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  • Aug. 1, 1797
  • Page 71
  • OBIUARY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1797: Page 71

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Page 71

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Obiuary.

possessed , and , for their sakes more than for his own , regretting that , during so long a political life , he had so seldom borne any share in power , which he considered only as an instrument of more diffusive good . In his domestic relations he was worthy ( and ' more than worthy he could not be )

of the eminent felicity which for many years he enjoyed ; an husband of ex . emplary tenderness and lideliy ; a father fond to excess ; lhe most affectionate of brothers ; the kindest master ; and , on his part , he has been often heard to declare , that , in the most anxious moments of his public life

, every care vanished when he entered his own roof . One , who long and intimately knew him , to divert his own sorrow , has paid this very inadequate tribu ' e to his memory . Nothing which relates to such a man can be uninteresting or uninsirucfive to the public , to . whom he trulbelonged . Few indeed

y , whom the Divine goodness has largelygifted , are capable of profiting bv the imitation of his genius and learning ; but all mankind may grow better by the study of his virtues . The following additional article is

translated from the French of M . Le Peltier . ' On Sunday , the 9 th of July , 1 797 , died at his house at Beaconsfield , with that simple dignity , that unostentatious . magnanimity , so consonant to the tenors of his life and actions , the Right Hon . Edmund Burke . There never was a more beautiful

alliance between virtue and talents . All his conceplions were grand , all his sentiments generous . The great leading trait of his character , and what gave it all its energy and its colour , was that strong hatred of vice , which is no other than the passionate love of virtue . It breathes in all his writings ;

it was the guide of all his actions . Biit even the force of his eloquence was insufficient to transfuse it into the weak and perverse minds of his contemporaries . This caused all the miseries of Europe ; this rendered of no effect towards her salvation the subliniest talentsthe greatest and rarest virtues

, , that the beneficence of Providence ever concentred in a single character for the benefit of mankind . But Mr . Burke was too superior to the age in which he lived . His prophetic genius only astonished the nation which it ought

to have governed . ' Mr . Fox said of . Mr . Burke , and in saying it ihe whole House wept , ' that , if all the information from men and books were put in one scale , and the information he had acquired from his honourable friend in the other , the latter would greatly preponderate . '

In lhe course of his usual walk betwixt his seais of Stevenstone and Hudscott , co . Devon , in a fit of Ihe angina pectoris ( a disorder he had long been subject to ) . aged 72 , Denys Rolle , E ^ q . late of East-Titherley , in Hampshire , father of Lord Rolle , and descended from an ancient and very

honourable family in that county , and to whose many public and pri-ate virtues Ihose who knew him well will bear ample testimony . The esteem and affection which Mr . Rolle had universally inspired ,, rendered the acquisition of rank to him of no moment ; and for this cause during his own life-time ,

the honours of the British peerage were conferred on his son . Mr . R . was supposed to he the greatest land-owner in Devonshire , and possessed , also , large eslatesin Oxfordshire and Hampshire . His rent-roll is said to have amounted to 40 , 000 ! . per annum , though he never raised the rent of an old

tenant . He was the general patron of merit and talents , and was everyway worthy of his great fortune , 2000 I . of which he appropriated to charitable uses , though it was known that his disbursements under this head very far exceeded that sum . In his public conductas a member of the House of

, Commons , he was biassed by no prejudices , and attached to no party . Influenced by no private or selfish views , he preferred the good of his country to everyotherconsideration ; discharged the sacred trust reposed in him with fidelity and honour ; and preserved , with unshaken firmness and inflexible

integrity , those honest and independent principles which he had laid down for the rule of his conduct . The same probity influenced and guided him in every transaction of private life , which was distinguished also by an exemplary piety and a diffusive charity . He was a liberal subscriber to many societies

instituted for the purposes of promoting religion , and advancing the glory of God ; and he contributed largely to many useful undertakings and benevo-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-08-01, Page 71” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081797/page/71/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
MEMOIR OF MR. HULL. Article 4
AN APOLOGY FOR THE CHARACTER AND CONDUCT OF SHYLOCK. Article 5
OBSERVATIONS ON THE DESTRUCTION OF SENNACHERIB'S ARMY. Article 9
HISTORY OF THE THE ARTS AND SCIENCES FOR 1797. Article 12
THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES or PETER PORCUPINE; Article 14
MEMOIRS OF CHARLES MACKLIN, Article 18
A BRIEF SYSTEM OF CONCHOLOGY. Article 26
THE COLLECTOR. Article 30
HUMOROUS ACCOUNT OF VENICE. Article 33
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 34
WHAT IS THE ORDER OF FREEMASONRY? Article 38
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 42
POETRY. Article 50
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 54
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLLAMENT. Article 56
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 59
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
INTELLIGENCE FRONT THE LONDON GAZETTES . Article 67
OBIUARY. Article 70
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Obiuary.

