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  • Sept. 1, 1797
  • Page 43
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Sept. 1, 1797: Page 43

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Review Op New Publications.

Chap . IV . relates the passage to Teneriffe , and from thence to St . Jago , with notices of those islands . The most interesting object in the former island is the Peak , of which an account will be seen in a former part of our Magazine ; and in the latter a dreadful famine had subsisted , from the want of rain , for alx > ut three years . _ Chap . V . describes the ' passage of the Line . Course across the Atlantic . The harbour , city , and country of Rio de Janeiro . ' Of this capital of

the Brazils a long and entertaining account is given ; and a pretty copious description of the Cochineal insect . It is observed that ' the shops of Rio were full of Manchester manufactures , and other British goods , even to English prints , both serious and caricature . ' Chap . VI . narrates the ' passage . to the southern part of the Atlantic , and of the Indian Ocean . View of the Islands of Tristan d'Acunha in the Former ,

and of those of St . Paul and Amsterdam , in the latter . ' In the last mentioned island a curious phaenomenonoccurred . Round the harbour , or bason , were several springs of hot water . Fahrenheit ' s thermometer , which stood in the air at 62 deg . on being immersed into one of those hot springs , ascended immediately to 19 6 deg . In another , it rose to 204 ; and in a third , on applying the bulb of the thermometer to , a creviceout of which a small stream issuedin less than a minute it rose to

, , the boiling point . On various trials , in several springs , it was found that the . general standard of heat was that of si 3 deg . when the bulb of the thermometer was applied to the fissure from whence the water issued ; and , that if a kind of reservoir was formed round the spring , the water in it would generally remain about the temperature of 2 . 04 . deg . The bason abounded with tench , bream , and perch ; and the same person , who with a hook and line , had caught

some of these fish in the cold water of the bason , might , with the same motion of his hand , let them drop into the hot adjoining springrw-here , in fact , they were boiled , in the space of fifteen minutes , and fit for eating . " Chap . VII . relates the ' Entrance into the straits of Sunda . Visit to Batavia and Bantam , in the island of Java . View of the southern extremity of the island of Sumatra . Passage through the straits of Banka to Pulo Condore . ' The unhealthiness of Batavia is confirmed by the following anecdote . ' Of

the fatal effects of the climate upon both sexes a strong proof was given by a lady there , who mentioned , that out of eleven persons of her family , who had come to Batavia only ten months before , her father , brothei ' -in-law , and six sisters , had already paid the debt of nature . ' In our extracts we shall be particularly attentive to objects of science and valuable information , and in this place we shall present our readers with the descriptions of some valuable lantsiven in this chapter . ' One of the

delep , g gates at Batavia gave , from the medical garden , ayoung growing ntttmegplant and a nut , in a state supposed rapable of germination , to a person belonging to the embassy , who committed it immediaetly to the care of a gentleman , then bound for England , in order to be put in his Majesty ' s rich botanical garden at Kew ; from whence , had the plant succeeded there , this tree might have b en propagated in the British . plantations in the West Indies ; in like manner as the coffee-tree was transplanted to the French West Indies , in the

Beginning of the present century , from a very few specimens in the botanic garden at Paris . The nutmeg plant , however , suffered in the passage , and was left at St . Helena . The nutmeg tree is a beautiful vegetable . The stem , with a smooth brown bark , rises perfectly straight . Its strong and numerous branches proceed regularly from it in an oblique direction upwards . They bear large oval leaves , pendulous from them , some a foot in length . The upper and outer surface of the leaf is smooth , and of a deep agreeable green ';

