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  • March 1, 1794
  • Page 45
  • ORIGINAL LETTER OF DOCTOR JOHNSON.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1794: Page 45

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

Original Letter Of Doctor Johnson.

ORIGINAL LETTER OF DOCTOR JOHNSON .

THE following letter of Dr . Johnson to a friend , upon the death of his wife , Mr . Boswell , in his biographical account of that truly great man . Vol . I . p . 221 , supposes to be , and laments as , lost . " The dreadful shock of separation , " says he , " took p lace on the 8 th ; " and he ( Dr . Johnson ) immediately dispatched a letter to his friend , " the Rev . Dr . Taylorwhichas Taylor told meexpressed grief in

, , , " the strongest manner he had ever read ; so that it is much to be re" grafted it has not been preserved . '" .. It is now produced to the public by Dr . WILLIAM FAULKNER , of Bath , and is certainly well worthy of preservation .

TO THE REV . DR . TAYLOR . DEAR . SIR , March 17 , 1752 , O . S . Notwithstanding the warnings of philosophers , and the daily examples of losses and misfortunes which life forces upon us , such is the absorption of our thoughts in the business of the present day—such the resignation of our reason to empty hopes of future felicity;—or such

our unwillingness to foresee what we dread , that every calamity comes suddenly upon us , and not only presses us as a burthen , but crushes as a blow . There are evils which happen out of the common course of nature , against which it is no reproach not to be provided . A flash of lightning intercepts the traveller in his way . The concussion of an earthquake

heaps the ruin of cities upon their inhabitants . But other miseries time brings , though silently , yet visibly forward , by its own lapse , which yet approaches unseen , because we tarn our eyes away , and seize us unresisted , because we could not arm ourselves against them , but by setting them before us .

That it is in vain to shrink from what cannot be avoided , and to hide that from ourselves which must sometimes be found , is a truth which we all know , but which all neglect , and perhaps none more than the speculative reasoner , whose thoughts are always from home , whose eye wanders over life , whose fancy dances after meteors of happiness kindled by itself , and who examines every thing , rather than his

own state . Nothing is more evident than that- the decays of age must terminate in death . Yet there is no man ( says Tully ) who does not believe that he may yet live another year ; and there is none who . does not , upon the same principle , hope another year for his parent or his friend ; but the fallacy will be in time detected ; the last yearthe last day , will

, come ; it has come , and is past . — . " The life which made my own life " p leasant is at an end , and the gates of death are shut upon my pros" pects . " The loss of a friend on whom the heart was fixed , to ' whom every wish and endeavour tended , is a state of desolation in which the mind

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-03-01, Page 45” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031794/page/45/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 3
MASONIC ANECDOTE. Article 8
ACCOUNT OF JOHN WATKINS, L. L. D. Article 10
JOHN COUSTOS, FREEMASON. Article 12
BRIEF ACCOUNT OF COLONEL MAEK, Article 16
LETTER Article 17
TRANSLATION OF QUEEN ELIZABETH'S LETTER TO MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS, Article 17
CHARACTER OF RICHARD CUMBERLAND, Article 18
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 19
AN ACCOUNT OF DRUIDISM. Article 20
LIFE OF PHILIP EGALITE, LATE DUKE OF ORLEANS. Article 25
ACCOUNT OF PENPARK-HOLE, Article 32
ON READING. Article 36
CARD Article 37
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 38
CHARACTERS WRITTEN IN THE LAST CENTURY. Article 39
ON AFRICAN SLAVERY. Article 41
ORIGINAL LETTER OF DOCTOR JOHNSON. Article 45
ANECDOTES OF THE LATE HUGH KELLY. Article 47
PLAN OF EDUCATION. Article 52
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 55
ANECDOTES OF J—— SWARTS. Article 59
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 60
HOUSE OF COMMONS, FINANCIAL MEASURE OF FRANCE. Article 62
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 70
EPILOGUE. Article 71
PHILOSOPHICAL EXPERIMENT . Article 73
POETRY. Article 74
ADVICE TO A PAINTER. Article 75
THE ENQUIRY. Article 76
PROCRASTINATION. Article 76
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 76
PREFERMENTS. Article 80
MARRIAGES. Article 80
DEATHS. Article 81
BANKRUPTS. Article 82
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Page 45

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

Original Letter Of Doctor Johnson.

ORIGINAL LETTER OF DOCTOR JOHNSON .

THE following letter of Dr . Johnson to a friend , upon the death of his wife , Mr . Boswell , in his biographical account of that truly great man . Vol . I . p . 221 , supposes to be , and laments as , lost . " The dreadful shock of separation , " says he , " took p lace on the 8 th ; " and he ( Dr . Johnson ) immediately dispatched a letter to his friend , " the Rev . Dr . Taylorwhichas Taylor told meexpressed grief in

, , , " the strongest manner he had ever read ; so that it is much to be re" grafted it has not been preserved . '" .. It is now produced to the public by Dr . WILLIAM FAULKNER , of Bath , and is certainly well worthy of preservation .

TO THE REV . DR . TAYLOR . DEAR . SIR , March 17 , 1752 , O . S . Notwithstanding the warnings of philosophers , and the daily examples of losses and misfortunes which life forces upon us , such is the absorption of our thoughts in the business of the present day—such the resignation of our reason to empty hopes of future felicity;—or such

our unwillingness to foresee what we dread , that every calamity comes suddenly upon us , and not only presses us as a burthen , but crushes as a blow . There are evils which happen out of the common course of nature , against which it is no reproach not to be provided . A flash of lightning intercepts the traveller in his way . The concussion of an earthquake

heaps the ruin of cities upon their inhabitants . But other miseries time brings , though silently , yet visibly forward , by its own lapse , which yet approaches unseen , because we tarn our eyes away , and seize us unresisted , because we could not arm ourselves against them , but by setting them before us .

That it is in vain to shrink from what cannot be avoided , and to hide that from ourselves which must sometimes be found , is a truth which we all know , but which all neglect , and perhaps none more than the speculative reasoner , whose thoughts are always from home , whose eye wanders over life , whose fancy dances after meteors of happiness kindled by itself , and who examines every thing , rather than his

own state . Nothing is more evident than that- the decays of age must terminate in death . Yet there is no man ( says Tully ) who does not believe that he may yet live another year ; and there is none who . does not , upon the same principle , hope another year for his parent or his friend ; but the fallacy will be in time detected ; the last yearthe last day , will

, come ; it has come , and is past . — . " The life which made my own life " p leasant is at an end , and the gates of death are shut upon my pros" pects . " The loss of a friend on whom the heart was fixed , to ' whom every wish and endeavour tended , is a state of desolation in which the mind

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