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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1796
  • Page 33
  • ACCOUNT OF DR. DEE, THE ASTROLOGER.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1796: Page 33

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    Article ACCOUNT OF DR. DEE, THE ASTROLOGER. ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 33

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

Account Of Dr. Dee, The Astrologer.

the Queen ordered him to return , being then in Bohemia * . On hi * arrival in England he waited upon her Majesty at Richmond , and was very graciously received . She assured him that he might rely upon her protection in the prosecution of his studies . Plaving been in England three years without reaping any advantage from the promise which had been made him , he was induced to present a petition to the Queenpraying that she would appoint commissioners to inquire

, into the losses and injuries which he had sustained , the services he had done her Majesty , and the various disappointments which he had encountered . In consequence of this application , Sir Thomas Gorge , Knt . and Mr . Secretary Woolley were actually appointed commissioners to hear his grievances , and sat as such at his house at Mortlake , Nov . 221592 to whomsitting in his library , he related his case at

, , , large . In the mean time two tables were placed near him ; on one of them were the proper vouchers for the facts he asserted , to which he constantly referred ; on the other , all the printed books and MSS . which he had written . Among the services which he had rendered to the Queen he reckons some consultations with her Majesty ' s physicians at homeand a journey of 1500 mileswhich he undertook

, , iu the winter season , to hold a conference with the most learned philosophers on the Continent upon the means of restoring and preserving her health . In enumerating his losses , he estimates the damage sustained in his library at 390 I . His whole collection , which consisted of 4000 books , of which a great part were'MSS . he valued at 2000 I . Among the latter he mentions a large collection of deeds and charters

relating principally to estates in Ireland which he got out of a ruined church . He says , they had been examined by heralds , clerks of the office of records in the Tower , and other antiquaries , who had spent whole days at his house in looking them over- ; and had taken away to their liking . His chemical apparatus , which cost him sool . was entirely destroyed by the mob when he left Mortlake in 1583 : at the same time they beat in pieces a fine quadrant of Chancellor ' s which cost him 30 I . and took away a magnet for which he gave 33 ] . Among the many promises of preferment which had been made him to so little

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-02-01, Page 33” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021796/page/33/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS , &c. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE: AND CABINET OF UNIVERSAL LITERATURE, FOR FEBRUARY 1796. Article 4
AN ADDRESS FROM THE PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF MADRAS TO THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 6
AN ADDRESS, DELIVERED TO THE BRETHREN OF ST. JOHN'S LODGE, NO. 534, LANCASTER. Article 7
OBSERVATIONS MADE IN A VISIT TO THE TOMBS IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY, Article 10
ON THE PASSIONS OF THE ANCIENTS. Article 17
THE MODERN STATE OF FRIENDSHIP. Article 20
ORIGINAL LETTER FROM OLIVERCROMWELL, Article 22
THE STAGE. Article 23
FURTHER PARTICULARS OF THE LATE THOMAS DUNCKERLEY, ESQ. Article 25
ON PARENTAL PARTIALITIES. Article 29
ACCOUNT OF DR. DEE, THE ASTROLOGER. Article 31
ON THE ABSURDITY, FOLLY, AND INCONSISTENCY OF VARIOUS FASHIONABLE CUSTOMS AND CEREMONIES Article 37
TWO LETTERS WRITTEN BY MR. ADDISON, IN THE YEAR I708, TO THE EARL OF WARWICK, Article 41
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 42
ON THE VARIOUS MODES OF EATING IN DIFFERENT COUNTRIES. Article 48
POETRY. MASONIC SONG. Article 50
SONG. Article 50
STANZAS TO WINTER. Article 51
TO FRIENDSHIP. Article 52
MONODY ON THE DEATH OF JOHN HOWARD, ESQ. Article 53
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 55
PROLOGUE TO THE WAY TO GET MARRIED, Article 56
EPILOGUE TO THE SAME. Article 57
" HISTORY OF THE THEATRES OF LONDON, Article 58
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 63
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 64
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Page 33

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

Account Of Dr. Dee, The Astrologer.

the Queen ordered him to return , being then in Bohemia * . On hi * arrival in England he waited upon her Majesty at Richmond , and was very graciously received . She assured him that he might rely upon her protection in the prosecution of his studies . Plaving been in England three years without reaping any advantage from the promise which had been made him , he was induced to present a petition to the Queenpraying that she would appoint commissioners to inquire

, into the losses and injuries which he had sustained , the services he had done her Majesty , and the various disappointments which he had encountered . In consequence of this application , Sir Thomas Gorge , Knt . and Mr . Secretary Woolley were actually appointed commissioners to hear his grievances , and sat as such at his house at Mortlake , Nov . 221592 to whomsitting in his library , he related his case at

, , , large . In the mean time two tables were placed near him ; on one of them were the proper vouchers for the facts he asserted , to which he constantly referred ; on the other , all the printed books and MSS . which he had written . Among the services which he had rendered to the Queen he reckons some consultations with her Majesty ' s physicians at homeand a journey of 1500 mileswhich he undertook

, , iu the winter season , to hold a conference with the most learned philosophers on the Continent upon the means of restoring and preserving her health . In enumerating his losses , he estimates the damage sustained in his library at 390 I . His whole collection , which consisted of 4000 books , of which a great part were'MSS . he valued at 2000 I . Among the latter he mentions a large collection of deeds and charters

relating principally to estates in Ireland which he got out of a ruined church . He says , they had been examined by heralds , clerks of the office of records in the Tower , and other antiquaries , who had spent whole days at his house in looking them over- ; and had taken away to their liking . His chemical apparatus , which cost him sool . was entirely destroyed by the mob when he left Mortlake in 1583 : at the same time they beat in pieces a fine quadrant of Chancellor ' s which cost him 30 I . and took away a magnet for which he gave 33 ] . Among the many promises of preferment which had been made him to so little

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