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  • July 1, 1793
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  • MEMOIRS OF PRINCE RUPERT,
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The Freemasons' Magazine, July 1, 1793: Page 77

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Page 77

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Memoirs Of Prince Rupert,

Society . In the year 1666 , the king entrusted him , in conjunction with the duke of Albemarle , to command the fleet , when he exhibited all the qualities that are necessary to constitute JI great admiral . By his happy return to the fleet , on the 3 d of June , he wrested from the Dutch the only victory they had the appearance of gainingand afterwards the 24 th of the same monthhe beat them

; , on , efrecuially , pursued them to their own coast , and blocked up their harbour . Indeed , the great intrepidity which prince Rupert displayed , in this naval war , was highly and justly celebrated in his own time ; and in the last Dutch war he seemed to retain all the activity and fire of his youth , and beat the enemy 111 several engagements . . and retired

From this time prince Rupert led a quiet , chiefly a life , mostly at Windsor-castle , of which he was governor ; and he very much employed himself in the prosecution of chemical and philosophical experiments , as well as in the practice of mechanic arts , for which he was very famous . He is mentioned by foreign authors with applause for his skill in painting ; and is considered as the inventor of mezzotinto , of which he is said tp have taken the hint from a soldier scraping his rusty fusil . The circumstances are

thus related : —The prince going out early one morning , observed , a centinel ,. at some distance from his post , very busy doing something to his p iece . The prince asked what he was about ? He replied , that the dew had fallen in the night , had made his fusil rusty , and that he was scraping and cleaning it . The prince looking at it , was struck with something like a figure eaten into the closed like fnezed

barrel , with innumerable little holes together , work on gold orsilver , part of which the soldier had scraped away .-From this trifling incident , prince Rupert is said to have conceived mezzotinto . He concluded , that some contrivance might be found to cover a brass p late with such a grained ground of fine pressed holeswhich would undoubtedl ive an impression all

, y , g ; black , and that by scraping away proper parts , the smooth superficies would leave the rest of the paper white . Communicating his ideas to Wallerant Vaillant , a painter whom he maintained , they made several experiments , and at last invented a steel roller , cut with tools to make teeth like a file or rasp , with projecting pointswhich effectually produced the black grounds ; those being

, scraped away , and diminished at pleasure , left the gradations of lig ht . It is said , that the first mezzotinto print ever published was executed by his highness himself . It may be seen in the first edition - of Evelyn ' s Sculpture ; and there is a copy of it in the second

edition , printed m 1755 . Prince Rupert also delig hted in making locks for fire-arms , and was the inventor of a composition , called from him prince ' s metal , and in which guns were cast . He communicated to the Royal Society his improvements upon gunpowder , by refining the several ingredients , and making it more carefully , by which , as appeared , by several experiments , it ' s force was augmented , in comparison at

