . Though the Cyropa _ dia be a work of imagination , yet the author evidently had in his mind some real personagesas

Age-, silaus , Cyrus the younger , and Socrates : it is not , theref re , improbable , that the characters of these Avomen are drawn from life , and that the circumstances related of them had actuall y happened . In any point of vie \ v , they reflect honour on , the sex , and prove Xenophon to be among the asserters of female excellence . In the fifth book of his RepublicPlato maintains the propriety of

, admitting Avomen to participate in the guardianship of a citv . He argues upon the principle , that genius is indiscriminately diffused through both sexes , though the Avomen , be in all things Aveaker than the men . That Avomen , by education , may be rendered capable of discharging all civil employments equally with men , cannot be doubted : but whether society ' Avould , upon the whole , derive advan-

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