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  • April 1, 1796
  • Page 32
  • A TOUR THROUGH LONDON,
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The Freemasons' Magazine, April 1, 1796: Page 32

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    Article A TOUR THROUGH LONDON, ← Page 4 of 7 →
Page 32

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A Tour Through London,

tute of limitations ; the money having never been demanded on one side , nor acknowledged on the other ; and if the defendant , said they , allowed any little matter between them , when they came to reckon , the balance mi ght be on the other side . - Lord Mansfield , in a small distinct voice , observed , a balance was not likely to exist on the other side , because it appeared from the

trial , that this was the only transaction of property between them . That the plaintiff could not easily demand his money , while the other resided in America . That his acknowledging there might be some little matter between them , was acknowled ging the debt , by which the statute of limitations was done away . Though his Lordshidid not himself this statute

p express upon , it was easy to see he considered it as extremely useful , in preventing litigious , obsolete , and even false claims ; but he also considered , that time pays no debts , that every just demand should be satisfied , and that a debt once contracted is a debt till paid .

. THE WILLING LADIES . We are now entering upon the fairest part of the creation ; the prospects are beautiful , but the ground is treacherous . As I profess to relate only what I saw , it may fairly be supposed I preserve the same rule in this slippery chapter ; and , perchance , may be suspected of falling . But cannot a man describe the course of a river , without

descending into the stream ? Besides , he who is sheltered under the word sixty , may venture himself among any description of the fair sex , without hazard to their reputation , or his own . He may retreat without any additional honour to his virtue . I have alread y remarked in the introduction , that the curiosity of an object consists in its novelty . We may be surprized to see a man ht feet hi

eig gh ; but if we see him every day , the surprize ceases . How often have I beheld astonishment in the face of a stranger , at his first view of Birmingham ? such as , perhaps , was mine in London . His features told me , he had never seen its equal . Hence we members of the quill relate tiifles to others , which are wonderful to ourselves . But let him view Birmingham for three days , and his astonishment off

wears . : ¦ The philosophers will tell us , that one half of our species were born for the other , and that human nature is every where nearly the same . This species however , differs widel y from habit in different places . The manner in which the two sexes approached each other , in London , surprized me , as being different from what I had ever observed

. Before I had been one hour there , a gentleman remarked , as two ladies were passing along , " They were girls of the town . " I replied , " You must be mistaken , they appear ladies of beauty , elepnce , and modest y . " I could have laughed at his ignorance . But before I had been one da )' , he had reason , I found , to laugh at mine . . ° . These transitory meteors rise , like the stars , in the evening ; are lis

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-04-01, Page 32” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01041796/page/32/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE: AND CABINET OF UNIVERSAL LITERATURE. Article 5
MOON-LIGHT. Article 12
AN ADDRESS TO THE BRETHREN OF ST. JOHN'S LODGE, NO. 534, LAHCASTER. Article 14
EXTRACTS FROM THE MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF EDWARD GIBBON, ESQ. Article 17
SKETCHES OF THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF THE NORTH-AMERICAN INDIANS. Article 22
CHARACTERS OF CHILLINGWORTH AND BAYLE. Article 26
SCENE IN THE ALPS. Article 28
A TOUR THROUGH LONDON, Article 29
THE STAGE. Article 35
ON THE RETURN OF SPRING. Article 39
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 41
THE VANITY OF FAME. Article 42
ANECDOTES. Article 44
SINGULAR INSTANCES OF PUSILLANIMITY Article 46
SINGULAR INSTANCE OF GENEROSITY. Article 47
BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 48
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 49
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 54
LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 59
POETRY. Article 60
THE MASON,S PRAYER. Article 61
ELEGY. Article 62
TO THE MOON. Article 63
PROLOGUE TO VORTIGERN. Article 64
EPILOGUE TO THE SAME. Article 65
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 66
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 69
FROM THE LONDON GAZETTES. Article 70
STATE PAPERS. Article 75
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 77
HOME NEWS. Article 78
TRIAL OF VICE-ADMIRAL CORNWALLIS. Article 79
PROMOTIONS. Article 82
Untitled Article 82
OBITUARY. Article 83
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 85
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Page 32

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

A Tour Through London,

tute of limitations ; the money having never been demanded on one side , nor acknowledged on the other ; and if the defendant , said they , allowed any little matter between them , when they came to reckon , the balance mi ght be on the other side . - Lord Mansfield , in a small distinct voice , observed , a balance was not likely to exist on the other side , because it appeared from the

trial , that this was the only transaction of property between them . That the plaintiff could not easily demand his money , while the other resided in America . That his acknowledging there might be some little matter between them , was acknowled ging the debt , by which the statute of limitations was done away . Though his Lordshidid not himself this statute

p express upon , it was easy to see he considered it as extremely useful , in preventing litigious , obsolete , and even false claims ; but he also considered , that time pays no debts , that every just demand should be satisfied , and that a debt once contracted is a debt till paid .

. THE WILLING LADIES . We are now entering upon the fairest part of the creation ; the prospects are beautiful , but the ground is treacherous . As I profess to relate only what I saw , it may fairly be supposed I preserve the same rule in this slippery chapter ; and , perchance , may be suspected of falling . But cannot a man describe the course of a river , without

descending into the stream ? Besides , he who is sheltered under the word sixty , may venture himself among any description of the fair sex , without hazard to their reputation , or his own . He may retreat without any additional honour to his virtue . I have alread y remarked in the introduction , that the curiosity of an object consists in its novelty . We may be surprized to see a man ht feet hi

eig gh ; but if we see him every day , the surprize ceases . How often have I beheld astonishment in the face of a stranger , at his first view of Birmingham ? such as , perhaps , was mine in London . His features told me , he had never seen its equal . Hence we members of the quill relate tiifles to others , which are wonderful to ourselves . But let him view Birmingham for three days , and his astonishment off

wears . : ¦ The philosophers will tell us , that one half of our species were born for the other , and that human nature is every where nearly the same . This species however , differs widel y from habit in different places . The manner in which the two sexes approached each other , in London , surprized me , as being different from what I had ever observed

. Before I had been one hour there , a gentleman remarked , as two ladies were passing along , " They were girls of the town . " I replied , " You must be mistaken , they appear ladies of beauty , elepnce , and modest y . " I could have laughed at his ignorance . But before I had been one da )' , he had reason , I found , to laugh at mine . . ° . These transitory meteors rise , like the stars , in the evening ; are lis

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