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  • Nov. 1, 1793
  • Page 24
  • COMMENTS ON STERNE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Nov. 1, 1793: Page 24

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    Article COMMENTS ON STERNE. ← Page 4 of 7 →
Page 24

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

Comments On Sterne.

"" forfeit cratik , a cheater , he is not touched with if , pauper nbiqite jacet , " ride on , he takes no notice of it . Put up a supplication to bin } , in ihe " name of a thousand orphans , an hospital , a spittle . a prison as he goes " by , they cry aid to him for aid : ride on Shew him a decay'd " haven , a bridge , a school , a fortification , S > e . or some public zvork ; " ride on . Good your -worship , your honour , for God ' s sake , your Coun-i " try ' s sake : ride on * . "

This curious copy is followed up in Tristram Shandy by a Chapter , and that a long one , written almost entirely from Burton . 16 is the Consolation of Mr . Shandy on the death of Brother Bobby . " When Agrippina was told of her son ' s death , Tacitns informs " us , that not being able to moderate the violence of her passions , ; " she abruptly broke off her work . " This quotation did not come

to Sterne from Tacitus . " Mezentius would not live after his soM - - - - And Pompey ' s -wife cry'd out at the news of her husband ' s death , Turpe mori post te , & c .- —as Tacitus of Agrippina , not able to moderate her passions . So when she beard her Son tons slain , she abruptl y broke off her work , changed countenance and colour , tore her hair , and fell a roaring downri ght .. " - \ - " Tis either Plato , " says Sterne , " or Plutarch , or Seneca , or " Xenephon , or EpictetuSj or Theophrastus , or Lucian—or some '

" one , perhaps of later date—either Cardan , or BudtEiis , or Pe" trarch , or Stella—or possibly it may be some divine or father of " the Church , St . Austin , or St . Cyprian , or Bernard , who affirm ^ " that it is an irresistible and natural passion , to weep for the loss " of our friends or children—and Seneca , ( I ' m positive ) tells us " somewhere , that such griefs evacuate themselves best by that-par- * " ticular channel . And accordingly - we find that David wept for

, " his son Absalom—Adrian for his AntinousJ—Niobe for her chi-1-" dren—and that Apollodorus and Crito both shed tears for Socrates " before his death . "—This is well rallied , as the following passage will evince ; but Sterne should have considered how much he owed to poor old Burton . " Death and departure of friends are things generally grievous ; Om ~

" nimn quee in vita humana contingunt , luctus atque mors stmt acerbis" sima , [ Cardan , de Consol . lib . 2 . ] the most austere and bitter acci" dents that can happen to a man in this life , in mternum valedicire , to " part for ever , to forsake the world and all our friends , 'tis ultimmn " terribilium , the last and the greatest terrour , most irksome and trou ~ " blesome unto us , & c . —Nay many generous spirits , and grave staid " 'men otherwise , are so tender in this , that at the loss of a dear friend " they will cry out , roar , and tear their hair , lamenting some months "after , bowling 0 hone , as those Irish women , and Greeks at their

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-11-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01111793/page/24/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE: OR, GENERAL and COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 2
A GENERAL CHARGE TO MASONRY. Article 7
A CHARGE Article 11
ON FASHION. Article 18
ANECDOTE OF PHILIP I. KING OF SPAIN. Article 20
COMMENTS ON STERNE. Article 21
THE ANTIQUITY OF DRINKING HEALTHS. Article 28
ANECDOTES OF DR. GOLDSMITH. Article 31
CHARACTER OF SIR ANTHONY BROWN. Article 38
ANECDOTES OF DR. JOHNSON, &c. Article 39
PRIVATE ANECDOTES OF ILLUSTRIOUS FRENCH CHARACTERS. Article 46
HOPE. Article 53
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF JAMES HESELTINE, ESQ. G. T. Article 56
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, Article 58
THE HUMBLE ADDRESS OF THE MOST ANTIENT AND HONOURABLE SOCIETY OF FREE AND ACCEPTED MASONS, RESIDENT IN THE COUNTY OF LINCOLN. In GRAND LODGE assembled. Article 58
OF MAN's HAPPINESS. Article 59
A TALE. Article 60
ON THE STUDY OF THE ARTS AND SCIENCES. Article 64
THE CRUELTY OF A FATHER. Article 65
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 69
THE CHOICE OF ABDALA: Article 74
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 79
POETRY. Article 82
TO ARNO. Article 83
STANZAS Article 84
PROLOGUE TO THE WORLD IN A VILLAGE. Article 85
FOREIGN OCCURRENCES. Article 86
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 88
Untitled Article 91
Untitled Article 91
Untitled Article 91
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Page 24

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

Comments On Sterne.

"" forfeit cratik , a cheater , he is not touched with if , pauper nbiqite jacet , " ride on , he takes no notice of it . Put up a supplication to bin } , in ihe " name of a thousand orphans , an hospital , a spittle . a prison as he goes " by , they cry aid to him for aid : ride on Shew him a decay'd " haven , a bridge , a school , a fortification , S > e . or some public zvork ; " ride on . Good your -worship , your honour , for God ' s sake , your Coun-i " try ' s sake : ride on * . "

This curious copy is followed up in Tristram Shandy by a Chapter , and that a long one , written almost entirely from Burton . 16 is the Consolation of Mr . Shandy on the death of Brother Bobby . " When Agrippina was told of her son ' s death , Tacitns informs " us , that not being able to moderate the violence of her passions , ; " she abruptly broke off her work . " This quotation did not come

to Sterne from Tacitus . " Mezentius would not live after his soM - - - - And Pompey ' s -wife cry'd out at the news of her husband ' s death , Turpe mori post te , & c .- —as Tacitus of Agrippina , not able to moderate her passions . So when she beard her Son tons slain , she abruptl y broke off her work , changed countenance and colour , tore her hair , and fell a roaring downri ght .. " - \ - " Tis either Plato , " says Sterne , " or Plutarch , or Seneca , or " Xenephon , or EpictetuSj or Theophrastus , or Lucian—or some '

" one , perhaps of later date—either Cardan , or BudtEiis , or Pe" trarch , or Stella—or possibly it may be some divine or father of " the Church , St . Austin , or St . Cyprian , or Bernard , who affirm ^ " that it is an irresistible and natural passion , to weep for the loss " of our friends or children—and Seneca , ( I ' m positive ) tells us " somewhere , that such griefs evacuate themselves best by that-par- * " ticular channel . And accordingly - we find that David wept for

, " his son Absalom—Adrian for his AntinousJ—Niobe for her chi-1-" dren—and that Apollodorus and Crito both shed tears for Socrates " before his death . "—This is well rallied , as the following passage will evince ; but Sterne should have considered how much he owed to poor old Burton . " Death and departure of friends are things generally grievous ; Om ~

" nimn quee in vita humana contingunt , luctus atque mors stmt acerbis" sima , [ Cardan , de Consol . lib . 2 . ] the most austere and bitter acci" dents that can happen to a man in this life , in mternum valedicire , to " part for ever , to forsake the world and all our friends , 'tis ultimmn " terribilium , the last and the greatest terrour , most irksome and trou ~ " blesome unto us , & c . —Nay many generous spirits , and grave staid " 'men otherwise , are so tender in this , that at the loss of a dear friend " they will cry out , roar , and tear their hair , lamenting some months "after , bowling 0 hone , as those Irish women , and Greeks at their

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