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  • March 1, 1797
  • Page 48
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1797: Page 48

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Page 48

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Review Or New Publications.

every thing that nature has done for its fecundity . I am persuaded that sugar-canes , cotton and indigo , would grow extremely well in the district of the Twenty-four Rivers . ' We trust that the liberality and extensive commercial views of the British Government , will second every thing M . Le Vaillant has here suggested 5 and that they will not be so blind to their own interests as the Dutch ' seem to have been . We may then shortly hope to see the Cape and its dependencies

the most wealthy and important of all our Colonies . ' In our next number we shall conclude our account of these volumes . , A Fiew of the Causes and Consequences of tbc Present Vi r ar -jnih France . By the Hon , Thomas Erskine . SOT . Price 2 S . Pages 138 . Debretf . The abilities of this eloquent popular Advocate , jwhich have so long adorned the English barare , in this pamphlet , brought forward to prove

, that an immediate change of Ministry can alone rescue tiiis country from the ruin which impends over it . Pie begins with an enquiry into the Causes of the War , which , he insists , was produced by the misconduct of Ministers , and the ambition of our allies , and not by any aggressions on the part of the French Republic , which might not have been amicably arrranged by negociation . He proceeds to take a general view of the conduit of the war on the part of the Court of London , andafter describing the condition to which

, Great Britain is now reduced by the continuance of the contest , insists , with all the force of eloquence and reason , that peace alone can ensure the safety , and even the very existence , of the country . These positions are maintained by a variety of arguments that appear to us incontrovertible . The motives alledged by Ministers , at different periods

since the beginning of the war , are proved to be either not their real ones , or , if real , to be fallacious ; and the failure of the mission of Lord Malmesbury ( to whose abilities as an Ambassador Mr . E . pays a very just tribute ) , is imputed to a want of sincerity on the p : i ,-1 of the British Government . To make extracts from a performance which must have been so generally read , from the number of editions it has undergone ( we review the twenty-- fourth ) , may appear superfluous ; but we cannot forbear -introducing to such

of our readers , as may not yet have perused tlie pamphlet itself , the following comparison of the state of this country at the present period , with her probable condition , if she had avoided the miseries resulting from the war . Her present state he describes thus : — ' Left almost single as we are upon the theatre of war—asking for peace , but asking for it in vain , upon terms which without war were not only within our reach to obtain . .. but left to us to dictate—asking for peace in France

under the pressure of a necessity created by our own folly—asking it of the regicide Direftory , whose existence ( 1 appeal to Mr . Burke and Lord Fitzwiliiam ) was pronounced to be perpetual war . Silent upon the subject of reli g ion , without any atonement to its violated altars—and seeking by a thousand suoterfuges and aitifices unworthy of a great nation ( and which must and will certainly be unsuccessful ) to restore peace without humbling the pride of the ministers who provoked the war , by consenting to terms which

nothing but their own imbecility could have raised France to the condition of offering , or have reduced England to the mortification of accepting . ' Such is the picture of what we are . With this Mr . E . contrasts what we might have been :. — ' To estimate rightly the extent of this responsibility , let us look at the comparative condition of Great Britain , if even fortitude and patience can bear to look at if , had the present war bt-en avoided by prudent counc ' ils ¦ and . if the one hundredmilllions of money absolutely thrown away upon it

