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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • March 1, 1798
  • Page 36
  • CHARACTER OF SIR WILLIAM JONES.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1798: Page 36

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    Article CHARACTER OF SIR WILLIAM JONES. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article THE LIFE OF DON BALTHASAR OROBIO, Page 1 of 2 →
Page 36

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Character Of Sir William Jones.

find dissipation . The poor felt the beneficial effects of this great change in their superiors ; and the suffering Hindoos found protectors instead of oppressors . It was not , however , only in his public character , that Sir William was thus eminentty distinguished ; in private life he abundantly possessed all those qualities which adorn the man , and render the possessor respected and amiable in society . The ardour of his friendshi

p was only to be equalled by its sincerity , and his liberal heart glowed with universal benevolence . As a married man , and as the head of a family , his affection , his fidelity , temperance , and regularity , rendered him a striking model of domestic virtue . He possessed , at all times , a noble independence of spirit ; to maintain which , he left the Museswho had been the deliht of his earllifefor a

profes-, g y , sion , to the severe duties of which he finally fell a victim in his fortyseventh year . When infidelity examines the modern names which belong to the list of her adherents , she will be puzzled to find one among them of sufficient weight to move the scale in counterpoise to that of JONES .

The Life Of Don Balthasar Orobio,

THE LIFE OF DON BALTHASAR OROBIO ,

A CELEBRATED SPANISH JEW .

"PftoN BALTHAZAR OROBIO was born at Seville , about the beginning ¦ ° ~* ofthe seventeenth century . He was carefully educated in Judaism by his parents , who were of that reli gion , though they outwardly professed themselves Roman Catholics ; abstaining from the practice , of the Jewish ceremonies in every thing except the observation of the fast of Expiation in the month Tisri , or September . Orobio studied the scholastic philosophy usual in Spainand became so skilled

, in it that he was made professor of metaphysics iu the university of Salamanca . But afterwards applying himself to the study of physic , he practised that art with such success , that his brethren , through envy , accused him of Judaism , and he was thrown into the Inquisition , where he suffered the most dreadful cruelties , to induce him to confess . He informs us himselfthat he was put into a dark dungeon

, , so strait that he could scarce turn himself in ^ it , and suffered so many hardships that his brain began to , be disturbed . He oiten talked to himself in . this way : 'Am I indeed that Balthasar Orobio who walked freely about in Seville , who was entirely at ease , and had the blessings of a wife and children ? ' Sometimes supposing that his past life was but a dream , and that the dungeon where he then lay was his

true birth-place , and which to all appearance would also prove the place of his death : at other times , as' he had a very metaphysical brain , he firstformed arguments of that kind , and then resolved them ; performing thus the three different parts of opponent , respondent , and moderator , at the same time . In this whimsical way he amused himself , and constantly denied that he was a Jew . After bavin- ap-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-03-01, Page 36” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031798/page/36/.
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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 36

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

Character Of Sir William Jones.

find dissipation . The poor felt the beneficial effects of this great change in their superiors ; and the suffering Hindoos found protectors instead of oppressors . It was not , however , only in his public character , that Sir William was thus eminentty distinguished ; in private life he abundantly possessed all those qualities which adorn the man , and render the possessor respected and amiable in society . The ardour of his friendshi

p was only to be equalled by its sincerity , and his liberal heart glowed with universal benevolence . As a married man , and as the head of a family , his affection , his fidelity , temperance , and regularity , rendered him a striking model of domestic virtue . He possessed , at all times , a noble independence of spirit ; to maintain which , he left the Museswho had been the deliht of his earllifefor a

profes-, g y , sion , to the severe duties of which he finally fell a victim in his fortyseventh year . When infidelity examines the modern names which belong to the list of her adherents , she will be puzzled to find one among them of sufficient weight to move the scale in counterpoise to that of JONES .

The Life Of Don Balthasar Orobio,

THE LIFE OF DON BALTHASAR OROBIO ,

A CELEBRATED SPANISH JEW .

"PftoN BALTHAZAR OROBIO was born at Seville , about the beginning ¦ ° ~* ofthe seventeenth century . He was carefully educated in Judaism by his parents , who were of that reli gion , though they outwardly professed themselves Roman Catholics ; abstaining from the practice , of the Jewish ceremonies in every thing except the observation of the fast of Expiation in the month Tisri , or September . Orobio studied the scholastic philosophy usual in Spainand became so skilled

, in it that he was made professor of metaphysics iu the university of Salamanca . But afterwards applying himself to the study of physic , he practised that art with such success , that his brethren , through envy , accused him of Judaism , and he was thrown into the Inquisition , where he suffered the most dreadful cruelties , to induce him to confess . He informs us himselfthat he was put into a dark dungeon

, , so strait that he could scarce turn himself in ^ it , and suffered so many hardships that his brain began to , be disturbed . He oiten talked to himself in . this way : 'Am I indeed that Balthasar Orobio who walked freely about in Seville , who was entirely at ease , and had the blessings of a wife and children ? ' Sometimes supposing that his past life was but a dream , and that the dungeon where he then lay was his

true birth-place , and which to all appearance would also prove the place of his death : at other times , as' he had a very metaphysical brain , he firstformed arguments of that kind , and then resolved them ; performing thus the three different parts of opponent , respondent , and moderator , at the same time . In this whimsical way he amused himself , and constantly denied that he was a Jew . After bavin- ap-

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