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  • May 1, 1796
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1796: Page 42

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    Article SOME PARTICULARS NOT GENERALLY KNOWN RESPECTING MONSIEUR BAILLY. ← Page 2 of 2
Page 42

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

Some Particulars Not Generally Known Respecting Monsieur Bailly.

His hands tied behind his back , he sometimes demanded when would be the end of so many hardships ? but these words were uttered with a calmness worthy of one of the first philosophers of Europe . He answered to one , who said to him , ' Thou tremblest , Bailly , '— ' My friend , it is from the cold . ' " If we were asked , how we were so well informed , let it be known that it was by the channel of the executioner , who , during die whole year , has not been a single day , without being called for in our execrable residence , and who related to our gaolers those shocking , but

wonderful circumstances . "Were I to abandon myself to the painful task of naming individually all the interesting beings sacrificed in so long a butchery , to speak in due terms of their virtues and courage , I should pile volumes on volumes . I confine myself to say , that death was become a trivial thing , and that Socrates himself , in the midst of 4000 persons of every and sexthat I have seen murdered in less than a yearcould not

age , , have surpassed them , except by his eloquence and his sublime speeches on the immortality of the soul . " In addition to these particulars , we find the following in another Paper ; ancl as any thing relative to a man who fills so great a place as Bailly , either in the literary or in the political world , cannot but be interesting and gratify ing to our readers , we give them without

apology . " Bailly wrote in his dungeon a Memoire Jnstificatif on all the facts he was indicted for , and especially on the affair of the Champ de Mars . That memoir was printed under the modest title of , Bailly to his Fellow-citizens ; but it is very little known : for though it was written with the greatest moderation , and inculpated nobody , and was only confined to the defence of a single accused person , no bookseller

or hawker dared to sell it . This is not one of the least striking features of the universal oppression under which a whole people groaned , who spoke of nothing but of liberty . " Bailly communicated his Memorial to some of the companions of his captivity ; and especially to a man of great sense , who , by the distinguished talents , and the wise princip les he had displayed in one of to be included in the Grande

our National Assemblies , deserved well Conspiration plotted by Roberspierre against all kinds of merit . " The friend of Bailly was strongly impressed with the evidence of the proofs that attested his innocence— ' if your Memorial is perused , ' said he , ' it is impossible they should condemn you . ' ' They ' will ' not read it , ' answered Bailly , ' and were they , they no less wish to have head shall have

would condemn me . They my ; they it ; and I think , ' he added , ' that such is their animosity , that they will change the nature of my punishment ; they will not deem the ordinary execution cruel enough . ' Then , after a moment of reflection , he pursued , ' That thought hangs heavy upon my heart , for the sake of the unfortunate victims who will fall after me , for the death bv the fruillotine is a very mild one . "

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-05-01, Page 42” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051796/page/42/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 4
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. FOR MAY 1796. PRESENT STATE OF FREEMASONRY IN SCOTLAND. Article 5
Untitled Article 10
COPY OF A LETTER. FROM THE REV. DR. STURGES, Article 13
THE FOLLY OF NOBLEMEN AND GENTLEMEN PAYING THEIR DEBTS, Article 16
SKETCHES OF THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF THE NORTH-AMERICAN INDIANS. Article 19
DISCIPLINE. Article 24
EXTRACTS FROM THE MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF EDWARD GIBBON, ESQ. Article 25
ON THE MASONIC JEWELS. Article 31
ON PRESENCE OF MIND. Article 33
THE DOG-TAX; A FRAGMENT. Article 35
CIVIC ANECDOTE. Article 36
EXCERPTA ET COLLECTANEA. Article 37
CLOWNISH SIMPLICITY. Article 38
BON MOT OF THE DEVIL. Article 38
ORIGINALITY IN DR. ROBERTSON AND MR. GIBBON. Article 39
SOME ANECDOTES OF HENRY PRINCE OF WALES, Article 40
SOME PARTICULARS NOT GENERALLY KNOWN RESPECTING MONSIEUR BAILLY. Article 41
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 43
LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 48
BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 49
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 50
THE FINE ARTS. Article 57
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 59
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 61
ANNIVERSARY OF THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 63
POETRY. Article 66
ELEGY, TO THE MEMORY OF STEPHEN STORACE , THE COMPOSER. Article 67
A NEW OCCASIONAL LYRIC, MASONIC EULOGIVM, Article 68
LINES TO DAPHNE, Article 68
Untitled Article 69
TO DELIA. Article 70
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 71
HOME NEWS. Article 73
PROMOTIONS. Article 77
Untitled Article 77
OBITUARY. Article 78
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 80
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Page 42

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

Some Particulars Not Generally Known Respecting Monsieur Bailly.

His hands tied behind his back , he sometimes demanded when would be the end of so many hardships ? but these words were uttered with a calmness worthy of one of the first philosophers of Europe . He answered to one , who said to him , ' Thou tremblest , Bailly , '— ' My friend , it is from the cold . ' " If we were asked , how we were so well informed , let it be known that it was by the channel of the executioner , who , during die whole year , has not been a single day , without being called for in our execrable residence , and who related to our gaolers those shocking , but

wonderful circumstances . "Were I to abandon myself to the painful task of naming individually all the interesting beings sacrificed in so long a butchery , to speak in due terms of their virtues and courage , I should pile volumes on volumes . I confine myself to say , that death was become a trivial thing , and that Socrates himself , in the midst of 4000 persons of every and sexthat I have seen murdered in less than a yearcould not

age , , have surpassed them , except by his eloquence and his sublime speeches on the immortality of the soul . " In addition to these particulars , we find the following in another Paper ; ancl as any thing relative to a man who fills so great a place as Bailly , either in the literary or in the political world , cannot but be interesting and gratify ing to our readers , we give them without

apology . " Bailly wrote in his dungeon a Memoire Jnstificatif on all the facts he was indicted for , and especially on the affair of the Champ de Mars . That memoir was printed under the modest title of , Bailly to his Fellow-citizens ; but it is very little known : for though it was written with the greatest moderation , and inculpated nobody , and was only confined to the defence of a single accused person , no bookseller

or hawker dared to sell it . This is not one of the least striking features of the universal oppression under which a whole people groaned , who spoke of nothing but of liberty . " Bailly communicated his Memorial to some of the companions of his captivity ; and especially to a man of great sense , who , by the distinguished talents , and the wise princip les he had displayed in one of to be included in the Grande

our National Assemblies , deserved well Conspiration plotted by Roberspierre against all kinds of merit . " The friend of Bailly was strongly impressed with the evidence of the proofs that attested his innocence— ' if your Memorial is perused , ' said he , ' it is impossible they should condemn you . ' ' They ' will ' not read it , ' answered Bailly , ' and were they , they no less wish to have head shall have

would condemn me . They my ; they it ; and I think , ' he added , ' that such is their animosity , that they will change the nature of my punishment ; they will not deem the ordinary execution cruel enough . ' Then , after a moment of reflection , he pursued , ' That thought hangs heavy upon my heart , for the sake of the unfortunate victims who will fall after me , for the death bv the fruillotine is a very mild one . "

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