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-09-01, Page 43” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01091797/page/43/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICE OF MR. WILLIAM WHITE. Article 4
ADDENDA TO THE MEMOIR OF MR. THOMAS HULL, Article 5
ON THE PECULIAR EXCELLENCIES OF HANDEL'S MUSIC. Article 6
HISTORY OF THE SCIENCES FOR 1797. Article 7
CURSORY REMARKS ON SHAKSPEARE'S MEASURE FOR MEASURE. Article 10
THE COLLECTOR. Article 12
THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF PETER PORCUPINE; Article 18
A BRIEF SYSTEM OF CONCHOLOGY. Article 22
DESCRIPTION OF THE PEAK OF TENERIFFE. Article 26
ACCOUNT OF A REMARKABLE SLEEP-WALKER. Article 30
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 34
OPINIONS CONCERNING MASONRY. WITH THE CHARACTER OP A TRUE FREEMASON. Article 36
A CHARGE Article 37
A VINDICATION OF MASONRY. Article 40
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 41
REVIEW OP NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 42
POETRY. Article 50
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 54
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 57
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
OBITUARY. Article 70
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Page 43

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

Review Op New Publications.

Chap . IV . relates the passage to Teneriffe , and from thence to St . Jago , with notices of those islands . The most interesting object in the former island is the Peak , of which an account will be seen in a former part of our Magazine ; and in the latter a dreadful famine had subsisted , from the want of rain , for alx > ut three years . _ Chap . V . describes the ' passage of the Line . Course across the Atlantic . The harbour , city , and country of Rio de Janeiro . ' Of this capital of

the Brazils a long and entertaining account is given ; and a pretty copious description of the Cochineal insect . It is observed that ' the shops of Rio were full of Manchester manufactures , and other British goods , even to English prints , both serious and caricature . ' Chap . VI . narrates the ' passage . to the southern part of the Atlantic , and of the Indian Ocean . View of the Islands of Tristan d'Acunha in the Former ,

and of those of St . Paul and Amsterdam , in the latter . ' In the last mentioned island a curious phaenomenonoccurred . Round the harbour , or bason , were several springs of hot water . Fahrenheit ' s thermometer , which stood in the air at 62 deg . on being immersed into one of those hot springs , ascended immediately to 19 6 deg . In another , it rose to 204 ; and in a third , on applying the bulb of the thermometer to , a creviceout of which a small stream issuedin less than a minute it rose to

, , the boiling point . On various trials , in several springs , it was found that the . general standard of heat was that of si 3 deg . when the bulb of the thermometer was applied to the fissure from whence the water issued ; and , that if a kind of reservoir was formed round the spring , the water in it would generally remain about the temperature of 2 . 04 . deg . The bason abounded with tench , bream , and perch ; and the same person , who with a hook and line , had caught

some of these fish in the cold water of the bason , might , with the same motion of his hand , let them drop into the hot adjoining springrw-here , in fact , they were boiled , in the space of fifteen minutes , and fit for eating . " Chap . VII . relates the ' Entrance into the straits of Sunda . Visit to Batavia and Bantam , in the island of Java . View of the southern extremity of the island of Sumatra . Passage through the straits of Banka to Pulo Condore . ' The unhealthiness of Batavia is confirmed by the following anecdote . ' Of

the fatal effects of the climate upon both sexes a strong proof was given by a lady there , who mentioned , that out of eleven persons of her family , who had come to Batavia only ten months before , her father , brothei ' -in-law , and six sisters , had already paid the debt of nature . ' In our extracts we shall be particularly attentive to objects of science and valuable information , and in this place we shall present our readers with the descriptions of some valuable lantsiven in this chapter . ' One of the

delep , g gates at Batavia gave , from the medical garden , ayoung growing ntttmegplant and a nut , in a state supposed rapable of germination , to a person belonging to the embassy , who committed it immediaetly to the care of a gentleman , then bound for England , in order to be put in his Majesty ' s rich botanical garden at Kew ; from whence , had the plant succeeded there , this tree might have b en propagated in the British . plantations in the West Indies ; in like manner as the coffee-tree was transplanted to the French West Indies , in the

Beginning of the present century , from a very few specimens in the botanic garden at Paris . The nutmeg plant , however , suffered in the passage , and was left at St . Helena . The nutmeg tree is a beautiful vegetable . The stem , with a smooth brown bark , rises perfectly straight . Its strong and numerous branches proceed regularly from it in an oblique direction upwards . They bear large oval leaves , pendulous from them , some a foot in length . The upper and outer surface of the leaf is smooth , and of a deep agreeable green ';

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