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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • May 1, 1795
  • Page 30
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1795: Page 30

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    Article SPECIMEN OF AN. INTENDED HISTORY OF ENGLAND. ← Page 5 of 5
    Article THE FREEMASON. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 30

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Specimen Of An. Intended History Of England.

Justice . But his oratory was turned against itself ; and he forgot , in his hour of affliction , that he was provoking still further the clamours of an indignant public , by evincing the possession of those powers , a more politic direction of which might have transplanted him from the bar of the culprit to the bench of the bishop . . The Recorder of England ' s Capitalwhose sombrous lips were

, the vehicle of his sentence , omitted not to impress on the mind of the offender this deep aggravation of his criminality ; and a rumour went forth , that the tears of the penitent pickpocket of Kildare were wiped with a cambrick trophy of former achievements . At this hour I . mentally descry him in the . Bay of Botany , either-realising-the professions of contrition which he held forth in his defence , and a saint

among his fallen associates , or employing the interval of his septennial exile in devising new forms of fraud , new artifices of concealment , or new immunities from justice . Thus in one dark day was crumbled into dust the grandeur of the Hero of Hibernia ; and as he moved along , melancholy and slow , the hall of justice , there ran along the dome a collective si gh , that

stole from the bosoms of maids , and wives , and widows—a desponding host—while it was the common consent of all who assisted at the spectacle , that the sorrowing Son of Waldron had more the appearance of an emissary sent forth on the pious errand of propagating the gospel , or a new bishop on his way to the sacerdotal throne , with the prelatical nolo in his mouth , than the culprit of Kildare , transported by the . Recorder of the Capital of Albion to the realm of rogues in the Southern Main *

The Freemason.

THE FREEMASON .

No . V . Scribendi recte sapcrc est et principium et fons . Hon . Ans BOLT . IN answer to my poor correspondent in the preceding number , I must acknowledge that literature indeed is shamefully oppressed .

I would with all my heart ( and in so doing feel inexpressible deli ght ) give mj' patronage to any man of abilities ; but , alas ! mine would be of little avail ; and , to confess the truth , the name of patron seems now totally extinct . My correspondent must , from his own vision , be convinced of the severe trials of merit ; for , if I interpret rightly , his dream portends that arrogant bombast and nonsense are now

preferred to modest ' merit : nor are poets the only sufferers—how many unhappy men of the cfiurch may we daily behold unprovided for , who are possessed of greater erudition , and who in fact are more capable of giving instruction , than several of those who are promoted . From the depression of merit , I am certain that many valuable productions are lost . Had not Paradise Lost been introduced to the

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-05-01, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051795/page/30/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON : Article 1
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 4
THE STAGE. Article 6
SKETCH OF THE CHARACTER OF THE LATE JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ. Article 8
BRIEF HISTORY OF THE RELIGIOUS AND MILITARY ORDER OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS OF ST. JOHN OF JERUSALEM. Article 10
ANECDOTE OF THE LATE SIR RICHARD ARKWRIGHT. Article 19
ANTICIPATION. Article 20
EXTRACT FROM THE WILL OF THE LATE MR. BOWYER, PRINTER, OF LONDON. Article 22
CURIOUS PARTICULARS RESPECTING THE LAST KING OF CORSICA. Article 23
SPECIMEN OF AN. INTENDED HISTORY OF ENGLAND. Article 26
THE FREEMASON. Article 30
STORY OF URBAIN GRANDIER. Article 33
BASEM; OR, THE BLACKSMITH. AN ORIENTAL APOLOGUE. Article 39
ACCOUNT AND DESCRIPTION OF THE CHAPEL OF ROSLIN, &c. Article 46
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 50
POETRY. Article 59
PRESENTED TO A YOUNG LADY, Article 61
EPITAPH. Article 61
Untitled Article 62
AN ELEGY, Article 62
MUTUAL OBLIGATION. Article 63
TO THE STORKS AT AMSTERDAM. Article 63
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 64
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 68
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 69
BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Specimen Of An. Intended History Of England.

Justice . But his oratory was turned against itself ; and he forgot , in his hour of affliction , that he was provoking still further the clamours of an indignant public , by evincing the possession of those powers , a more politic direction of which might have transplanted him from the bar of the culprit to the bench of the bishop . . The Recorder of England ' s Capitalwhose sombrous lips were

, the vehicle of his sentence , omitted not to impress on the mind of the offender this deep aggravation of his criminality ; and a rumour went forth , that the tears of the penitent pickpocket of Kildare were wiped with a cambrick trophy of former achievements . At this hour I . mentally descry him in the . Bay of Botany , either-realising-the professions of contrition which he held forth in his defence , and a saint

among his fallen associates , or employing the interval of his septennial exile in devising new forms of fraud , new artifices of concealment , or new immunities from justice . Thus in one dark day was crumbled into dust the grandeur of the Hero of Hibernia ; and as he moved along , melancholy and slow , the hall of justice , there ran along the dome a collective si gh , that

stole from the bosoms of maids , and wives , and widows—a desponding host—while it was the common consent of all who assisted at the spectacle , that the sorrowing Son of Waldron had more the appearance of an emissary sent forth on the pious errand of propagating the gospel , or a new bishop on his way to the sacerdotal throne , with the prelatical nolo in his mouth , than the culprit of Kildare , transported by the . Recorder of the Capital of Albion to the realm of rogues in the Southern Main *

The Freemason.

THE FREEMASON .

No . V . Scribendi recte sapcrc est et principium et fons . Hon . Ans BOLT . IN answer to my poor correspondent in the preceding number , I must acknowledge that literature indeed is shamefully oppressed .

I would with all my heart ( and in so doing feel inexpressible deli ght ) give mj' patronage to any man of abilities ; but , alas ! mine would be of little avail ; and , to confess the truth , the name of patron seems now totally extinct . My correspondent must , from his own vision , be convinced of the severe trials of merit ; for , if I interpret rightly , his dream portends that arrogant bombast and nonsense are now

preferred to modest ' merit : nor are poets the only sufferers—how many unhappy men of the cfiurch may we daily behold unprovided for , who are possessed of greater erudition , and who in fact are more capable of giving instruction , than several of those who are promoted . From the depression of merit , I am certain that many valuable productions are lost . Had not Paradise Lost been introduced to the

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