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  • Aug. 1, 1798
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1798: Page 18

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    Article THE HISTORY OF MADAME AND MONSIEUR C-. ← Page 3 of 5 →
Page 18

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

The History Of Madame And Monsieur C-.

pressed her little boy to her bosom , and instantly dispatched Victoire to make known how thankfully she accepted this blessed offer . Early the next morning the necessary materials were purchased , and Madame C , with eager alacrity , began her task . While she contemplated the first elegant performance , which advanced rapidly beneath her creating hand , tears of soothing pleasure , tears which it was luxury to shedgushed from her eyes . To have the power of

, applying those accomplishments , which she had only cultivated as the amusement of a solitary hour , to the dear , the precious purpose of sustaining her child , filled her mind with the sweetest sensations cf maternal tenderness—it was delight , elevated by the noble consciousness of duty—it was an effort of virtue , which , while it shielded the object ; of her fond solicitude from suffering , was interwoven with an

immediate recompense in the southing effect it produced en her own mind . Since , amidst continual occupation , that gloomy despondency , which , in stillness and solitude brooded over its own turbulent wretchedness , was softened into milder sorrow , and engrossed by the unceasing care of providing for her child , the image of its father , which used to call forth the wild agonies of disappointed passion , but now awakened a tender melancholy , which resignation tempered .

The only moments which Madame C gave to leisure , and the indulgence of her feelings , were those of twilight , when , after the unremitting labours of the long summer day , she usual !} ' left her little boy to the care of Victoire , and walking out alone amidst those scenes of solemn grandeur , indulged that mournful musing , when the mind wanders over its vanished pleasures , and tears , which ' flow without controul , embalm the past ! In one of those solitary walks , seated on the fragment of a rock ,

near the torrent-stream , the hoarse noise of whose melancholy waters were congenial to her meditations , the chain of pensive thought was suddenly broken by the tread of an approaching footstep . She cast up her eyes , and beheld Mons . C , who , pale , and trembling with emotion , threw himself at her feet , clasped her knees in unutterable agony , aud at length told her , in broken accents , that he came not to solicit her forgivenessbut to die in her —that

, presence feeling he had but a short time to live , he had ventured to behold her once more ; not to attempt any extenuation of his guilt , or to declare how much he abhorred himself for the past , but merely to explain the appearance of that barbarous neglect , in which she had been left at Bellinzone ; Mons . C , then , after execrating the delusion hy which he had

been so fatally misled , related , that having taken an " excursion into Germany , at the period when her letter arrived , he had only received it two months after it was dated . Rouzed as from an hideous dream , seized with the pangs of remorse at his own conduct , and feeling every sentiment of renewed tenderness awakened in his heart by 'he image of her sufferings , he instantly declaied to Madame ¦ iis resolution to hasten to Bellinzone . No intelligence , he perceived , could be more agreeable to that lady ; and , tiot long after , ' he discovered the reason , by hearing that she was gone to Vienna with s

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-08-01, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081798/page/18/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
A BRIEF MEMOIR OF MASONICUS. Article 2
PARK'S TRAVELS IN AFRICA. Article 3
CHARACTER OF GENERAL CLAIRFAIT. Article 5
DURING THE CONFINEMENT OF LOUIS XVI. KING OF FRANCE. Article 6
AN HISTORICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL ACCOUNT OF THE KINGDOM OF IRELAND. Article 12
ANECDOTES. Article 15
THE HISTORY OF MADAME AND MONSIEUR C-. Article 16
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF A DUMB PHILOSOPHER. Article 20
THE LIFE OF THE LATE MR. JOHN PALMER, Article 27
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 35
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
SCIENTIFIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 47
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 51
POETRY. Article 57
PARLIAMENT OF IRELAND. Article 59
OBITUARY. Article 61
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The History Of Madame And Monsieur C-.

pressed her little boy to her bosom , and instantly dispatched Victoire to make known how thankfully she accepted this blessed offer . Early the next morning the necessary materials were purchased , and Madame C , with eager alacrity , began her task . While she contemplated the first elegant performance , which advanced rapidly beneath her creating hand , tears of soothing pleasure , tears which it was luxury to shedgushed from her eyes . To have the power of

, applying those accomplishments , which she had only cultivated as the amusement of a solitary hour , to the dear , the precious purpose of sustaining her child , filled her mind with the sweetest sensations cf maternal tenderness—it was delight , elevated by the noble consciousness of duty—it was an effort of virtue , which , while it shielded the object ; of her fond solicitude from suffering , was interwoven with an

immediate recompense in the southing effect it produced en her own mind . Since , amidst continual occupation , that gloomy despondency , which , in stillness and solitude brooded over its own turbulent wretchedness , was softened into milder sorrow , and engrossed by the unceasing care of providing for her child , the image of its father , which used to call forth the wild agonies of disappointed passion , but now awakened a tender melancholy , which resignation tempered .

The only moments which Madame C gave to leisure , and the indulgence of her feelings , were those of twilight , when , after the unremitting labours of the long summer day , she usual !} ' left her little boy to the care of Victoire , and walking out alone amidst those scenes of solemn grandeur , indulged that mournful musing , when the mind wanders over its vanished pleasures , and tears , which ' flow without controul , embalm the past ! In one of those solitary walks , seated on the fragment of a rock ,

near the torrent-stream , the hoarse noise of whose melancholy waters were congenial to her meditations , the chain of pensive thought was suddenly broken by the tread of an approaching footstep . She cast up her eyes , and beheld Mons . C , who , pale , and trembling with emotion , threw himself at her feet , clasped her knees in unutterable agony , aud at length told her , in broken accents , that he came not to solicit her forgivenessbut to die in her —that

, presence feeling he had but a short time to live , he had ventured to behold her once more ; not to attempt any extenuation of his guilt , or to declare how much he abhorred himself for the past , but merely to explain the appearance of that barbarous neglect , in which she had been left at Bellinzone ; Mons . C , then , after execrating the delusion hy which he had

been so fatally misled , related , that having taken an " excursion into Germany , at the period when her letter arrived , he had only received it two months after it was dated . Rouzed as from an hideous dream , seized with the pangs of remorse at his own conduct , and feeling every sentiment of renewed tenderness awakened in his heart by 'he image of her sufferings , he instantly declaied to Madame ¦ iis resolution to hasten to Bellinzone . No intelligence , he perceived , could be more agreeable to that lady ; and , tiot long after , ' he discovered the reason , by hearing that she was gone to Vienna with s

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