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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1795
  • Page 47
  • PHYSIOGNOMICAL SKETCHES.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1795: Page 47

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    Article ACCOUNT OF AN EXTRAORDINARY NATURAL GENIUS, ← Page 6 of 6
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Page 47

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

Account Of An Extraordinary Natural Genius,

losopher , upon which were scattered some pieces of writing paper containing extracts of books , various calculations and geometrical figures ; the books which have been mentioned before were placed on a shelf with the compass and ruler that have been described , which with a wooden square and a pair of six inch globes , constituted the library and musasum of the truly celebrated John Ludwig .

In this hovel he lived till the year 1754 , and while he was pursuing the study of philosophy at his leisure hours , he was indefatigable in his day labour as a poor peasant , sometimes carrying a basket at bis back , and sometimes driving a wheel-barrow , and carrying such garden-stuff " as he had to sell about the village . In this state he was subject to frequent insults , such as "patient merit of the unworth y takes" and he bore them wi

, thout reply or any other mark either of resentment or contempt , when those who could not agree with him about the price of his commodities used to turn from him with an air of superiority , and call him in derision a silly clown and a stupid dog . Mr . "Hoffman , when he dismissed him , presented him with 100

crowns , which filled all his wishes and made him the happiest man in the world ; with this sum he built himself a more commodious , habitation in the middle of his vineyard , and furnished it \ vith many moveables and utensils , of which he was in great want , but above all he procured a very considerable addition to his library , an article so essential to his happiness that he declared to Mr . Hoffman , he . would not accept the whole province in which he lived upon condition that he should renounce his studies , and that he had rather live on bread and

water than withhold from his mind that food which his intellectual hunger perpetually required . - T S

Physiognomical Sketches.

PHYSIOGNOMICAL SKETCHES .

BY E . WILSON , SUNDERLAND .

" The proper study of mankind is man . " ' VtpIS odd—' tis very odd '—says my young friend Frank John-Ji . son , as he came bouncing into my room one ni ght , - that this same art of reading faces is not more comeatable ; yet one truth is clear ; we are all plrysiognomists by Nature , none by art . That

old lady , however , depend upon ic ,. has some secrets behind the curtain which she is determined none shall see . Have not our greatest philosophers been begging , and praying , and peeping , and peering , and prying about , like the arrantest snivellers , for these 3000 years , and not one admitted , not one embrace ? Nay , sooner than indulge their worships with even one glance of her beauties

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-08-01, Page 47” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081795/page/47/.
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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 47

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

Account Of An Extraordinary Natural Genius,

losopher , upon which were scattered some pieces of writing paper containing extracts of books , various calculations and geometrical figures ; the books which have been mentioned before were placed on a shelf with the compass and ruler that have been described , which with a wooden square and a pair of six inch globes , constituted the library and musasum of the truly celebrated John Ludwig .

In this hovel he lived till the year 1754 , and while he was pursuing the study of philosophy at his leisure hours , he was indefatigable in his day labour as a poor peasant , sometimes carrying a basket at bis back , and sometimes driving a wheel-barrow , and carrying such garden-stuff " as he had to sell about the village . In this state he was subject to frequent insults , such as "patient merit of the unworth y takes" and he bore them wi

, thout reply or any other mark either of resentment or contempt , when those who could not agree with him about the price of his commodities used to turn from him with an air of superiority , and call him in derision a silly clown and a stupid dog . Mr . "Hoffman , when he dismissed him , presented him with 100

crowns , which filled all his wishes and made him the happiest man in the world ; with this sum he built himself a more commodious , habitation in the middle of his vineyard , and furnished it \ vith many moveables and utensils , of which he was in great want , but above all he procured a very considerable addition to his library , an article so essential to his happiness that he declared to Mr . Hoffman , he . would not accept the whole province in which he lived upon condition that he should renounce his studies , and that he had rather live on bread and

water than withhold from his mind that food which his intellectual hunger perpetually required . - T S

Physiognomical Sketches.

PHYSIOGNOMICAL SKETCHES .

BY E . WILSON , SUNDERLAND .

" The proper study of mankind is man . " ' VtpIS odd—' tis very odd '—says my young friend Frank John-Ji . son , as he came bouncing into my room one ni ght , - that this same art of reading faces is not more comeatable ; yet one truth is clear ; we are all plrysiognomists by Nature , none by art . That

old lady , however , depend upon ic ,. has some secrets behind the curtain which she is determined none shall see . Have not our greatest philosophers been begging , and praying , and peeping , and peering , and prying about , like the arrantest snivellers , for these 3000 years , and not one admitted , not one embrace ? Nay , sooner than indulge their worships with even one glance of her beauties

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