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  • Nov. 1, 1793
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  • A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Nov. 1, 1793: Page 73

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Page 73

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A View Of The Progress Of Navigation.

Kamika to the North . Euthymenes advanced to the southward tff the line , and published , on his return , a relation , of the curiosities , and of the singular manners and customs of the nations he had met wj . th in the course of his discoveries . Pytheas sailed alonr ^ the coast of Portugal , Spain , Gaul , and Britain , to the most northern extremity ; and Horn thence continuing his course , arrived in six days at Thulewherein the summer soisrkethe sun did not set

, , , for twenty-four hours . This some snppi / se to have been Iceland , others the Shetland islands . The first , however , is the most probable opinisn ; for though at the Shetland islands ( in 60 degrees of latitude ) tlie refraction of ihe attoo-phere is so luminous , as to enable-a person to read , write , or transact any other business by day-lig ht for that space of time- , yet it is only in tlie

arctic circle , or in 66 anri a h ; : ii' deg . that the sun , during the summer solstice , does not set , ( as Pytheas asserts ) for twentyfour hours . Pytheas penetrated also to the very farthermost part of the Baltic , and explored , with great accuracy , those regions whence the Phoenicians fetched their amber , a commodity from which they

derived great wealth , and which passed to other nations throiio-fi their hands alone . From the fragments of Pytheas , preserved in the latter geographers ,, we are convinced that he had explored with great accuracy the shores of the -Baltic , and that he had even made iiimself acquainted with the neig hbouring nations and rivers adjacent . *

Judging of others by their own propensity to fable , the Greeks regarded as mere fiction the relations of Pytheas ancl Euth ymenes . They had formerly treated in the same manner the discoveries of Hanno and Hamilca . But time and philosophic investigation have < fone justice to those celebrated Massilian navigators , and confirmed the veracity of their relations .

- But the Greeks even in the most flourishing state of their affairs , were never equal to the Phoenicians , either in the extensiveness of their commerce , the number atid opulence of their colonies and settlements , or in their skill of Navigation . The Phoenicians conducted their course with much subtility of observation b y the Little Bear , while the Great Bear was the inaccurate ; guide of Navigation to the- nncurious Greeks . There existed in the manners aud

prejudices of the Grecian people an insuperable obstacle to the progress of commerce and naval improvement . After the Phoenicians and Greeks , the Romans became sovereigns of the sea , yet not at once , but after a hard struggle- with the Carthagenians , then in the height of their power . These people having , by their naval force , made themselves masters of the greatest part of Spain , the coast of Africa , and many ports in the Mediterranean , were intent upon the conquest of Sicil y , when the

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-11-01, Page 73” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01111793/page/73/.
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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 73

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

A View Of The Progress Of Navigation.

Kamika to the North . Euthymenes advanced to the southward tff the line , and published , on his return , a relation , of the curiosities , and of the singular manners and customs of the nations he had met wj . th in the course of his discoveries . Pytheas sailed alonr ^ the coast of Portugal , Spain , Gaul , and Britain , to the most northern extremity ; and Horn thence continuing his course , arrived in six days at Thulewherein the summer soisrkethe sun did not set

, , , for twenty-four hours . This some snppi / se to have been Iceland , others the Shetland islands . The first , however , is the most probable opinisn ; for though at the Shetland islands ( in 60 degrees of latitude ) tlie refraction of ihe attoo-phere is so luminous , as to enable-a person to read , write , or transact any other business by day-lig ht for that space of time- , yet it is only in tlie

arctic circle , or in 66 anri a h ; : ii' deg . that the sun , during the summer solstice , does not set , ( as Pytheas asserts ) for twentyfour hours . Pytheas penetrated also to the very farthermost part of the Baltic , and explored , with great accuracy , those regions whence the Phoenicians fetched their amber , a commodity from which they

derived great wealth , and which passed to other nations throiio-fi their hands alone . From the fragments of Pytheas , preserved in the latter geographers ,, we are convinced that he had explored with great accuracy the shores of the -Baltic , and that he had even made iiimself acquainted with the neig hbouring nations and rivers adjacent . *

Judging of others by their own propensity to fable , the Greeks regarded as mere fiction the relations of Pytheas ancl Euth ymenes . They had formerly treated in the same manner the discoveries of Hanno and Hamilca . But time and philosophic investigation have < fone justice to those celebrated Massilian navigators , and confirmed the veracity of their relations .

- But the Greeks even in the most flourishing state of their affairs , were never equal to the Phoenicians , either in the extensiveness of their commerce , the number atid opulence of their colonies and settlements , or in their skill of Navigation . The Phoenicians conducted their course with much subtility of observation b y the Little Bear , while the Great Bear was the inaccurate ; guide of Navigation to the- nncurious Greeks . There existed in the manners aud

prejudices of the Grecian people an insuperable obstacle to the progress of commerce and naval improvement . After the Phoenicians and Greeks , the Romans became sovereigns of the sea , yet not at once , but after a hard struggle- with the Carthagenians , then in the height of their power . These people having , by their naval force , made themselves masters of the greatest part of Spain , the coast of Africa , and many ports in the Mediterranean , were intent upon the conquest of Sicil y , when the

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