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  • Aug. 1, 1795
  • Page 30
  • CHARACTER OF LOUIS THE SIXTEENTH.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1795: Page 30

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Character Of Louis The Sixteenth.

mortality , are perfectly in harmony with philosophy ; and while they ¦ year its column on those most solid of all foundations , they likewise adorn it with the most finished capital . Wretched are tiie legislators , who despise these powerful means of inspiring political virtues , and pf forming the morals of a nation . If they were even illusions , we ht to cherish themfor the consolation of mankind : but the

relioug , gion of our priests presented us only v / ith objects of childish fear , and miserable mummeries instead of good works ; and also consecrated the whole code of despotism , on which the authority of the established church is founded . Louis XVI . was literally afraid of hell , the horns and hoofs of the . deviland excommunication ; and with all this it was impossible he

, should be any thing but a poor creature of a king . If he had been born two hundred years earlier , and had had a reasonable wife , he would have made no more noise in the world than other princes bf his Jine , who have passed across the stage without doing either much good or evil : but ascending the throne amidst the dissoluteness of the court of Louis XV . and the disordered state of the treasury , and

surrounded by corrupted men , he was drawn on by a giddy woman , . who joined to Austrian insolence the forwardness of youth , and to ihe arrogance of grandeur ' the intoxication of the senses , and the carelessness of levity ; and who was herself seduced by all the vices of an Asiatic court . Louis XVI . too weak to hold the reins of government , which was

now falling headlong into ruin , and crumbling to dissolution , hastened his own by faults without number . Neckar , who always acted the pathetic in politics as well as in writing ; a man of moderate abilities , but of which the world entertained a high opinion , because , he had formed a high opinion of them himself , which lie . was careful to make known ; without foresight ; a sort of a retail financier , who could only calculate the contents of a purseand was talking

con-, tinually of his reputation , as women of intrigue talk of their chastity ; Neckar was but a sorry pilot for the storm that was gathering . France was , as it were , exhausted of- men : it is a thing highly surprising that they should have been so scarce in this revolution ; it lias brought forth scarcely any but pigmies .. It is not because there was any want of witof informationof knowledgeof philosophy :

, , , these ingredients had never been more common : it was the blaze of , t . he torch just expiring . B . ttt that energ } ' of soul which J . J . Rousseau has so ath-qirabi y defined as the first characteristic of the hero , supported by that solidity of judgment which knows the just value pf every thing ; with that foresight which penetrates into futurity , the re-union of which constitutes character , and forms the superior man ,

we have looked for it every where , but it has been no where to be found . ' " Louis XVI . continually floating between the fear of irritating his subjects , and his wish to keep them within bounds , and unable to govern them , convened the States-General , instead of reforming the expences , and regulating his court . After , having himself unveiled ihe spring , and shewed the way to innovation , he hoped to stop its

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-08-01, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081795/page/30/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY . Article 4
ON THE PRESENT STATE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 7
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 10
CHARACTER OF BERNARD GILPIN, Article 14
THE KHALIF AND HIS VISIER, AN ORIENTAL APOLOGUE. Article 18
ANECDOTES OF HENRI DUC DE MONTMORENCI. Article 20
EXTRAORDINARY INSTANCES OF GRATITUDE. Article 24
EXTRACTS FROM A CURIOUS MANUSCRIPT, CONTAINING DIRECTIONS FOR THE HOUSEHOLD OF HENRY VIII. Article 25
BON MOT. Article 27
THE STAGE. Article 28
CHARACTER OF LOUIS THE SIXTEENTH. Article 29
A THIEF RESCUED BY AN ELEPHANT. AN AUTHENTIC ANECDOTE. Article 31
ANECDOTES OF THE LIFE OF THEODORE, KING OF CORSICA*. Article 32
ORIGIN OF ST. JAMES'S PALACE. Article 33
THE UNION OF LOVE TO GOD AND LOVE TO MAN, A SERMON, Preached in St. Andrew's Church, New Town, Edinburgh, Article 34
ACCOUNT OF AN EXTRAORDINARY NATURAL GENIUS, Article 42
PHYSIOGNOMICAL SKETCHES. Article 47
CURIOUS METHOD OF PROTECTING CORN. Article 50
ON COMPASSION. Article 50
ON MODESTY, AS A MASCULINE VIRTUE. Article 53
SOME ACCOUNT OF BOTANY BAY, Article 55
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE . Article 56
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 58
ON POVERTY. Article 60
DISSERTATIONS ON THE POLITE ARTS. Article 61
POETRY. Article 64
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, A SKETCH. Article 67
TO INDUSTRY. Article 67
WRITTEN IN MEMORY OF MY FATHER, Article 68
PORTRAIT OF AN HYPOCRITE. Article 68
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 69
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 69
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Page 30

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

Character Of Louis The Sixteenth.

mortality , are perfectly in harmony with philosophy ; and while they ¦ year its column on those most solid of all foundations , they likewise adorn it with the most finished capital . Wretched are tiie legislators , who despise these powerful means of inspiring political virtues , and pf forming the morals of a nation . If they were even illusions , we ht to cherish themfor the consolation of mankind : but the

relioug , gion of our priests presented us only v / ith objects of childish fear , and miserable mummeries instead of good works ; and also consecrated the whole code of despotism , on which the authority of the established church is founded . Louis XVI . was literally afraid of hell , the horns and hoofs of the . deviland excommunication ; and with all this it was impossible he

, should be any thing but a poor creature of a king . If he had been born two hundred years earlier , and had had a reasonable wife , he would have made no more noise in the world than other princes bf his Jine , who have passed across the stage without doing either much good or evil : but ascending the throne amidst the dissoluteness of the court of Louis XV . and the disordered state of the treasury , and

surrounded by corrupted men , he was drawn on by a giddy woman , . who joined to Austrian insolence the forwardness of youth , and to ihe arrogance of grandeur ' the intoxication of the senses , and the carelessness of levity ; and who was herself seduced by all the vices of an Asiatic court . Louis XVI . too weak to hold the reins of government , which was

now falling headlong into ruin , and crumbling to dissolution , hastened his own by faults without number . Neckar , who always acted the pathetic in politics as well as in writing ; a man of moderate abilities , but of which the world entertained a high opinion , because , he had formed a high opinion of them himself , which lie . was careful to make known ; without foresight ; a sort of a retail financier , who could only calculate the contents of a purseand was talking

con-, tinually of his reputation , as women of intrigue talk of their chastity ; Neckar was but a sorry pilot for the storm that was gathering . France was , as it were , exhausted of- men : it is a thing highly surprising that they should have been so scarce in this revolution ; it lias brought forth scarcely any but pigmies .. It is not because there was any want of witof informationof knowledgeof philosophy :

, , , these ingredients had never been more common : it was the blaze of , t . he torch just expiring . B . ttt that energ } ' of soul which J . J . Rousseau has so ath-qirabi y defined as the first characteristic of the hero , supported by that solidity of judgment which knows the just value pf every thing ; with that foresight which penetrates into futurity , the re-union of which constitutes character , and forms the superior man ,

we have looked for it every where , but it has been no where to be found . ' " Louis XVI . continually floating between the fear of irritating his subjects , and his wish to keep them within bounds , and unable to govern them , convened the States-General , instead of reforming the expences , and regulating his court . After , having himself unveiled ihe spring , and shewed the way to innovation , he hoped to stop its

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