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  • June 1, 1797
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  • REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, June 1, 1797: Page 47

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. ← Page 3 of 8 →
Page 47

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

Review Of New Publications.

We have thus exhibited , as far as we possibly could , the p-eneral outline of the story ; but with respect to the moral tendency , or the grand design of the work , it is proper that the author should speak for himself , and this he has sufficiently done in the concluding chapter of his performance . ' In point of interest with the heart , and effect upon the conduct of the reader , ' says Mr . Pratt , ' it has been our . endeavour to render conspicuous , and impressiveseveral of the most important objects in literaturein morality

, , , aud in domestic life : with example and warnings appropriate to each . ' In one of the personages , the character of a protestant clergyman , and father of a family , of an honourable mind , shaded by human error , and somewhat warped by religious tenacity , has been contrasted with the character and conduct of a man , who has exhibited , in the perpetration , consciousness perseverance , punishment , and repentance of progressive crimes . And as the life and death of the former of these persons give the example of a good

man , in the several moral divisions of a divine , friend , neighbour , citizen , parent , and husband , through every period of a wise and active life ; even till he quits the world , with the above exception ; so does the behaviour of the other hold out the warning of a vicious being , placed in no less prosperous circumstances , even till he is overwhelmed by a sense of his own enormity ; bringing the death-bed of the wicked close under the eye , in contrast to the death-bed of the righteous .

'Ina third character has been ponrtrayed a venerable supporter of virtue , in a catholic clergyman , in all the trying instances of a difficult station , to act as a corrective on that intolerance of sentiment which influenced the opinions of the protestant divine . A fourth endtavonr has been to display , in the domestic history of these young men , brothers , the two great extremes of philosophic energy and poetic softness of character , with the safety of a middle man between both , shewing , however , in the conduct of the two former , the possibility of" preserving all the virtues of the latter , even when the practice of those virtues is exposed by habit , temper , and pdrsnit , to more arduous trials .

' The power of filial piety has also been given , in the delineation of a mind that preserved its modest dignity , amidst the hardest ordeals , to which a child can ever be called upon , in her relative situation , to pass . * The sixth portrait is that of a candid and perfectly unsuspicious character , in all the relations of social and domestic life . ' The seventh discovers the good prod need , to an unfortunate woman from some merciful treatment received from the fortunate of her own sex : for

the want of which many a violated form , but unsullied mind , languishes in the shades of obscurity , or crowds our streets with irreclaimable victims . ' These are interspersed with various examples , and warnings—of faithful domestics in youth and age—of their contrast in some treacherous servantsof pettifoggers in the law—of" honourable men in that profession—of patient meekness , unaffected candour , conjugal faith , and maternal affection , through a life of . trials : and its appropriate warning is given in a violent

disposition , coupling strong powers of mind with beauty of person and loose principles , scorning patience and resisting conscience . ' A fourteenth warning arises from shewing the danger of hazarding thehappiness of a child , in the momentous article of marriage , on any consideration , where the heart sanctions not the etioice of the parent , even though the hand is presented to beauty , elegance , and virtue : since nothing can be more certainthan that more mischief result from one unhappy marri

, may - age , than from an army of men bent on destruction . ' Such are some of the great aims proposed to be accomplished by this work as a whole ; from a due contemplation of which , with the parts , must be collected its energy and colour , its ornament and utility . From the intention ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-06-01, Page 47” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01061797/page/47/.
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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
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 5
AUTHENTIC MEMOIRS OF THE LAST YEAR OF LOUIS THE SIXTEENTH. Article 7
ANECDOTES RESPECTING THE LIFE AND DISCOVERIES OF PYTHAGORAS. Article 11
ESSAY ON POLITENESS. Article 15
ESSAY ON POLITENESS. Article 17
A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF RICHARD PARKER. Article 20
AN APOLOGY FOR THE CHARACTER AND CONDUCT OF IAGO. Article 21
AN ACCOUNT OF CHARLES THE FIRST's ENTRY INTO EDINBURGH, Article 27
A WRITING OF QUEEN MARY. Article 28
HISTORY OF THE GYPSIES. Article 29
FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 31
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 33
ANNIVERSARY OF THE CUMBERLAND FREEMASONS' SCHOOL , Article 41
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 43
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA . Article 43
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 45
POETRY. Article 53
A MINSTREL's SONG. Article 53
ADDRESS. Article 54
GARRICK'S MONUMENT. Article 55
HOMO TRESSIS. Article 55
ANALOGY. Article 55
OLD BEN BLOCK'S ADVICE TO THE BRAVE TARS OF OLD ENGLAND. Article 55
PROLOGUE TO THE WANDERING JEW. Article 56
ITALIAN V. LLAGERS. Article 56
A SONG, Article 56
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 57
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 58
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 63
DOMESTIC NEWS. Article 69
THE TRIAL OF RICHARD PARKER, THE MUTINEER, BY COURT MARTIAL. Article 79
INDEX TO THE EIGHTH VOLUME. Article 97
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Page 47

