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  • Feb. 1, 1795
  • Page 39
  • NATIONAL CHARACTER.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1795: Page 39

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    Article NATIONAL CHARACTER. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article MR. TASKER'S LETTERS Page 1 of 1
Page 39

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National Character.

In studying our National character , I have found nothing so prominent as generosity , and I have therefore set it down as our distinguished characteristic—and to the feelings , connected with generosity ,. ! attribute much . of- the failures recorded in our political history ; for the amiable weaknesses are always the prey of the cunning .

Mr. Tasker's Letters

MR . TASKER'S LETTERS

LETTER THE NINTH . PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART . SIR , CONTINUED .

Xo-nov KIIJ , tlie strong or vigorous heart . " FROM this description one would almost conclude that Homer had known the true and genuine use of the noblest muscle '; though 1 am pretty confident that he did . not— Praj' , were you present at the dissection of the lion that died in the Tower ? If you were , you may easily conceive my meaning : for when I saw the heart of that

bold animal , I immediately thought on the phrase of Homer , and of Shakspeare ' s " lion-hearted Richard ; " the heart of the king of beasts being large , dense , and strong , in an amazing degree . Some naturalists tell us , that the hearts of timid animals are the largest ¦ : perhaps they mean that the cavities of the heart in deer , hares , & c . are preternaturally distendedby the refluent blood being driven

, into them , through the frequent acts of fear and trembling . And it is remarkable that , in the Iliad , Achilles insults Agamemnon , by ' telling him that he-had the eyes of a clog , and the heart of a deer . . _ Man , the lorcl of the creation ,- has no ri ght , 1 think , to be called a timid animal ; and man has as large an heart , and more brains , in proportion to his size , than any animal in nature . The elephant

that was dissected some time ago is no exception : for though that " half-reasoning brute , " as Pope stiles him , had ten pounds weight of brains , yet , when we consider the immense bulk of the creature , it had not so large a quantity in proportion as one of the human species . Again , a viper has , I believe , the least heart and largest liver of

almost any animal ; from which I conclude that it has less blood and mpre bile than any other ; and I suspect that the apparent quantity of bile contributes in a great measure to form the viperine virus . —¦ An unexpected circumstance obliges me to break oft' abruptly . Yours * , & c .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-02-01, Page 39” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021795/page/39/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 2
ANECDOTE, Article 4
ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE STADTHOLDERSHIP OF HOLLAND. Article 4
INSTANCES OF RETRIBUTIVE JUSTICE. Article 5
THE NEWSPAPER. Article 7
A SERMON PREACHED AT GREENWICH, ON THE FESTIVAL OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, JUNE 24, 1774, Article 8
HYDROPHOBIA CURED BY VINEGAR. Article 15
THE FREEMASON. No. II. Article 16
BRIEF HISTORY OF THE RELIGIOUS AND MILITARY ORDER OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS' OF ST. JOHN OF JERUSALEM. Article 18
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 22
DEVONSHIRE ANECDOTE. Article 23
ANECDOTE OF GOVERNOR BOYD. Article 23
ACCOUNT AND DESCRIPTION OF THE CHAPEL OF ROSLIN, &c. * Article 24
ACCOUNT OF SHAKSPEARE's CRAB-TREE. Article 29
NEW EXPERIMENT IN AGRICULTURE. Article 30
AN ENQUIRY INTO THE ORIGIN AND MEANING OF SEVERAL CANT TERMS AND PHRASES IN USE IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE. Article 31
THE EFFECT OF SUDDEN PREFERMENT IN LOOSENING ANCIENT CONNEXIONS. Article 33
NATIONAL CHARACTER. Article 38
MR. TASKER'S LETTERS Article 39
CONSECRATION OF THE LODGE OF UNANIMITY, No. 136, AT COLTISHALL, IN NORFOLK. Article 40
LIFE OF THE RIGHT REVEREND JOHN EGERTON, LATE LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM. Article 41
SINGULAR WORDS. Article 44
THE IRON MASK. Article 45
DOMESTIC MANNERS OF THE DUTCH. Article 47
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 48
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 54
POETRY. Article 55
A ROYAL ARCH SONG. Article 56
ODE FOR THE NEW YEAR, Article 57
THE HORSE TO HIS RIDER; AN ELEGY, Article 58
EPIGRAM Article 60
ICE CREAM. Article 60
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 60
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 65
Untitled Article 72
LONDON : Article 72
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 73
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 73
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Page 39

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

National Character.

In studying our National character , I have found nothing so prominent as generosity , and I have therefore set it down as our distinguished characteristic—and to the feelings , connected with generosity ,. ! attribute much . of- the failures recorded in our political history ; for the amiable weaknesses are always the prey of the cunning .

Mr. Tasker's Letters

MR . TASKER'S LETTERS

LETTER THE NINTH . PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART . SIR , CONTINUED .

Xo-nov KIIJ , tlie strong or vigorous heart . " FROM this description one would almost conclude that Homer had known the true and genuine use of the noblest muscle '; though 1 am pretty confident that he did . not— Praj' , were you present at the dissection of the lion that died in the Tower ? If you were , you may easily conceive my meaning : for when I saw the heart of that

bold animal , I immediately thought on the phrase of Homer , and of Shakspeare ' s " lion-hearted Richard ; " the heart of the king of beasts being large , dense , and strong , in an amazing degree . Some naturalists tell us , that the hearts of timid animals are the largest ¦ : perhaps they mean that the cavities of the heart in deer , hares , & c . are preternaturally distendedby the refluent blood being driven

, into them , through the frequent acts of fear and trembling . And it is remarkable that , in the Iliad , Achilles insults Agamemnon , by ' telling him that he-had the eyes of a clog , and the heart of a deer . . _ Man , the lorcl of the creation ,- has no ri ght , 1 think , to be called a timid animal ; and man has as large an heart , and more brains , in proportion to his size , than any animal in nature . The elephant

that was dissected some time ago is no exception : for though that " half-reasoning brute , " as Pope stiles him , had ten pounds weight of brains , yet , when we consider the immense bulk of the creature , it had not so large a quantity in proportion as one of the human species . Again , a viper has , I believe , the least heart and largest liver of

almost any animal ; from which I conclude that it has less blood and mpre bile than any other ; and I suspect that the apparent quantity of bile contributes in a great measure to form the viperine virus . —¦ An unexpected circumstance obliges me to break oft' abruptly . Yours * , & c .

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