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  • Sept. 1, 1796
  • Page 51
  • REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Sept. 1, 1796: Page 51

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. ← Page 8 of 9 →
Page 51

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

Review Of New Publications.

The Iron Chest . a play ; tn three Acts . Written By George Col-man , the younger . With a Preface , ' s-vo . Pages izj . Price zs Cadell and Davies . 1796 . THE point at issue between Mr . Oilman ( the younger ) and the Manager of Drury-Lane Theatre , is , whether the ill success of the play of the Iron Chest was owing to the want of me . it in the niece itself , or to the acting cf the latter gentleman . Mr . C . is very violent in support of his accusation that Mr . Kemble did not do his bestor the play must have been well

re-, ceived . Many f . iCls relative to the getting of it up are stated , with much force , but without either temper or discretion . Upon this controversy , which has occupied so much of the attention of dramatic amateurs , we shall not . rnake any observations , as the Public have had a fair opportunity of judging of the truth of Mr . C ' s accusation by the renewed representation of the p lay at the Haymai ket Theatre . We cannot , however , forbear giving a few extracts from the Preface , though we do not pretend to defend their virulence

91 'to espouse either side of the question . ' I am too callous , now , to be annoyed by those innumerable gnats and itiseCts , who daily dart their impotent stings on the literary traveller ; and too knowing to dismount , and waste my time in whipping grasshoppers : —¦ but here is a scowlitisr , sulle / i , black Bull , right athwart my road .- —a monster of magnitude , of the Bxotian breed , perplexing me in my wanderings through the entangled labyrinth of Drury 1 he stands sulkily before me , with sides ,

seemingly , impenetrable to any lash , and tougher than the Dun Cow of Warwick !—Ilis front ou . fronting the brazen bull of Perijlus 1—he has bellowed , gentlemen 1 Yea , he hath bellowed a dismal sound ! ' A hollow , unvaried tone , heaved from his very midriff , and stiiking the listener with torpor 1—Would I could pass the animal quietly , for my own sake!—and , for his , by Jupiter ! I repeat it , I would not willingly harm the Bull . —I delight not . hi baiting liini . —I would jog as gently by him as by the ass that grazes on the common ; but he has obstinately blocked up my way;—he has already tossed and gored rue severely—I must make an effort , or he batters me down , and leaves me to bite the dust . '

* And , here , let me describe the requisites for the character which I have attempted to draw , that the world may judge whether I have , taken a wrong measure of the personage whom I proposed to fit : premising that I have . worked for him before , with snecess , and , therefore , it may be presumed that lam somewhat acquainted with the dimensions of his qualifications . ——I required , then , a man " ¦ Of a tail stature , and of sable hue , "

* ' Muclt like tiie son of Kisli , that lofty Jew . " A'man of whom it might be said , " There's something in his soul " " O ' er which his melancholy sits , and broods . " ' Look at the actor ;—and will any boddo him the injustice to declare that

y ne is deficient in these qualifications . It would puzzle any author , in any t : me or country , from y £ sch yhis down , even , to the Translator of Ludojdca , -rand really , gentlemen , I can go no lower—to find a figure and fee- better suited to tne purpose . I have endeavoured , moreover / to pourtray Si- Ed-Tvard Mortimer as a man stately in his deportment , reserved in his temper ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-09-01, Page 51” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01091796/page/51/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, AND CABINET OF UNIVERSAL LITERATURE . Article 4
A DEFENCE OF MASONRY, Article 10
FEMALE SECRESY. Article 17
HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE OF WILLIAM OF WYKEHAM. Article 18
ON THE ABUSES PRACTISED BY MILLERS AND DEALERS IN CORN. Article 22
REFLECTIONS ON HISTORY. Article 24
ON THE POWER OF HABIT. Article 25
SKETCHES OF CELEBRATED CHARACTERS. Article 28
ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF PROMISSORY NOTES AND PAPER CREDIT. Article 34
THE REMOVAL OF THE MONUMENTS OF THE FINE ARTS FROM ITALY TO FRANCE. Article 37
CURIOUS ANECDOTE OF A FRENCH TRAVELLER. Article 38
EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE REPRESENTING A COMPANION OF THE ANCIENT KNIGHTS TEMPLARS, Article 40
ON THE DEGENERATE MANNERS OF THE ATHENIANS. Article 42
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 44
LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 53
POETRY. Article 54
ODE TO FORTITUDE. Article 55
ELEGY, ON MR. MATTHEW WINTERBOTHAM, Article 56
VERSES, Article 57
SONNET. Article 58
THE SIGH AND THE TEAR. Article 58
EPIGRAMS, Article 59
THE CONJUGAL REPARTEE. Article 59
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 60
INTELLIGENCE OF IMPORTANCE Article 62
ARMIES IN ITALY. Article 64
HOME NEWS. Article 66
THE ARTS. Article 66
OBITUARY. Article 68
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Page 51

