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  • Sept. 1, 1795
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Sept. 1, 1795: Page 9

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Ar00900

Lady B . Well , let me recollect . I go every other Sunday , in the : early part of the evening , to au old aunt , who lives at the antipodes of the fashionable part of the town , and there I retail to her the historic scandal of the fortnig ht ; . and then she reads to me , through her green spectacles , out of a folio , a sermon ofthe last century . Lord Mel . I hope , Sir Pepper , you will give Lady Bellair some

credit for that . Lady B . Then I go once in the winter to the Ancient Music . Sir P . Plin . That , I suppose , is a concert performed by the decayed musicians . Lady B . Not exactly so ; it is , however , a very edifying concert , and composed of those hoary , venerable notes , that in days of yore

delig hted the ears of Harry the Eighth and Anne Bullen , and is now a very suitable recreation for old bachelors , old maids , and emigrant nuns ! But to continue the narrative of my mortified inclination : my carriage every morning makes one of the long procession of coaches that besiege the circulating library in Bond-street . SirP . Plin . That denotes your ladyship ' s fondness for literature .

Lady B . I beg your pardon , Sir Pepper ,, literature is my aversion : I never look into a book , but 1 cannot avoid calling every morning at the library ; it is a kind of literary tavern , where the waiters are in perpetual demand . A dish of elegant sonnets for Miss Simper ; satires with a poignant sauce for Mrs . Grumble ; a sirloin of history for lady Sleepless ; a broil'd devil of private anecdote , highly peppered Sir

with scandal , for Lady Angelica Worthless . It would amuse you , Pepper , to see these female Academics enter the porch of Hookham college , their cheeks , paled by study , a little relieved by a thin stratum of morninc rouge . Then you would wonder at the method the learned professors adopt of supplying the impatience of their pupils ; for example—one lady receives the first volume of an author , of which she' will never enquire for the second ; at the same time she receives the second volume of another author , of which she has not yet an idea of the first .

; Sir P . Plin . Give me leave to observe , this vague method of reading must create a kind of chaos , without consistency . Lady B . Consistency is a vulgar word we do not admit into our vocabulary ; and as for the chaos j-ou disapprove of , I really think there is to be found the whole merit ; for this miscellaneous , variegated , unconnected reading , forms the beautiful dove-tailed , mosaic

literature of the female mind . Sir P . Plin . I hope you will allow Lady Plinlimmon to be a brilliant exception to your general description . Lady B . Most undoubtedly ; I have a long list of exceptions . — But not to interrupt the narrative of my own memoirs—I am sometime ' s obliged to mingle with the elegant mob at a sale of pictures .

Sir P . Plin . A sale of p ictures must be very improving . Yon there frequently meet with works of old masters . Lady B . The ladies-of fashion do not go to auctions for the sake of ihe old masters ; do they , lord Melcourt ?

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-09-01, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01091795/page/9/.
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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.

Ar00900

Lady B . Well , let me recollect . I go every other Sunday , in the : early part of the evening , to au old aunt , who lives at the antipodes of the fashionable part of the town , and there I retail to her the historic scandal of the fortnig ht ; . and then she reads to me , through her green spectacles , out of a folio , a sermon ofthe last century . Lord Mel . I hope , Sir Pepper , you will give Lady Bellair some

credit for that . Lady B . Then I go once in the winter to the Ancient Music . Sir P . Plin . That , I suppose , is a concert performed by the decayed musicians . Lady B . Not exactly so ; it is , however , a very edifying concert , and composed of those hoary , venerable notes , that in days of yore

delig hted the ears of Harry the Eighth and Anne Bullen , and is now a very suitable recreation for old bachelors , old maids , and emigrant nuns ! But to continue the narrative of my mortified inclination : my carriage every morning makes one of the long procession of coaches that besiege the circulating library in Bond-street . SirP . Plin . That denotes your ladyship ' s fondness for literature .

Lady B . I beg your pardon , Sir Pepper ,, literature is my aversion : I never look into a book , but 1 cannot avoid calling every morning at the library ; it is a kind of literary tavern , where the waiters are in perpetual demand . A dish of elegant sonnets for Miss Simper ; satires with a poignant sauce for Mrs . Grumble ; a sirloin of history for lady Sleepless ; a broil'd devil of private anecdote , highly peppered Sir

with scandal , for Lady Angelica Worthless . It would amuse you , Pepper , to see these female Academics enter the porch of Hookham college , their cheeks , paled by study , a little relieved by a thin stratum of morninc rouge . Then you would wonder at the method the learned professors adopt of supplying the impatience of their pupils ; for example—one lady receives the first volume of an author , of which she' will never enquire for the second ; at the same time she receives the second volume of another author , of which she has not yet an idea of the first .

; Sir P . Plin . Give me leave to observe , this vague method of reading must create a kind of chaos , without consistency . Lady B . Consistency is a vulgar word we do not admit into our vocabulary ; and as for the chaos j-ou disapprove of , I really think there is to be found the whole merit ; for this miscellaneous , variegated , unconnected reading , forms the beautiful dove-tailed , mosaic

literature of the female mind . Sir P . Plin . I hope you will allow Lady Plinlimmon to be a brilliant exception to your general description . Lady B . Most undoubtedly ; I have a long list of exceptions . — But not to interrupt the narrative of my own memoirs—I am sometime ' s obliged to mingle with the elegant mob at a sale of pictures .

Sir P . Plin . A sale of p ictures must be very improving . Yon there frequently meet with works of old masters . Lady B . The ladies-of fashion do not go to auctions for the sake of ihe old masters ; do they , lord Melcourt ?

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