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  • Feb. 1, 1797
  • Page 42
  • REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1797: Page 42

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. ← Page 3 of 10 →
Page 42

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

Review Of New Publications.

We sat down to table . An unrestrained cheerfulness presided at the meal . The melancholy affair that had occasioned such alarm was arranged , and . ail parties satisfied . ' I longed for the promised history of the stake . These good people are slow in their motions , and it was not till after many preambles , in which , however , I gave myself up to the most charming distractions , that my host began as follows .

" You must know , " said he , " that , in this country , to see and to possess are nearly the same thing . When an in Habitant of the Cape wants to obtain a spot of ground in the colony , whether for agriculture or for grazing , he traverses different cantons , to look out for a situation that may suit him . When he has found it , he sets up what is called a baaken , as much as to signify to any one who may be looking out with a similar purpose , that the spot is already occupied . Then lie returns to the Capeand applies to the

govern-, ment for a regular permission and title . This sort of solicitation is seldom refused ; but , as the grants of uncultivated ground made by the company are usually a league square , it happens , sometimes from mistake ? nd sometimes from malice , that the baaken has been set up upon the ground of a former proprietor ; or that in the circumference granted him , of which the baaken is the centre , some part of another man ' s land is included . In this case , to terminate the dispute , arbitrators are sent for , and a decision

obtained . If the question be not much involved , a compromise is easily made ; but in many cases it happens otherwise . Then commences a regular suit at law . and an eternal subject of variance and hatred between the two parties . Another misfortune in such cases is , that the original proprietor is rarel y at liberty to quit his farm , and to undertake the management of his own . cause , which assuredly he is the person to understand best . The trial , however , goes on , and the advocate , who has frequently never seen the spot ,

acquits himself as well as he can . The judge , who is equally in the dark , gives sentence accordingly ; and thus your Europeans , who think that no people have finder-standing and reason but themselves , forget that they have not less a monopoly of corruption and vice . Tie simplest disputes often terminate ' in the ruin of families , while nobody gains by them , except it be the jud ge , whose trade thrives upon this species of nourishment . The planters , on the other handwhose condition removes them from the bustlesubtlety , and

, , intrigue of'large towns , settle these things in the clearest and most sagacious manner , with no other instructor but good sense , and no other guide but ' reason . " Philosopher as my host affected to be , and though his countenance , which became animated at every stroke of satire that escaped him against the institutions of society , was expressive of considerable energy , candour , and good sense , I have taken the liberty of abridging his narrative , leaving it to the reader ' s imagination to supply what I have omitted . '

The Italian , or the Confessional of the Black Penitents , a Romance . B y Ann Radclifte . 3 vol . 121110 . Price 15 / . Cadell and Davies . THE elegant authoress of this Romance , is well known to the world for her former productions of the Romance of the Forest , and the Mysteries of Udolp ho . With a genius peculiarly calculated , to work on our imaginationand our fears , she has long been unrivalled in this kind of composition . The Italian , thoughin our opinion , it does not much add to , yet certainly takes ,

, little from , the fame she has so justly acquired . There is one fault which is carried farther in this than in Mrs . Radciiite ' s former Romances , viz . the too frequent descriptions of the scenery of Italy . Mrs . Radclifte . it cannot be denied , is , in general , ricii and correct in the descriptive ; but to us , if VOL . vin . P

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-02-01, Page 42” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021797/page/42/.
  • List
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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 42

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

Review Of New Publications.

We sat down to table . An unrestrained cheerfulness presided at the meal . The melancholy affair that had occasioned such alarm was arranged , and . ail parties satisfied . ' I longed for the promised history of the stake . These good people are slow in their motions , and it was not till after many preambles , in which , however , I gave myself up to the most charming distractions , that my host began as follows .

" You must know , " said he , " that , in this country , to see and to possess are nearly the same thing . When an in Habitant of the Cape wants to obtain a spot of ground in the colony , whether for agriculture or for grazing , he traverses different cantons , to look out for a situation that may suit him . When he has found it , he sets up what is called a baaken , as much as to signify to any one who may be looking out with a similar purpose , that the spot is already occupied . Then lie returns to the Capeand applies to the

govern-, ment for a regular permission and title . This sort of solicitation is seldom refused ; but , as the grants of uncultivated ground made by the company are usually a league square , it happens , sometimes from mistake ? nd sometimes from malice , that the baaken has been set up upon the ground of a former proprietor ; or that in the circumference granted him , of which the baaken is the centre , some part of another man ' s land is included . In this case , to terminate the dispute , arbitrators are sent for , and a decision

obtained . If the question be not much involved , a compromise is easily made ; but in many cases it happens otherwise . Then commences a regular suit at law . and an eternal subject of variance and hatred between the two parties . Another misfortune in such cases is , that the original proprietor is rarel y at liberty to quit his farm , and to undertake the management of his own . cause , which assuredly he is the person to understand best . The trial , however , goes on , and the advocate , who has frequently never seen the spot ,

acquits himself as well as he can . The judge , who is equally in the dark , gives sentence accordingly ; and thus your Europeans , who think that no people have finder-standing and reason but themselves , forget that they have not less a monopoly of corruption and vice . Tie simplest disputes often terminate ' in the ruin of families , while nobody gains by them , except it be the jud ge , whose trade thrives upon this species of nourishment . The planters , on the other handwhose condition removes them from the bustlesubtlety , and

, , intrigue of'large towns , settle these things in the clearest and most sagacious manner , with no other instructor but good sense , and no other guide but ' reason . " Philosopher as my host affected to be , and though his countenance , which became animated at every stroke of satire that escaped him against the institutions of society , was expressive of considerable energy , candour , and good sense , I have taken the liberty of abridging his narrative , leaving it to the reader ' s imagination to supply what I have omitted . '

The Italian , or the Confessional of the Black Penitents , a Romance . B y Ann Radclifte . 3 vol . 121110 . Price 15 / . Cadell and Davies . THE elegant authoress of this Romance , is well known to the world for her former productions of the Romance of the Forest , and the Mysteries of Udolp ho . With a genius peculiarly calculated , to work on our imaginationand our fears , she has long been unrivalled in this kind of composition . The Italian , thoughin our opinion , it does not much add to , yet certainly takes ,

, little from , the fame she has so justly acquired . There is one fault which is carried farther in this than in Mrs . Radciiite ' s former Romances , viz . the too frequent descriptions of the scenery of Italy . Mrs . Radclifte . it cannot be denied , is , in general , ricii and correct in the descriptive ; but to us , if VOL . vin . P

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