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  • May 1, 1798
  • Page 4
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1798: Page 4

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    Article MEMOIR OF THE COUNTESS OF DERBY, ← Page 2 of 2
    Article DESCRIPTION OF THE SOURCE OF THE RHINE, Page 1 of 3 →
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Memoir Of The Countess Of Derby,

sincerity of his affe & ion for Miss Farren , by raising her to the merited ' rank of a Countess , May 8 , 1797 . ' Soon after this long-expected union had taken place , her Ladyship was introduced at Court , and made one of the procession at the nuptials of the Princess Royal with the Hereditary Prince of ' Wirremburg . Her Ladyship was lately delivered of a still-born child .

We here close our view of the Countess of Derby , leaving it to her own clear and undiminished lustre to speak her future praise ; in rso degree doubting that the rectitude which has preserved her from incurring merited censure in situations the most critical and trying , will enable her to maintain the exalted staiion to which she has arrived with-an honour equal to the virtue which she has procure ! it . *

Description Of The Source Of The Rhine,

DESCRIPTION OF THE SOURCE OF THE RHINE ,

WITH . THE ADJACENT SCENERY . fFKOM MISS WILLIAMS ' S TOITK TN . SWITZSRI-AND , JUST PUILISHEB , ]

ID EFORE we bid adieu to the Alpine regions , we went up the valley to visit the spot from whence the Rhine draws its first and principal source , at . the foot of the Glacier which we had visited the preceding day , but some miles nearer the mass . of mountains of which that Glacier , is a branch , There are three sources , to this celebrated river ; one , called the Lower Rhine , rises from that part of the

mountain of St . Gothard which stretches bejiind the valley , of Urscren , and flows along the Grison valley of Tavelsch : the middle source springs from the western extremity of the Glacier of the Vogelsberg , and flowing through the valley of . Medels , joins the former , at the distanceof some leagues , near the Abbey of Disentis ; the Hi gher Rhine , which is said to have been the only branch known to the ancients , proceeding from the mass of mountains formerly called the Adula ,

runs from the eastern extremity of the Vogelsberg , or Bird-mountain , below the point called the Moschelhonr , and there , it is said , was built a temple consecrated to the guardian god of the stream , whose tranquil slumbers Boileau describes in one of his epistles * . ' Au pied du Mont Adule , entre mille roseaux , Le Rhin , tranquille et fier du progrcs . de seseatix ,

Appuye d'une main sur son urne penchante , Dormoit au bruit de son oncie na ' i ' ssante . " Whether Boileau took part of his description from the statue of this river-god in the Thtiiileries , or , what is more probable , the . sculptor borrowed the idea of his statue from the poet , the p lace itself is not unworthy of the divinity .-We were now at the source of that river , whose gentle current had heretofore g lided from its tranquil and solitary abode , to witness the

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-05-01, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051798/page/4/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
MEMOIR OF THE COUNTESS OF DERBY, Article 3
DESCRIPTION OF THE SOURCE OF THE RHINE, Article 4
WISDOM AND FOLLY. Article 7
HAWKESWORTH'S NOTES on ROBERTSON'S HISTORY OF SCOTLAND. Article 10
LETTER II. Article 12
PROCEEDINGS OF A GREAT COUNCIL OF JEWS, Article 14
COLVILLE. Article 17
THE LIFE OF XIMENES, ARCHBISHOP OF TOLEDO. Article 23
A BRIEF ENQUIRY INTO THE LEARNING OF SHAKSPEARE. Article 29
SCIENTIFIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 33
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 45
POETRY. Article 47
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 49
IRISH PARLIAMENT. Article 55
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 56
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 57
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Memoir Of The Countess Of Derby,

sincerity of his affe & ion for Miss Farren , by raising her to the merited ' rank of a Countess , May 8 , 1797 . ' Soon after this long-expected union had taken place , her Ladyship was introduced at Court , and made one of the procession at the nuptials of the Princess Royal with the Hereditary Prince of ' Wirremburg . Her Ladyship was lately delivered of a still-born child .

We here close our view of the Countess of Derby , leaving it to her own clear and undiminished lustre to speak her future praise ; in rso degree doubting that the rectitude which has preserved her from incurring merited censure in situations the most critical and trying , will enable her to maintain the exalted staiion to which she has arrived with-an honour equal to the virtue which she has procure ! it . *

Description Of The Source Of The Rhine,

DESCRIPTION OF THE SOURCE OF THE RHINE ,

WITH . THE ADJACENT SCENERY . fFKOM MISS WILLIAMS ' S TOITK TN . SWITZSRI-AND , JUST PUILISHEB , ]

ID EFORE we bid adieu to the Alpine regions , we went up the valley to visit the spot from whence the Rhine draws its first and principal source , at . the foot of the Glacier which we had visited the preceding day , but some miles nearer the mass . of mountains of which that Glacier , is a branch , There are three sources , to this celebrated river ; one , called the Lower Rhine , rises from that part of the

mountain of St . Gothard which stretches bejiind the valley , of Urscren , and flows along the Grison valley of Tavelsch : the middle source springs from the western extremity of the Glacier of the Vogelsberg , and flowing through the valley of . Medels , joins the former , at the distanceof some leagues , near the Abbey of Disentis ; the Hi gher Rhine , which is said to have been the only branch known to the ancients , proceeding from the mass of mountains formerly called the Adula ,

runs from the eastern extremity of the Vogelsberg , or Bird-mountain , below the point called the Moschelhonr , and there , it is said , was built a temple consecrated to the guardian god of the stream , whose tranquil slumbers Boileau describes in one of his epistles * . ' Au pied du Mont Adule , entre mille roseaux , Le Rhin , tranquille et fier du progrcs . de seseatix ,

Appuye d'une main sur son urne penchante , Dormoit au bruit de son oncie na ' i ' ssante . " Whether Boileau took part of his description from the statue of this river-god in the Thtiiileries , or , what is more probable , the . sculptor borrowed the idea of his statue from the poet , the p lace itself is not unworthy of the divinity .-We were now at the source of that river , whose gentle current had heretofore g lided from its tranquil and solitary abode , to witness the

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