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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1797
  • Page 21
  • THE GHOST OF STERNE IN LONDON.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1797: Page 21

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    Article THE GHOST OF STERNE IN LONDON. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 21

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The Ghost Of Sterne In London.

said I . — 'It is so still , sir , ' said he . 'There are too many tumults there , sir . ' N'importe , ' said he . 'It is the capital of France . ' 'Mon Dieu , monsieur , ' said I ; ' no one can live there now with safety . ' ' Bagatelle ! Les batimenssont magnifiques . ' ' C ' est pour les batimens que vousaimez Paris done , monsieur ? ' ' Assurement . ' This man had been a Parisian marquis de boutique , I suppose— ' Adieu monsieur . ' Say what please 1 cannot see any great difference between an

you , Englishman and Frenchmar ..---One of each nation are going to play at backgammon . —Let me observe them , and by contrast , see in what respects they differ .- — ' Oh ! certainly ; ' said a sarcastic voice , behind me ; ' the pleasure must be very great indeed 1 ' O England , thou art the native soil of humourists , hypochondriacs , and the devil knows what ! I hate common-place remarks . This

fellow , I see , is endeavouring to palm himself on his hearers for a sensible mm—He has quite broken the chain of my ideas , I protest!—And , if 1 should go to another box out of hearing , I shall lose sight of my backgammon players . But the Frenchman will let all the company know how the game goes . 'MenDieu ! Quelle betisel Vousgagne ' rex la partie , monsieur , ' exclaims he . —The Englishman contracts his eye- ^ browsleans his cheek on his handand discovers no emotion either of

, , hope or fear . —He is successful . 'Ah !—Voila un coup demaitre , ' says the Frenchman—Vous perdrez assurement , monsieur ! ' ' Damn the dice ! ' says the other . ' Butfor that throw , the game was my own ! ' He now swears , and offers to double the stakes—He is unlucky . —Strange , that he should bear good fortune with such a grace , while the least reverse makes him mad . —The Frenchman , on the contrary , can , by his manners , give an air of gentleman-like consequence even to poverty

itself—Were it not for this gentleman-like air , that poor fellow opposite to me would make but a pitiful figure . He seems , from his dress , to have left France in a very great hurry . It consists of a brown-silk coat with white liiiino- ;—a black satin waistcoat , stockings of the same colour , and o-reen bree ' ehes . The p inch of his hat is too smart to have been moulded by the clumsy hands of an English hatter ; and his hair—you had better not touch it " friend—it appears as if it would prick your

, my lingers . —Though he appears a little depressed , those lines still remain in his countenance , by which you may trace French gaiety;—his features seem to struggle , as it were , to preserve their natural cast , in spite of die gloom diffused over them by misfortune . —Yet he is not in so deplorable a situation as 1 thought . He has a i ' victnd to whom he can relate his sorrow . ai

• ' Ab ! mon ami , ' says he , ' j " at perdu ma femme & mes enjans , j ' perdu tout mon bitril '—His friend , by taking a pinch of snuff , reminded him of another misfortune— ' Et ma tabuiiere aussi , mon cber ami , j ' ai perdu ma tabatiere ! ' ' Ce nest pas grande chose , ' said his friend . - I was exactly of the same opinion . Plow , said I to myself , can he put the loss of a snuff-box in the same inventory that contains that of his wife and his children ? ' Ab ! monsieur , cast wit tabatiere que j ' ai garde—il y a vignt am ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-01-01, Page 21” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011797/page/21/.
  • List
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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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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Ghost Of Sterne In London.

said I . — 'It is so still , sir , ' said he . 'There are too many tumults there , sir . ' N'importe , ' said he . 'It is the capital of France . ' 'Mon Dieu , monsieur , ' said I ; ' no one can live there now with safety . ' ' Bagatelle ! Les batimenssont magnifiques . ' ' C ' est pour les batimens que vousaimez Paris done , monsieur ? ' ' Assurement . ' This man had been a Parisian marquis de boutique , I suppose— ' Adieu monsieur . ' Say what please 1 cannot see any great difference between an

you , Englishman and Frenchmar ..---One of each nation are going to play at backgammon . —Let me observe them , and by contrast , see in what respects they differ .- — ' Oh ! certainly ; ' said a sarcastic voice , behind me ; ' the pleasure must be very great indeed 1 ' O England , thou art the native soil of humourists , hypochondriacs , and the devil knows what ! I hate common-place remarks . This

fellow , I see , is endeavouring to palm himself on his hearers for a sensible mm—He has quite broken the chain of my ideas , I protest!—And , if 1 should go to another box out of hearing , I shall lose sight of my backgammon players . But the Frenchman will let all the company know how the game goes . 'MenDieu ! Quelle betisel Vousgagne ' rex la partie , monsieur , ' exclaims he . —The Englishman contracts his eye- ^ browsleans his cheek on his handand discovers no emotion either of

, , hope or fear . —He is successful . 'Ah !—Voila un coup demaitre , ' says the Frenchman—Vous perdrez assurement , monsieur ! ' ' Damn the dice ! ' says the other . ' Butfor that throw , the game was my own ! ' He now swears , and offers to double the stakes—He is unlucky . —Strange , that he should bear good fortune with such a grace , while the least reverse makes him mad . —The Frenchman , on the contrary , can , by his manners , give an air of gentleman-like consequence even to poverty

itself—Were it not for this gentleman-like air , that poor fellow opposite to me would make but a pitiful figure . He seems , from his dress , to have left France in a very great hurry . It consists of a brown-silk coat with white liiiino- ;—a black satin waistcoat , stockings of the same colour , and o-reen bree ' ehes . The p inch of his hat is too smart to have been moulded by the clumsy hands of an English hatter ; and his hair—you had better not touch it " friend—it appears as if it would prick your

, my lingers . —Though he appears a little depressed , those lines still remain in his countenance , by which you may trace French gaiety;—his features seem to struggle , as it were , to preserve their natural cast , in spite of die gloom diffused over them by misfortune . —Yet he is not in so deplorable a situation as 1 thought . He has a i ' victnd to whom he can relate his sorrow . ai

• ' Ab ! mon ami , ' says he , ' j " at perdu ma femme & mes enjans , j ' perdu tout mon bitril '—His friend , by taking a pinch of snuff , reminded him of another misfortune— ' Et ma tabuiiere aussi , mon cber ami , j ' ai perdu ma tabatiere ! ' ' Ce nest pas grande chose , ' said his friend . - I was exactly of the same opinion . Plow , said I to myself , can he put the loss of a snuff-box in the same inventory that contains that of his wife and his children ? ' Ab ! monsieur , cast wit tabatiere que j ' ai garde—il y a vignt am ,

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