Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1794
  • Page 61
  • PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.
Current:

The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1794: Page 61

  • Back to The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1794
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. ← Page 2 of 10 →
Page 61

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

Parliamentary Proceedings.

-been guillotined at Lyons , or put to death at La Vendee , or shot at Toulon , say what protection we had afforded them 1 It had liten supposed we could not treat with Atheists ; but he denied they were so , and read some accounts of the proceedings of the Jacobin club , in which they acknowledge ; i Supreme Being . The Aristocrats and Clergy , indeed , were Atheists ; lor at some meetings at which he was present , Atheism was boldly professed . His Lordship proceeded to such lengths in this account , that he was called to order

by The Bishop of Durham , whp said he had heard with patience , as long as possible , the farrago his Lordship had uttered , which had no relation to the subject , and could no longer be tome : he ' would not hear religion insulted , or tlie expressions of French or other Athicsts repeated . Lord Stanhope apologized . The French , he said , had 150 millions sterling in their hands for carrying on the next campaignbesides the large contributions they had

le-, vied ; and that they had converted the bells of their churches into cannon , which he thought was putting them to a much better use . Tliey have also made the gold and silver saints descend from the altars , and have sent them to the mint , the crucible , and the melting-pot ! But do I deduce the wealth of the Republic from these things ? TCp—Jf 1 am asked where the treasury of the French is , 1 say , that it exists in the hearts of the people . " If Ministers be yet to knowwhy they cannot imitate the example of the French

, in carrying on the Avar , I will tell them .-r—1 have been in the west—1 live in the south . ¦—and I have heard from the north—and Ministers may be assured I speak correctly , ¦ when 1 say that the people are neither ready to spend their last guinea , nor to sacrifige their iqst man in support of the % var . " . ' The present government of France , he alledged , was a strong provisional gOA'ernment , made solely fpr the moment , like a R . omati dictator , but which would be abolished when peace was restored ; and such , he said , was the enthusiasm of the French ,

that women had desired the death of their sons for having fled before the enemy ; and lipm hence he inferred , the impossibility of conquering that country . His Lprdship next noticed the truth of the reports made by the French Ministers , which , with the guillotine at their back , they durst not garble or falsify . He concluded with proposing the following motion : That this House having seen , that the French nation , by the 1 i 3 th and 119 th clauses of their new constitution , has renounced every idea of interfering in the internal affairs of other states , and has declared herself the ally of every free people , most humbly beseech his Majesty to recognize the . Republic of France , that thereby a foundation may belaid for a lasting peace between the two nations .

Lord Abingdon was of opinion , that the only answer which the last speech deserv 7 ed , was what it had already received—a loud horse-laugh . Lord Darnley and Lord Warwick , spoke againsit the motion , which was negatived without a division . 31 st . Lord Stanhope introduced a motion , relative to tlie recent trials in Scotland , by observing , that he felt himself warranted in this mode ' of proceeding by the precedents which stood on the Journals , in the cases pf Lord Russell , Algernon Sidney ,

Alderman Cornish , & c . The House of Lords , some time after the executions of thosa persons , considering the judgments of the courts upon them to have been too violent , liad ' therefore took off their attainders . His Lordship then adverted to the rules which had been decided upon in law points during the trial of Mr . Hastings , and contended , that a contrary mode had been followed in Scotland , in the trials of Mr . Muir , Mi > . Palmer , Mr . Skirving , and Mr . Margaret ; having pointed put several particular instances , he cpncluded by moving , " That an humble address be presented to his Majestypraying hm to suspend the sentence pf Mr . Muiruntil their Lordshishpuid

, , ps have examined the circumstances attending the trial , and which the House pledged itr self to dp . " —The same was repeated as to the other three persons . Lord Mansfield denied the precedents being in point , and considered the motioa tended to throw a reflection upon the character of the judges Avhich they by no mean deserved . * " " .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-02-01, Page 61” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021794/page/61/.
  • List
  • Grid
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
Page 1

