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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Sept. 1, 1795
  • Page 11
  • TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Sept. 1, 1795: Page 11

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Ar01100

¦ Is t nothing , Sir Pepper , to have all the opera glasses levelled at one ?¦ To sit in my box , as on a throne , the unrivalled queen of Fopland ? Lord Mel . I must confess ,. Lady Bellair , you have an extensive dominion ; Fopland is a populous country . Lady B- Soit is , and what is still better , there is not an old man to , be found in it .

Sir P . Plin . I am sorry I am excluded from being one of your majesty ' s subjects ? Lady B . Out of regard to your gallantry , I will introduce a bill to naturalise you , Sir Pepper ; but , not to lose -the thread of my narrative , I must inform you , that I go once in the winter to an assembly , given by the wife of my hysician ; there all his pale convalescents

p stalk about like ghosts : Lord Mel . And to conclude the description ; tlie lemonade is inT tentionally made so acid that the doctoi is obliged to return all the visits of his company the next day . Sir P . Plin . Very good indeed . Lady B . You . perceive what a mortified life I am obliged to

. lead . Sir P . 'Plin . If your historic pencil has drawn a true resemblance , I inust confess a fashionable lad y is to me an incomprehensible being . ( Exempt ,

To The Editor Of The Freemasons' Magazine.

TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE .

SIR , IN turning over a late volume of the Archrsologia , a work calculated to illustrate local history , and to furnish amusing information to inquisitive minds , I was much surprised to find a gentleman , whose extensive knowledge and penetration 1 have frequently admired , descend so low as to throw out invectives against a whole society of

menma-, ny of them of the hig hest rank and estimation , in whose favour he is nevertheless obliged to admit a laving clause that will indeed , on due consideration , securely shelter them from his wanton obloquy . GovernorPownal , in his Observations on Gothic Architecture , fond oftheidea of having discovered the origin of Freemasonry in the corporations of artists employed by the Roman pontiff in the 12 th .

century , in various countries , to restoie decayed churches , censures the grant of exclusive privileges to them as an instance of ecclesiastical usurpation aud tyranny ; when , if he had considered the matter with unbiassed coolness and circumspection , he might have recollected , that in ages of feudal ' turbulence and barbarism , no . mechanical arts could ever have been exercisedif they had not been protected from

, lawless violence , and been nursed with that tenderness which their , first efforts required . About the time referred to , was , indeed , the . sera of municipal establishments for the promotion of trade , and for the association of those brotherhoods and fellowships that cultivated the .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-09-01, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01091795/page/11/.
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
LONDON : Article 1
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
Untitled Article 2
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
MEMOIRS OF WILLIAM PERFECT, M. D. Article 4
SKETCH OF HIGH LIFE. Article 8
Untitled Article 9
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 11
THOUGHTS ON CALUMNY. Article 13
ANECDOTE OF SHENSTONE. Article 14
ESSAY ON FRIENDSHIP. Article 15
SPIRITED CONDUCT OF A MAYOR OF ARUNDEL. Article 17
ANECDOTE OF WILLIAM THE THIRD. Article 17
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 18
DISSERTATIONS ON THE POLITE ARTS. No. IV. Article 23
Untitled Article 25
LETTERS FROM BARON BIELFELD. Article 28
HISTORICAL ANECDOTES. Article 31
THE UNION OF LOVE TO GOD AND LOVE TO MAN: A MASONIC SERMON. Article 34
HISTORICAL ANECDOTES. Article 35
THE UNION OF LOVE TO GOD AND LOVE TO MAN:-A MASONIC SERMON. Article 38
AN ADDRESS TO THE MASON BRETHREN*. Article 42
THE STAGE. Article 46
AN IMPROPRIETY IN THE CHARACTER OF OTHELLO, MOOR OF VENICE. Article 47
ORIENTAL APOLOGUES. Article 48
RIDICULOUS CUSTOMS AND SUPERSTITIONS IN DIFFERENT NATIONS. Article 54
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 55
REMARKS ON THE DURATION OF LIFE IN MEN AND ANIMALS. Article 57
ANECDOTE OF JAMES THE FIRST. Article 59
THE MAN OF GENIUS. Article 60
DESCRIPTION OF LONDON , Article 62
ANECDOTE OF THE CELEBRATED DR. STUKELEY. Article 63
ANECDOTE OF THE LATE ALDERMAN BECKFORD. Article 63
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 64
POETRY. Article 65
STANZAS ON MASONRY. Article 66
ON VIEWING A SKELETON, Article 67
EPITAPH Article 68
EPITAPH Article 68
EPITAPH TO THE MEMORY OF COLLINS THE POET. Article 69
THE ENGLISH JUSTICE. Article 69
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 70
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 70
HOME NEWS. Article 73
HOME NEWS. Article 77
MARRIAGES. Article 81
DEATHS. Article 81
BANKRUPTS. Article 81
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar01100

¦ Is t nothing , Sir Pepper , to have all the opera glasses levelled at one ?¦ To sit in my box , as on a throne , the unrivalled queen of Fopland ? Lord Mel . I must confess ,. Lady Bellair , you have an extensive dominion ; Fopland is a populous country . Lady B- Soit is , and what is still better , there is not an old man to , be found in it .

Sir P . Plin . I am sorry I am excluded from being one of your majesty ' s subjects ? Lady B . Out of regard to your gallantry , I will introduce a bill to naturalise you , Sir Pepper ; but , not to lose -the thread of my narrative , I must inform you , that I go once in the winter to an assembly , given by the wife of my hysician ; there all his pale convalescents

p stalk about like ghosts : Lord Mel . And to conclude the description ; tlie lemonade is inT tentionally made so acid that the doctoi is obliged to return all the visits of his company the next day . Sir P . Plin . Very good indeed . Lady B . You . perceive what a mortified life I am obliged to

. lead . Sir P . 'Plin . If your historic pencil has drawn a true resemblance , I inust confess a fashionable lad y is to me an incomprehensible being . ( Exempt ,

To The Editor Of The Freemasons' Magazine.

TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE .

SIR , IN turning over a late volume of the Archrsologia , a work calculated to illustrate local history , and to furnish amusing information to inquisitive minds , I was much surprised to find a gentleman , whose extensive knowledge and penetration 1 have frequently admired , descend so low as to throw out invectives against a whole society of

menma-, ny of them of the hig hest rank and estimation , in whose favour he is nevertheless obliged to admit a laving clause that will indeed , on due consideration , securely shelter them from his wanton obloquy . GovernorPownal , in his Observations on Gothic Architecture , fond oftheidea of having discovered the origin of Freemasonry in the corporations of artists employed by the Roman pontiff in the 12 th .

century , in various countries , to restoie decayed churches , censures the grant of exclusive privileges to them as an instance of ecclesiastical usurpation aud tyranny ; when , if he had considered the matter with unbiassed coolness and circumspection , he might have recollected , that in ages of feudal ' turbulence and barbarism , no . mechanical arts could ever have been exercisedif they had not been protected from

, lawless violence , and been nursed with that tenderness which their , first efforts required . About the time referred to , was , indeed , the . sera of municipal establishments for the promotion of trade , and for the association of those brotherhoods and fellowships that cultivated the .

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