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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1797
  • Page 14
  • ON THE INFLUENCE OF THE SEASONS ON THE MENTAL POWERS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1797: Page 14

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    Article ON THE NATIONAL MANNERS OF THE FRENCH AND ENGLISH. ← Page 3 of 3
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On The National Manners Of The French And English.

With regard to the real intrinsic comforts of existence , I think they are unknown in every country but our own . We are not ostentatiously splendid ; but what we have is good , and a mere extefJial glare would not , in our opinion , render it more valuable . —In cleanliness , articles of convenience and utility , we certainly surpass every country on earth . Step into the house of foreignerand afterwards

any , into the house of an English gentleman , and this point is immediately determined . The accommodations on cur roads for travellers are likewise , beyond all comparison , superior to those which are to be met with elsewhere . > « . —

On The Influence Of The Seasons On The Mental Powers.

ON THE INFLUENCE OF THE SEASONS ON THE MENTAL POWERS .

FOR THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE . "K "OITH whatever air of triumph a sturdy moralist may exclaim ^* Sapiens dominahitur , astris , and bid defiance to the hand of winter ; yet the man who is composed of elements less hardy , courage less haughtyand limb less heroic ( see Milton ' s Par . Lost' IX . 484 )

, , , and who , with conscious humility , confesses the imbecility of his ' terrestrial mold , ' must acknowledge the influence of season over his body and mind to be very considerable and powerful . It is observed by Naturalists , that , in the gradual ranks . of beings which belong to our system , each class ascending partakes of some propertypeculiar to the class immediately below it . For instance , the herb

which rises next in order above lifeless matter , has in it material substance and vegetating qualities ; the beast has material substance , vegetating qualities , and loco-motion ; man has material-substance , vegetating qualities , loco-motion , and the highest portion of reason assigned to anv inhabitant of this s : lobe : and thus is there a connection which unites the sever . ; ] orders in one system ; and as that

connection proceeds from participation of similar component prin' ciples , it-is unavoidable but th :: t what affects one order , should also , in some measure , afFect all . Amidst the rigorous severity of winter we see the inanimate and irrational parts of creation in a state of torpid languor . The earth is hardened into an iron clod ; the waters are become ' a frozen continent' ( Par . Lost , II . 587 ); the power of

vegetation is checked in every plant ; domestic animals are contracted in their limbs ; and the wilder inhabitants of the woods are subdued into tameness , by intense cold : —rlt is therefore obvious to conclude , that man , in his animal part , must be unable to-resist the force of the atmosphere so entirely , as not to feel it either in a less or greater degree , according to the strength or weakness of his frame . The crepitans dentibiis algus of Lucretius , b . V . 745 , and Spenser ' s , ' Winter clad in frize , chattering his teetli for cold , ' b . VII . c . 7 . st . 31 ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-02-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021797/page/14/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS,&c. Article 3
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY, Article 4
MEMOIRS OF HER LATE IMPERIAL MAJESTY, CATHARINE II. Article 6
REFLECTIONS UPON TRAGEDY. Article 10
ON THE NATIONAL MANNERS OF THE FRENCH AND ENGLISH. Article 12
ON THE INFLUENCE OF THE SEASONS ON THE MENTAL POWERS. Article 14
ANECDOTE. Article 17
MEMOIRS OF THE LATE COLONEL FREDERICK. Article 18
NEW OXFORD GUIDE: OR HUMOROUS SUPPLEMENT TO ALL FORMER ACCOUNTS, OFTHAT ANCIENT CITY AND UNIVERSITY. Article 21
YORICK AND ELIZA. Article 26
ON THE IMPASSIBILITY OF INSECTS. Article 27
ON THE EXISTENCE OF MERMAIDS. Article 28
BON MOT OF A SPANIARD. Article 31
ORIGINAL LETTER FROM ADDISON TO A LADY. Article 32
DESCRIPTION OF AN UNFREQUENTED CAVE, NEAR BESANCON, IN FRANCE. Article 33
FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 34
ROYAL ARCH. Article 38
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 40
POETRY. Article 50
EPILOGUE, TO THE SAME, Article 50
EPILOGUE Article 51
MARY, A TALE. Article 52
SONG. Article 53
OCCASIONAL ADDRESS, SUNG BY THE CHILDREN OF THE FREEMASONS' FEMALE CHARITY, FEBRUARY- 9, 1797. Article 53
SONNET. Article 53
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 54
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 56
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 57
MONTHLY CHRONICLE . Article 62
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. Article 67
OBITUARY. Article 70
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Page 14

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

On The National Manners Of The French And English.

With regard to the real intrinsic comforts of existence , I think they are unknown in every country but our own . We are not ostentatiously splendid ; but what we have is good , and a mere extefJial glare would not , in our opinion , render it more valuable . —In cleanliness , articles of convenience and utility , we certainly surpass every country on earth . Step into the house of foreignerand afterwards

any , into the house of an English gentleman , and this point is immediately determined . The accommodations on cur roads for travellers are likewise , beyond all comparison , superior to those which are to be met with elsewhere . > « . —

On The Influence Of The Seasons On The Mental Powers.

ON THE INFLUENCE OF THE SEASONS ON THE MENTAL POWERS .

FOR THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE . "K "OITH whatever air of triumph a sturdy moralist may exclaim ^* Sapiens dominahitur , astris , and bid defiance to the hand of winter ; yet the man who is composed of elements less hardy , courage less haughtyand limb less heroic ( see Milton ' s Par . Lost' IX . 484 )

, , , and who , with conscious humility , confesses the imbecility of his ' terrestrial mold , ' must acknowledge the influence of season over his body and mind to be very considerable and powerful . It is observed by Naturalists , that , in the gradual ranks . of beings which belong to our system , each class ascending partakes of some propertypeculiar to the class immediately below it . For instance , the herb

which rises next in order above lifeless matter , has in it material substance and vegetating qualities ; the beast has material substance , vegetating qualities , and loco-motion ; man has material-substance , vegetating qualities , loco-motion , and the highest portion of reason assigned to anv inhabitant of this s : lobe : and thus is there a connection which unites the sever . ; ] orders in one system ; and as that

connection proceeds from participation of similar component prin' ciples , it-is unavoidable but th :: t what affects one order , should also , in some measure , afFect all . Amidst the rigorous severity of winter we see the inanimate and irrational parts of creation in a state of torpid languor . The earth is hardened into an iron clod ; the waters are become ' a frozen continent' ( Par . Lost , II . 587 ); the power of

vegetation is checked in every plant ; domestic animals are contracted in their limbs ; and the wilder inhabitants of the woods are subdued into tameness , by intense cold : —rlt is therefore obvious to conclude , that man , in his animal part , must be unable to-resist the force of the atmosphere so entirely , as not to feel it either in a less or greater degree , according to the strength or weakness of his frame . The crepitans dentibiis algus of Lucretius , b . V . 745 , and Spenser ' s , ' Winter clad in frize , chattering his teetli for cold , ' b . VII . c . 7 . st . 31 ,

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