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  • Sept. 30, 1854
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1854: Page 85

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    Article CRITICAL NOTICES OF THE LITERATURE OF THE LAST THREE MONTHS, ← Page 13 of 18 →
Page 85

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Critical Notices Of The Literature Of The Last Three Months,

afternoon—silent , motionless , and self-absorbed , as a Turk over his opium pouch ; for tea served him precisely in this capacity . It was the only stimulant he ever took , and at the same time the only luxury- ; the delicate state of his digestive organs prevented him from tasting any fermented liquors or touching any food but beef and mutton , or poultry and game dressed with perfect plainness . He never touched any but Mack tea , and was very particular about the quality of that , always using the most expensive that could be got ; and he used when living alone

to consume nearly a pound a week . A cup of Hazlitt ' s tea ( if you happened to come in for the first brewage of it ) was a peculiar thing ; I have never tasted anything like it . He always made it himself ; half-filling the tea-pot with tea , pouring the boiling water on it , and then almost immediately pouring it out ; using wifch ifc a greafc quantity of sugar and cream . " To judge from its occasional effect upon myself , I should say that the quantity Hazlitt drank of this tea produced ultimately a most injurious effect upon him ; and in all probability hastened his deathwhich took place from disease of the

, digestive organs . But its immediate effect was agreeable , even to a degree of fascination ; and not feeling any subsequent reaction from it , he persevered in its use to the last , notwithstanding two or three attacks similar to that which terminated his life . " His breakfast and tea were frequently the only meals that Hazlitt took till

late at night ; when he usually ate a hearty supper of hot meat—either rumpsteak , poultry , or game—a partridge or a pheasant . This he invariably took at a tavern ; his other meals ( except his dinner , sometimes ) being as invariably taken at home . " There were three or four houses only that he frequented ; for he never entered the doors of any one where bis ways were not well known , or where there was any chance of his bill being asked for till he chose to offer payment of it . And when treated in a way that pleased him in this latter particular , he did not care

what he paid . I have known him pay with cheerfulness accumulated sums of twenty or thirty pounds for suppers only or chiefly . " The houses Hazlitt frequented were the Southampton Coffee-house , in Southampton-buildings , Chancery-lane ; Munday ' s , in Maiden-lane , Covent-garden ; and ( for a short period ) the Spring-garden Coffee-house . The first of these he has immortalized in one of the most amusing of his essays , ' On Coffee-house Politicians . ' Here , for several years , he used to hold a sort of evening levee ; where , after a certain hour at night ( and till a very uncertain hour in the morning ) he

was always to be found , aud always more or less ready to take part in that sort of desultory 'talk' ( the ouly thing deserving the name of ' conversation' ) in which he excelled every man I have ever met with . But of this hereafter . Here , ho % vever , in that Ijttle bare and comfortless coffee-room , have I scores of times seen the daylight peep through the crevices ofthe window-shutters , upon 'Table-Talk ' that was worthy an intellectual feast of the gods . "

"The three or four hours a day employed by Hazlitt in composition enabled him to produce an essay for a magazine , one of his most profound and masterly 'Table-Talks , ' in two or three sittings ; or a long and brilliant article of thirty or forty pages for the Edinhurgh Rcvwio , in about a week . But when he had an entire volume or work in hand , he invariably went into the country to execute it , and almost always to the same spot , —a little wayside public-house , called ' The Hut , ' standing alone , and some miles distant from auy other house on Winterslow Heath , a barren tract of country on the road to and a few miles from Salisbury .

There , ensconced in a little wainscotted parlour , looking over the bare heath to the distant groves of Norman Court , some of his finest Essays were written ; there , in utter solitude and silence , many of his least unhappy days were spent ; and the ? 'e , wandering for hours over the bare heath , oi ; through the dark woods of the above named domain , his shattered frame always gained temporary strength and renovation . ' - < - . * •* * * * % # * " When Hazlitt was regularly engaged on any work or article , he Avrote at the