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

Review Of New Publications.

The Iron Chest . a play ; tn three Acts . Written By George Col-man , the younger . With a Preface , ' s-vo . Pages izj . Price zs Cadell and Davies . 1796 . THE point at issue between Mr . Oilman ( the younger ) and the Manager of Drury-Lane Theatre , is , whether the ill success of the play of the Iron Chest was owing to the want of me . it in the niece itself , or to the acting cf the latter gentleman . Mr . C . is very violent in support of his accusation that Mr . Kemble did not do his bestor the play must have been well

re-, ceived . Many f . iCls relative to the getting of it up are stated , with much force , but without either temper or discretion . Upon this controversy , which has occupied so much of the attention of dramatic amateurs , we shall not . rnake any observations , as the Public have had a fair opportunity of judging of the truth of Mr . C ' s accusation by the renewed representation of the p lay at the Haymai ket Theatre . We cannot , however , forbear giving a few extracts from the Preface , though we do not pretend to defend their virulence

91 'to espouse either side of the question . ' I am too callous , now , to be annoyed by those innumerable gnats and itiseCts , who daily dart their impotent stings on the literary traveller ; and too knowing to dismount , and waste my time in whipping grasshoppers : —¦ but here is a scowlitisr , sulle / i , black Bull , right athwart my road .- —a monster of magnitude , of the Bxotian breed , perplexing me in my wanderings through the entangled labyrinth of Drury 1 he stands sulkily before me , with sides ,

seemingly , impenetrable to any lash , and tougher than the Dun Cow of Warwick !—Ilis front ou . fronting the brazen bull of Perijlus 1—he has bellowed , gentlemen 1 Yea , he hath bellowed a dismal sound ! ' A hollow , unvaried tone , heaved from his very midriff , and stiiking the listener with torpor 1—Would I could pass the animal quietly , for my own sake!—and , for his , by Jupiter ! I repeat it , I would not willingly harm the Bull . —I delight not . hi baiting liini . —I would jog as gently by him as by the ass that grazes on the common ; but he has obstinately blocked up my way;—he has already tossed and gored rue severely—I must make an effort , or he batters me down , and leaves me to bite the dust . '

* And , here , let me describe the requisites for the character which I have attempted to draw , that the world may judge whether I have , taken a wrong measure of the personage whom I proposed to fit : premising that I have . worked for him before , with snecess , and , therefore , it may be presumed that lam somewhat acquainted with the dimensions of his qualifications . ——I required , then , a man " ¦ Of a tail stature , and of sable hue , "

* ' Muclt like tiie son of Kisli , that lofty Jew . " A'man of whom it might be said , " There's something in his soul " " O ' er which his melancholy sits , and broods . " ' Look at the actor ;—and will any boddo him the injustice to declare that

y ne is deficient in these qualifications . It would puzzle any author , in any t : me or country , from y £ sch yhis down , even , to the Translator of Ludojdca , -rand really , gentlemen , I can go no lower—to find a figure and fee- better suited to tne purpose . I have endeavoured , moreover / to pourtray Si- Ed-Tvard Mortimer as a man stately in his deportment , reserved in his temper ,

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