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  • March 1, 1798
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1798: Page 70

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    Article OBITUARY. ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 70

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Obituary.

never went to bed sober . He served as a private in the royal army in the year 1715 , and at the age of 73 , with only five shillings in his pocket , walked from Newcastle to London , and back again , in the short space of eleven days , one of which he spent in the metropolis . The appellation ofDoctorwas conferred

. upon him , from the circumstance of his vending nostrums and quack medicines of his own preparing On the 13 th of February , in the 73 d year of his age , the Rev . William Holwell , B . D . Prebendary of Exeter , Vicar of Thornbury , and formerly Chaplain in Ordinary to his Majesty :

an able and firm supporter of the Christian faith ; he was the open enemy of bigotry and prejudice : the intricate discussions of bewildering controversy he relinquished for the simple lessons of piety and truth . In the civil department of a Magistrate , which he exercised upwards of 30 yearshis conduct

, was truly independent , temperate , and firm . I ^ et not his superior attainments and taste in polite literature and solid erudition be consigned to oblivion ; from candour they demand no ordinary praise . In a critical and intimate knowledge of the Greek language he yielded the palm to few . His ( ine edition of

Aristotle's Rhetoric , published at Oxford , though it modestly withholds his name , is a sufficient specimen of his talents as 0 scholar . Severely , cruelly disappointed in a former period of Ins life , he probably enjoyed more real happiness in the shade of retirement , than he would have done if favoured by the smiles of fortune .

' Si quis piorum manibus locus , si ut sapientibus placet , non cum corpore extinguunter magna : anuria : ; placide quiescas , uo ' sque domuin tuam Lib infirmo desiderio , & mulieribus laments ad contemplalioiiem virtulum tuarum voces , quas neque lugeri neque piangi fas est . '

At Exeter , Rear Admiral Truscot . ) S . At his house in Argyll- Street , at a very advanced age , General Maclean . Me was a younger son of a very amient and respectable family in North Britain , and , according to the custom of that country , was destined to acquire honour in the tented field . He

accordingly entered early in life into the service of the States-General of the United Provinces , then considered as VOL . X . B B

the best school of the military art for the natives of this island ; and by intense application soon acquired such a knowledge of his profession as might have justified him in looking up to ihe highest honour and preferment that a grateful prince could bestow : but the love of his native country was his ruling

passion ; all his acquirements were considered as useful only so far as they might advance her glory and interest . The first moment that his country seemed to require the exertion of his zeal and talents , he quilted the service of a Prince , who regretted his loss , to devote himself to that of his own

sovereign : and at that period—when under the auspices of the immortal Chatham , England obtained laurels which can never fade ; and whose remembrance yet swells with a noble pride the warlike bosoms of her intrepid sons— -the General raised a regt . of those brave men whom Chatham

boasted lie had sought and found in th . ; bleak mountains of the North . It is needless to add , that the talents and abilitiesof the commanding officer were conspicuous in the discipline , order , and fine appearance of the corps .

At the beginning of ( he American war , his active zeal and enterprizing spirit immediatel y drew him from repose , and prompted him to propose 10 collect those brave Highlanders ' scattered over America , who had fought and conquered under Wolfe , Murray , and 'Townshend , names for ever dear to

their country . As the Americans then kept the most watchful eye over every stranger , this was an arduous and dangerous enterprize , which would have appalled a less determined mind . With that courage , address , and perseverance , with which nature had endowed him , he surmounted every danger and

difficulty , and raised two battalions of brai-e and experienced soldiers , who rendered the most signal service to their country . When Arnold ancl Montgomery led the Americans into Canada , and boasted that they would take Quebec , it had the good fortune to have the General

within its walls . Defended by men of opposite characters and tempers , by his popularity , his unremitted activity , by exertions that seemed too great for the most robust constitution to support , the General knew how to unite and consolidate his seemingly inchorent and

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-03-01, Page 70” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031798/page/70/.
  • List
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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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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Obituary.

never went to bed sober . He served as a private in the royal army in the year 1715 , and at the age of 73 , with only five shillings in his pocket , walked from Newcastle to London , and back again , in the short space of eleven days , one of which he spent in the metropolis . The appellation ofDoctorwas conferred

. upon him , from the circumstance of his vending nostrums and quack medicines of his own preparing On the 13 th of February , in the 73 d year of his age , the Rev . William Holwell , B . D . Prebendary of Exeter , Vicar of Thornbury , and formerly Chaplain in Ordinary to his Majesty :

an able and firm supporter of the Christian faith ; he was the open enemy of bigotry and prejudice : the intricate discussions of bewildering controversy he relinquished for the simple lessons of piety and truth . In the civil department of a Magistrate , which he exercised upwards of 30 yearshis conduct

, was truly independent , temperate , and firm . I ^ et not his superior attainments and taste in polite literature and solid erudition be consigned to oblivion ; from candour they demand no ordinary praise . In a critical and intimate knowledge of the Greek language he yielded the palm to few . His ( ine edition of

Aristotle's Rhetoric , published at Oxford , though it modestly withholds his name , is a sufficient specimen of his talents as 0 scholar . Severely , cruelly disappointed in a former period of Ins life , he probably enjoyed more real happiness in the shade of retirement , than he would have done if favoured by the smiles of fortune .

' Si quis piorum manibus locus , si ut sapientibus placet , non cum corpore extinguunter magna : anuria : ; placide quiescas , uo ' sque domuin tuam Lib infirmo desiderio , & mulieribus laments ad contemplalioiiem virtulum tuarum voces , quas neque lugeri neque piangi fas est . '

At Exeter , Rear Admiral Truscot . ) S . At his house in Argyll- Street , at a very advanced age , General Maclean . Me was a younger son of a very amient and respectable family in North Britain , and , according to the custom of that country , was destined to acquire honour in the tented field . He

accordingly entered early in life into the service of the States-General of the United Provinces , then considered as VOL . X . B B

the best school of the military art for the natives of this island ; and by intense application soon acquired such a knowledge of his profession as might have justified him in looking up to ihe highest honour and preferment that a grateful prince could bestow : but the love of his native country was his ruling

passion ; all his acquirements were considered as useful only so far as they might advance her glory and interest . The first moment that his country seemed to require the exertion of his zeal and talents , he quilted the service of a Prince , who regretted his loss , to devote himself to that of his own

sovereign : and at that period—when under the auspices of the immortal Chatham , England obtained laurels which can never fade ; and whose remembrance yet swells with a noble pride the warlike bosoms of her intrepid sons— -the General raised a regt . of those brave men whom Chatham

boasted lie had sought and found in th . ; bleak mountains of the North . It is needless to add , that the talents and abilitiesof the commanding officer were conspicuous in the discipline , order , and fine appearance of the corps .

At the beginning of ( he American war , his active zeal and enterprizing spirit immediatel y drew him from repose , and prompted him to propose 10 collect those brave Highlanders ' scattered over America , who had fought and conquered under Wolfe , Murray , and 'Townshend , names for ever dear to

their country . As the Americans then kept the most watchful eye over every stranger , this was an arduous and dangerous enterprize , which would have appalled a less determined mind . With that courage , address , and perseverance , with which nature had endowed him , he surmounted every danger and

difficulty , and raised two battalions of brai-e and experienced soldiers , who rendered the most signal service to their country . When Arnold ancl Montgomery led the Americans into Canada , and boasted that they would take Quebec , it had the good fortune to have the General

within its walls . Defended by men of opposite characters and tempers , by his popularity , his unremitted activity , by exertions that seemed too great for the most robust constitution to support , the General knew how to unite and consolidate his seemingly inchorent and

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