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  • Oct. 1, 1794
  • Page 19
  • LETTERS FROM T. DUNCKERLEY, ESQ.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Oct. 1, 1794: Page 19

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    Article LETTERS FROM T. DUNCKERLEY, ESQ. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 19

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

Letters From T. Dunckerley, Esq.

very hi gh arid uniform , of a white stone or marble , and over the doors of the best part of them are beautifull y painted in large oval shields the arms of the Grand Duke ; the streets are very beautiful , well paved , and wide ; the Exchange , or place where the merchants meet , is a large spacious square , not unlike Covent-Garden , the houses being all raised on piazzas . Straw hats , silks , velvets , embroideries and silver lace

, gold , & c . ate very cheap and good here . The two chief things that attract the eye of a stranger at his landinoare , the Brazen Men , as they are called , and the Courtezanes Galley The former is a piece of statuary , universally allowed to be the most finished work in its kind ; it is erected in the market-place . On a large square black marble pedestal stands the fi of a manlarge

gure , r than the life , habited like a Roman , with a truncheon in his hand ; the statue is of white marble , about the size of that of King James in the college-garden of Chelsea . Round the pedestal are the ° ngures of four men chained , three times as large as the life ; the eldest of these is represented with his back bowed and broke , and surely nothing but the view of these admirable ieces can ive an adequate

p g idea of their beauties . Sorrow , distress , age , and misery , are lively represented in the old man . In the three young ' ones appear a mixture of manly courage and filial tenderness contending for the superiority ; two of them have their looks turned toward Their suffering father , and seem to tell him with their eyes the . share they bear in his misfortune ; the other looks up to Heaven as implorin g-

assistance in their behalf ; not a muscle nor vein but what are as justly ex-pressed here as in the most correct anatomical print . The occasion of erecting this statue is said to be as follows : One of the Dukes of Tuscany , in his excursions on the Barbarians , having taken prisoners an old man and his three sons of a more than common and gigantic stature and strength ( and who had frequently made great depredations on the Legonese in their small feluccas

, or row-boats , carrying away whole families at a time , and bearing all before them by their sole strength and powers ) , was particularly pleased with this his conquest , and reserved them for an appointed day to satisfy his people ' s desire in putting them to death . One night , however , having by some means or other escaped from their guard , they seized on a small boat ling in the harbourand rowed

y , off till they came to the great chain which gees across the entrance of the mole , which they with prodigious strength ' of rowing burst open , unperceived by the guard that were asleep , and passed out ; but the centinel being awaked by the noise alarmed the town ; it was , however , day before it was known that it was the Moors who had made their The duke was greatltroubled at their

escape . y flight , which the young prince his son perceiving , offered himself ; ' on the forfeiture of his head , to fetch these fugitives back ; upon which his father gave him several small vessels , and a sufficient number of armed men , with which he immediately set out , and overtook' these poor wretches just as they were on the point of landing on the Barb . iry coast , which is a considerable distance from

