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  • March 1, 1797
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1797: Page 5

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    Article THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY, ← Page 2 of 2
    Article ON THE MANNERS OF ANCIENT TIMES. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 5

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

The Scientific Magazine, And Freemasons' Repository,

no medical assistance could resist . He died on the 31 st day of May , 1793 . On the morning of the 4 th of April , his remains were interred in a vault in the south east corner of St . Paul ' s church-yard , Covent-Garden . His remains were attended by his son , Mr . Justice Addington , Mr . Goodenough , Mr . Howard , and others , who had been his intimate friends . The patroles of the metropolis also

attended the funeral , and , by their concern , manifested their feelings for the loss of so good a master : for , as he planned this useful guard , so , according to their merits , he protected them . If we consider the character of Sir Sampson Wright with attention , we shall find in it very much to admire . 'His beginning life so humbly , the more fully approved his talents and rectitude of conduct ;

and the faithful discharge of bis duties as a magistrate , clearly evinced fhe integrity of his princi ples and the goodness of his heart . The improvements and regulations he made in the general police of the metropolis , deserve the hi ghest praise , and will be remembered with gratitude by its inhabitants , whose safety so much depends on the Vi gilance of the presiding istrate at Bow-street , peculation and "

mag avarice , which are too often the concomitants of those holding public situations , cannot be laid to his charge ; and the greatest proof of his being clear in his great office ^ , is , that though the emoluments of it were considerable , and he lived without splendour or extravagance , the property he left behind him was very small , in consideration of what it might have been , had he been less zealous in his good wishes

towards the community . He left behind him only one son , who was brought up at Westminster , and afterwards sent to Trinity-College , Cambridge , where he acquitted himself with great credit . Soon after he left College , this son went out fo Newfoundland in the department of the Judge-Advocate-General , from whence he returned in the year 1 793 ; since which period , satisfied with the patrimony left him by his father , he has not been in any public situation ,

On The Manners Of Ancient Times.

ON THE MANNERS OF ANCIENT TIMES .

A N ingenious writer of the present times says , that the accounts ¦ £ *• which have been given by some authors of the wealth and splendour of the seventh century , are as fabulous as all the other miraculous things we read of in the history of those times . Their whole cloathing was of skins , or coarse woollens . The conveniences of life were not known : buildings , indeed , were erected with strength and

solidity , but conveyed no idea of either the affluence' or taste of the age . Neither much money , nor much knowledge of the arts , is required to pick up heaps of stones by the hands of slaves . One incontestible proof of the indigence of the people was , that taxes were levied in kind ; and that even the contributions which the inferior Clergy paid to . their superiors , consisted of provisions . The superstition "Vyhich prevailed , increased the general darkness . '

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-03-01, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031797/page/5/.
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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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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Scientific Magazine, And Freemasons' Repository,

no medical assistance could resist . He died on the 31 st day of May , 1793 . On the morning of the 4 th of April , his remains were interred in a vault in the south east corner of St . Paul ' s church-yard , Covent-Garden . His remains were attended by his son , Mr . Justice Addington , Mr . Goodenough , Mr . Howard , and others , who had been his intimate friends . The patroles of the metropolis also

attended the funeral , and , by their concern , manifested their feelings for the loss of so good a master : for , as he planned this useful guard , so , according to their merits , he protected them . If we consider the character of Sir Sampson Wright with attention , we shall find in it very much to admire . 'His beginning life so humbly , the more fully approved his talents and rectitude of conduct ;

and the faithful discharge of bis duties as a magistrate , clearly evinced fhe integrity of his princi ples and the goodness of his heart . The improvements and regulations he made in the general police of the metropolis , deserve the hi ghest praise , and will be remembered with gratitude by its inhabitants , whose safety so much depends on the Vi gilance of the presiding istrate at Bow-street , peculation and "

mag avarice , which are too often the concomitants of those holding public situations , cannot be laid to his charge ; and the greatest proof of his being clear in his great office ^ , is , that though the emoluments of it were considerable , and he lived without splendour or extravagance , the property he left behind him was very small , in consideration of what it might have been , had he been less zealous in his good wishes

towards the community . He left behind him only one son , who was brought up at Westminster , and afterwards sent to Trinity-College , Cambridge , where he acquitted himself with great credit . Soon after he left College , this son went out fo Newfoundland in the department of the Judge-Advocate-General , from whence he returned in the year 1 793 ; since which period , satisfied with the patrimony left him by his father , he has not been in any public situation ,

On The Manners Of Ancient Times.

ON THE MANNERS OF ANCIENT TIMES .

A N ingenious writer of the present times says , that the accounts ¦ £ *• which have been given by some authors of the wealth and splendour of the seventh century , are as fabulous as all the other miraculous things we read of in the history of those times . Their whole cloathing was of skins , or coarse woollens . The conveniences of life were not known : buildings , indeed , were erected with strength and

solidity , but conveyed no idea of either the affluence' or taste of the age . Neither much money , nor much knowledge of the arts , is required to pick up heaps of stones by the hands of slaves . One incontestible proof of the indigence of the people was , that taxes were levied in kind ; and that even the contributions which the inferior Clergy paid to . their superiors , consisted of provisions . The superstition "Vyhich prevailed , increased the general darkness . '

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