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-07-01, Page 77” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01071793/page/77/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO THE LIBERAL PATRONS OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 3
EXPLANATION OF THE ENGRAVINGS. Article 4
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 4
Untitled Article 6
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE: OR, GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 7
CHARITY THE DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTIC OF MASONS. Article 9
THE HISTORY OF FRANCE. Article 11
THE GENERAL HISTORY OF CHINA: Article 15
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 19
AN EASTERN NOVEL. Article 21
ON THE NATURE AND PROPERTIES OF AIR. Article 25
FROM A PERSIAN IN LONDON TO HIS CORRESPONDENT IN BENGAL. Article 27
ON THE SAGACITY OF A SPIDER; IT'S STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES DELINEATED. Article 30
SEARCH AFTER HAPPINESS. Article 33
MELESICHTON. Article 35
ON EDUCATION. Article 37
For the FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 39
ON RETIREMENT. Article 41
AN ACCOUNT OF THE MONKS, Article 43
DESCRIPTION OF POMPEY's PILLAR Article 45
ON EPITAPHS. Article 47
OF ANIMALS LIVING IN SOLID BODIES. Article 48
ANECDOTE OF THE LATE DR. DODD. Article 50
For the FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 51
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 53
LAW. Article 53
A COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ASIATICS AND FRENCH. Article 55
THE QUEEN OF FRANCE AND THE DAUPHIN. Article 58
FATE OF THE UNFORTUNATE MUNRO. Article 60
THE SPEECH OF MISS POLLY BAKER, Article 61
ANECDOTE OF BISHOP BURNET. Article 63
MEMOIRS OF THE CELEBRATED FARINELLI. Article 64
THE EVILS OF WAR. Article 66
ON SHAM WAREHOUSES, AND PRETENDED MERCHANTS. Article 68
STATE PAPER. Article 69
INCREASE OF BUILDINGS NO PROOF OF THE RICHES OF A KINGDOM. Article 70
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE Article 71
FINE ARTS. Article 73
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 74
SADLER's WELLS. Article 75
MEMOIRS OF PRINCE RUPERT, Article 76
PICTURE OF LONDON AND IT's INHABITANTS, &c. Article 78
POETRY. Article 79
THE HISTORY OF GYGES's RING, Article 80
ODE. Article 81
SONG. Article 82
TO DELIA'S KITTEN. Article 83
THE CURATE. Article 84
ON CONTENTMENT. Article 85
FOREIGN OCCURRENCES. Article 87
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 88
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Page 77

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

Memoirs Of Prince Rupert,

Society . In the year 1666 , the king entrusted him , in conjunction with the duke of Albemarle , to command the fleet , when he exhibited all the qualities that are necessary to constitute JI great admiral . By his happy return to the fleet , on the 3 d of June , he wrested from the Dutch the only victory they had the appearance of gainingand afterwards the 24 th of the same monthhe beat them

; , on , efrecuially , pursued them to their own coast , and blocked up their harbour . Indeed , the great intrepidity which prince Rupert displayed , in this naval war , was highly and justly celebrated in his own time ; and in the last Dutch war he seemed to retain all the activity and fire of his youth , and beat the enemy 111 several engagements . . and retired

From this time prince Rupert led a quiet , chiefly a life , mostly at Windsor-castle , of which he was governor ; and he very much employed himself in the prosecution of chemical and philosophical experiments , as well as in the practice of mechanic arts , for which he was very famous . He is mentioned by foreign authors with applause for his skill in painting ; and is considered as the inventor of mezzotinto , of which he is said tp have taken the hint from a soldier scraping his rusty fusil . The circumstances are

thus related : —The prince going out early one morning , observed , a centinel ,. at some distance from his post , very busy doing something to his p iece . The prince asked what he was about ? He replied , that the dew had fallen in the night , had made his fusil rusty , and that he was scraping and cleaning it . The prince looking at it , was struck with something like a figure eaten into the closed like fnezed

barrel , with innumerable little holes together , work on gold orsilver , part of which the soldier had scraped away .-From this trifling incident , prince Rupert is said to have conceived mezzotinto . He concluded , that some contrivance might be found to cover a brass p late with such a grained ground of fine pressed holeswhich would undoubtedl ive an impression all

, y , g ; black , and that by scraping away proper parts , the smooth superficies would leave the rest of the paper white . Communicating his ideas to Wallerant Vaillant , a painter whom he maintained , they made several experiments , and at last invented a steel roller , cut with tools to make teeth like a file or rasp , with projecting pointswhich effectually produced the black grounds ; those being

, scraped away , and diminished at pleasure , left the gradations of lig ht . It is said , that the first mezzotinto print ever published was executed by his highness himself . It may be seen in the first edition - of Evelyn ' s Sculpture ; and there is a copy of it in the second

edition , printed m 1755 . Prince Rupert also delig hted in making locks for fire-arms , and was the inventor of a composition , called from him prince ' s metal , and in which guns were cast . He communicated to the Royal Society his improvements upon gunpowder , by refining the several ingredients , and making it more carefully , by which , as appeared , by several experiments , it ' s force was augmented , in comparison at

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