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  • Jan. 1, 1866
  • Page 27
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The Masonic Press, Jan. 1, 1866: Page 27

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    Article REPRINT OF SCARCE, OR CURICUS, BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY. Page 1 of 6 →
Page 27

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

Reprint Of Scarce, Or Curicus, Books On Freemasonry.

REPRINT OF SCARCE , OR CURICUS , BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY .

"TUB LIFE OF SETHOS . Taken from private memoirs of the " Ancient Egyptians . Translated from a Greek " Manuscript into French , " and now done faithfully into English , from the Paris edition , by Mr . " LEDIARD . Two Volumes . London : Printed for J . VfALTHOE " , over " against the Royal Exchange , in Cornhill . M . DCC . XXXII . " THIS hook , of which Ave offer a first instalment , lias been very popular

with Freemasons on the Continent . It has gone through several editions in France , has been translated into three or four European languages , and even now holds its place in the best masonic libraries . Dunlop ' s Jliston / of Fiction , vol . iii ., page 141 , quotes Gibbon , the Roman historian , as saying— " The author" ( the Abbe Terrasson ) " was a scholar and

" philosopher . His book " ( Sethos ) " has far more ori ginality and variety " than Telemackus ; yet Sctltos is forgotten and Tehmachus will be " immortal . That harmony of style , and the great talent of speaking to " heart and passions , which Fenelon possessed , was unknown to Terrasson . "

Dunlop observes , " that besides its intrinsic merit the romance of Sethos " is curious , as being the foundation of the hypothesis , concerning the " vith . Book of the JEnid , maintained by Bishop Warburton , in his Divine " Legation of Moses , which was first published in 1738 , seven years after " the appearance of Sethos ; " and he then quotes a passage from Cooper ' s Life of Socrates , where that author says— " Warburton supposes the Avhole

" vith . Book of the iEnid to be a description of the Elusinian mysteries , " which , though he . lets it pass for his own , was borrowed , or more " properly stolen , from a French romance , entitled , The Life of Sethos . " And Gibbon s & ja— " Appearances , it must be confessed , wear a very " suspicious aspect , but "—he sarcastically subjoins— " what are appearances

" wben Aveighed against his Lordship ' s declaration , that this is a point of " honour in Avhich he is particularly delicate , and that he may venture to " boast that no author was ever more averse to take to himself what

" belonged to another . We have produced a literal reprint , with the following exceptions : —The spelling has been modernized ; the profuse use of capital letters—so common in books printed in the eighteenth century- —has been abandoned ; and the punctuation has been occasionally revised , so as to be more in accordance with modern usage . In all else it is a faithful reproduction of the original translation .

THE PREFACE . | ^|? HE Greek manuscript , of which I here offer the public a translation , CQj was found in the libraiy of a foreign nation extremely jealous of this ^^ sort of treasure . Those who procured me the reading of it would admit of my publishing this translation upon no other terms but that of

“The Masonic Press: 1866-01-01, Page 27” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msp/issues/mxr_01011866/page/27/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
NUMBER ONE. Article 4
"LIVE AND LET LIVE." Article 9
OBJECTS OF MASONIC REFORM. Article 11
MASONIC ANTIQUITIES, DOCUMENTS, &c. JERUSALEM ENCAMPMENT, MANCHESTER. Article 20
REPRINT OF SCARCE, OR CURICUS, BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 27
THE RITE OF MISRAIM. Article 32
NOTES AND QUERIES FOR FREEMASONS. Article 36
MASONIC ENCLAVES. Article 38
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 38
EVENTS AND THINGS TO BE REMEMBERED. Article 41
CLOTHING FOR THE RISING STAR OF WESTERN INDIA. Article 43
REVIEWS. Article 43
POETRY. Article 44
THE MASONIC REPORTER. Article 46
KNIGHT TEMPLARY. Article 47
CRAFT FREEMASONRY. Article 50
OBITUARY. Article 50
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 51
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Page 27

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

Reprint Of Scarce, Or Curicus, Books On Freemasonry.

REPRINT OF SCARCE , OR CURICUS , BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY .

"TUB LIFE OF SETHOS . Taken from private memoirs of the " Ancient Egyptians . Translated from a Greek " Manuscript into French , " and now done faithfully into English , from the Paris edition , by Mr . " LEDIARD . Two Volumes . London : Printed for J . VfALTHOE " , over " against the Royal Exchange , in Cornhill . M . DCC . XXXII . " THIS hook , of which Ave offer a first instalment , lias been very popular

with Freemasons on the Continent . It has gone through several editions in France , has been translated into three or four European languages , and even now holds its place in the best masonic libraries . Dunlop ' s Jliston / of Fiction , vol . iii ., page 141 , quotes Gibbon , the Roman historian , as saying— " The author" ( the Abbe Terrasson ) " was a scholar and

" philosopher . His book " ( Sethos ) " has far more ori ginality and variety " than Telemackus ; yet Sctltos is forgotten and Tehmachus will be " immortal . That harmony of style , and the great talent of speaking to " heart and passions , which Fenelon possessed , was unknown to Terrasson . "

Dunlop observes , " that besides its intrinsic merit the romance of Sethos " is curious , as being the foundation of the hypothesis , concerning the " vith . Book of the JEnid , maintained by Bishop Warburton , in his Divine " Legation of Moses , which was first published in 1738 , seven years after " the appearance of Sethos ; " and he then quotes a passage from Cooper ' s Life of Socrates , where that author says— " Warburton supposes the Avhole

" vith . Book of the iEnid to be a description of the Elusinian mysteries , " which , though he . lets it pass for his own , was borrowed , or more " properly stolen , from a French romance , entitled , The Life of Sethos . " And Gibbon s & ja— " Appearances , it must be confessed , wear a very " suspicious aspect , but "—he sarcastically subjoins— " what are appearances

" wben Aveighed against his Lordship ' s declaration , that this is a point of " honour in Avhich he is particularly delicate , and that he may venture to " boast that no author was ever more averse to take to himself what

" belonged to another . We have produced a literal reprint , with the following exceptions : —The spelling has been modernized ; the profuse use of capital letters—so common in books printed in the eighteenth century- —has been abandoned ; and the punctuation has been occasionally revised , so as to be more in accordance with modern usage . In all else it is a faithful reproduction of the original translation .

THE PREFACE . | ^|? HE Greek manuscript , of which I here offer the public a translation , CQj was found in the libraiy of a foreign nation extremely jealous of this ^^ sort of treasure . Those who procured me the reading of it would admit of my publishing this translation upon no other terms but that of

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