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  • June 1, 1797
  • Page 46
  • REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, June 1, 1797: Page 46

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. ← Page 2 of 8 →
Page 46

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

Review Of New Publications.

Armine is pathetically expressed . The struggles in Henry ' s mind , between duty and affection , are powerful ; but in the end princi ple prevails over passion , and the dying injunctions of Sir Armine are religiously obeyed by the duteous youth , who , in blessing Olivia , renders himself miserable . Lady Stuart falls a martyr to her husband's treatment , and Providence punishes the murderer , by making him the victim of his own vices . His associates gain a complete ascendancy over him ; . his quondam mistress trepans him

into marriage , and , with the help of her paramour , robs him of all his property .. In the outset of her career she obliges his children to quit their paternal seat . Their first asylum is the chapel-house-belonging to the family mansion , and inhabited by Father Arthur , who is confessedly the venerable Dr . O'Leary . In their exile , they are attended by another excellent domestic , the faithful steward Dennison . Their residence here is of short duration ; but before he leaves his favourite retirement , the good priest determines on

viisiting the abbey , to give a farewell sermon to his wretched patron . The manner in which this mission is described would not have discredited Cervantes , Le Sage , or Fielding . By a variety of steps Sir Guise accelerates his ruin . He is reduced to wander the streets of the metropolis at midnight , while his wife riots in alj the depravities of fashionable extravagance . In this condition he obtains shelter at the house of an old servant of his own , from whence he sets out on

the western road , and becomes dependant on the casual care of Henry Fitzorton ' s attendant , True George , who contrives , with the Kelp of his mistress , to secret the guilty outcast in the forsaken walls of bis own house . Here , in seclusion and sickness , conscience rouses its forces in the bosom of Sir Guise , and a deep repentance is the happy result . The assiduity of Olivia and Sir John F . procures the return of Charles and Caroline , to render the last scene of their wretched father's existence more comfortable . The

death-bed of penitence is awfully described . After filling up a horrid climax of crimes , Lady Guise and her confederates pay the just forfeiture of their lives to the violated laws of their country .. The all-accomplished Olivia , ever unsuspicious of her Henry ' s alienated affection , contracts a fever by her unremitted attention to the youngest of her three children . Thus ' she and her babe , the former almost as free from the tinge of the world as the latter , expired within a few hours of each other . '

The flame which had so long preyed upon Henry ' s peace is hereby again ' revived ; but another dreadful bar is thrown in the way of hope , by the seclusion of Caroline in a French monastery , where she is actually on the eve x > f taking the veil . Our readers will easily anticipate the event . There are several other characters exhibited in the course of this variegated narrative ; all of which are well drawn , and none of them is unnecessarily introduced . One of these is Jane Atwood , an amiable country girl ,

deluded from her father ' s house by Sir Guise , seduced by him under a pretended marriage , and then cast out upon the world to earn the wages ol infamy . The unhappy victim , however , returns like the prodigal toiler father ' s home , and the villainous seducer , irritated at the circumstance , wreaks his vengeance on the distressed family , by reducing them to utter ruin . In this condition they are taken into the protection of the Fitzortons , and the penitent magdalcn becomes the favourite attendant of Olivia . Between her and True

George , the servant of Henry , a happy union takes place ; and we cannot help noticing here the generous conduct of this domestic , who , while he was paying his addresses to the unfortunate Jane , yet takes her fallen seducer into l . is protection , labours assiduously for his benefit , and even endeavours to console and revive his dejected spirits under his misfortunes .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-06-01, Page 46” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01061797/page/46/.
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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
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 4
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 5
AUTHENTIC MEMOIRS OF THE LAST YEAR OF LOUIS THE SIXTEENTH. Article 7
ANECDOTES RESPECTING THE LIFE AND DISCOVERIES OF PYTHAGORAS. Article 11
ESSAY ON POLITENESS. Article 15
ESSAY ON POLITENESS. Article 17
A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF RICHARD PARKER. Article 20
AN APOLOGY FOR THE CHARACTER AND CONDUCT OF IAGO. Article 21
AN ACCOUNT OF CHARLES THE FIRST's ENTRY INTO EDINBURGH, Article 27
A WRITING OF QUEEN MARY. Article 28
HISTORY OF THE GYPSIES. Article 29
FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 31
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 33
ANNIVERSARY OF THE CUMBERLAND FREEMASONS' SCHOOL , Article 41
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 43
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA . Article 43
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 45
POETRY. Article 53
A MINSTREL's SONG. Article 53
ADDRESS. Article 54
GARRICK'S MONUMENT. Article 55
HOMO TRESSIS. Article 55
ANALOGY. Article 55
OLD BEN BLOCK'S ADVICE TO THE BRAVE TARS OF OLD ENGLAND. Article 55
PROLOGUE TO THE WANDERING JEW. Article 56
ITALIAN V. LLAGERS. Article 56
A SONG, Article 56
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 57
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 58
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 63
DOMESTIC NEWS. Article 69
THE TRIAL OF RICHARD PARKER, THE MUTINEER, BY COURT MARTIAL. Article 79
INDEX TO THE EIGHTH VOLUME. Article 97
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Page 46