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-03-01, Page 48” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031797/page/48/.
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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
ON THE MANNERS OF ANCIENT TIMES. Article 5
NOBLE SPEECH. OF A NATIVE OF AMBOYNA TO THE PORTUGUESE. Article 7
A DROLL CIRCUMSTANCE. Article 7
HISTORICAL FACT Article 8
A TURKISH STORY. Article 9
Untitled Article 10
ACCOUNT OF THE LATE GLORIOUS NAVAL VICTORY * Article 11
ORIGINAL LETTERS RELATIVE TO IRELAND. Article 18
LETTER I. Article 18
LETTER II. Article 21
ANECDOTE RELATIVE TO THE BASTILLE. Article 22
RISE AND FALL OF BEARDS. Article 24
ON THE CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH RENDER THE RETROSPECT OF PAST AGES AGREEABLE. Article 27
ON THE FASCINATING POWER OF SERPENTS. Article 30
ANECDOTES. Article 33
FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 35
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 38
REVIEW or NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 41
POETRY. Article 51
AN HYMN ON MASONRY, Article 51
SONG. Article 51
HYMN. Article 52
THE MAID's SOLILOQUY. Article 52
YRAN AND JURA. Article 53
THE SOUL. Article 53
LOUISA: A FUNEREAL WREATH. Article 54
SONNET II. Article 54
LINES, ADD11ESSED TO A YOUNG LADY, Article 54
ON ETERNITY. Article 54
SONNET. Article 54
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 55
Untitled Article 56
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 57
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 58
MONTHLY CHRONICLE Article 63
OBITUARY. Article 71
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Page 48

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

Review Or New Publications.

every thing that nature has done for its fecundity . I am persuaded that sugar-canes , cotton and indigo , would grow extremely well in the district of the Twenty-four Rivers . ' We trust that the liberality and extensive commercial views of the British Government , will second every thing M . Le Vaillant has here suggested 5 and that they will not be so blind to their own interests as the Dutch ' seem to have been . We may then shortly hope to see the Cape and its dependencies

the most wealthy and important of all our Colonies . ' In our next number we shall conclude our account of these volumes . , A Fiew of the Causes and Consequences of tbc Present Vi r ar -jnih France . By the Hon , Thomas Erskine . SOT . Price 2 S . Pages 138 . Debretf . The abilities of this eloquent popular Advocate , jwhich have so long adorned the English barare , in this pamphlet , brought forward to prove

, that an immediate change of Ministry can alone rescue tiiis country from the ruin which impends over it . Pie begins with an enquiry into the Causes of the War , which , he insists , was produced by the misconduct of Ministers , and the ambition of our allies , and not by any aggressions on the part of the French Republic , which might not have been amicably arrranged by negociation . He proceeds to take a general view of the conduit of the war on the part of the Court of London , andafter describing the condition to which

, Great Britain is now reduced by the continuance of the contest , insists , with all the force of eloquence and reason , that peace alone can ensure the safety , and even the very existence , of the country . These positions are maintained by a variety of arguments that appear to us incontrovertible . The motives alledged by Ministers , at different periods

since the beginning of the war , are proved to be either not their real ones , or , if real , to be fallacious ; and the failure of the mission of Lord Malmesbury ( to whose abilities as an Ambassador Mr . E . pays a very just tribute ) , is imputed to a want of sincerity on the p : i ,-1 of the British Government . To make extracts from a performance which must have been so generally read , from the number of editions it has undergone ( we review the twenty-- fourth ) , may appear superfluous ; but we cannot forbear -introducing to such

of our readers , as may not yet have perused tlie pamphlet itself , the following comparison of the state of this country at the present period , with her probable condition , if she had avoided the miseries resulting from the war . Her present state he describes thus : — ' Left almost single as we are upon the theatre of war—asking for peace , but asking for it in vain , upon terms which without war were not only within our reach to obtain . .. but left to us to dictate—asking for peace in France

under the pressure of a necessity created by our own folly—asking it of the regicide Direftory , whose existence ( 1 appeal to Mr . Burke and Lord Fitzwiliiam ) was pronounced to be perpetual war . Silent upon the subject of reli g ion , without any atonement to its violated altars—and seeking by a thousand suoterfuges and aitifices unworthy of a great nation ( and which must and will certainly be unsuccessful ) to restore peace without humbling the pride of the ministers who provoked the war , by consenting to terms which

nothing but their own imbecility could have raised France to the condition of offering , or have reduced England to the mortification of accepting . ' Such is the picture of what we are . With this Mr . E . contrasts what we might have been :. — ' To estimate rightly the extent of this responsibility , let us look at the comparative condition of Great Britain , if even fortitude and patience can bear to look at if , had the present war bt-en avoided by prudent counc ' ils ¦ and . if the one hundredmilllions of money absolutely thrown away upon it

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