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  • April 1, 1794
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The Freemasons' Magazine, April 1, 1794: Page 34

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    Article TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article A NARRATIVE Page 1 of 10 →
Page 34

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To The Editor Of The Freemasons' Magazine.

a better stile , or finer imagination . Moreover , it is the work of an apostate Abbe , namely , Laurence ; he published , _ about eighteen months since , a work intitled The jesuistical . He is a jroet formed by nature . The other is called Oriental Defpotism , by M . Boulanger . It is a book worthy of a Montesquieu : I know you are acquainted with the discover but to

editor : the Police has let loose all her furies to them * no purpose , and I am glad of it . Within a month we have had sixty assassinations , or fri ghtful lriurthers , considered in their circumstances ; war , luxury ; and extravagance , destroy this place . You know the Jesuits have no longer their colleges ; that we are

at the eve of banishing them out of the kindom . We begin , though tremblingly , to shew our teeth at old Grey Beard of Rome . Send me , as soon as you can , your fourth Canto of the Dispensary * If my Christina appears to you deserving the notice of your glorious p iratical gentry , get it translated as faithfully as possible . Adieu ! bestir yourselves ingrates ; praise God for all things ; admire nature ; it is the only way I know to live sometimes contentedl y *

A Narrative

A NARRATIVE

OF THE LOSS OF THE HONOURABLE EAST-INDIA COMPANY'S SHIP WINTERTON .

Augult I , 1793 . HAVING completed our water , and other necessaries in False Bay , we sailed at day-lig ht with a fresh breeze at N . W . with which we shaped our course to the S . E . fbi ; two days , when the wind shifted , and became variable , between the South and East , blowing fresh till the 9 th when a S . W . wind succeeded , of short continuance

, , for it soon returned to the S . E . It was Captain Dundas ' s intention , on leaving the Cape of Good Hope , to take the outer passage for India , but the winds , as has been stated above , inclining so much from the S . E . obliged him to deviate from his original purpose ; and on the ioth he accordingly bore away for the Mosambique channel . Being baffled with lig ht variable winds and calms , for some days our

progress was inconsiderable , but on the 19 th ( Sunday ) , a S . W . sprung up , which we had reason to believe was the regular monsoons , being then , to the best of my recollection ( as no Journals were saved ) , in 25 S , latitude . Captain Dundas , before he stood to the Northward , in order that he miht avoid the shoal named the Bassas de Indias , so uncertainly laid

g down in our charts , wished to make the Island of Madagascar somewhere near St . Augustin ' s Bay ; with a view to accomplish this end , we steered East by compass , from noon of the 19 th till midnight , when I relieved the second officer ; the captain was then on deck , and altered VOL . II . Mm

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-04-01, Page 34” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01041794/page/34/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 4
THE PRESENT STATE OF FREE MASONRY. Article 6
A CURE FOR ENVY. Article 9
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 10
CHARACTER OF EDWARD STILLINGFLEET, Article 13
CHARACTER OF CICERO. Article 15
LIFE OF THE RIGHT REVEREND GEORGE HORNE, Article 18
MEMOIRS OF THE LATE DR. PAUL HIFFERNAN. Article 25
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 32
A NARRATIVE Article 34
ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY, &c. Article 43
PLAN OF EDUCATION. Article 49
PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 52
THE WONDERFUL CUNNING OF A FOX. Article 57
MEMORABLE SPEECH OF THEOPHRASTUS Article 57
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 58
POETRY. Article 65
MASONIC SONG. Article 66
A LYRIC ODE, BY GRAY. Article 66
CONTEST BETWEEN THE LIPS AND EYES. Article 67
LINES Article 68
Untitled Article 69
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 71
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 75
DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 78
BANKRUPTS. Article 81
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Page 34

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

To The Editor Of The Freemasons' Magazine.

a better stile , or finer imagination . Moreover , it is the work of an apostate Abbe , namely , Laurence ; he published , _ about eighteen months since , a work intitled The jesuistical . He is a jroet formed by nature . The other is called Oriental Defpotism , by M . Boulanger . It is a book worthy of a Montesquieu : I know you are acquainted with the discover but to

editor : the Police has let loose all her furies to them * no purpose , and I am glad of it . Within a month we have had sixty assassinations , or fri ghtful lriurthers , considered in their circumstances ; war , luxury ; and extravagance , destroy this place . You know the Jesuits have no longer their colleges ; that we are

at the eve of banishing them out of the kindom . We begin , though tremblingly , to shew our teeth at old Grey Beard of Rome . Send me , as soon as you can , your fourth Canto of the Dispensary * If my Christina appears to you deserving the notice of your glorious p iratical gentry , get it translated as faithfully as possible . Adieu ! bestir yourselves ingrates ; praise God for all things ; admire nature ; it is the only way I know to live sometimes contentedl y *

A Narrative

A NARRATIVE

OF THE LOSS OF THE HONOURABLE EAST-INDIA COMPANY'S SHIP WINTERTON .

Augult I , 1793 . HAVING completed our water , and other necessaries in False Bay , we sailed at day-lig ht with a fresh breeze at N . W . with which we shaped our course to the S . E . fbi ; two days , when the wind shifted , and became variable , between the South and East , blowing fresh till the 9 th when a S . W . wind succeeded , of short continuance

, , for it soon returned to the S . E . It was Captain Dundas ' s intention , on leaving the Cape of Good Hope , to take the outer passage for India , but the winds , as has been stated above , inclining so much from the S . E . obliged him to deviate from his original purpose ; and on the ioth he accordingly bore away for the Mosambique channel . Being baffled with lig ht variable winds and calms , for some days our

progress was inconsiderable , but on the 19 th ( Sunday ) , a S . W . sprung up , which we had reason to believe was the regular monsoons , being then , to the best of my recollection ( as no Journals were saved ) , in 25 S , latitude . Captain Dundas , before he stood to the Northward , in order that he miht avoid the shoal named the Bassas de Indias , so uncertainly laid

g down in our charts , wished to make the Island of Madagascar somewhere near St . Augustin ' s Bay ; with a view to accomplish this end , we steered East by compass , from noon of the 19 th till midnight , when I relieved the second officer ; the captain was then on deck , and altered VOL . II . Mm

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