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  • March 1, 1795
  • Page 67
  • MONTHLY CHRONICLE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1795: Page 67

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    Article PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. ← Page 12 of 12
    Article MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Page 1 of 5 →
Page 67

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Parliamentary Proceedings.

meeting of Parliament : but did not object to the proposition , though he thought that every exertion should be used to obtain a speedy , safe , and honourable peace . Mr . PiU replied to Mr . Fox : Two or three other Members said a few words , when the Oueslion was put , the Resolution carried , and the House adjourned . 24 . TJje House proceeded further ill the consideration of the Report of the Committee , on the Bill for raising men for the Navy in the several Counties .

Several alterations and amendments were proposed , and agreed to . 25 . ( Fast-day ) . The Speaker , accompanied by Mr . Pitt , Mr . Dundas , the Master of the Rolls , Mr . Windham , Mr . Ryder , and about twenty other Members , went to St . Margaret ' s Church , where a sermon was preached-by the Rev , Dr . Kingham . After they returned from church , adjourned . ' 26 . The Comity Quota Bill , for the better manning of the Navy , was read a third time and passed .

Mr . Wilberforce said , he had troubled the House so often on the subject of the Slave Trade , that he should not enteral present into any details on it . That House , in 1792 , had resolved that this infamous traffic should be abolished : he should , therefore , make that resolution the ground of his motion . Mr . Wilberforce then urged the expediency of abolishing this Trade , on the grounds of humanity , justice , and sound policy ; after which , he moved for leave to bring in a Bill for the Abolition of the Slave Trade . A debate rook place , in which Mr . Barbam moved , by way of amendment , '

that the debate be adjourned to that day sixmonths . Mr . Dundas and Sir W . Young spoke in favour of the-amendment , . Mr . Fox , JSrfr . Pitt , Mr . Grey , Mr . Whitbread , and others , spoke in favour of the original motion . Mr . Wiiberforce replied , and the House divided , for the amendment 78 , against it , 61 ; majority 17 . 27 . The Altomey-Gencral moved for leave to bring in a Bill to empower his Majesty ' s Postmaster-General to open and return letters made up the 13 th , 16 th , and 20 th of January for Holland , now remaining at the Post-Office . — Leave given .

Monthly Chronicle.

MONTHLY CHRONICLE .

FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . TTN the Sessions of ( he French National Convention of the 30 th of January , Jj . Boissy d'Anglas , in a very warm speech , took a cursory view of ihe exterior situation of France , explained the system of the powers leagued against her , and fixed the limits of the empire of France to the Ocean and tbe Rhine , as the means of guarding her for ages from all invasion . D'Anglas expatiated on the idea thrown out to mislead people , that the government of France was only provisionary , and therefore -could not be negociated with . " Our government , " said

he , " is the plenipotentiary named by all the people of France to put an end , in " their name , to the revolution and the war ; and I doubt whether ever an am-. " bassador was invested with a higher character . Our government is the will of " the nation ; our armies the force of the nation . Our forms are justice ; prin" ciples , humanity . Our Government may be appreciated by what it offers to " the world : it has opened the prisons , broke down the scaffolds , and restored * ' activity to commerce and the arts . Justice is the order of the day in the in-* ' ferior , and victory on the frontiers ; and yet an absurd system of policy doubts * ' whether a nation which knows how to conquer knows how to negoeiate . " This speech ( which contains more important developements than appear ai first ( reading ) ivas frequently interrupted by applauses , and a member proposed its ;