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

Review Of New Publications.

Armine is pathetically expressed . The struggles in Henry ' s mind , between duty and affection , are powerful ; but in the end princi ple prevails over passion , and the dying injunctions of Sir Armine are religiously obeyed by the duteous youth , who , in blessing Olivia , renders himself miserable . Lady Stuart falls a martyr to her husband's treatment , and Providence punishes the murderer , by making him the victim of his own vices . His associates gain a complete ascendancy over him ; . his quondam mistress trepans him

into marriage , and , with the help of her paramour , robs him of all his property .. In the outset of her career she obliges his children to quit their paternal seat . Their first asylum is the chapel-house-belonging to the family mansion , and inhabited by Father Arthur , who is confessedly the venerable Dr . O'Leary . In their exile , they are attended by another excellent domestic , the faithful steward Dennison . Their residence here is of short duration ; but before he leaves his favourite retirement , the good priest determines on

viisiting the abbey , to give a farewell sermon to his wretched patron . The manner in which this mission is described would not have discredited Cervantes , Le Sage , or Fielding . By a variety of steps Sir Guise accelerates his ruin . He is reduced to wander the streets of the metropolis at midnight , while his wife riots in alj the depravities of fashionable extravagance . In this condition he obtains shelter at the house of an old servant of his own , from whence he sets out on

the western road , and becomes dependant on the casual care of Henry Fitzorton ' s attendant , True George , who contrives , with the Kelp of his mistress , to secret the guilty outcast in the forsaken walls of bis own house . Here , in seclusion and sickness , conscience rouses its forces in the bosom of Sir Guise , and a deep repentance is the happy result . The assiduity of Olivia and Sir John F . procures the return of Charles and Caroline , to render the last scene of their wretched father's existence more comfortable . The

death-bed of penitence is awfully described . After filling up a horrid climax of crimes , Lady Guise and her confederates pay the just forfeiture of their lives to the violated laws of their country .. The all-accomplished Olivia , ever unsuspicious of her Henry ' s alienated affection , contracts a fever by her unremitted attention to the youngest of her three children . Thus ' she and her babe , the former almost as free from the tinge of the world as the latter , expired within a few hours of each other . '

The flame which had so long preyed upon Henry ' s peace is hereby again ' revived ; but another dreadful bar is thrown in the way of hope , by the seclusion of Caroline in a French monastery , where she is actually on the eve x > f taking the veil . Our readers will easily anticipate the event . There are several other characters exhibited in the course of this variegated narrative ; all of which are well drawn , and none of them is unnecessarily introduced . One of these is Jane Atwood , an amiable country girl ,

deluded from her father ' s house by Sir Guise , seduced by him under a pretended marriage , and then cast out upon the world to earn the wages ol infamy . The unhappy victim , however , returns like the prodigal toiler father ' s home , and the villainous seducer , irritated at the circumstance , wreaks his vengeance on the distressed family , by reducing them to utter ruin . In this condition they are taken into the protection of the Fitzortons , and the penitent magdalcn becomes the favourite attendant of Olivia . Between her and True

George , the servant of Henry , a happy union takes place ; and we cannot help noticing here the generous conduct of this domestic , who , while he was paying his addresses to the unfortunate Jane , yet takes her fallen seducer into l . is protection , labours assiduously for his benefit , and even endeavours to console and revive his dejected spirits under his misfortunes .

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