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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1798
  • Page 35
  • THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Aug. 1, 1798: Page 35

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Page 35

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

The Freemasons' Repository.

THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY .

HTHOTJGH we cannot subscribe to the propriety of publishing , or - " - of g iving credit to the many strange and improbable , ( we had almost been induced to say ridiculous ) assertions which characterize the principal part of a learned Professor ' s late publication , we think it justice to pronounce , that the work contains many excellent observations and passages , which do honour to the head and to the heart of the Secretary of the Royal Society of Edinburgh . Under

these impressions , and the supposition that the work may not have undergone the perusal of many of our numerous friends , it is our purpose occasionally to select such passages as have particularly attracted attention , and induced us to hope that the insertion in our monthly miscellany may meet with the approbation of our ' various readers . A warmth of zeal for the support of the character of Real

Masonry unimpeached , we understand , induced some worthy members of the Grand Lodge of England to cause the work above alluded to , tobe there taken into consideration , when all the Brethren present signified their strong disapprobation and abhorrence of such practices , and expressed a manly and firm confidence that their Sovereign and their Country had no occasion to be publicly assured

ofthe iinabated and steady attachment of the Brethren to their King and Government ; pronounced the work incapable of injuring the real professors of Masonry , and totally inapplicable to the Grand Lodge of England , or any Lodge under its constitution . The proposition for the consideration of the work by the Grand Lodge consequently passed by sub silentio .

INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRST CHAPTER OF THE WORK—TJFON THE ART OF BUILDING , AND THE PROFESSORS OF THE ART . ' THERE is undoubtedly a dignity in the art of building , or in architecture , which no other art possesses ; and this , whether we consider it in its rudest stateoccupied in raising a hutor as practised in a

, , cultivated nation , in the erection of a magnificent and ornamented temple . As the arts in general improve in any nation , this must always maintain its pre-eminence ; for it employs them all , and no man can be eminent as an architect who does not possess a considerable knowledge of almost every science and art already cultivated in his nation . His great works are undertakings of the most serious

concern , connect him with the public , or with the rulers of the state , and attach to him the practitioners of other arts , who are occupied in executing his orders : his works are theobjects of public attention , and are not the transient spectacles of the day , but hand down to posterity his invention , his knowledge , and his taste . ' It is not at all surprising , therefore , that the incorporated architects in all cultivated nations should arrogate to themselves a preeminence over the similar associations of other- tradesmen . A \ find traces of this in the remotest antiquity . The Dionysiacs of Asia

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-08-01, Page 35” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01081798/page/35/.
  • 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 35

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

The Freemasons' Repository.

THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY .

HTHOTJGH we cannot subscribe to the propriety of publishing , or - " - of g iving credit to the many strange and improbable , ( we had almost been induced to say ridiculous ) assertions which characterize the principal part of a learned Professor ' s late publication , we think it justice to pronounce , that the work contains many excellent observations and passages , which do honour to the head and to the heart of the Secretary of the Royal Society of Edinburgh . Under

these impressions , and the supposition that the work may not have undergone the perusal of many of our numerous friends , it is our purpose occasionally to select such passages as have particularly attracted attention , and induced us to hope that the insertion in our monthly miscellany may meet with the approbation of our ' various readers . A warmth of zeal for the support of the character of Real

Masonry unimpeached , we understand , induced some worthy members of the Grand Lodge of England to cause the work above alluded to , tobe there taken into consideration , when all the Brethren present signified their strong disapprobation and abhorrence of such practices , and expressed a manly and firm confidence that their Sovereign and their Country had no occasion to be publicly assured

ofthe iinabated and steady attachment of the Brethren to their King and Government ; pronounced the work incapable of injuring the real professors of Masonry , and totally inapplicable to the Grand Lodge of England , or any Lodge under its constitution . The proposition for the consideration of the work by the Grand Lodge consequently passed by sub silentio .

INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRST CHAPTER OF THE WORK—TJFON THE ART OF BUILDING , AND THE PROFESSORS OF THE ART . ' THERE is undoubtedly a dignity in the art of building , or in architecture , which no other art possesses ; and this , whether we consider it in its rudest stateoccupied in raising a hutor as practised in a

, , cultivated nation , in the erection of a magnificent and ornamented temple . As the arts in general improve in any nation , this must always maintain its pre-eminence ; for it employs them all , and no man can be eminent as an architect who does not possess a considerable knowledge of almost every science and art already cultivated in his nation . His great works are undertakings of the most serious

concern , connect him with the public , or with the rulers of the state , and attach to him the practitioners of other arts , who are occupied in executing his orders : his works are theobjects of public attention , and are not the transient spectacles of the day , but hand down to posterity his invention , his knowledge , and his taste . ' It is not at all surprising , therefore , that the incorporated architects in all cultivated nations should arrogate to themselves a preeminence over the similar associations of other- tradesmen . A \ find traces of this in the remotest antiquity . The Dionysiacs of Asia

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