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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1796
  • Page 46
  • A DISSERTATION ON THE MODERN ART OF SCRIBBLING.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1796: Page 46

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    Article A DISSERTATION ON THE MODERN ART OF SCRIBBLING. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article EXTRAORDINARY EPITAPH Page 1 of 1
Page 46

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

A Dissertation On The Modern Art Of Scribbling.

run over into the subsequent page ; where a pretty wooden device of a flower-pot supported by two chubby cherubims , or a little pert squirrel perched up with a bushy expanse of tail , may be stuck into tiie centre of the vacant blank , and so prevent the unthrifty profusion of your matter . You will always take particular care to split the connection of j'our piece into innumerable divisions and paragraphs , of

which will extend it to very near the length a moderate volume extraordinary . Your copy being thus managed , you must now call in the assistance of your printer , to nurse it still farther : he will therefore furnish you with a large type , thai it may not strain , the eyes of the reader : lie will also take care that the margin be very wide at the top ,

bottom , and sides : besides this , he will put spacious distances between every line , and leave what they call a white line between every paragraph . Many other artifices may be used , to bilk the purchaser , and swell the profits of . the sale . When your piece is thus spun out into several more volumes than is necessaryyou will puff it off in the advertising . and to satisf

, , y the impatience of the public , you may tell them that I don't know how many presses are at work to get . it printed off . If afterwards your sale should not prove brisk enough ,, and you have many left on your hands , you may advertise a second , third , fourth , fifth ; and sixth edition repeatedly , though you have not got off near the number of your first impression ' . —But hold , —1 must not reveal the mysteries

of the trade : —I have already gone too far ' : —Some parts of this Essay I was obliged to strike out , as the printer absolutely refused , for some private reasons , to set them ;—and I know not how . far I may hereafter be forced to a dependence on those generous , those humane , those honourable , those honest gentiemen , the booksellers . - ; - - '¦ ' ¦"' ; Q .

Extraordinary Epitaph

EXTRAORDINARY EPITAPH

¦ ¦ IN ST . MARTIN S CHURCH , LEICESTER . HERE lyeth the , bodie of John Heyrich , who departed tl ^ s life April 3 d , 1589 , being about the age of 76 years . He did marje Mary the daughter of John Bond , Esq . of Wardend , in the countie

of Warwick . He lived with the sayde Mary in one house 52 yeeres , and in all that tyme never buryed he manne , womanne , nor chylde , although there were sometymes twentie in the housholde . He had issue bye the sayd Mary 5 sonnes and seven daughters . The sayde John was Maior of the towne 1559 , and againe anno 1572 . The sayde Mary lived to ninerie seven yeeres , and departed on the Sth of December 1611 . She dyd see before her departure , of" her chyldreiv and chyldren ' s chyldreir , to the number of 142 ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-01-01, Page 46” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011796/page/46/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 4
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 4
WILLIAM HENRY LAMBTON, Esq. M P. Article 5
PART OF A CHARGE LATELY DELIVERED TO A SOCIETY OF FREE MASONS ON AN EXTRAORDINARY OCCASION*. Article 8
ON THE PLEASURES OF THE TABLE AMONG THE GREEKS. Article 12
ON THE OVERFONDNESS OF PARENTS. Article 13
CHARACTER OF SIR EDWARD SEYMOUR. Article 15
OBSERVATIONS MADE IN A VISIT TO THE TOMBS OF WESTMINSTER ABBEY, IN DECEMBER. 1784, Article 16
THE STAGE. Article 23
RULES FOR THE GERMAN FLUTE. Article 25
ANECDOTE OF THE LATE MR. WHISTON. Article 26
ON THE MUTABILITY OF THE TIMES. Article 27
ANECDOTES. Article 28
TO THE EDITOR. Article 31
AN EASTERN APOLOGUE. Article 31
ACCOUNT OF, AND EXTRACTS FROM, THE NEWLY DISCOVERED SHAKSPEARE MANUSCRIPTS. Article 32
BRIEF MEMOIRS OF MR. SPILLARD, THE PEDESTRIAN. Article 35
PROCESS OF SCALPING AMONG THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS. Article 37
SINGULARITIES OF MR. HOWARD, THE PHILANTHROPIST. Article 39
A DISSERTATION ON THE MODERN ART OF SCRIBBLING. Article 43
EXTRAORDINARY EPITAPH Article 46
DESCRIPTION OF A GRAND COLLATION, Article 47
REMARKS ON MEN OF SPIRIT. Article 47
REMARKABLE REVERSE OF FORTUNE. Article 48
BIOGRAPHY. Article 49
POETRY. Article 53
ON SEEING A BEAUTIFUL YOUNG LADY IN TEARS, Article 54
SEPTEMBER *. Article 54
ODE FOR THE NEW YEAR, 1796. Article 57
MASONIC SONG. Article 58
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 59
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 61
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 67
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Page 46

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

A Dissertation On The Modern Art Of Scribbling.

run over into the subsequent page ; where a pretty wooden device of a flower-pot supported by two chubby cherubims , or a little pert squirrel perched up with a bushy expanse of tail , may be stuck into tiie centre of the vacant blank , and so prevent the unthrifty profusion of your matter . You will always take particular care to split the connection of j'our piece into innumerable divisions and paragraphs , of

which will extend it to very near the length a moderate volume extraordinary . Your copy being thus managed , you must now call in the assistance of your printer , to nurse it still farther : he will therefore furnish you with a large type , thai it may not strain , the eyes of the reader : lie will also take care that the margin be very wide at the top ,

bottom , and sides : besides this , he will put spacious distances between every line , and leave what they call a white line between every paragraph . Many other artifices may be used , to bilk the purchaser , and swell the profits of . the sale . When your piece is thus spun out into several more volumes than is necessaryyou will puff it off in the advertising . and to satisf

, , y the impatience of the public , you may tell them that I don't know how many presses are at work to get . it printed off . If afterwards your sale should not prove brisk enough ,, and you have many left on your hands , you may advertise a second , third , fourth , fifth ; and sixth edition repeatedly , though you have not got off near the number of your first impression ' . —But hold , —1 must not reveal the mysteries

of the trade : —I have already gone too far ' : —Some parts of this Essay I was obliged to strike out , as the printer absolutely refused , for some private reasons , to set them ;—and I know not how . far I may hereafter be forced to a dependence on those generous , those humane , those honourable , those honest gentiemen , the booksellers . - ; - - '¦ ' ¦"' ; Q .

Extraordinary Epitaph

EXTRAORDINARY EPITAPH

¦ ¦ IN ST . MARTIN S CHURCH , LEICESTER . HERE lyeth the , bodie of John Heyrich , who departed tl ^ s life April 3 d , 1589 , being about the age of 76 years . He did marje Mary the daughter of John Bond , Esq . of Wardend , in the countie

of Warwick . He lived with the sayde Mary in one house 52 yeeres , and in all that tyme never buryed he manne , womanne , nor chylde , although there were sometymes twentie in the housholde . He had issue bye the sayd Mary 5 sonnes and seven daughters . The sayde John was Maior of the towne 1559 , and againe anno 1572 . The sayde Mary lived to ninerie seven yeeres , and departed on the Sth of December 1611 . She dyd see before her departure , of" her chyldreiv and chyldren ' s chyldreir , to the number of 142 ,

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