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  • Feb. 1, 1794
  • Page 35
  • THE ORIGIN OF LITERARY JOURNALS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1794: Page 35

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    Article EXTRACT FROM AN ESSAY ON INSTINCT. ← Page 3 of 3
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Page 35

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

Extract From An Essay On Instinct.

animals , than between those of man and the most sagacious brutes . The notion that animals are machines is therefore too absurd to merit refutation . They possess , in some degree , every faculty of the busman mind . Sensation , memory , imagination , curiosity , cunning , & c . & c . are all discernible in them . Every species has a language . Brutes , without some portion of reason , could never make a proper use of

their senses . But many animals are capable of balancing motives , which is a pretty high degree of reason . Young animals examine all objects they meet ; the first period of their lives seems dedicated to study . Thus they gradually improve their faculties , and acquire a knoAvledge of the objects which surround them ; and men who , from peculiar circumstances , have been prevented from mingling with companions , are ahvays aulcAvard , cannot keep up their organs Avith dexterity j and often continue ignorant of the most common objects during- life . .

The Origin Of Literary Journals.

THE ORIGIN OF LITERARY JOURNALS .

IN the last century , it Avas a consolation , at least , for an unsuccessful -Writer , that he fell insensibl y into oblivion . If he committed the private folly of printing what no one Avould purchase , he had only to settle the matter with his publisher : he was not arraigned at the public tribunalas if he had committed a crime of magnitude . Butin those

, , times , the nation Avas little addicted to the cultivation of letters : the writers were then few , and the readers Avere not many . When , at length , a taste for literature spread itself through tlie body of the people , vanity induced the inexperienced and the ignorant to aspire to literary honours . To oppose these inroads into the haunts of the muses ' , periodical criticism brandished its formidable weapon ; and it tvas b

y the fall of others that our greatest genii have been taught to rise . M u ltifarious Avriring produced multifarious strictures ; and if the rays of criticism were not always of the strongest kind , yet so many continually issuing formed a focus , Avhich has enli ghtened those whose occupations had otherwise never permitted them to judge on-literary composition .

The ori gin of so many Literary Journals takes its birth in France . Denis de Salo , ecclesiastical counfellor in the parliament of Paris , invented the scheme of a work of this kind ; on the . 30 th of May 166 3 , appeared the first number of his Journal des Scavans . What is remarkable , he published his Essay in the name of the Sieur de Hedonville , who was ¦ his footmanOne is led to bthis circumstance

. suppose , y , that he entertained but a faint hope of ' its success ; or , perhaps , he thought that the scurrility of criticism might be sanctioned by its supposed author . The Avork , however , met with so favourable a reception VOL . II . . P ¦ ' k

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-02-01, Page 35” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021794/page/35/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 3
THE PRINCIPLES OF FREE MASONRY EXPLAINED. Article 11
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 19
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 22
ON THE PROPRIETY OF MAKING A WILL. Article 24
ANECDOTES OF THE LATE HUGH KELLY. Article 29
EXTRACT FROM AN ESSAY ON INSTINCT. Article 33
THE ORIGIN OF LITERARY JOURNALS. Article 35
LETTER Article 37
LETTER Article 38
ON MAN. Article 38
ON JEALOUSY. Article 40
ON YOUTHFUL COURAGE AND RESOLUTION. Article 41
INVASION. Article 42
ANECDOTES OF JAMES NORTHCOTE, ESQ. Article 48
SURPRIZING INGENUITY. Article 51
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF THE PHYSICIANS OF ANCIENT EGYPT. Article 52
INSTANCE OF THE POWER OF MUSIC OVER ANIMALS. Article 53
PLAN OF EDUCATION. Article 53
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 56
REMARKS ON THE MUTABILITY OF FORTUNE. Article 57
LONDON CHARACTERIZED. Article 59
LITERARY INTELLIGENCE. Article 59
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 60
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 69
A CURIOUS FACT. Article 72
POETRY. Article 73
FREEMASON PROLOGUE. Article 74
PROLOGUE WRITTEN FOR THE YOUNG GENTLEMEN, Article 75
RURAL FELICITY: A POEM. Article 76
TO FRIENDSHIP. Article 77
IMPROMPTU Article 77
ON CONTENT. Article 78
ON AN INFANT Article 79
EPITAPH. Article 79
EPITAPH ON A NOBLE LADY. Article 79
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 80
Untitled Article 83
Untitled Article 83
Untitled Article 83
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Page 35

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

Extract From An Essay On Instinct.

animals , than between those of man and the most sagacious brutes . The notion that animals are machines is therefore too absurd to merit refutation . They possess , in some degree , every faculty of the busman mind . Sensation , memory , imagination , curiosity , cunning , & c . & c . are all discernible in them . Every species has a language . Brutes , without some portion of reason , could never make a proper use of

their senses . But many animals are capable of balancing motives , which is a pretty high degree of reason . Young animals examine all objects they meet ; the first period of their lives seems dedicated to study . Thus they gradually improve their faculties , and acquire a knoAvledge of the objects which surround them ; and men who , from peculiar circumstances , have been prevented from mingling with companions , are ahvays aulcAvard , cannot keep up their organs Avith dexterity j and often continue ignorant of the most common objects during- life . .

The Origin Of Literary Journals.

THE ORIGIN OF LITERARY JOURNALS .

IN the last century , it Avas a consolation , at least , for an unsuccessful -Writer , that he fell insensibl y into oblivion . If he committed the private folly of printing what no one Avould purchase , he had only to settle the matter with his publisher : he was not arraigned at the public tribunalas if he had committed a crime of magnitude . Butin those

, , times , the nation Avas little addicted to the cultivation of letters : the writers were then few , and the readers Avere not many . When , at length , a taste for literature spread itself through tlie body of the people , vanity induced the inexperienced and the ignorant to aspire to literary honours . To oppose these inroads into the haunts of the muses ' , periodical criticism brandished its formidable weapon ; and it tvas b

y the fall of others that our greatest genii have been taught to rise . M u ltifarious Avriring produced multifarious strictures ; and if the rays of criticism were not always of the strongest kind , yet so many continually issuing formed a focus , Avhich has enli ghtened those whose occupations had otherwise never permitted them to judge on-literary composition .

The ori gin of so many Literary Journals takes its birth in France . Denis de Salo , ecclesiastical counfellor in the parliament of Paris , invented the scheme of a work of this kind ; on the . 30 th of May 166 3 , appeared the first number of his Journal des Scavans . What is remarkable , he published his Essay in the name of the Sieur de Hedonville , who was ¦ his footmanOne is led to bthis circumstance

. suppose , y , that he entertained but a faint hope of ' its success ; or , perhaps , he thought that the scurrility of criticism might be sanctioned by its supposed author . The Avork , however , met with so favourable a reception VOL . II . . P ¦ ' k

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