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  • March 1, 1795
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1795: Page 36

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    Article ESSAY ON A KING. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 36

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

Essay On A King.

wear it every day ; but he that thinks it too light knows not of what metal it is made . A king must make religion the rule of government , arid not the balance of state ; for the monarch that shall cast reli g ion into the scale to make it even , shall himself be judged and weig hed in these charactersTekel Peres ; he is found too lihthis kingdom shall be

di-, g , vided and g iven to another : and that king who holds not religion the best reason of state , is void of piety and justice , the only sure supporters of a crown . —A king , in matters of consequence , should be able to give his advice , but not to rely intirely thereupon ; for though happy events always justify their counsellors , yet . it is much better that the ill success of good advice be imputed to a subject than a

sovereign . ^—A king is the chief fountain of honour , which should not run to waste by too large a pipe , lest courtiers sell the water , and then , as the Popish priests say of their holy fluid , it Joses the virtue . A king is also the life of the law , not only as he is Lex Loquens himself , butbecause he animates that dead L— making it active towards all his subjects ; and as a wise king must do less in altering the laws ,

for new governments are dangerous , it being in the body politic as in the natural , that omnis subita mutatis est periculosa , and though it be for the better , yet it is not without fearful apprehensions ; for the king that changeth the fundamental laws of his kingdom , openly declares , that there is no good title to a crown but by conquest . A king that sets to sale seats of judicature oppressed ! the people ,

for he teaches the judges to sell justice . —Bounty and magnificence are great virtues , but a prodigal king is nearer to a tyrant than a parsimonious one ; for plenty at lionie draws his contemplations abroad , and want supplies itself of what is next ; and herein a good king ought to be wise and prudent , that he do not exceed what he has a rig ht to do . —A king that is not feared consequently is not loved , his studythereforeought to behow to be feared as well as loved ;

, , , not loved from fear , but feared from love ; therefore , as he must always endeavour to resemble him whose great name-he bears , and that in manifesting the sweet influence of his mercy over the severe strokes of his justice , but not to suffer a man of death to liVe ; for , besides that the land will mourn the restraint of justice , some doth more retard the affection of love , than the extent of mercy to others

doth inflame it ; and surely where love is so lessened , their fears are quite lost . —A king ' s greatest enemies are his flatterers , who-, though they always speak on his side , yet their words make against him . The love that a king owes to the public should not be confined to any particular , yet , that his more special favour reflect upon some worthy one is certainly necessary , because he knows but few deserving that

character ; but also he must know , that by concealing that man ' s faults ( for where is the person free from faults ) he injureth the commonwealth more than he could in paying his debts at the expence of the public .-r-A good king ought to love his queen above all women , and to keep her from jealousy he must persuade her to love his mistress the commonwealth , which the more they both do , the better

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-03-01, Page 36” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 7 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031795/page/36/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 2
A SERMON Article 8
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 14
DETACHED SENTIMENTS. Article 16
ORDER OF THE PROCESSION ON LAYING THE FOUNDATION-STONE OF THE NEW BUILDINGS FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH, Article 17
HINTS FOR THE OECONOMY OF TIME, EXPENCE, LEARNING, AND MORALITY; Article 22
A CHARACTER. Article 24
THE FREEMASON No. III. Article 26
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 28
SUMMARY OF ALL THE ARGUMENTS FOR AND AGAINST RICHARD BROTHERS. Article 28
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 32
MR. TASKER'S LETTERS Article 33
SHORT ESSAYS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS. Article 34
ESSAY ON A KING. Article 35
THE IRON MASK. Article 37
VICES AND VIRTUES. FROM THE FRENCH. Article 39
CANT PHRASES IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE EXPLAINED. Article 40
PHILOSOPHICAL EXPERIMENTS. Article 45
DUTY OF CONSIDERING THE POOR. Article 47
POETRY. Article 48
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 52
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 53
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 56
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 67
Untitled Article 72
LONDON : Article 72
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 73
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 73
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Page 36

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

Essay On A King.

wear it every day ; but he that thinks it too light knows not of what metal it is made . A king must make religion the rule of government , arid not the balance of state ; for the monarch that shall cast reli g ion into the scale to make it even , shall himself be judged and weig hed in these charactersTekel Peres ; he is found too lihthis kingdom shall be

di-, g , vided and g iven to another : and that king who holds not religion the best reason of state , is void of piety and justice , the only sure supporters of a crown . —A king , in matters of consequence , should be able to give his advice , but not to rely intirely thereupon ; for though happy events always justify their counsellors , yet . it is much better that the ill success of good advice be imputed to a subject than a

sovereign . ^—A king is the chief fountain of honour , which should not run to waste by too large a pipe , lest courtiers sell the water , and then , as the Popish priests say of their holy fluid , it Joses the virtue . A king is also the life of the law , not only as he is Lex Loquens himself , butbecause he animates that dead L— making it active towards all his subjects ; and as a wise king must do less in altering the laws ,

for new governments are dangerous , it being in the body politic as in the natural , that omnis subita mutatis est periculosa , and though it be for the better , yet it is not without fearful apprehensions ; for the king that changeth the fundamental laws of his kingdom , openly declares , that there is no good title to a crown but by conquest . A king that sets to sale seats of judicature oppressed ! the people ,

for he teaches the judges to sell justice . —Bounty and magnificence are great virtues , but a prodigal king is nearer to a tyrant than a parsimonious one ; for plenty at lionie draws his contemplations abroad , and want supplies itself of what is next ; and herein a good king ought to be wise and prudent , that he do not exceed what he has a rig ht to do . —A king that is not feared consequently is not loved , his studythereforeought to behow to be feared as well as loved ;

, , , not loved from fear , but feared from love ; therefore , as he must always endeavour to resemble him whose great name-he bears , and that in manifesting the sweet influence of his mercy over the severe strokes of his justice , but not to suffer a man of death to liVe ; for , besides that the land will mourn the restraint of justice , some doth more retard the affection of love , than the extent of mercy to others

doth inflame it ; and surely where love is so lessened , their fears are quite lost . —A king ' s greatest enemies are his flatterers , who-, though they always speak on his side , yet their words make against him . The love that a king owes to the public should not be confined to any particular , yet , that his more special favour reflect upon some worthy one is certainly necessary , because he knows but few deserving that

character ; but also he must know , that by concealing that man ' s faults ( for where is the person free from faults ) he injureth the commonwealth more than he could in paying his debts at the expence of the public .-r-A good king ought to love his queen above all women , and to keep her from jealousy he must persuade her to love his mistress the commonwealth , which the more they both do , the better

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