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-03-01, Page 67” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031795/page/67/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 2
A SERMON Article 8
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 14
DETACHED SENTIMENTS. Article 16
ORDER OF THE PROCESSION ON LAYING THE FOUNDATION-STONE OF THE NEW BUILDINGS FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH, Article 17
HINTS FOR THE OECONOMY OF TIME, EXPENCE, LEARNING, AND MORALITY; Article 22
A CHARACTER. Article 24
THE FREEMASON No. III. Article 26
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 28
SUMMARY OF ALL THE ARGUMENTS FOR AND AGAINST RICHARD BROTHERS. Article 28
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 32
MR. TASKER'S LETTERS Article 33
SHORT ESSAYS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS. Article 34
ESSAY ON A KING. Article 35
THE IRON MASK. Article 37
VICES AND VIRTUES. FROM THE FRENCH. Article 39
CANT PHRASES IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE EXPLAINED. Article 40
PHILOSOPHICAL EXPERIMENTS. Article 45
DUTY OF CONSIDERING THE POOR. Article 47
POETRY. Article 48
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 52
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 53
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 56
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 67
Untitled Article 72
LONDON : Article 72
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 73
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 73
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Parliamentary Proceedings.

meeting of Parliament : but did not object to the proposition , though he thought that every exertion should be used to obtain a speedy , safe , and honourable peace . Mr . PiU replied to Mr . Fox : Two or three other Members said a few words , when the Oueslion was put , the Resolution carried , and the House adjourned . 24 . TJje House proceeded further ill the consideration of the Report of the Committee , on the Bill for raising men for the Navy in the several Counties .

Several alterations and amendments were proposed , and agreed to . 25 . ( Fast-day ) . The Speaker , accompanied by Mr . Pitt , Mr . Dundas , the Master of the Rolls , Mr . Windham , Mr . Ryder , and about twenty other Members , went to St . Margaret ' s Church , where a sermon was preached-by the Rev , Dr . Kingham . After they returned from church , adjourned . ' 26 . The Comity Quota Bill , for the better manning of the Navy , was read a third time and passed .

Mr . Wilberforce said , he had troubled the House so often on the subject of the Slave Trade , that he should not enteral present into any details on it . That House , in 1792 , had resolved that this infamous traffic should be abolished : he should , therefore , make that resolution the ground of his motion . Mr . Wilberforce then urged the expediency of abolishing this Trade , on the grounds of humanity , justice , and sound policy ; after which , he moved for leave to bring in a Bill for the Abolition of the Slave Trade . A debate rook place , in which Mr . Barbam moved , by way of amendment , '

that the debate be adjourned to that day sixmonths . Mr . Dundas and Sir W . Young spoke in favour of the-amendment , . Mr . Fox , JSrfr . Pitt , Mr . Grey , Mr . Whitbread , and others , spoke in favour of the original motion . Mr . Wiiberforce replied , and the House divided , for the amendment 78 , against it , 61 ; majority 17 . 27 . The Altomey-Gencral moved for leave to bring in a Bill to empower his Majesty ' s Postmaster-General to open and return letters made up the 13 th , 16 th , and 20 th of January for Holland , now remaining at the Post-Office . — Leave given .

Monthly Chronicle.

MONTHLY CHRONICLE .

FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . TTN the Sessions of ( he French National Convention of the 30 th of January , Jj . Boissy d'Anglas , in a very warm speech , took a cursory view of ihe exterior situation of France , explained the system of the powers leagued against her , and fixed the limits of the empire of France to the Ocean and tbe Rhine , as the means of guarding her for ages from all invasion . D'Anglas expatiated on the idea thrown out to mislead people , that the government of France was only provisionary , and therefore -could not be negociated with . " Our government , " said

he , " is the plenipotentiary named by all the people of France to put an end , in " their name , to the revolution and the war ; and I doubt whether ever an am-. " bassador was invested with a higher character . Our government is the will of " the nation ; our armies the force of the nation . Our forms are justice ; prin" ciples , humanity . Our Government may be appreciated by what it offers to " the world : it has opened the prisons , broke down the scaffolds , and restored * ' activity to commerce and the arts . Justice is the order of the day in the in-* ' ferior , and victory on the frontiers ; and yet an absurd system of policy doubts * ' whether a nation which knows how to conquer knows how to negoeiate . " This speech ( which contains more important developements than appear ai first ( reading ) ivas frequently interrupted by applauses , and a member proposed its ;

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