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1854-09-30, Page 85” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091854/page/85/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE. Article 1
LEIBNIZ AND SPINOZA. Article 5
OPHIOLOGY AND SERPENT SYMBOLISM. Article 30
MADELAINE. Article 39
A SERVIAN WEDDING. Article 51
GENTLE SMILES. Article 55
WILLIAM SHAKSPERE. Article 56
CRITICAL NOTICES OF THE LITERATURE OF THE LAST THREE MONTHS, Article 73
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 91
FREEMASONRY AT MAURITIUS. Article 92
MASONIC MENDICITY. Article 93
ON THE JURISDICTION OF GEN. G. ENCAMPMENT OF THE UNITED STATES Article 97
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 99
LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 100
METROPOLITAN. Article 101
PROVINCIAL. Article 103
ISLE OF WIGHT. Article 110
ROYAL ARCH. Article 135
IRELAND. Article 136
SCOTLAND. Article 137
INDIA. Article 138
COLONIAL. Article 141
Obituary. Article 148
BIRTH. Article 150
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 150
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Page 85

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

Critical Notices Of The Literature Of The Last Three Months,

afternoon—silent , motionless , and self-absorbed , as a Turk over his opium pouch ; for tea served him precisely in this capacity . It was the only stimulant he ever took , and at the same time the only luxury- ; the delicate state of his digestive organs prevented him from tasting any fermented liquors or touching any food but beef and mutton , or poultry and game dressed with perfect plainness . He never touched any but Mack tea , and was very particular about the quality of that , always using the most expensive that could be got ; and he used when living alone

to consume nearly a pound a week . A cup of Hazlitt ' s tea ( if you happened to come in for the first brewage of it ) was a peculiar thing ; I have never tasted anything like it . He always made it himself ; half-filling the tea-pot with tea , pouring the boiling water on it , and then almost immediately pouring it out ; using wifch ifc a greafc quantity of sugar and cream . " To judge from its occasional effect upon myself , I should say that the quantity Hazlitt drank of this tea produced ultimately a most injurious effect upon him ; and in all probability hastened his deathwhich took place from disease of the

, digestive organs . But its immediate effect was agreeable , even to a degree of fascination ; and not feeling any subsequent reaction from it , he persevered in its use to the last , notwithstanding two or three attacks similar to that which terminated his life . " His breakfast and tea were frequently the only meals that Hazlitt took till

late at night ; when he usually ate a hearty supper of hot meat—either rumpsteak , poultry , or game—a partridge or a pheasant . This he invariably took at a tavern ; his other meals ( except his dinner , sometimes ) being as invariably taken at home . " There were three or four houses only that he frequented ; for he never entered the doors of any one where bis ways were not well known , or where there was any chance of his bill being asked for till he chose to offer payment of it . And when treated in a way that pleased him in this latter particular , he did not care

what he paid . I have known him pay with cheerfulness accumulated sums of twenty or thirty pounds for suppers only or chiefly . " The houses Hazlitt frequented were the Southampton Coffee-house , in Southampton-buildings , Chancery-lane ; Munday ' s , in Maiden-lane , Covent-garden ; and ( for a short period ) the Spring-garden Coffee-house . The first of these he has immortalized in one of the most amusing of his essays , ' On Coffee-house Politicians . ' Here , for several years , he used to hold a sort of evening levee ; where , after a certain hour at night ( and till a very uncertain hour in the morning ) he

was always to be found , aud always more or less ready to take part in that sort of desultory 'talk' ( the ouly thing deserving the name of ' conversation' ) in which he excelled every man I have ever met with . But of this hereafter . Here , ho % vever , in that Ijttle bare and comfortless coffee-room , have I scores of times seen the daylight peep through the crevices ofthe window-shutters , upon 'Table-Talk ' that was worthy an intellectual feast of the gods . "

"The three or four hours a day employed by Hazlitt in composition enabled him to produce an essay for a magazine , one of his most profound and masterly 'Table-Talks , ' in two or three sittings ; or a long and brilliant article of thirty or forty pages for the Edinhurgh Rcvwio , in about a week . But when he had an entire volume or work in hand , he invariably went into the country to execute it , and almost always to the same spot , —a little wayside public-house , called ' The Hut , ' standing alone , and some miles distant from auy other house on Winterslow Heath , a barren tract of country on the road to and a few miles from Salisbury .

There , ensconced in a little wainscotted parlour , looking over the bare heath to the distant groves of Norman Court , some of his finest Essays were written ; there , in utter solitude and silence , many of his least unhappy days were spent ; and the ? 'e , wandering for hours over the bare heath , oi ; through the dark woods of the above named domain , his shattered frame always gained temporary strength and renovation . ' - < - . * •* * * * % # * " When Hazlitt was regularly engaged on any work or article , he Avrote at the

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