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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • May 1, 1797
  • Page 42
  • REMARKS MADE BY A LATE TRAVELLER IN SPAIN.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1797: Page 42

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    Article ON APPARITIONS. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article REMARKS MADE BY A LATE TRAVELLER IN SPAIN. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 42

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

On Apparitions.

dream ; ' Avhich I desire you to forget , for you are now awake . ' Dr , Donne ansAvered , " I cannot be surer that I noAV live , than that I have not slept since I satv you : and I am -as sure , that , at her second appearing , she stopped , and looked me in the face , and vanished . " A servant was immediately sent to Drury-house in London , to know whether Mrs . Donne was living ; and , if alive , in Avhat condition as to her health . On the tAvelfth day the messenger returned with an

account , that he found , and left her , very sad , and sick in bed ; and that , after a long arid dangerous labour , she had been delivered of a dead child . And , upon examination , the abortion proved to be on the same day , and about the same hour , in which Dr . Donne affirmed that he saAV her pass by him in the room . ' If additional facts be deemed necessary to the above , and many

others recorded by authors , both ancient and modern , distinguished for their probity arid accuracy , we select another instance , extracted from an ingenious essay , which has lately appeared , by a Clergyman of the West of England , vindicating a belief in Spirits . * When Admiral Coates was commanding a Squadron in the East Indies , he met with this extraordinary incident : Retiring one nig ht to his lodging-room , he satv the form of his wife standing at his

bedside , as plainly ( he used to say ) as he had ever seen her m England . Greatly agitated , he hurried from the room and joined his brother Officers , Avho were not yet retired to rest . But willing to persuade himself that this appearance was a mere illusion , he went again into his bed-room , where he again satv his wife in the same attitude as before . She did not attempt to speak to him ; but then slowly waved her hand and disappeared . In the last letters he had recived from

England , he Aviis informed that his wife was perfectly well ; his mind , in short , had been quite composed . Of this very singular occurrence , however , he immediately set down the particulars in his memorandum-book , noticing the exact time in tviiich it happened . Fie saw also a minute made to the same purport by several of his friends on board . The ship had begun her voyage homeward ; so that

before he could receive any intelligence from England , he arrived there ; and on enquiry for his wife , he not only found she was dead , but that she died at the very same hour of thc nig ht when her spirit appeared to him in the East Indies . This account the Admiral himself has often given to a near relation , who had seen indeed the memorandum on the Admiral ' s pocket-book ; and who-more than once related the aboA'e particulars . "

Remarks Made By A Late Traveller In Spain.

REMARKS MADE BY A LATE TRAVELLER IN SPAIN .

TN Spain the eldest son of a Grandee is prohibited marrying the - " * heiress of one of equal rank . The writer names an instance , the Countess of'Bevenente , whose daughter is to inherit an income of 50 , 000 doubloons a year , about 35 , 000 ! . sterling yearly , and who is to be married to the second son of the Duke d'Opuna , who , a as cadet ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-05-01, Page 42” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051797/page/42/.
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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 42

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

On Apparitions.

dream ; ' Avhich I desire you to forget , for you are now awake . ' Dr , Donne ansAvered , " I cannot be surer that I noAV live , than that I have not slept since I satv you : and I am -as sure , that , at her second appearing , she stopped , and looked me in the face , and vanished . " A servant was immediately sent to Drury-house in London , to know whether Mrs . Donne was living ; and , if alive , in Avhat condition as to her health . On the tAvelfth day the messenger returned with an

account , that he found , and left her , very sad , and sick in bed ; and that , after a long arid dangerous labour , she had been delivered of a dead child . And , upon examination , the abortion proved to be on the same day , and about the same hour , in which Dr . Donne affirmed that he saAV her pass by him in the room . ' If additional facts be deemed necessary to the above , and many

others recorded by authors , both ancient and modern , distinguished for their probity arid accuracy , we select another instance , extracted from an ingenious essay , which has lately appeared , by a Clergyman of the West of England , vindicating a belief in Spirits . * When Admiral Coates was commanding a Squadron in the East Indies , he met with this extraordinary incident : Retiring one nig ht to his lodging-room , he satv the form of his wife standing at his

bedside , as plainly ( he used to say ) as he had ever seen her m England . Greatly agitated , he hurried from the room and joined his brother Officers , Avho were not yet retired to rest . But willing to persuade himself that this appearance was a mere illusion , he went again into his bed-room , where he again satv his wife in the same attitude as before . She did not attempt to speak to him ; but then slowly waved her hand and disappeared . In the last letters he had recived from

England , he Aviis informed that his wife was perfectly well ; his mind , in short , had been quite composed . Of this very singular occurrence , however , he immediately set down the particulars in his memorandum-book , noticing the exact time in tviiich it happened . Fie saw also a minute made to the same purport by several of his friends on board . The ship had begun her voyage homeward ; so that

before he could receive any intelligence from England , he arrived there ; and on enquiry for his wife , he not only found she was dead , but that she died at the very same hour of thc nig ht when her spirit appeared to him in the East Indies . This account the Admiral himself has often given to a near relation , who had seen indeed the memorandum on the Admiral ' s pocket-book ; and who-more than once related the aboA'e particulars . "

Remarks Made By A Late Traveller In Spain.

REMARKS MADE BY A LATE TRAVELLER IN SPAIN .

TN Spain the eldest son of a Grandee is prohibited marrying the - " * heiress of one of equal rank . The writer names an instance , the Countess of'Bevenente , whose daughter is to inherit an income of 50 , 000 doubloons a year , about 35 , 000 ! . sterling yearly , and who is to be married to the second son of the Duke d'Opuna , who , a as cadet ,

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