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  • March 1, 1798
  • Page 30
  • AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1798: Page 30

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    Article AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 30

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

An Historical Essay On Longevity.

nqt forsake him till the last months of his life . He never ' used spectacles , and , when at a great age , would frequently walk a cc * taple of miles . His usual food was eggs ; he never tasted boiled flesh ; sometimes he ate a little roasted , but always in very small quantity ; and he drank abundance of tea , with vosa solis and sugar candy . Ant . Senish , a farmer in the village of Puy , in Limoges , died in 1770 in the 111 th year of his age . He laboured till within 14 days

, of his death ; had still his teeth and his hairs and his sight had not fijiled him . Plis usual food was chesnuts and Turkish corn . He had never been bled , nor used any medicine . These are the most remarkable instances of great age in modern times with which we are acquainted . Persons of 100 years we omit , for these are more common . A carpenter died a few years ago at

Burgel , near Jena , in his 104 th year . He worked daily till his death ; and his favourite employment , at last , was spinning yarn . One day , as he was sitting at his wheel , his daughter observed it motionless ; she immediately went up to him , and—found him dead . . Physicians ought to claim here a distinguished place . But , unfortunately , this is not the case . It may be said of them , in general ; Aliis inser-viendo consumuntur ; aliis medendo morinntiir .

At any rate , mortality is greater among praftical physicians than among men of any other profession . They have the least opportunity of observing those rules and precautions for preserving health , which they lay down to others ; and there are few employments in which the powers both of the body and mind are exposed to so ' much consumption as in this . Plead and feet must be always exercised in common . But the greatest mortality prevails during the first ten

years of their practice . A physician who has withstood that period , attains to a strength of constitution , a kind of insensibility to fatigue and the causes of disease ; by custom , noxious effluvia and the poison of disorders become less prejudicial ; and he acquires more indifference for the scenes of woe , and the miseries , the consequences oi moral evil , which his business condemns him to be a daily spectatoi of : and thus a physician , who has passed his time of probation , maj become an old man .

A striking instance of this is afforded by Hippocrates , who lived to the age of 104 . His-life was employed in the study of Nature , travelling , and visiting the sick ; but he passed more of his time in villages , and in the country , than in great cities . — : GaIen , Hoffmann , Haller , Van Swieten , and Boerhaave , all attained to a considerable age . In regard to shortness of life , miners , and those employed in melting-houses , are particularly distinguished , as well as those who .

live under the earth , or are continually exposed to poisonous effluvia . In some mines , which contain abundance of arsenic and cobalt , the . workmen do not live to be older than thirty . We shall now take a short view of the difference of age , as arising from climate . Sweden , Norway , Denmark , and . Englancl , have without doubt produced the oldest men . Instances of some who . attained ' to the . age of 130 , 140 , and 150 , have occurred in these countries , ¦ VOL . x . u -

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-03-01, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031798/page/30/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 3
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF HER ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUTCHESS OF CUMBERLAND. Article 4
THE LIFE OF XIMENES, ARCHBISHOP OF TOLEDO. Article 5
BRIEF HISTORY OF NONSENSE. Article 11
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF GENERAL MUSKIEN. Article 13
ACCOUNT OF THE CABALISTICAL PHILOSOPHY OF THE JEWS. Article 14
WISDOM AND FOLLY. A VISION. Article 18
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Article 22
AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY. Article 29
AN ESSAY ON THE CHINESE POETRY. Article 31
CHARACTER OF SIR WILLIAM JONES. Article 34
THE LIFE OF DON BALTHASAR OROBIO, Article 36
THE COLLECTOR. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 42
GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 43
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 44
POETRY. Article 52
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 56
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 56
IRISH PARLIAMENT. Article 60
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
OBITUARY. Article 68
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Page 30

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

An Historical Essay On Longevity.

nqt forsake him till the last months of his life . He never ' used spectacles , and , when at a great age , would frequently walk a cc * taple of miles . His usual food was eggs ; he never tasted boiled flesh ; sometimes he ate a little roasted , but always in very small quantity ; and he drank abundance of tea , with vosa solis and sugar candy . Ant . Senish , a farmer in the village of Puy , in Limoges , died in 1770 in the 111 th year of his age . He laboured till within 14 days

, of his death ; had still his teeth and his hairs and his sight had not fijiled him . Plis usual food was chesnuts and Turkish corn . He had never been bled , nor used any medicine . These are the most remarkable instances of great age in modern times with which we are acquainted . Persons of 100 years we omit , for these are more common . A carpenter died a few years ago at

Burgel , near Jena , in his 104 th year . He worked daily till his death ; and his favourite employment , at last , was spinning yarn . One day , as he was sitting at his wheel , his daughter observed it motionless ; she immediately went up to him , and—found him dead . . Physicians ought to claim here a distinguished place . But , unfortunately , this is not the case . It may be said of them , in general ; Aliis inser-viendo consumuntur ; aliis medendo morinntiir .

At any rate , mortality is greater among praftical physicians than among men of any other profession . They have the least opportunity of observing those rules and precautions for preserving health , which they lay down to others ; and there are few employments in which the powers both of the body and mind are exposed to so ' much consumption as in this . Plead and feet must be always exercised in common . But the greatest mortality prevails during the first ten

years of their practice . A physician who has withstood that period , attains to a strength of constitution , a kind of insensibility to fatigue and the causes of disease ; by custom , noxious effluvia and the poison of disorders become less prejudicial ; and he acquires more indifference for the scenes of woe , and the miseries , the consequences oi moral evil , which his business condemns him to be a daily spectatoi of : and thus a physician , who has passed his time of probation , maj become an old man .

A striking instance of this is afforded by Hippocrates , who lived to the age of 104 . His-life was employed in the study of Nature , travelling , and visiting the sick ; but he passed more of his time in villages , and in the country , than in great cities . — : GaIen , Hoffmann , Haller , Van Swieten , and Boerhaave , all attained to a considerable age . In regard to shortness of life , miners , and those employed in melting-houses , are particularly distinguished , as well as those who .

live under the earth , or are continually exposed to poisonous effluvia . In some mines , which contain abundance of arsenic and cobalt , the . workmen do not live to be older than thirty . We shall now take a short view of the difference of age , as arising from climate . Sweden , Norway , Denmark , and . Englancl , have without doubt produced the oldest men . Instances of some who . attained ' to the . age of 130 , 140 , and 150 , have occurred in these countries , ¦ VOL . x . u -

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