possessed , and , for their sakes more than for his own , regretting that , during so long a political life , he had so seldom borne any share in power , which he considered only as an instrument of more diffusive good . In his domestic relations he was worthy ( and ' more than worthy he could not be )

of the eminent felicity which for many years he enjoyed ; an husband of ex . emplary tenderness and lideliy ; a father fond to excess ; lhe most affectionate of brothers ; the kindest master ; and , on his part , he has been often heard to declare , that , in the most anxious moments of his public life

, every care vanished when he entered his own roof . One , who long and intimately knew him , to divert his own sorrow , has paid this very inadequate tribu ' e to his memory . Nothing which relates to such a man can be uninteresting or uninsirucfive to the public , to . whom he trulbelonged . Few indeed

y , whom the Divine goodness has largelygifted , are capable of profiting bv the imitation of his genius and learning ; but all mankind may grow better by the study of his virtues . The following additional article is

translated from the French of M . Le Peltier . ' On Sunday , the 9 th of July , 1 797 , died at his house at Beaconsfield , with that simple dignity , that unostentatious . magnanimity , so consonant to the tenors of his life and actions , the Right Hon . Edmund Burke . There never was a more beautiful

alliance between virtue and talents . All his conceplions were grand , all his sentiments generous . The great leading trait of his character , and what gave it all its energy and its colour , was that strong hatred of vice , which is no other than the passionate love of virtue . It breathes in all his writings ;

it was the guide of all his actions . Biit even the force of his eloquence was insufficient to transfuse it into the weak and perverse minds of his contemporaries . This caused all the miseries of Europe ; this rendered of no effect towards her salvation the subliniest talentsthe greatest and rarest virtues

, , that the beneficence of Providence ever concentred in a single character for the benefit of mankind . But Mr . Burke was too superior to the age in which he lived . His prophetic genius only astonished the nation which it ought

to have governed . ' Mr . Fox said of . Mr . Burke , and in saying it ihe whole House wept , ' that , if all the information from men and books were put in one scale , and the information he had acquired from his honourable friend in the other , the latter would greatly preponderate . '

In lhe course of his usual walk betwixt his seais of Stevenstone and Hudscott , co . Devon , in a fit of Ihe angina pectoris ( a disorder he had long been subject to ) . aged 72 , Denys Rolle , E ^ q . late of East-Titherley , in Hampshire , father of Lord Rolle , and descended from an ancient and very

honourable family in that county , and to whose many public and pri-ate virtues Ihose who knew him well will bear ample testimony . The esteem and affection which Mr . Rolle had universally inspired ,, rendered the acquisition of rank to him of no moment ; and for this cause during his own life-time ,

the honours of the British peerage were conferred on his son . Mr . R . was supposed to he the greatest land-owner in Devonshire , and possessed , also , large eslatesin Oxfordshire and Hampshire . His rent-roll is said to have amounted to 40 , 000 ! . per annum , though he never raised the rent of an old

tenant . He was the general patron of merit and talents , and was everyway worthy of his great fortune , 2000 I . of which he appropriated to charitable uses , though it was known that his disbursements under this head very far exceeded that sum . In his public conductas a member of the House of

, Commons , he was biassed by no prejudices , and attached to no party . Influenced by no private or selfish views , he preferred the good of his country to everyotherconsideration ; discharged the sacred trust reposed in him with fidelity and honour ; and preserved , with unshaken firmness and inflexible

integrity , those honest and independent principles which he had laid down for the rule of his conduct . The same probity influenced and guided him in every transaction of private life , which was distinguished also by an exemplary piety and a diffusive charity . He was a liberal subscriber to many societies

instituted for the purposes of promoting religion , and advancing the glory of God ; and he contributed largely to many useful undertakings and benevo-

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