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    Article HUMOUROUS ACCOUNT OF A RELIGIOUS CEREMONY, PERFORMED AT ROME. ← Page 2 of 2
Page 46

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

Humourous Account Of A Religious Ceremony, Performed At Rome.

manded Abel to descend . Enthusiasm had deafened him ' to every ' worldly consideration . ; and , what added to my chagrin was , that the pilgrims had greatly the advantage of him , ten out of eleven bein « sans culottes- ^ -so finding all remonstrance ineffectual , I waited to see the conclusion of the ceremony . The holy receptacle at the top contains a splendid . crucifix , surrounded about dozen

by a portable saints , which are shewn . off by a strong li ght in the back ground ; and it has much the appearance of a magic lantern . As the pilgrims advance they batter their fore , heads against the upper step , ' more or less according to their superstition , or the wei ght of sin that overwhelms them ; and then , as the same method of descent , being as I have informed you upon their ineesmi

, ghtpossibly . be more rapid , they go off at the top through two narrow passages or defiles that look like a couple of cracks in the wall ; which , I suppose , are intended to answer the purposes of a weighing machine , to ascertain how much they are wasted by fastiW and praying . ' & . -It-was , evident . that-they had not used the same artificial means ' of themselves that

reducing a Newmarket jockey does , by wearing a dozen flannel waistcoats at a time , for most of them were bareV covered with the remnant of a shirt— . what fasting might have done I . know not , but arn apt to give very iittle credit , to the effect of their prayers . —^ Indeed there was a more natural way of accounting for their leannessas most of them had walked some hundreds of miles

, previous to the ceremony ; and we may discover a cause for thestrange attitude which they used on the occasion , by conjecturing , ' that being leg-weary , they had recourse to their knees by way of a change . " " ' .

These narrow passages did well enough for a mortified taper catholic ( one or two of whom I have seen , towards the conclusion of Lent , reduced to such a- point that one mi ght almost have threaded a bodkin with them ) but in nowise answered the purpose of your portly well-fed . protestant ; so Abel , as was easyto foresee , stuck ' fast in the middle—several of them endeavoured to pull him through , till at last he letel

was so comp y wedged in that he could neither get backwards nor forwards . r „ — Finding him in this situation , the pilgrims were suddenly disarmed of sufficient strength to withstand the ' temptations of their old pilfering system ; so one ran away with his hat , another clawed hold of his hair , and had very nearly scalped himsupposing it to be a wi . In short-after a violent " exertion

, g , , Abel effected his escape , and promised to make no more reli gious experiments for the present ; but is persuaded that he should neverhave got through , had it not been for the interference of the crucifix and portable saints , ' " ¦ ' - ' " -

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-07-01, Page 46” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01071795/page/46/.
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Title Category Page
MASONIC DIRECTORY, NUMBER I. Article 1
Untitled Article 9
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Article 11
LONDON : Article 11
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 12
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 12
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 13
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 16
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 18
TO SIR GEORGE STAUNTON, BART. Article 19
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 24
THE FREEMASON. Article 33
THE STAGE. Article 35
THE MURDERER OF CHARLES I. Article 37
DISSERTATIONS ON THE POLITE ARTS. No. II. Article 37
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 42
HUMOUROUS ACCOUNT OF A RELIGIOUS CEREMONY, PERFORMED AT ROME. Article 45
BASEM; OR, THE BLACKSMITH. AN ORIENTAL APOLOGUE. Article 47
FRENCH VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY. Article 53
FEMALE CHARACTERS. THE DOMESTIC AND THE GADDER. Article 55
CHARACTER OF MECOENAS, Article 57
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 59
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 67
POETRY. Article 69
MASONIC SONG *. Article 70
ANOTHER. Article 70
TO HOPE. Article 71
PROLOGUE TO WERTER, Article 72
TO A YOUNG LADY, CURLING AND POWDERING HER HAIR. Article 73
ON THE BENEVOLENCE OF ENGLAND. Article 74
THE SONG OF CONSTANCY. Article 74
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 75
PROMOTIONS. Article 81
Untitled Article 81
Untitled Article 81
BANKRUPTS. Article 82
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Humourous Account Of A Religious Ceremony, Performed At Rome.

manded Abel to descend . Enthusiasm had deafened him ' to every ' worldly consideration . ; and , what added to my chagrin was , that the pilgrims had greatly the advantage of him , ten out of eleven bein « sans culottes- ^ -so finding all remonstrance ineffectual , I waited to see the conclusion of the ceremony . The holy receptacle at the top contains a splendid . crucifix , surrounded about dozen

by a portable saints , which are shewn . off by a strong li ght in the back ground ; and it has much the appearance of a magic lantern . As the pilgrims advance they batter their fore , heads against the upper step , ' more or less according to their superstition , or the wei ght of sin that overwhelms them ; and then , as the same method of descent , being as I have informed you upon their ineesmi

, ghtpossibly . be more rapid , they go off at the top through two narrow passages or defiles that look like a couple of cracks in the wall ; which , I suppose , are intended to answer the purposes of a weighing machine , to ascertain how much they are wasted by fastiW and praying . ' & . -It-was , evident . that-they had not used the same artificial means ' of themselves that

reducing a Newmarket jockey does , by wearing a dozen flannel waistcoats at a time , for most of them were bareV covered with the remnant of a shirt— . what fasting might have done I . know not , but arn apt to give very iittle credit , to the effect of their prayers . —^ Indeed there was a more natural way of accounting for their leannessas most of them had walked some hundreds of miles

, previous to the ceremony ; and we may discover a cause for thestrange attitude which they used on the occasion , by conjecturing , ' that being leg-weary , they had recourse to their knees by way of a change . " " ' .

These narrow passages did well enough for a mortified taper catholic ( one or two of whom I have seen , towards the conclusion of Lent , reduced to such a- point that one mi ght almost have threaded a bodkin with them ) but in nowise answered the purpose of your portly well-fed . protestant ; so Abel , as was easyto foresee , stuck ' fast in the middle—several of them endeavoured to pull him through , till at last he letel

was so comp y wedged in that he could neither get backwards nor forwards . r „ — Finding him in this situation , the pilgrims were suddenly disarmed of sufficient strength to withstand the ' temptations of their old pilfering system ; so one ran away with his hat , another clawed hold of his hair , and had very nearly scalped himsupposing it to be a wi . In short-after a violent " exertion

, g , , Abel effected his escape , and promised to make no more reli gious experiments for the present ; but is persuaded that he should neverhave got through , had it not been for the interference of the crucifix and portable saints , ' " ¦ ' - ' " -

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