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  • Sept. 1, 1795
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  • THOUGHTS ON CALUMNY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Sept. 1, 1795: Page 13

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Thoughts On Calumny.

THOUGHTS ON CALUMNY .

FOR THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE .

CALUMNY may be defined a false , injurious detraction from the character of any person , either in speech or writing . The most abandoned and sordid minds have the least abhorrence of Calumny . He who is but moderately wicked , dursc not venture upon it ; he who has but a spark of ingenuity in his temper , disdains it . One asked a Spartan whether his sword was sharp ? Fie answered ,

" Sharper than Calumny . " The Calumniator is a general Misanthropist , he spares no age 5 , order , nor sex . He is a general calamity , and wants power , not will , to be the Phaeton of the world . He wishes the destruction of the human race , but the best and most useful men are his principal objects ; for he that aims at the overthrow of a buildingwill bend his »

, strength against the pillars . ^ United measures for the public good give the Calumniator nothing but torment , and he will stick at nothing to break the connection—he cannot bear to see individuals happy and , if he knows two of kindred souls , he is restless , until , by secret arts and

insinuations , he breaks the sacred bands , and separates Lcelius from Scipio , Pylades from Orestes . . Calumny is one of those evils , which , for reasons infinitely wise , ' ( G p d has permitted in every age of the world , and the greatest , the wisest , the best of men , have suffered by Calumny . Moses , though meek to a proverb , was calumniated b y his own

brother and sister . Socrates , among the Greeks , lost his life by Calumny . Calumny banished Rutilius from Old Rome , and Calumny deposed Lord Somers , the greatest , the best Chancellor that had ever been in England . If Calumny , thenbe so pernicious to human societyif it be a vies

, , in its nature so detestable , why is it not every where ranked in the first class , and an adequate punishment provided by all legislatures ? k has been seen in different li ghts by different states , and in different ages . Among the Athenians , the Calumniator was only subject to a pecuniary mulct . The Romans branded him on the forehead .

In some ofthe present governments in Europe , Calumny is a capital offence . A delicate sense of honour had made duelling as frequent as libelling and Calumny ; and the only way to prevent the former , was effectually to suppress the latter . In some other governments and their dependencies , Calumny seems to be tolerated . Is it because it prevails like a torrent , and that it would break through all banks made to stop it ? or , are the people less sensible of its stings , of have they mere virtue to bear , ¦ thejn- ? Possibly false notions of liberty may be the true cause .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-09-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01091795/page/13/.
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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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Page 13

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

Thoughts On Calumny.

THOUGHTS ON CALUMNY .

FOR THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE .

CALUMNY may be defined a false , injurious detraction from the character of any person , either in speech or writing . The most abandoned and sordid minds have the least abhorrence of Calumny . He who is but moderately wicked , dursc not venture upon it ; he who has but a spark of ingenuity in his temper , disdains it . One asked a Spartan whether his sword was sharp ? Fie answered ,

" Sharper than Calumny . " The Calumniator is a general Misanthropist , he spares no age 5 , order , nor sex . He is a general calamity , and wants power , not will , to be the Phaeton of the world . He wishes the destruction of the human race , but the best and most useful men are his principal objects ; for he that aims at the overthrow of a buildingwill bend his »

, strength against the pillars . ^ United measures for the public good give the Calumniator nothing but torment , and he will stick at nothing to break the connection—he cannot bear to see individuals happy and , if he knows two of kindred souls , he is restless , until , by secret arts and

insinuations , he breaks the sacred bands , and separates Lcelius from Scipio , Pylades from Orestes . . Calumny is one of those evils , which , for reasons infinitely wise , ' ( G p d has permitted in every age of the world , and the greatest , the wisest , the best of men , have suffered by Calumny . Moses , though meek to a proverb , was calumniated b y his own

brother and sister . Socrates , among the Greeks , lost his life by Calumny . Calumny banished Rutilius from Old Rome , and Calumny deposed Lord Somers , the greatest , the best Chancellor that had ever been in England . If Calumny , thenbe so pernicious to human societyif it be a vies

, , in its nature so detestable , why is it not every where ranked in the first class , and an adequate punishment provided by all legislatures ? k has been seen in different li ghts by different states , and in different ages . Among the Athenians , the Calumniator was only subject to a pecuniary mulct . The Romans branded him on the forehead .

In some ofthe present governments in Europe , Calumny is a capital offence . A delicate sense of honour had made duelling as frequent as libelling and Calumny ; and the only way to prevent the former , was effectually to suppress the latter . In some other governments and their dependencies , Calumny seems to be tolerated . Is it because it prevails like a torrent , and that it would break through all banks made to stop it ? or , are the people less sensible of its stings , of have they mere virtue to bear , ¦ thejn- ? Possibly false notions of liberty may be the true cause .

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