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  • Feb. 1, 1796
  • Page 56
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1796: Page 56

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    Article PROLOGUE TO THE WAY TO GET MARRIED, Page 1 of 1
Page 56

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

Prologue To The Way To Get Married,

PROLOGUE TO THE WAY TO GET MARRIED ,

WRITTEN BY W . T . FITZGERALD , ESQ .

SPOKEN BY MR . MACKEADY . THE Stage should be to life a faithful glass , Reflecting modes and manners as they pas ? : If these extravagant appear to you , Blame not the drama—the reflection ' s true . Our author makes of virtue no parade

, And only ridicules the vice of trade ; . . Exposes folly in its native tint , And leaves mankind to profit by the hint . The modern buck , how diff ' rent from the beau In bag and ruffles sixty years ago ? The City Coxcomb then was seldom seen { Conlin'd to Bunhill Row , or Bethnal Green ) ; West of Cheapside you then could scarcely meet

The gay Lothario—of Threadneedle-street 1 ' His folly rarely met the public eye , Or like a shadow pass'd unheeded by : Tradesman and Rake were then remov'd as far As gay St . James's is from Temple-bar . But now the Cit must breathe a purer air ; The 'Change he visits—lives in Bedford-square ; Insures a fleet—then BOOTLE ' S club attends , Proud to be noticed by his titled friends , And strives to join , by Dissipation's aid ,

The Man of Fashion with the Man of Trade . Vain to associate with superior rank , He quits his Ledger—for the Faro Bank ; His dashing curricle down Bond-street drives , Risking his own—and ¦ worse— his horses' lives ; Till , urging Fortune's glowing wheel too fast—This empty air-blown Bubble breaks at last ! Though Trade ive such upstart mushrooms birth

may g , The Muse pays homage to its real worth . This Isle to Commerce owes her splendid state , The source of all that makes her truly great ; And ' midst her busy sons enough are found - ' To raise dejected Mis ' ry from the ground . ' While Commerce , with a lib ' ral heart bestows Her wealth to mitigate the poor man ' s woes ; Seeks out the

wretch , his gloomy prison cheers , And wipes with pitying hand the widow's tears ; Th' applauding world will say ( such bounty giv ' n ) The English Merchant is the Steward of Heav'ri ! Our Author now that candour would implore Which j-our indulgence has bestow'd before ; Still on a gen'rous . Public he depends ; Give your support—lie asks no better friends .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-02-01, Page 56” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021796/page/56/.
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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 56

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

Prologue To The Way To Get Married,

PROLOGUE TO THE WAY TO GET MARRIED ,

WRITTEN BY W . T . FITZGERALD , ESQ .

SPOKEN BY MR . MACKEADY . THE Stage should be to life a faithful glass , Reflecting modes and manners as they pas ? : If these extravagant appear to you , Blame not the drama—the reflection ' s true . Our author makes of virtue no parade

, And only ridicules the vice of trade ; . . Exposes folly in its native tint , And leaves mankind to profit by the hint . The modern buck , how diff ' rent from the beau In bag and ruffles sixty years ago ? The City Coxcomb then was seldom seen { Conlin'd to Bunhill Row , or Bethnal Green ) ; West of Cheapside you then could scarcely meet

The gay Lothario—of Threadneedle-street 1 ' His folly rarely met the public eye , Or like a shadow pass'd unheeded by : Tradesman and Rake were then remov'd as far As gay St . James's is from Temple-bar . But now the Cit must breathe a purer air ; The 'Change he visits—lives in Bedford-square ; Insures a fleet—then BOOTLE ' S club attends , Proud to be noticed by his titled friends , And strives to join , by Dissipation's aid ,

The Man of Fashion with the Man of Trade . Vain to associate with superior rank , He quits his Ledger—for the Faro Bank ; His dashing curricle down Bond-street drives , Risking his own—and ¦ worse— his horses' lives ; Till , urging Fortune's glowing wheel too fast—This empty air-blown Bubble breaks at last ! Though Trade ive such upstart mushrooms birth

may g , The Muse pays homage to its real worth . This Isle to Commerce owes her splendid state , The source of all that makes her truly great ; And ' midst her busy sons enough are found - ' To raise dejected Mis ' ry from the ground . ' While Commerce , with a lib ' ral heart bestows Her wealth to mitigate the poor man ' s woes ; Seeks out the

wretch , his gloomy prison cheers , And wipes with pitying hand the widow's tears ; Th' applauding world will say ( such bounty giv ' n ) The English Merchant is the Steward of Heav'ri ! Our Author now that candour would implore Which j-our indulgence has bestow'd before ; Still on a gen'rous . Public he depends ; Give your support—lie asks no better friends .

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