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  • May 1, 1796
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1796: Page 43

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Page 1 of 5 →
Page 43

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Review Of New Publications.

REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS .

The Paradise of Taste . B y Alexander Thomson , Esq . author of Whist , a Poem . Cadell and Davies . 1796 . 4 / 0 . Pages 124 . Price 6 s .. TVTEVER were dtsjeBi membra facta more glaringly * exhibited than in this J- ^ motley composition . Avowedl y written in defiance of established authorities , it maintains a claim to' originality by extravagant methods ; and tins , at least , is certain , that the daring independence asserted in Mr T ' s preface , is preserved with tmabating irit throughout his inti

sp poem To - mate the writer ' s age , were needless ; abundant marks of youth are discoverable : felicity of expression , however , bursts forth occasionally , rolling : along such majestic floods of imagery , that , overwhelmed with the unexpected torrent , criticism" becomes lost in admiration . Tlie work being unique , we ' shall grant unusual latitude to its review . It divides itself into seven - Cantos , viz .: the Library ; Vision ; Garden of Beauty ; Vale oj Pity ; House of RidiculeMountain ofSublimity and Island of '

; Fancy We would here gladly close our remarks ; with advising Mr . T . to ride Pegasus with shorter reins in future ; but ours is a sacred office : we must not deal merely 111 loose , general observation . Examples are wanting to corroborate applause and censure . _ We objeft to a wanton change of versification in a continued poem . Poor indeed , is the performance that requires stage-trick to fix attention . The

profit and loss of such process are lamentabl y disproportionate . We are surprized—we expeft—we examine—we are disappointed . Irregularity and variety are not synonimous . —Our strictures in this respect are pointed because attempts are made at justification . ' The personification , Canto II . page 19 , forcibl y reminds us of Cowley ' s Gabriel . Johnson ' s celebrated sarcasm upon that description , is equally applicable to the portrait of Taste * . The celestial employments of Mr T ' s bards arefor the most partinsiid and ridiculous

, , p . Ovid , Ariosto , and Spenser , are huddled together upon a joint-stool ; whilst Virgil and Pope sit 111 chairs , to bear birds sing . Euri pides and Otway skulk ferdus in a cave h ontame either apes Narcissus of old , or makes eddies in the water . Racine and Rowe turn galley-slaves . Richardson lolls on a coffin . Svatius and Young are puny sprites squatting on the afex of a pyramid . Fielding tipples ateMohere CbampameCervantes Madeira they then mix their

, , ; beverage Lucian and Swift gobble down beef-steaks . Plautus , Aristophanes , and Kabelais , bespatter themselves with porridge . Sterne rests propped up bv two tombs , like a maudlin bacchanal—a leer in one eye , and a tear in the other . In fine , Shakespeare ( the author ' s favourite ) stands perched upon a cragged rock , « like eagle chained , " and carelessl y vibrates a vast club , too ponderous for other hands . . '

Canto VII . page 1 , 7 , presents a passage that we strove in vain to un oerstand : » . " -there of dazzling moons an army bright " Still broke the silence of the midni ght air , ' With many-shap'd and many-colour'd li ght , « ' With azure beams and purple splendors rare , " And many an oval green a . ; u , n . uiy ¦ * scmci = quare . "

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-05-01, Page 43” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051796/page/43/.
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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 43

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

Review Of New Publications.

REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS .

The Paradise of Taste . B y Alexander Thomson , Esq . author of Whist , a Poem . Cadell and Davies . 1796 . 4 / 0 . Pages 124 . Price 6 s .. TVTEVER were dtsjeBi membra facta more glaringly * exhibited than in this J- ^ motley composition . Avowedl y written in defiance of established authorities , it maintains a claim to' originality by extravagant methods ; and tins , at least , is certain , that the daring independence asserted in Mr T ' s preface , is preserved with tmabating irit throughout his inti

sp poem To - mate the writer ' s age , were needless ; abundant marks of youth are discoverable : felicity of expression , however , bursts forth occasionally , rolling : along such majestic floods of imagery , that , overwhelmed with the unexpected torrent , criticism" becomes lost in admiration . Tlie work being unique , we ' shall grant unusual latitude to its review . It divides itself into seven - Cantos , viz .: the Library ; Vision ; Garden of Beauty ; Vale oj Pity ; House of RidiculeMountain ofSublimity and Island of '

; Fancy We would here gladly close our remarks ; with advising Mr . T . to ride Pegasus with shorter reins in future ; but ours is a sacred office : we must not deal merely 111 loose , general observation . Examples are wanting to corroborate applause and censure . _ We objeft to a wanton change of versification in a continued poem . Poor indeed , is the performance that requires stage-trick to fix attention . The

profit and loss of such process are lamentabl y disproportionate . We are surprized—we expeft—we examine—we are disappointed . Irregularity and variety are not synonimous . —Our strictures in this respect are pointed because attempts are made at justification . ' The personification , Canto II . page 19 , forcibl y reminds us of Cowley ' s Gabriel . Johnson ' s celebrated sarcasm upon that description , is equally applicable to the portrait of Taste * . The celestial employments of Mr T ' s bards arefor the most partinsiid and ridiculous

, , p . Ovid , Ariosto , and Spenser , are huddled together upon a joint-stool ; whilst Virgil and Pope sit 111 chairs , to bear birds sing . Euri pides and Otway skulk ferdus in a cave h ontame either apes Narcissus of old , or makes eddies in the water . Racine and Rowe turn galley-slaves . Richardson lolls on a coffin . Svatius and Young are puny sprites squatting on the afex of a pyramid . Fielding tipples ateMohere CbampameCervantes Madeira they then mix their

, , ; beverage Lucian and Swift gobble down beef-steaks . Plautus , Aristophanes , and Kabelais , bespatter themselves with porridge . Sterne rests propped up bv two tombs , like a maudlin bacchanal—a leer in one eye , and a tear in the other . In fine , Shakespeare ( the author ' s favourite ) stands perched upon a cragged rock , « like eagle chained , " and carelessl y vibrates a vast club , too ponderous for other hands . . '

Canto VII . page 1 , 7 , presents a passage that we strove in vain to un oerstand : » . " -there of dazzling moons an army bright " Still broke the silence of the midni ght air , ' With many-shap'd and many-colour'd li ght , « ' With azure beams and purple splendors rare , " And many an oval green a . ; u , n . uiy ¦ * scmci = quare . "

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