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  • Aug. 1, 1794
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1794: Page 32

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    Article ON IMPRUDENT FRIENDSHIPS. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 32

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

On Imprudent Friendships.

after cutting and bruising one another until they can scarcely sfancf , are separated b y their friends—my , what is more remarkable , they sometimes shake hands , and agree to part friends ! Such are the common ideas of friendshi p ; and if such is the only friendship men expect to contract , surely they have little reason to complain if they should be disappointed . After having prostituted the how

name , can they expect the substance ? After having dreamt only of the sign , how can they expect the thing signified ? If we consider h ' ow those connexion ' s which are called friendships are formed ,. We shall the less wonder that they are unstable with most men : -it is sufficient to have been twice or thrice in each other ' s cosrmauy , they become thereafter friends , and' we are not to be surprised / if what is formed so hastily , should be as hastily dissolved . Houses that are thrown up quickly , and while the materials are green and unseasoned , cannot be expected to last long .

there are , on the other hand , some persons who entertain a notion of friendship , so very celestial and romantic , as is not to be expected from the frailty of human nature . They mistake the nature of a fiend , just as much as the others of whom I have been speaking . They expect every thing from a friend , and in this are as much ? n fault as die others who expected any thing . Romantic notions of friendship are much cherished in novels and sentimental writings

- , - but their tendency is often fatal , and at all times pernicious . A veryshort intercourse with the world of men , convinces them that they have been reading of ideal beings , and their tempers are apt to be soured ; in consequence of which they entertain worse notions of men than they deserve .

There are two kinds of men from whom it is impossible to expect " real friendshi p ; and if we are sufficiently guarded against them , we shall be furnished with every necessary precaution against a world abounding in a mixture of characters . The one of these is , the lowminded i gnorant man ; the other is the bad or immoral man . With either of these I aver that it is impossible to form that connexion to which ive the

we g name of friendship ,, or , if in appearance formed , if will be utterly impossible to retain it , so as to reap the advantages of friendshi p when they are wanted . M y reasons are these : With regard to the ignorant and low-minded , friendshi p is not a pas ion , but an operation of the intellect . The understanding must ever be employed in perfecting itand in preventing those sallies of

, momentary regard , which savour more of whim and caprice than of friendship . Of all this an i gnorant man knows nothing , and a lowminded man will practise nothing . In such minds self-interest usually has a strong hold ; for I Would wish it to be understood that mere ignorance , without this poverty of sentiment and generosity , is a misfortune that may be remedied and never can be the object of

, censure . There is a wide difference between the ignorance of a man in whom the natural feelings have not been adulterated by vice , nor civilized and refined by education , and that of an illiterate mechanic , who , while he can scarcely spell his name , or comprehend a rational argument , can yet take pride in grasping more money than he who is

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-08-01, Page 32” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081794/page/32/.
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 1
BRIEF OBSERVATIONS ON MASONRY, Article 6
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 7
A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE OF THE PATRONS AND GRAND MASTERS IN ENGLAND, Article 14
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 16
THE MASTER AND SLAVE. Article 17
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE RELIGIOUS AND MILITARY ORDER OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS OF ST. JOHN OF JERUSALEM. Article 18
PRESENT STATE OF FREE MASONRY. Article 22
MR. TASKER'S LETTERS Article 26
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 27
ON IMPRUDENT FRIENDSHIPS. Article 31
FEMALE MERIT AND VANITY CONTRASTED. Article 35
THOUGHTS ON CONJUGAL HAPPINESS. Article 37
LETTERS FROM T. DUNCKERLEY, ESQ. Article 39
BRIEF CHRONOLOGICAL SKETCH OF THE ORDER OF KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 41
ANECDOTE OF KAMHI, EMPEROR OF CHINA. Article 42
WHIMSICAL ANECDOTE. Article 43
KENTISH EPITAPHS. Article 44
THE MEDICAL APPLICATION OF MONEY. Article 45
ANECDOTE OF THEOPHILUS CIBBER. Article 46
FORTITUDE Article 47
ON FORTITUDE. Article 48
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 51
BIOGRAPHIC SKETCH OF THE. LATE. GEORGE COLMAN, ESQ. Article 53
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 55
CEREMONY OF LAYING THE FOUNDATION-STONE OF ST. PAUL'S. CHURCH, BRISTOL. AUGUST 17, 1789. Article 56
TO THE PROPRIETOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 57
THE HERMIT'S PRAYER. Article 57
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 58
OCCASIONAL ADDRESS Article 60
POETRY. Article 61
A SONG FOR THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 62
MASONIC SONG. Article 63
ON MY SHADOW. Article 63
THE DEBTOR. Article 65
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 66
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 71
HOME NEWS. Article 72
PROMOTIONS. Article 76
Untitled Article 77
Untitled Article 78
BANKRUPTS. Article 79
Untitled Article 80
LONDON : Article 80
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 81
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 81
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Page 32

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

On Imprudent Friendships.

after cutting and bruising one another until they can scarcely sfancf , are separated b y their friends—my , what is more remarkable , they sometimes shake hands , and agree to part friends ! Such are the common ideas of friendshi p ; and if such is the only friendship men expect to contract , surely they have little reason to complain if they should be disappointed . After having prostituted the how

name , can they expect the substance ? After having dreamt only of the sign , how can they expect the thing signified ? If we consider h ' ow those connexion ' s which are called friendships are formed ,. We shall the less wonder that they are unstable with most men : -it is sufficient to have been twice or thrice in each other ' s cosrmauy , they become thereafter friends , and' we are not to be surprised / if what is formed so hastily , should be as hastily dissolved . Houses that are thrown up quickly , and while the materials are green and unseasoned , cannot be expected to last long .

there are , on the other hand , some persons who entertain a notion of friendship , so very celestial and romantic , as is not to be expected from the frailty of human nature . They mistake the nature of a fiend , just as much as the others of whom I have been speaking . They expect every thing from a friend , and in this are as much ? n fault as die others who expected any thing . Romantic notions of friendship are much cherished in novels and sentimental writings

- , - but their tendency is often fatal , and at all times pernicious . A veryshort intercourse with the world of men , convinces them that they have been reading of ideal beings , and their tempers are apt to be soured ; in consequence of which they entertain worse notions of men than they deserve .

There are two kinds of men from whom it is impossible to expect " real friendshi p ; and if we are sufficiently guarded against them , we shall be furnished with every necessary precaution against a world abounding in a mixture of characters . The one of these is , the lowminded i gnorant man ; the other is the bad or immoral man . With either of these I aver that it is impossible to form that connexion to which ive the

we g name of friendship ,, or , if in appearance formed , if will be utterly impossible to retain it , so as to reap the advantages of friendshi p when they are wanted . M y reasons are these : With regard to the ignorant and low-minded , friendshi p is not a pas ion , but an operation of the intellect . The understanding must ever be employed in perfecting itand in preventing those sallies of

, momentary regard , which savour more of whim and caprice than of friendship . Of all this an i gnorant man knows nothing , and a lowminded man will practise nothing . In such minds self-interest usually has a strong hold ; for I Would wish it to be understood that mere ignorance , without this poverty of sentiment and generosity , is a misfortune that may be remedied and never can be the object of

, censure . There is a wide difference between the ignorance of a man in whom the natural feelings have not been adulterated by vice , nor civilized and refined by education , and that of an illiterate mechanic , who , while he can scarcely spell his name , or comprehend a rational argument , can yet take pride in grasping more money than he who is

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