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  • May 1, 1797
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1797: Page 13

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    Article WISDOM AND FOLLY: A VISION. ← Page 2 of 7 →
Page 13

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

Wisdom And Folly: A Vision.

dig with much more patience , through dirty rubt . ish , for the precious metals , than the Wise . The Wise are , indeed , much more sharpsighted at discovering the best places for digging , as at discovering every thing else ; but the Dull are the diggers . The Wise form the projects , the Dull get the gold . Dull-Land is also blessed with an excellent breed of beasts of burdenand particularlfamous for those

; y very useful animals , Asses . My guide now touched my eyesAvitha salve , which instantaneously enabled them to see to an infinitely greater distance than they could have done before through the finest telescope , and , as I afterwards found , to see through the fog . Surveying the mountainous country , noAV that my eyes were

cleared and strengthened , I perceived that , like Etna , it rose gradually , biit for a much greater space . I observed that it was divided into different regions or compartments , increasing in the two dissimilar qualities of steepness ancl fruitfulness , as the ascent rose . One phenomenon struck me , which ivas , that it was indented by a number of dens , which participated of the fog that overspread the valley below . ' These , ' said my guide , ' are dangerous passages , - through Avhich inhabitants even of the higher regions of Wisdom

often either insensibly glide , or rapidly plunge into the valley below—an easy descent , but a difficult recovery . Many , however , of the subjects of Wisdom , who have occasionally visited her Stultan Majesty , or even sojourned some time at her court , do , by their innate and habitual vigour , regain the regions of Wisdom . ' . - What is the qualification required , ' said I , 'to become a subject of Wisdom ?' 'Seeing , ' answered my guide ' and pursuing- the most useful and

, pleasant ends , and applying the most adequate means . The qualification of a subject of Folly is habitually either to pursue useless tnds , or to apply inadequate means . 'Turn your eyes to the right of the country you have been contemplating , and tell me what you discover . ' ' I see , ' said I , ' another mountain almost as high , and more steep , than Wise-Land .

Heavens , what a grand and beautiful prospect ! what AA'oods and lawns , and streams ! what deli ghtful verdure I The top appears to be sublime , the middle exquisitely beautiful ; but the lower part is grotesque , and seems to lose itself in the confines of Frivolity . ' ' That , ' said my guide , 'is Mount Fancy . Here are the A'ineyarcis and flower-gardens of Wise-Land . Observe their eminences , which so join Mount Fancy ancl Wise-Land , that it is difficult to say to which they belong . These are called the districts of Wit and

Humour . ' Strai ght down from W it and Humour , but at a great distance , is the region of Quibbles and Puns ; thither the Dull resort when they get frisk y , for the Dull are very fond of jokes , but can mount no higher than to the parts just mentioned . Formerly tbe Wise used very often to visit Pun-Land ; but now generally keep to the upper regions of Wit and Humour , and leave the lower parts as a playground to the honest Dull , knowing that thev can go no where else .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-05-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051797/page/13/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY, Article 4
WISDOM AND FOLLY: A VISION. Article 12
HISTORY OF THE GYPSIES. Article 19
CHARACTER OF THE POPE AND MODERN ROMANS. Article 22
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF THE GREAT EARL OF MANSFIELD. Article 25
DEVELOPEMENT OF THE VIEWS OF THE FRENCH NATION. Article 29
A VOYAGE Article 34
PRESENT STATE OF THE SPANISH THEATRE. Article 36
A WONDERFUL AND TRAGICAL RELATION OF , A VOYAGE FROM THE INDIES.* Article 38
ON APPARITIONS. Article 41
REMARKS MADE BY A LATE TRAVELLER IN SPAIN. Article 42
A REMARKABLE PRESERVATION IN THE GREAT EARTHQUAKE AT LISBON. Article 43
FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 44
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 46
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 48
POETRY. Article 56
EPILOGUE Article 56
EPIGRAM Article 57
ODE TO ELOQUENCE; Article 57
LINES ADDRESSED TO Mrs. BISHOP, Article 58
A SONG, Article 58
ON IDLENESS. Article 58
GOGAR AND DULACH. Article 59
ADAM AND ELLEN. * Article 59
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 60
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 62
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 63
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 68
THE GENERAL IN CHIEF OF THE ARMY OF ITALY TO HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS M. PRINCE CHARLES. Article 74
ANSWER OF THE ARCHDUKE TO BUONAPARTE. Article 74
DOMESTIC NEWS. Article 74
OBITUARY. Article 78
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Page 13

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

Wisdom And Folly: A Vision.

dig with much more patience , through dirty rubt . ish , for the precious metals , than the Wise . The Wise are , indeed , much more sharpsighted at discovering the best places for digging , as at discovering every thing else ; but the Dull are the diggers . The Wise form the projects , the Dull get the gold . Dull-Land is also blessed with an excellent breed of beasts of burdenand particularlfamous for those

; y very useful animals , Asses . My guide now touched my eyesAvitha salve , which instantaneously enabled them to see to an infinitely greater distance than they could have done before through the finest telescope , and , as I afterwards found , to see through the fog . Surveying the mountainous country , noAV that my eyes were

cleared and strengthened , I perceived that , like Etna , it rose gradually , biit for a much greater space . I observed that it was divided into different regions or compartments , increasing in the two dissimilar qualities of steepness ancl fruitfulness , as the ascent rose . One phenomenon struck me , which ivas , that it was indented by a number of dens , which participated of the fog that overspread the valley below . ' These , ' said my guide , ' are dangerous passages , - through Avhich inhabitants even of the higher regions of Wisdom

often either insensibly glide , or rapidly plunge into the valley below—an easy descent , but a difficult recovery . Many , however , of the subjects of Wisdom , who have occasionally visited her Stultan Majesty , or even sojourned some time at her court , do , by their innate and habitual vigour , regain the regions of Wisdom . ' . - What is the qualification required , ' said I , 'to become a subject of Wisdom ?' 'Seeing , ' answered my guide ' and pursuing- the most useful and

, pleasant ends , and applying the most adequate means . The qualification of a subject of Folly is habitually either to pursue useless tnds , or to apply inadequate means . 'Turn your eyes to the right of the country you have been contemplating , and tell me what you discover . ' ' I see , ' said I , ' another mountain almost as high , and more steep , than Wise-Land .

Heavens , what a grand and beautiful prospect ! what AA'oods and lawns , and streams ! what deli ghtful verdure I The top appears to be sublime , the middle exquisitely beautiful ; but the lower part is grotesque , and seems to lose itself in the confines of Frivolity . ' ' That , ' said my guide , 'is Mount Fancy . Here are the A'ineyarcis and flower-gardens of Wise-Land . Observe their eminences , which so join Mount Fancy ancl Wise-Land , that it is difficult to say to which they belong . These are called the districts of Wit and

Humour . ' Strai ght down from W it and Humour , but at a great distance , is the region of Quibbles and Puns ; thither the Dull resort when they get frisk y , for the Dull are very fond of jokes , but can mount no higher than to the parts just mentioned . Formerly tbe Wise used very often to visit Pun-Land ; but now generally keep to the upper regions of Wit and Humour , and leave the lower parts as a playground to the honest Dull , knowing that thev can go no where else .

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