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  • Jan. 1, 1797
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1797: Page 46

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Page 1 of 8 →
Page 46

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Review Of New Publications.

REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS .

Essays , by a ' Society of Gentlemen at Exeter , two , 573 pages . 9 s . boards . Cadell andliivies . PROVINCIAL literary societies are , we believe , of very modern date , at least in this country , and few of them have risen into any respe & able notice . That at-Manchester appears to have been the first to attract the public ' attention by the . respectability of its transactions and " the success which the

; volumes published by that society have obtained seems to have excited a spirit of emulation in other parts of the kingdom . The literary society of Exeter has certainly the next place ; and this first volume of its production * will give it great c . edit , and no doubt will stimulate its members to further exertions . "' We are sorry , however , to find that jealousy and ill-will have attended the publication of this volume , and that something like a literary warfare has takeii lace in

p consequence of it . Such bickerings are often fatal to promising and well-composed bodies , and must be peculiarl y injurious to a society formed of men of letters . But we shall turn from this lui pleasing theme to the more agreeable and . profitable employ , of reviewing the various contents of this interesting publication . In a very modest , s'hort , but well written adver ' - tisement we are informed that " These essays were read at the stated meetings of a society , oriinallunited b rivate friendshi When number

g y y p p . a of papers had accumulated , it was supposed , that a selection from them , would not be uninteresting- ; and , as in a miscellaneous publication , no advantage could be attained by arrangement , the order , in which each member read an essay has been adopted . " To the justness of this remark we readil y accedebut we think that the addition of the names of the authors would have been no disadvantage to the work , and certainly would have been more agreeable to the reader .

The volume opens with an address to the society , which might have done very wx-11 as an extemporaneous effusion , but possesses neither sufficient ingenuity or excellence of language to give it credit where it now stands . This is followed by ; _ lines read at the second meeting ; ' which are , indeed , " a Very curious composition . The poet begins by givihg auricular organs ' to a liver : ' '

A theme invites- —a rugged word the theme . That ne ' er was heard by the castalian stream . ^ ' Some merit is then taken b y the author from the singularity and difficulty ot his undertaking , wliich is " To trace the birth , the progress of a CLUB . ' * We are next presented with a long ' vindication of the character of Pindar , and translation of two of his odes

a . ' The poet has . been charged with venanty by some scholiasts , and translators have given strength to the accusation by the turn which their versions have taken of the eleventh Pythian Ode , anel vhesecond Isthmian . The essayist enters at large into file defence of the old card ; and it must be confessed , that his arguments ' are decisive , and hi * translations . do him credit both as a' scholar and a . poet . ' '" VOL , VIII . ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-01-01, Page 46” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011797/page/46/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
THE PROPRIETOR TO THE SUBSCRIBERS. Article 4
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 5
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY, FOR JANUARY 1797. Article 6
ON SUICIDE AND MADNESS. Article 14
TO THE EDITOR OF THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE. Article 16
THE GHOST OF STERNE IN LONDON. Article 20
ESSAYS ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH HISTORY AND CLASSICAL LEARNING. Article 24
LETTERS FROM LORD ESSEX TO QUEEN ELIZABETH. Article 31
THE DYING MIRA, A FRAGMENT. Article 32
ANECDOTES. Article 33
REMARKABLE RESEMBLANCE IN TWO TWIN BROTHERS. Article 35
SINGULAR INSTANCE OF A CAPACITY TO ENDURE ABSTINENCE AND HUNGER IN A SPIDER. Article 36
ABSENCE OF MIND. Article 37
FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 38
MASONRY FOUNDED ON SCRIPTURE. Article 38
ROYAL CUMBERLAND SCHOOL. Article 43
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 45
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 45
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 46
POETRY. Article 54
THE AFFLICTED PARENTS, AN ELEGY Article 54
TO THE MEMORY OF LAURA. Article 55
ODE ON CLASSIC DISCIPLINE. Article 55
LINES Article 56
IMITATION OF SHAKSPEAR, Article 56
SONNET. Article 57
TO THE GLOW-WORM. Article 57
SONG. Article 57
EPITAPH ON A BEAUTIFUL BOY. Article 57
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 58
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 60
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 60
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 66
OBITUARY. Article 75
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Page 46

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

Review Of New Publications.

REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS .

Essays , by a ' Society of Gentlemen at Exeter , two , 573 pages . 9 s . boards . Cadell andliivies . PROVINCIAL literary societies are , we believe , of very modern date , at least in this country , and few of them have risen into any respe & able notice . That at-Manchester appears to have been the first to attract the public ' attention by the . respectability of its transactions and " the success which the

; volumes published by that society have obtained seems to have excited a spirit of emulation in other parts of the kingdom . The literary society of Exeter has certainly the next place ; and this first volume of its production * will give it great c . edit , and no doubt will stimulate its members to further exertions . "' We are sorry , however , to find that jealousy and ill-will have attended the publication of this volume , and that something like a literary warfare has takeii lace in

p consequence of it . Such bickerings are often fatal to promising and well-composed bodies , and must be peculiarl y injurious to a society formed of men of letters . But we shall turn from this lui pleasing theme to the more agreeable and . profitable employ , of reviewing the various contents of this interesting publication . In a very modest , s'hort , but well written adver ' - tisement we are informed that " These essays were read at the stated meetings of a society , oriinallunited b rivate friendshi When number

g y y p p . a of papers had accumulated , it was supposed , that a selection from them , would not be uninteresting- ; and , as in a miscellaneous publication , no advantage could be attained by arrangement , the order , in which each member read an essay has been adopted . " To the justness of this remark we readil y accedebut we think that the addition of the names of the authors would have been no disadvantage to the work , and certainly would have been more agreeable to the reader .

The volume opens with an address to the society , which might have done very wx-11 as an extemporaneous effusion , but possesses neither sufficient ingenuity or excellence of language to give it credit where it now stands . This is followed by ; _ lines read at the second meeting ; ' which are , indeed , " a Very curious composition . The poet begins by givihg auricular organs ' to a liver : ' '

A theme invites- —a rugged word the theme . That ne ' er was heard by the castalian stream . ^ ' Some merit is then taken b y the author from the singularity and difficulty ot his undertaking , wliich is " To trace the birth , the progress of a CLUB . ' * We are next presented with a long ' vindication of the character of Pindar , and translation of two of his odes

a . ' The poet has . been charged with venanty by some scholiasts , and translators have given strength to the accusation by the turn which their versions have taken of the eleventh Pythian Ode , anel vhesecond Isthmian . The essayist enters at large into file defence of the old card ; and it must be confessed , that his arguments ' are decisive , and hi * translations . do him credit both as a' scholar and a . poet . ' '" VOL , VIII . ,

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