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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • May 15, 1843
  • Page 43
  • CHARACTER, LIFE, AND TIMES OF HIS LATE ROYAL. HIGHNESS , BY THE PUBLIC PRESS.
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    Article CHARACTER, LIFE, AND TIMES OF HIS LATE ROYAL. HIGHNESS , BY THE PUBLIC PRESS. ← Page 15 of 37 →
Page 43

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Character, Life, And Times Of His Late Royal. Highness , By The Public Press.

part of the last half century . As an enlightened politician , quick to perceive truth , and fearless to speak it ; as a liberal patron of science , literature , and art ; as a steady friend , a kind master , and a diligent seeker out and rewarder of merit wherever it was to be found , no matter how humble might be the sphere in which it moved , —in each and all of these capacities his Royal Highness deserves to be gratefully remembered

by his countrymen . It must be said also to his credit , that his opinions as a reformer were not adopted from blind , servile compliance with the fashion of the times ; but were formed and matured at a period when the very word " reform" was synonimous with revolution , and affixed a sort of brand upon the individual—no matter how exalted might be his position—who dared to enlist under its banner . In those days of

relentless persecution , when it was a crime little short of sacrilege to maintain that the boroughmongers were not the most immaculate of politicians , and their parliament the most immaculate of parliaments ; when high church and high tory principles were in the ascendant ; and

the gaol , the pillory , and the hulks , were the portion of those who doubted the patriotism and omniscience of a corrupt lay and clerical oligarchy;—in those disastrous days for freedom , which we trust will never return , the Duke of Sussex boldly threw his influence into the scale of the weaker party ; insisted on the right ofthe people—then only known by name , and unacknowledged as a body—to a voice in the legislature ; and

distinguished , himself , on e ^ er * occasion , by his energetic advocacy of . the great principles of civil and religious liberty . His Royal Highness married again , but privately , the Lady Cecilia Underwood . This marriage was also made in defiance of " The Royal Marriage Act , " and this tacit defiance to the royal authority was so far resentedthat the Duchess of Sussex ( for so we must consider her , as

, we must consider his first lady , and Duke de jure as we also conceive his son to be ) , was never acknowledged as such , but , in the semi-recognition of 1840 , created , by a species of compromise , Duchess of Inverness , on the 30 th of March in that year . Her Grace survives his Royal Highness .

( From the Kent Herald . ) His long-sustained consistency in the advocation of liberal politics , the affability of his deportment , his love of learning and learned men , his extensive usefulness as a patron of charitable institutions , had endeared him to the public at large ; and , in spite of some errors in private life , he has left a reputation superior to most of the princes of the Brunswick

race . His virtues were his own—his faults those of his position and the temptations to which an unnatural law ( the Royal Marriage Act ) had exposed him .

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1843-05-15, Page 43” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_15051843/page/43/.
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Title Category Page
TO BROTHER WILLIAM HENRY WHITE, GRAND SECRETARY Article 1
CONTENTS. Article 2
THE SUSSEX MEMORIAL. Article 3
Untitled Article 4
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 5
THE DEATH Article 13
HIS LAST MOMENTS . Article 17
POST MORTEM EXAMINATION OF THE BODY OF THE LATE DUKE OF SUSSEX. Article 19
Public Orders. Article 20
IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT. Article 21
ments, with an especial view to the adva... Article 27
CHARACTER, LIFE, AND TIMES OF HIS LATE ROYAL. HIGHNESS , BY THE PUBLIC PRESS. Article 29
INTRODUCTION OP THE LATE DUKE OF SUSSEX ... Article 66
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF FREE AND ACCEPTED MASONS OF ENGLAND. Article 67
GRAND LODGE, APRIL 25, 1843. Article 68
MASONIC MEMOIR. Article 73
MISCELLANEOUS. Article 81
Manody ,ON THE DEATH OF HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUKE OF SUSSEX, Article 87
Funeral Dirge, Article 89
Funeral Dirge. Article 91
THE LYING IN STATE. Article 92
THE FUNERAL. Article 97
FREEMASONS OF THE ROYAL HOUSE OF BRUNSWICK. Article 108
ON THE DEATH OF THE DUKE OF SUSSEX. Article 111
MASONIC ODE, Article 112
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 113
Untitled Ad 114
FREEMASONRY. GENUINE MASONIC TRACING BOA... Article 115
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 116
Untitled Ad 117
Untitled Ad 118
Untitled Ad 119
Untitled Ad 120
ItOVAL AGBICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. ... Article 121
FIRS AND LIFE INSURANCE SOCIETY Article 122
WATCHES, PLATE, AND JEWELLERY. T P. ACKL... Article 123
AIR GUNS AND AIR CANES, RECENTLY IMPROVE... Article 123
Magna est Veritas et praivaldbit. GALL'S... Article 123
Untitled Ad 124
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Page 43

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

Character, Life, And Times Of His Late Royal. Highness , By The Public Press.

part of the last half century . As an enlightened politician , quick to perceive truth , and fearless to speak it ; as a liberal patron of science , literature , and art ; as a steady friend , a kind master , and a diligent seeker out and rewarder of merit wherever it was to be found , no matter how humble might be the sphere in which it moved , —in each and all of these capacities his Royal Highness deserves to be gratefully remembered

by his countrymen . It must be said also to his credit , that his opinions as a reformer were not adopted from blind , servile compliance with the fashion of the times ; but were formed and matured at a period when the very word " reform" was synonimous with revolution , and affixed a sort of brand upon the individual—no matter how exalted might be his position—who dared to enlist under its banner . In those days of

relentless persecution , when it was a crime little short of sacrilege to maintain that the boroughmongers were not the most immaculate of politicians , and their parliament the most immaculate of parliaments ; when high church and high tory principles were in the ascendant ; and

the gaol , the pillory , and the hulks , were the portion of those who doubted the patriotism and omniscience of a corrupt lay and clerical oligarchy;—in those disastrous days for freedom , which we trust will never return , the Duke of Sussex boldly threw his influence into the scale of the weaker party ; insisted on the right ofthe people—then only known by name , and unacknowledged as a body—to a voice in the legislature ; and

distinguished , himself , on e ^ er * occasion , by his energetic advocacy of . the great principles of civil and religious liberty . His Royal Highness married again , but privately , the Lady Cecilia Underwood . This marriage was also made in defiance of " The Royal Marriage Act , " and this tacit defiance to the royal authority was so far resentedthat the Duchess of Sussex ( for so we must consider her , as

, we must consider his first lady , and Duke de jure as we also conceive his son to be ) , was never acknowledged as such , but , in the semi-recognition of 1840 , created , by a species of compromise , Duchess of Inverness , on the 30 th of March in that year . Her Grace survives his Royal Highness .

( From the Kent Herald . ) His long-sustained consistency in the advocation of liberal politics , the affability of his deportment , his love of learning and learned men , his extensive usefulness as a patron of charitable institutions , had endeared him to the public at large ; and , in spite of some errors in private life , he has left a reputation superior to most of the princes of the Brunswick

race . His virtues were his own—his faults those of his position and the temptations to which an unnatural law ( the Royal Marriage Act ) had exposed him .

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