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  • Feb. 1, 1798
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1798: Page 50

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS: Page 1 of 8 →
Page 50

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

Review Of New Publications:

REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS :

Walsingbam , or the Pupil of Nature , a domestic Story , by Mary Robinson , in 4- 'vols , iivio . Longman . Price 14 .... boards . TO compose a good fictitious history is not the work of an ordinary mind . To display man as he really is requires accurate observation , a comprehensive understanding , and the power and habit of investigating moral causes . Unless we know human nature , ive cannot describe it : if we comprehend it only partially , our descriptions must be imperfect : unless we can trace

effect to cause , and demonstrate consequence , the description will afford little important instru-fion . Every person of lively ingenuity i even with the advantages of education , is no more fit to write a good fictitious history than a good real history—to compose a Gil Bias , or a Tom Jones , than to equal Robertson's Charles V . Not only a knowledge of human nature in general , but of man as modified by the studies , pursuits , manners , and circumstances , in which he is attempted to be represented , is requisite . From the qualifications necessary to form an able novel-writer , the number is very small of those who have succeeded in that kind of composition . Our Smollets , our Barneys j our Fieldings , our Le Sages , are not more numerous than our Gibbons , our

Robertsons , our Fergussons , and our Humes . Although the writer of Walsingha . m certainl y does not deserve to rank in the highest class of novelists , she is entitled to a respectable place in the second . If she does not discover that comprehensive genius which can grasp a variety of parts , and mould them , into one consistent whole , she displays considerable acuteness , and still more vivacity of fancy in observing and painting some of the parts . The fable is perplexed and improbable . The following are the outlines : —

WalsinghamAinsforth , after having been , in his infancy , the chief favourite of his uncle and aunt , Sir Edward and Lady Aubrey , of Glenowen Castle , in Glamorganshire , is , on the birth of an heir to theAubreys , left to negleft . — SirEdward soon after dying , his lady , from certain transactions , becomes under tbe direction of her housekeeper , Mrs . Blagden , who had been abandoned after seduifion by Walsingham ' s father , and revenges the perfidy of the parent on the innocent child . Walsinsrham not knowin g of this instigator of

his aunt , imputes her neglect to the birth of his cousin , and himself as supplanted by the young proprietor of Glenowen . He is indebted for his education to a Mr . Hanbuiy , a young clergyman , of whose sister , Isabella , lie becomes enamoured . Sir Sidney Aubrey , after receiving foreign education , returns to Wales , and is suspected by Walsingbam to have deprived him of the affe & ions 01 Isabella . A duel ensues ; but , by the moderation of Sir Sidney , without bloodshed . WsOsingham , however , being represented to Lady

Aubrey by her confidante , Mrs . Blagden , as having attempted to assassinate Sir Sidney , is obliged to leave Glenowen Castle . Going to Bath , he falls in with demireps of quality that solicit his love , and gamblers of quality tlv . it seek his purse—both to no purpose . A duel is likely to ensue between him and a peer , the head ot" a gang of titled sharpers . Colonel Aubrey , uncle to Sir Sidney , and a warm friend to Walsingham , trying to prevent the duel , quarrels himself with the peer , and wounds him mortally . Aubrey disappears , Walsingham hastens to London to join him , meets with many adventures and < : Xav ? . & . zis— - ( those of rank generally bad ) is summoned home by Lad y VOL . x , o

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-02-01, Page 50” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021798/page/50/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
ACCOUNT OF KIEN-LONG, EMPEROR OF CHINA. Article 4
NOTICE OF SIR ANDREW DOUGLAS. Article 6
A RETROSPECTIVE VIEW OF THE LITERATURE OF 1797. Article 7
WISDOM AND FOLLY: A VISION. Article 12
THE LIFE OF XIMENES, ARCHBISHOP OF TOLEDO. Article 18
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Article 30
A COLLECTION OF CHINESE PROVERBS AND APOTHEGMS, Article 36
AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY. Article 41
COLONEL TITUS's LETTER TO OLIVER CROMWELL. Article 43
THE COLLECTOR. Article 45
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS: Article 50
POETRY. Article 58
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 62
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 66
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Page 50

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

Review Of New Publications:

REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS :

Walsingbam , or the Pupil of Nature , a domestic Story , by Mary Robinson , in 4- 'vols , iivio . Longman . Price 14 .... boards . TO compose a good fictitious history is not the work of an ordinary mind . To display man as he really is requires accurate observation , a comprehensive understanding , and the power and habit of investigating moral causes . Unless we know human nature , ive cannot describe it : if we comprehend it only partially , our descriptions must be imperfect : unless we can trace

effect to cause , and demonstrate consequence , the description will afford little important instru-fion . Every person of lively ingenuity i even with the advantages of education , is no more fit to write a good fictitious history than a good real history—to compose a Gil Bias , or a Tom Jones , than to equal Robertson's Charles V . Not only a knowledge of human nature in general , but of man as modified by the studies , pursuits , manners , and circumstances , in which he is attempted to be represented , is requisite . From the qualifications necessary to form an able novel-writer , the number is very small of those who have succeeded in that kind of composition . Our Smollets , our Barneys j our Fieldings , our Le Sages , are not more numerous than our Gibbons , our

Robertsons , our Fergussons , and our Humes . Although the writer of Walsingha . m certainl y does not deserve to rank in the highest class of novelists , she is entitled to a respectable place in the second . If she does not discover that comprehensive genius which can grasp a variety of parts , and mould them , into one consistent whole , she displays considerable acuteness , and still more vivacity of fancy in observing and painting some of the parts . The fable is perplexed and improbable . The following are the outlines : —

WalsinghamAinsforth , after having been , in his infancy , the chief favourite of his uncle and aunt , Sir Edward and Lady Aubrey , of Glenowen Castle , in Glamorganshire , is , on the birth of an heir to theAubreys , left to negleft . — SirEdward soon after dying , his lady , from certain transactions , becomes under tbe direction of her housekeeper , Mrs . Blagden , who had been abandoned after seduifion by Walsingham ' s father , and revenges the perfidy of the parent on the innocent child . Walsinsrham not knowin g of this instigator of

his aunt , imputes her neglect to the birth of his cousin , and himself as supplanted by the young proprietor of Glenowen . He is indebted for his education to a Mr . Hanbuiy , a young clergyman , of whose sister , Isabella , lie becomes enamoured . Sir Sidney Aubrey , after receiving foreign education , returns to Wales , and is suspected by Walsingbam to have deprived him of the affe & ions 01 Isabella . A duel ensues ; but , by the moderation of Sir Sidney , without bloodshed . WsOsingham , however , being represented to Lady

Aubrey by her confidante , Mrs . Blagden , as having attempted to assassinate Sir Sidney , is obliged to leave Glenowen Castle . Going to Bath , he falls in with demireps of quality that solicit his love , and gamblers of quality tlv . it seek his purse—both to no purpose . A duel is likely to ensue between him and a peer , the head ot" a gang of titled sharpers . Colonel Aubrey , uncle to Sir Sidney , and a warm friend to Walsingham , trying to prevent the duel , quarrels himself with the peer , and wounds him mortally . Aubrey disappears , Walsingham hastens to London to join him , meets with many adventures and < : Xav ? . & . zis— - ( those of rank generally bad ) is summoned home by Lad y VOL . x , o

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