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  • Aug. 1, 1798
  • Page 26
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1798: Page 26

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    Article CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF A DUMB PHILOSOPHER. ← Page 7 of 7
Page 26

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

Curious Account Of A Dumb Philosopher.

little band of music , are all within the compass of nry small family . I delight to see my servants . as happy and as pleased as myself ; and setting aside their respective offices , for which their wages are their least rewards , they are much more my companions than my slaves ; and they receive my orders as favours rather than duties . What others , who perhaps have far less means than I have to support it , expend in gilt coachescostly liveriessuperb gardens and palaces ,

, , rich furniture and apparel , gaming , feasts , balls , masquerades , and the like , I employ in making other people easy in their circumstances ; in relieving the fatherless and the widow ; in administering to the sick ; in putting the sons of decayed families out to trades , and in giving small . fortunes to their daughters in marriage ; in procuring employments for some , and in setting up others in the trades

they have learned : and as I never appear in any of these things myself , and the number of my agents is not great , I am known to few . However , the enquiries I cause to be made , to find out these real objects of charity , give me an opportunity of knowing where I am not known , of seeing where I am not seen , and , in short , of prying into the actions , conduct , and misconduct of ever } ' ' rank of men , in this great city and the neighbourhood thereof ; from the highest degree to the , lowest . I find means to get an insight-into the most secret transactions ofthe Senate and the Consistory , in-the

assemblies ofthe great , and the diversions of the meaner sort ; hf taverns and coffee-houses , in studies and warehouses , in nurseries , and even among the gossips in the chambers of lying-in women . In short , there is no door , but what my silver key will open , whenever I think fit to put it into the hands of any of my agents . Nor is this mire matter of curiosity , but directly conducive to my main purpose , and the ultimate view of all my actionsthe happiness of fellow

citi-, my zens . By this means I can , without being perceived or suspected , make observations on the depraved manners ,, evil customs and vices ofthe times , and likewise distinguish the virtues and good qualities of those , who are so happy as not to be tainted / with them , and dare be upright , generous and virtuous , in' spite of that grand incitive to evil , fashion , and the example of others ; and as it is a part of my

employment to commit all these ' my remarks to writing , and to animadvert upon them , sometimes in a ludicrous , and at other times in a serious manner , I find means to render these my lucubrations useful to mankind , by getting them inserted , without any view of farther advantage , and even at my own expence , in the public prints : of which , as occasion shall offer , I shall submit some to your censure . '

Here my learned friend finished his history , and I was so hi ghly delighted with this , and what I had before seen and heard , that I could hardly forbear bursting out in an ecstasy , in the following hues , which I have somewhere read : < Should the whole frame of Nature round him break , In ruin and confusion bin I'd , Jle , unconcern'd , would hear the mi ghty crack , And stand secure amidst a falling world P [ TO BE CONTINUED , " ]

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-08-01, Page 26” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081798/page/26/.
  • 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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Page 26

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

Curious Account Of A Dumb Philosopher.

little band of music , are all within the compass of nry small family . I delight to see my servants . as happy and as pleased as myself ; and setting aside their respective offices , for which their wages are their least rewards , they are much more my companions than my slaves ; and they receive my orders as favours rather than duties . What others , who perhaps have far less means than I have to support it , expend in gilt coachescostly liveriessuperb gardens and palaces ,

, , rich furniture and apparel , gaming , feasts , balls , masquerades , and the like , I employ in making other people easy in their circumstances ; in relieving the fatherless and the widow ; in administering to the sick ; in putting the sons of decayed families out to trades , and in giving small . fortunes to their daughters in marriage ; in procuring employments for some , and in setting up others in the trades

they have learned : and as I never appear in any of these things myself , and the number of my agents is not great , I am known to few . However , the enquiries I cause to be made , to find out these real objects of charity , give me an opportunity of knowing where I am not known , of seeing where I am not seen , and , in short , of prying into the actions , conduct , and misconduct of ever } ' ' rank of men , in this great city and the neighbourhood thereof ; from the highest degree to the , lowest . I find means to get an insight-into the most secret transactions ofthe Senate and the Consistory , in-the

assemblies ofthe great , and the diversions of the meaner sort ; hf taverns and coffee-houses , in studies and warehouses , in nurseries , and even among the gossips in the chambers of lying-in women . In short , there is no door , but what my silver key will open , whenever I think fit to put it into the hands of any of my agents . Nor is this mire matter of curiosity , but directly conducive to my main purpose , and the ultimate view of all my actionsthe happiness of fellow

citi-, my zens . By this means I can , without being perceived or suspected , make observations on the depraved manners ,, evil customs and vices ofthe times , and likewise distinguish the virtues and good qualities of those , who are so happy as not to be tainted / with them , and dare be upright , generous and virtuous , in' spite of that grand incitive to evil , fashion , and the example of others ; and as it is a part of my

employment to commit all these ' my remarks to writing , and to animadvert upon them , sometimes in a ludicrous , and at other times in a serious manner , I find means to render these my lucubrations useful to mankind , by getting them inserted , without any view of farther advantage , and even at my own expence , in the public prints : of which , as occasion shall offer , I shall submit some to your censure . '

Here my learned friend finished his history , and I was so hi ghly delighted with this , and what I had before seen and heard , that I could hardly forbear bursting out in an ecstasy , in the following hues , which I have somewhere read : < Should the whole frame of Nature round him break , In ruin and confusion bin I'd , Jle , unconcern'd , would hear the mi ghty crack , And stand secure amidst a falling world P [ TO BE CONTINUED , " ]

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