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-10-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01101794/page/19/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 3
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 4
AN ORATION Article 4
BRIEF HISTORY OF THE RELIGIOUS AND MILITARY ORDER OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS OF ST. JOHN OF JERUSALEM. Article 9
EXTRACTS FROM TWO SERMONS, PREACHED BEFORE THE ANCIENT AND HONOURABLE SOCIETY OF FREEMASONS, Article 11
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 17
LETTERS FROM T. DUNCKERLEY, ESQ. Article 18
A SHORT DESCRIPTION OF WEYMOUTH. Article 21
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 22
MR. TASKER'S LETTERS Article 23
MEMOIRS OF THE REV. WILLIAM PETERS, L.L.B. Article 25
POPULATION OF THE GLOBE. Article 29
AUTHENTIC AND INTERESTING NARRATIVE OF THE ADVENTURES OF THE MUTINEERS Article 30
ANECDOTE. Article 37
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS AT NAPLES. Article 38
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 42
DETACHED THOUGHTS, ILLUSTRATED BY ANECDOTES ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS. Article 43
ON CONSTANCY. Article 44
ON DILIGENCE Article 45
ON SUSPICION. Article 45
INSTANCES OF UNPARALLELLED PARSIMONY IN THE LATE DANIEL DANCER, ESQ. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 48
REMEDY FOR PUTRID FEVERS. Article 48
THE TELEGRAPHE. Article 49
ON THE PROPRIETY OF SPECULATING ON FIRST PRINCIPLES. Article 51
THE POETICAL LANGUAGE OF TRAGEDY NOT BORROWED FROM NATURE. Article 53
POETRY. Article 54
AN ADDRESS WRITTEN BY J. F. S. Article 55
The following is a Translation of the famous Lines composed by DES BARREAUX, so justly celebrated by Mr. BAYLE. Article 56
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, TO A MARRIED LADY* ON HER BIRTH-DAY, Article 57
ELEGY TO THE ISLAND OF JAMAICA. Article 57
EPITAPH ON A CELEBRATED IRISH ACTOR, Article 58
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, LETTER FROM MR. J. TERU TO DOCTOR BIRCH, Dated June 25th, 1728. Article 59
THE FLY, ADDRESSED TO MRS. ******. Article 59
LINES BY MRS. ROBINSON. Article 59
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 60
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
AGRICULTURE, &c. METHOD OF MAKING STILTON CHEESE, Article 69
DISEASES OF CORN AND CATTLE, FROM MR. LOWE'S SURVEY OF NOTTINGHAMSHIRE. Article 70
CURES FOR VARIOUS DISEASES OF DAIRY CATTLE, FROM MR. WEDGE'S SURVEY OF CHESHIRE. Article 71
PROMOTIONS. Article 72
Untitled Article 72
Untitled Article 73
BANKRUPTS. Article 73
Untitled Article 74
LONDON : Article 74
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 75
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 75
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Letters From T. Dunckerley, Esq.

very hi gh arid uniform , of a white stone or marble , and over the doors of the best part of them are beautifull y painted in large oval shields the arms of the Grand Duke ; the streets are very beautiful , well paved , and wide ; the Exchange , or place where the merchants meet , is a large spacious square , not unlike Covent-Garden , the houses being all raised on piazzas . Straw hats , silks , velvets , embroideries and silver lace

, gold , & c . ate very cheap and good here . The two chief things that attract the eye of a stranger at his landinoare , the Brazen Men , as they are called , and the Courtezanes Galley The former is a piece of statuary , universally allowed to be the most finished work in its kind ; it is erected in the market-place . On a large square black marble pedestal stands the fi of a manlarge

gure , r than the life , habited like a Roman , with a truncheon in his hand ; the statue is of white marble , about the size of that of King James in the college-garden of Chelsea . Round the pedestal are the ° ngures of four men chained , three times as large as the life ; the eldest of these is represented with his back bowed and broke , and surely nothing but the view of these admirable ieces can ive an adequate

p g idea of their beauties . Sorrow , distress , age , and misery , are lively represented in the old man . In the three young ' ones appear a mixture of manly courage and filial tenderness contending for the superiority ; two of them have their looks turned toward Their suffering father , and seem to tell him with their eyes the . share they bear in his misfortune ; the other looks up to Heaven as implorin g-

assistance in their behalf ; not a muscle nor vein but what are as justly ex-pressed here as in the most correct anatomical print . The occasion of erecting this statue is said to be as follows : One of the Dukes of Tuscany , in his excursions on the Barbarians , having taken prisoners an old man and his three sons of a more than common and gigantic stature and strength ( and who had frequently made great depredations on the Legonese in their small feluccas

, or row-boats , carrying away whole families at a time , and bearing all before them by their sole strength and powers ) , was particularly pleased with this his conquest , and reserved them for an appointed day to satisfy his people ' s desire in putting them to death . One night , however , having by some means or other escaped from their guard , they seized on a small boat ling in the harbourand rowed

y , off till they came to the great chain which gees across the entrance of the mole , which they with prodigious strength ' of rowing burst open , unperceived by the guard that were asleep , and passed out ; but the centinel being awaked by the noise alarmed the town ; it was , however , day before it was known that it was the Moors who had made their The duke was greatltroubled at their

escape . y flight , which the young prince his son perceiving , offered himself ; ' on the forfeiture of his head , to fetch these fugitives back ; upon which his father gave him several small vessels , and a sufficient number of armed men , with which he immediately set out , and overtook' these poor wretches just as they were on the point of landing on the Barb . iry coast , which is a considerable distance from

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