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

Review Of New Publications.

We have thus exhibited , as far as we possibly could , the p-eneral outline of the story ; but with respect to the moral tendency , or the grand design of the work , it is proper that the author should speak for himself , and this he has sufficiently done in the concluding chapter of his performance . ' In point of interest with the heart , and effect upon the conduct of the reader , ' says Mr . Pratt , ' it has been our . endeavour to render conspicuous , and impressiveseveral of the most important objects in literaturein morality

, , , aud in domestic life : with example and warnings appropriate to each . ' In one of the personages , the character of a protestant clergyman , and father of a family , of an honourable mind , shaded by human error , and somewhat warped by religious tenacity , has been contrasted with the character and conduct of a man , who has exhibited , in the perpetration , consciousness perseverance , punishment , and repentance of progressive crimes . And as the life and death of the former of these persons give the example of a good

man , in the several moral divisions of a divine , friend , neighbour , citizen , parent , and husband , through every period of a wise and active life ; even till he quits the world , with the above exception ; so does the behaviour of the other hold out the warning of a vicious being , placed in no less prosperous circumstances , even till he is overwhelmed by a sense of his own enormity ; bringing the death-bed of the wicked close under the eye , in contrast to the death-bed of the righteous .

'Ina third character has been ponrtrayed a venerable supporter of virtue , in a catholic clergyman , in all the trying instances of a difficult station , to act as a corrective on that intolerance of sentiment which influenced the opinions of the protestant divine . A fourth endtavonr has been to display , in the domestic history of these young men , brothers , the two great extremes of philosophic energy and poetic softness of character , with the safety of a middle man between both , shewing , however , in the conduct of the two former , the possibility of" preserving all the virtues of the latter , even when the practice of those virtues is exposed by habit , temper , and pdrsnit , to more arduous trials .

' The power of filial piety has also been given , in the delineation of a mind that preserved its modest dignity , amidst the hardest ordeals , to which a child can ever be called upon , in her relative situation , to pass . * The sixth portrait is that of a candid and perfectly unsuspicious character , in all the relations of social and domestic life . ' The seventh discovers the good prod need , to an unfortunate woman from some merciful treatment received from the fortunate of her own sex : for

the want of which many a violated form , but unsullied mind , languishes in the shades of obscurity , or crowds our streets with irreclaimable victims . ' These are interspersed with various examples , and warnings—of faithful domestics in youth and age—of their contrast in some treacherous servantsof pettifoggers in the law—of" honourable men in that profession—of patient meekness , unaffected candour , conjugal faith , and maternal affection , through a life of . trials : and its appropriate warning is given in a violent

disposition , coupling strong powers of mind with beauty of person and loose principles , scorning patience and resisting conscience . ' A fourteenth warning arises from shewing the danger of hazarding thehappiness of a child , in the momentous article of marriage , on any consideration , where the heart sanctions not the etioice of the parent , even though the hand is presented to beauty , elegance , and virtue : since nothing can be more certainthan that more mischief result from one unhappy marri

, may - age , than from an army of men bent on destruction . ' Such are some of the great aims proposed to be accomplished by this work as a whole ; from a due contemplation of which , with the parts , must be collected its energy and colour , its ornament and utility . From the intention ,

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