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  • March 1, 1794
  • Page 48
  • ANECDOTES OF THE LATE HUGH KELLY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1794: Page 48

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Page 48

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Anecdotes Of The Late Hugh Kelly.

friends gave out it was Woodward ' s misconception of his part that principally promoted it , aided by the malice of those enemies who formerly made head against his dramatic productions ; but the fact was , it was carried down by its own lead . Party malice had a good deal subsided by this time , and as far as it appeared by the complexion arid conduct of the audiencethey gave it a fair and equitable trial .

, The p lot of this play , as far as we can remember ( for it was never printed ) , turned upon a man who , attempting to do every thing by the rig id rules of reason and abstraction , felt most of his plans counteracted by the customs and habits of the world . How far this may be dramatized in skilful hands , is another question ; but it . was far above Kelly ' s grasp ; such a subject required strong views and nice discriminations of

character ; it likewise required such a selection of incidents as were proper to elucidate that character -. but in all those our Author was deficient ; he had but one forte in dramatic writing , and that was sentimental dialogue ; deprive him of that , and you left him very little - pretensions indeed .

The disappointment of this comedy ftuck so close to our Author ' s heart , both in point of interest as well as fame , that he determined never to write for the Stage again . ' He had been called to the bar about two years before this , and though he had at that time qualified himself verylittle for the practice of the profession , he resolved now to advert to it as the great object of his pursuit ; for this purpose he gave up all his literary engagements ( which were very profitable to him ) and

, reserving only to himself the character of Barrister , he had now , in a great degree , to begin the world again ; to exchange lig ht congenialreading for the severer ftudies of the law ; and what was much more serious to him , to give up what was little short of a certainty , for all the precariousness of a new profession .

Our Author ' s usual prudence here forsook him , and his error should be a warning to others in similar circumstances . Kelly from his Editorship , the Theatre , and holding in a variety of other respects " the pen of a ready . writer , " could make little less than one thousand pounds ' per year ( at least in such years as he brought out anew play ) . Here was a kind of certainty for himself , his wife , and a family of five or six Childrenand this he altogether relinquished for a profession in which

, neither his natural inclination , his education , or even occasional ftudies , had fitted him .. He did not weigh sufficiently in his own mind the difficulty of beginning any learned profession with success between thirty and forty years of age : nor the many examples which were before his eyes of Barristers' properly educated for their profession , with considerable talents and connexions , who were obliged to wait four , five ,

six , nay sometimes ten years , before any accident drew them forward into any thing like a profitable practice . He should have likewise considered the peculiarity of his own situation , which , in point of fortune , age , and connexions , could not brook such a delay , and that , by this total change , he likewise gave up the established fame of an Author of some celebrity , to mingle in the train of juvenile ambulators . of Westminster-hall .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-03-01, Page 48” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031794/page/48/.
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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 48

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

Anecdotes Of The Late Hugh Kelly.

friends gave out it was Woodward ' s misconception of his part that principally promoted it , aided by the malice of those enemies who formerly made head against his dramatic productions ; but the fact was , it was carried down by its own lead . Party malice had a good deal subsided by this time , and as far as it appeared by the complexion arid conduct of the audiencethey gave it a fair and equitable trial .

, The p lot of this play , as far as we can remember ( for it was never printed ) , turned upon a man who , attempting to do every thing by the rig id rules of reason and abstraction , felt most of his plans counteracted by the customs and habits of the world . How far this may be dramatized in skilful hands , is another question ; but it . was far above Kelly ' s grasp ; such a subject required strong views and nice discriminations of

character ; it likewise required such a selection of incidents as were proper to elucidate that character -. but in all those our Author was deficient ; he had but one forte in dramatic writing , and that was sentimental dialogue ; deprive him of that , and you left him very little - pretensions indeed .

The disappointment of this comedy ftuck so close to our Author ' s heart , both in point of interest as well as fame , that he determined never to write for the Stage again . ' He had been called to the bar about two years before this , and though he had at that time qualified himself verylittle for the practice of the profession , he resolved now to advert to it as the great object of his pursuit ; for this purpose he gave up all his literary engagements ( which were very profitable to him ) and

, reserving only to himself the character of Barrister , he had now , in a great degree , to begin the world again ; to exchange lig ht congenialreading for the severer ftudies of the law ; and what was much more serious to him , to give up what was little short of a certainty , for all the precariousness of a new profession .

Our Author ' s usual prudence here forsook him , and his error should be a warning to others in similar circumstances . Kelly from his Editorship , the Theatre , and holding in a variety of other respects " the pen of a ready . writer , " could make little less than one thousand pounds ' per year ( at least in such years as he brought out anew play ) . Here was a kind of certainty for himself , his wife , and a family of five or six Childrenand this he altogether relinquished for a profession in which

, neither his natural inclination , his education , or even occasional ftudies , had fitted him .. He did not weigh sufficiently in his own mind the difficulty of beginning any learned profession with success between thirty and forty years of age : nor the many examples which were before his eyes of Barristers' properly educated for their profession , with considerable talents and connexions , who were obliged to wait four , five ,

six , nay sometimes ten years , before any accident drew them forward into any thing like a profitable practice . He should have likewise considered the peculiarity of his own situation , which , in point of fortune , age , and connexions , could not brook such a delay , and that , by this total change , he likewise gave up the established fame of an Author of some celebrity , to mingle in the train of juvenile ambulators . of Westminster-hall .

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