Page 1

2 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

1 Article
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

1 Article
Page 11

Page 11

2 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

1 Article
Page 13

Page 13

1 Article
Page 14

Page 14

1 Article
Page 15

Page 15

1 Article
Page 16

Page 16

1 Article
Page 17

Page 17

1 Article
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

2 Articles
Page 20

Page 20

1 Article
Page 21

Page 21

1 Article
Page 22

Page 22

2 Articles
Page 23

Page 23

1 Article
Page 24

Page 24

1 Article
Page 25

Page 25

1 Article
Page 26

Page 26

1 Article
Page 27

Page 27

1 Article
Page 28

Page 28

1 Article
Page 29

Page 29

1 Article
Page 30

Page 30

1 Article
Page 31

Page 31

1 Article
Page 32

Page 32

1 Article
Page 33

Page 33

1 Article
Page 34

Page 34

1 Article
Page 35

Page 35

2 Articles
Page 36

Page 36

1 Article
Page 37

Page 37

1 Article
Page 38

Page 38

2 Articles
Page 39

Page 39

1 Article
Page 40

Page 40

1 Article
Page 41

Page 41

1 Article
Page 42

Page 42

2 Articles
Page 43

Page 43

1 Article
Page 44

Page 44

1 Article
Page 45

Page 45

1 Article
Page 46

Page 46

1 Article
Page 47

Page 47

1 Article
Page 48

Page 48

2 Articles
Page 49

Page 49

1 Article
Page 50

Page 50

1 Article
Page 51

Page 51

1 Article
Page 52

Page 52

2 Articles
Page 53

Page 53

2 Articles
Page 54

Page 54

1 Article
Page 55

Page 55

1 Article
Page 56

Page 56

2 Articles
Page 57

Page 57

2 Articles
Page 58

Page 58

1 Article
Page 59

Page 59

3 Articles
Page 60

Page 60

1 Article
Page 61

Page 61

1 Article
Page 62

Page 62

1 Article
Page 63

Page 63

1 Article
Page 64

Page 64

1 Article
Page 65

Page 65

1 Article
Page 66

Page 66

1 Article
Page 67

Page 67

1 Article
Page 68

Page 68

1 Article
Page 69

Page 69

2 Articles
Page 70

Page 70

1 Article
Page 71

Page 71

1 Article
Page 72

Page 72

2 Articles
Page 73

Page 73

1 Article
Page 74

Page 74

1 Article
Page 75

Page 75

1 Article
Page 76

Page 76

1 Article
Page 77

Page 77

3 Articles
Page 78

Page 78

1 Article
Page 79

Page 79

3 Articles
Page 80

Page 80

1 Article
Page 81

Page 81

1 Article
Page 82

Page 82

1 Article
Page 83

Page 83

3 Articles
Page 61

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

Parliamentary Proceedings.

-been guillotined at Lyons , or put to death at La Vendee , or shot at Toulon , say what protection we had afforded them 1 It had liten supposed we could not treat with Atheists ; but he denied they were so , and read some accounts of the proceedings of the Jacobin club , in which they acknowledge ; i Supreme Being . The Aristocrats and Clergy , indeed , were Atheists ; lor at some meetings at which he was present , Atheism was boldly professed . His Lordship proceeded to such lengths in this account , that he was called to order

by The Bishop of Durham , whp said he had heard with patience , as long as possible , the farrago his Lordship had uttered , which had no relation to the subject , and could no longer be tome : he ' would not hear religion insulted , or tlie expressions of French or other Athicsts repeated . Lord Stanhope apologized . The French , he said , had 150 millions sterling in their hands for carrying on the next campaignbesides the large contributions they had

le-, vied ; and that they had converted the bells of their churches into cannon , which he thought was putting them to a much better use . Tliey have also made the gold and silver saints descend from the altars , and have sent them to the mint , the crucible , and the melting-pot ! But do I deduce the wealth of the Republic from these things ? TCp—Jf 1 am asked where the treasury of the French is , 1 say , that it exists in the hearts of the people . " If Ministers be yet to knowwhy they cannot imitate the example of the French

, in carrying on the Avar , I will tell them .-r—1 have been in the west—1 live in the south . ¦—and I have heard from the north—and Ministers may be assured I speak correctly , ¦ when 1 say that the people are neither ready to spend their last guinea , nor to sacrifige their iqst man in support of the % var . " . ' The present government of France , he alledged , was a strong provisional gOA'ernment , made solely fpr the moment , like a R . omati dictator , but which would be abolished when peace was restored ; and such , he said , was the enthusiasm of the French ,

that women had desired the death of their sons for having fled before the enemy ; and lipm hence he inferred , the impossibility of conquering that country . His Lprdship next noticed the truth of the reports made by the French Ministers , which , with the guillotine at their back , they durst not garble or falsify . He concluded with proposing the following motion : That this House having seen , that the French nation , by the 1 i 3 th and 119 th clauses of their new constitution , has renounced every idea of interfering in the internal affairs of other states , and has declared herself the ally of every free people , most humbly beseech his Majesty to recognize the . Republic of France , that thereby a foundation may belaid for a lasting peace between the two nations .

Lord Abingdon was of opinion , that the only answer which the last speech deserv 7 ed , was what it had already received—a loud horse-laugh . Lord Darnley and Lord Warwick , spoke againsit the motion , which was negatived without a division . 31 st . Lord Stanhope introduced a motion , relative to tlie recent trials in Scotland , by observing , that he felt himself warranted in this mode ' of proceeding by the precedents which stood on the Journals , in the cases pf Lord Russell , Algernon Sidney ,

Alderman Cornish , & c . The House of Lords , some time after the executions of thosa persons , considering the judgments of the courts upon them to have been too violent , liad ' therefore took off their attainders . His Lordship then adverted to the rules which had been decided upon in law points during the trial of Mr . Hastings , and contended , that a contrary mode had been followed in Scotland , in the trials of Mr . Muir , Mi > . Palmer , Mr . Skirving , and Mr . Margaret ; having pointed put several particular instances , he cpncluded by moving , " That an humble address be presented to his Majestypraying hm to suspend the sentence pf Mr . Muiruntil their Lordshishpuid

, , ps have examined the circumstances attending the trial , and which the House pledged itr self to dp . " —The same was repeated as to the other three persons . Lord Mansfield denied the precedents being in point , and considered the motioa tended to throw a reflection upon the character of the judges Avhich they by no mean deserved . * " " .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 60
  • You're on page61
  • 62
  • 83
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy