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  • March 1, 1797
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1797: Page 49

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Page 49

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Review Or New Publications.

or even half of that sum , had been raised by a vigorous and popular administration for the reduction of tlie national debt . Fancy can hardly forbear to indulge in such a renovating scene of prosperity ; a scene which , unhappily , it is now her exclusive and melancholy privilege to resort to . ' We should have seen a moral , ingenious , and industrious people , consenting to an increase of burden to repair the errors of their fathers , and to ward off their from crushing their posteritybut enjoying

consequences ; under the pressure of them the virtuous consolation , that they were laying the foundation of a long career of national happiness ; seeing every relaxed and wearied sinew of the government coming back to its vigour ; not by sudden rest , which is an enemy to convalescence , but by the gradual diminution of the weight which over-pressed them . Observing new sources of trade and manufacture bursting forth like the buds of the spring as the frosts of winter are gradually chased away , and seeing with pride and satisfaction , in the

hands of a wise and frugal government , a large , and growing capital for the" refreshment of all its dependencies . To encourage and to extend marine establishments , our only real security against the hour when ambition might disturb the repose of nations ' . To give vigour to arts and manufactures , by large rewards and bounties . To feed and to employ the poor , by grand and extensive plans of national improvement . To remove by degrees the of licated revenueand with it the complicated and galling

pressure comp , penalties inseparable from its collection . To form a fund , to bring justice within the reach and to the very doors of the poor , and , by a large public revenue at the command of the magistracy , to ward off the miseries , the reflection of which , under the best system of laws in , the world , and under their purest administration , have wrung with frequent sorrow the heart of the writer of these pages . And , finally , to enable this great , benevolent , and enlightened country , with a more liberal and exhaustless hand , to

advance in her glorious career of humanising the world , and spreading the lights of the gospel to the uttermost corners of the earth . All these animating visions are , I am afraid , fled for ever . It will be happy now if Great Britain , amidst the sufferings and distresses of her inhabitants , can maintain her present trade , and preserve , even with all its defeats , her present -ines- . timable constitution . ' We leave our readers to indulge their own reflections , and form their own con elusions , on contemplating-these two pictures ; but we think every Englishman must see that that they are not more forcibly drawn , or more highly coloured , than the subject requires .

An Appeal lo the Moral Feelings of Samuel Thornton , Rowland Burden , Hawkins Brown , Esqrs . ancl the several Members of the House of Commons , -oho conscientiousl y support She present Administration . In a Letter to "W . Wilberforce , Esq . Zvo . Price is . Johnson . This pamphlet is a very fine appeal to the conscience and the feelings of our . countrymen , upon two subjects—Parliamentary Reform , and the manner in which the war has been conducted against France . It is grounded upon this assumed truth , that morality is essential to the well being of society ,

and may not be dispensed with , though s . fancied necessity require it . - In the outset the author declares himself unconnected with any party , unprejudiced in favour of any political characters , but attached to the . firm and inviolable principles , on which was reared the noble fabric of the British constitution . But he fears the vessel hath of late changed her steerage , and that her faithless pilot , is now guiding her headlong amidst rocks and quicksands . The practices at elections—the evasion and the breach of the most sacred of obligations , the obligations of an oath , he deems subversive of all moral aud religious principle -. and iu its consequences , therefore , destructive of the

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-03-01, Page 49” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031797/page/49/.
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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 49

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

Review Or New Publications.

or even half of that sum , had been raised by a vigorous and popular administration for the reduction of tlie national debt . Fancy can hardly forbear to indulge in such a renovating scene of prosperity ; a scene which , unhappily , it is now her exclusive and melancholy privilege to resort to . ' We should have seen a moral , ingenious , and industrious people , consenting to an increase of burden to repair the errors of their fathers , and to ward off their from crushing their posteritybut enjoying

consequences ; under the pressure of them the virtuous consolation , that they were laying the foundation of a long career of national happiness ; seeing every relaxed and wearied sinew of the government coming back to its vigour ; not by sudden rest , which is an enemy to convalescence , but by the gradual diminution of the weight which over-pressed them . Observing new sources of trade and manufacture bursting forth like the buds of the spring as the frosts of winter are gradually chased away , and seeing with pride and satisfaction , in the

hands of a wise and frugal government , a large , and growing capital for the" refreshment of all its dependencies . To encourage and to extend marine establishments , our only real security against the hour when ambition might disturb the repose of nations ' . To give vigour to arts and manufactures , by large rewards and bounties . To feed and to employ the poor , by grand and extensive plans of national improvement . To remove by degrees the of licated revenueand with it the complicated and galling

pressure comp , penalties inseparable from its collection . To form a fund , to bring justice within the reach and to the very doors of the poor , and , by a large public revenue at the command of the magistracy , to ward off the miseries , the reflection of which , under the best system of laws in , the world , and under their purest administration , have wrung with frequent sorrow the heart of the writer of these pages . And , finally , to enable this great , benevolent , and enlightened country , with a more liberal and exhaustless hand , to

advance in her glorious career of humanising the world , and spreading the lights of the gospel to the uttermost corners of the earth . All these animating visions are , I am afraid , fled for ever . It will be happy now if Great Britain , amidst the sufferings and distresses of her inhabitants , can maintain her present trade , and preserve , even with all its defeats , her present -ines- . timable constitution . ' We leave our readers to indulge their own reflections , and form their own con elusions , on contemplating-these two pictures ; but we think every Englishman must see that that they are not more forcibly drawn , or more highly coloured , than the subject requires .

An Appeal lo the Moral Feelings of Samuel Thornton , Rowland Burden , Hawkins Brown , Esqrs . ancl the several Members of the House of Commons , -oho conscientiousl y support She present Administration . In a Letter to "W . Wilberforce , Esq . Zvo . Price is . Johnson . This pamphlet is a very fine appeal to the conscience and the feelings of our . countrymen , upon two subjects—Parliamentary Reform , and the manner in which the war has been conducted against France . It is grounded upon this assumed truth , that morality is essential to the well being of society ,

and may not be dispensed with , though s . fancied necessity require it . - In the outset the author declares himself unconnected with any party , unprejudiced in favour of any political characters , but attached to the . firm and inviolable principles , on which was reared the noble fabric of the British constitution . But he fears the vessel hath of late changed her steerage , and that her faithless pilot , is now guiding her headlong amidst rocks and quicksands . The practices at elections—the evasion and the breach of the most sacred of obligations , the obligations of an oath , he deems subversive of all moral aud religious principle -. and iu its consequences , therefore , destructive of the

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