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The Freemasons' Magazine, Nov. 1, 1797: Page 43

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Page 1 of 8 →
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Review Of New Publications.

REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS .

4 n authentic Account of an Embassy from the King of Great Britain to the Emperor of C bina Taken chiefly from the Papers of his Excellency the Earl of Macartney , K . B . His Ma ~ jesty ' s Embassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Emperor of China , & c . By Sir George Staunton , Bart . L . L . D . F . K . S . & c . 2 vols . 4 ( 0 . with Engravings , besides a folio Volume of Plates . 4 / . 4 s . in boards . Nicol . [ CONTINUED FilOM OUH LAST . ]

IN the passage of the Ladrones , which is next related , we meet with no particulars sufficiently interesting to admit of extrafts . We soon , - however , become entertained in the arrival of the Embassy at the Chusan Islands . The Clarence brig was dispatched to the town of that name for a pilot ; and a party from her took an opportunity to visit the city of Ting-hai . Here the sight of the females leads to the following observations : ' Or most of these , even in the middle and inferior classes , the feet were

unnaturally small , or rather truncated . They appeared as if the fore part of the foot had been accidentally cut off , leaving the remainder of the usual size , and bandaged like the stump of an amputated limb . They undergo , indeed , much torment , and cripple themselves in a great measure , in imitation of ladies of the higher rank , among whom it is there the custom to stop , by pressure , the growth of the ancle , as well as foot , froyi the earliest infancy and leaving the great toe in its natural positionfoiciblto bend the

; , y others , and retain them " under the foot , till at length they adhere to , as if buried in the sole , and can no more be separated . Notwithstanding the pliability of the human frame in tender years , its tendency to expansion at that period must , whenever if is counteracted , occasion uneasy sensation . ? toiliose

who are so treated ; and before the ambition of being admitted takes possession of these victims of fashion , it requires the vig ilance of their female parents to deter them from relieving themselves from the firm and tight compresses which bind their feet and ancles . When those compresses are constantly and carefully kept on , the feet are symmetrically small . The young creatures are , indeed , obliged , for a considerable time , to be supported when they attempt to walk ; even afterwards they totter , and always walk upon

their heels . ' This artificial diminutiveness of the feet , though it does not entirely prevent their use , must certainly cramp the general ' growth , and injure ' the constitution of those who have been subjected to it . Seme of the very lowest classes of the Chinese , of a race confined chiefly to the mountains and remote places , have not adopted this unnatural custom . But the females of this class are held by the rest in the utmost degree of contempt , and are employed only in the most menial domestic offices . So inveterate h

the custom , which gives pre-eminence to mutilated before perfeft limbs , that the interpreter averred , and every subsequent information confirmed the assertion , that if , of two sisters , otherwise every way equal , the one had thus been maimed , while nature was suffered to make its usual progress in the other , the latter would be considered as in an abjeS : state , unworthy of associating with the rest of the family , and doomed to perpetual obscurity , and the drudgery of servitude / VOL . ix . it

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-11-01, Page 43” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01111797/page/43/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON. Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
MEMOIR OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE RICHARD HELY HUTCHINSON, Article 4
LIFE OF MR. GARRICK. Article 6
ON THE INFLUENCE OF GOVERNMENT ON THE MENTAL FACULTIES. Article 8
OBSERVATIONS ON THE YELLOW FEVER. Article 11
TRAITS OF THE SCOTCH CHARACTER. Article 12
OBSERVATIONS ON THE ENGLISH STYLE OF WRITING. Article 14
THE CHANGE OF CLIMATE IN THE MIDDLE COLONIES OF NORTH-AMERICA, Article 16
HISTORY OF THE SCIENCES FOR 1797. Article 18
ON THE PRESENT STATE OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY. Article 20
THE COLLECTOR. Article 22
ON THE INFELICITIES OF THE LEARNED. Article 27
AUTHENTIC PARTICULARS OF THE EVER MEMORABLE DEFEAT OF THE DUTCH FLEET, UNDER THE COMMAND OF ADMIRAL DE WINTER, Article 30
PLAN OF THE ACTION BETWEEN THE ENGLISH AND DUTCH FLEETS, Article 33
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF ADMIRAL LORD DUNCAN. Article 36
ADMIRAL DE WINTER, Article 37
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 43
POETRY. Article 51
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 55
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 57
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 58
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 63
OBITUARY. Article 70
LIST OF BANKRUPTS Article 74
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Page 43

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

Review Of New Publications.

REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS .

4 n authentic Account of an Embassy from the King of Great Britain to the Emperor of C bina Taken chiefly from the Papers of his Excellency the Earl of Macartney , K . B . His Ma ~ jesty ' s Embassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Emperor of China , & c . By Sir George Staunton , Bart . L . L . D . F . K . S . & c . 2 vols . 4 ( 0 . with Engravings , besides a folio Volume of Plates . 4 / . 4 s . in boards . Nicol . [ CONTINUED FilOM OUH LAST . ]

IN the passage of the Ladrones , which is next related , we meet with no particulars sufficiently interesting to admit of extrafts . We soon , - however , become entertained in the arrival of the Embassy at the Chusan Islands . The Clarence brig was dispatched to the town of that name for a pilot ; and a party from her took an opportunity to visit the city of Ting-hai . Here the sight of the females leads to the following observations : ' Or most of these , even in the middle and inferior classes , the feet were

unnaturally small , or rather truncated . They appeared as if the fore part of the foot had been accidentally cut off , leaving the remainder of the usual size , and bandaged like the stump of an amputated limb . They undergo , indeed , much torment , and cripple themselves in a great measure , in imitation of ladies of the higher rank , among whom it is there the custom to stop , by pressure , the growth of the ancle , as well as foot , froyi the earliest infancy and leaving the great toe in its natural positionfoiciblto bend the

; , y others , and retain them " under the foot , till at length they adhere to , as if buried in the sole , and can no more be separated . Notwithstanding the pliability of the human frame in tender years , its tendency to expansion at that period must , whenever if is counteracted , occasion uneasy sensation . ? toiliose

who are so treated ; and before the ambition of being admitted takes possession of these victims of fashion , it requires the vig ilance of their female parents to deter them from relieving themselves from the firm and tight compresses which bind their feet and ancles . When those compresses are constantly and carefully kept on , the feet are symmetrically small . The young creatures are , indeed , obliged , for a considerable time , to be supported when they attempt to walk ; even afterwards they totter , and always walk upon

their heels . ' This artificial diminutiveness of the feet , though it does not entirely prevent their use , must certainly cramp the general ' growth , and injure ' the constitution of those who have been subjected to it . Seme of the very lowest classes of the Chinese , of a race confined chiefly to the mountains and remote places , have not adopted this unnatural custom . But the females of this class are held by the rest in the utmost degree of contempt , and are employed only in the most menial domestic offices . So inveterate h

the custom , which gives pre-eminence to mutilated before perfeft limbs , that the interpreter averred , and every subsequent information confirmed the assertion , that if , of two sisters , otherwise every way equal , the one had thus been maimed , while nature was suffered to make its usual progress in the other , the latter would be considered as in an abjeS : state , unworthy of associating with the rest of the family , and doomed to perpetual obscurity , and the drudgery of servitude / VOL . ix . it

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