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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1795
  • Page 7
  • THOUGHTS SUGGESTED BY BEADING A TREATISE ON THE "ORIGIN OF LANGUAGE."
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Nov. 1, 1795: Page 7

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    Article THOUGHTS SUGGESTED BY BEADING A TREATISE ON THE "ORIGIN OF LANGUAGE." ← Page 2 of 3 →
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Thoughts Suggested By Beading A Treatise On The "Origin Of Language."

was new , her faculties not clouded as ours are—she could quickly make such progress as to believe that the fruit she had ate had the wonderful effect to make her know good and evil . And wherein does the good aud evil of a woman consist so much , as in the proper use of her tongue . What else could have made the fair sexin all agesso remarkable

, , for the power and force of their tongues ? The facetious Mr . Fielding says , in describing one of his battles— " Our landlady then entered , and made an attack with a weapon many men have fled from , who could face a battery of cannon . "—So ambitious was the first and most perfect of her sex to speak , that she willingly renounced immortality to obtain that faculty . Aud no doubt but this mark has

been set upon her daughters to keep in perpetual remembrance , that women first learned to speak from the Devil : —do not tve say such a woman has the Devil of a tongue ? Is not a scold called a Dragon , a Brimstone ? & c . It may , perhaps , be said , that since I found my hypothesis upon the history of Moses , and reject the authority of tra-, vellers ancient and modernand even of the wild Girl 30 years

, , after she was caught , that Moses , had this been true , would have mentioned it in his history . To this I answer , that Moses has been very short in that part of his history , and that he has said nothing to contradict it .

By the time Moses came to write his history , women had gained a great ascendant in the world by the superiority of their eloquence . His own preservation shewed how far the daughter of Pharaoh could counteract her King and father ' s positive command , that every male of that people should be put to death as soon as born . In . contradiction to this command , she not only preserved his life , but educated him in her father ' s courtand had all his wise men to instruct him :

, add to this , his politesse , his court education , and the obligations he lay under to that Princess , it would have been a conduct , Sir , quite the reverse-of every thing we can suppose , that Moses should have handed it down to all posterity that the Fair Sex had received so valuable an endowment from the Devil . Moses himself tells us , he was so much under the influence of his own wifethat he forbore

compli-, ance to the most positive law given to his people , that of circumcision , and that . no less authori ty than that of an angel from heaven could prevail upon her to perform that rite ; and after she had performed it , " A bloody husband hast thou been , " said she . Had Moses given us the contents of a speech to which this was the preambleconsidering he was a man of a meek temperand slow of speech

, , , I believe , Sir , you would join with me in pardoning Moses for his silence upon any subject that could in the least reflect upon the Fair-Sex ; more especially as , by his silence , he has not contradicted the truth .

I could say a great deal more in support of my hypothesis , did I not intend to write the History of Womankind , where this subject shall be more fully discussed , if I live to finish it . I shall here only add , that on the person who can believe that women were for thousands of

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-11-01, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01111795/page/7/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON : Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS , &c. Article 3
Untitled Article 3
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 3
THE MAN OF PLEASURE. Article 4
THOUGHTS SUGGESTED BY BEADING A TREATISE ON THE "ORIGIN OF LANGUAGE." Article 6
TO THE EDITOR. Article 8
ON SEDUCTION. Article 9
MASONIC EXTRACT FROM A TOUR IN SCOTLAND. Article 10
TO THE PROPRIETOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 11
FUNERAL ORATION Article 11
ANECDOTE Article 14
TO THE EDITOR. Article 16
A CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF THE GRAND MASTERS OF THE KNIGHTS HOSPITALLERS Article 17
UNCOMMON SENTENCE: Article 19
OLD LAWS. Article 20
ANECDOTE OF THE LATE EARL MOUNT EDGECUMBE. Article 20
DETACHED SENTIMENTS.No. III. Article 21
ANECDOTES OF THE VERY ANCIENT LODGE OF KILWINNING. Article 22
INSCRIPTIONS Article 23
SLAVE COUNTRIES. Article 24
A CURE FOR A SORE THROAT. Article 28
CEREMONY OF A GENTOO WOMAN Article 29
DISSERTATIONS ON THE POLITE ARTS. Article 31
THE STAGE. Article 36
A LEAP YEAR LOST. Article 37
FOR THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 38
RELIEVING THE POOR. Article 39
CHARACTER OF A GENTLEMAN. Article 40
FOR THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 42
TO THE EDITOR. Article 43
REAL PHILOSOPHER, Article 44
A CHINESE TALE. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 48
Untitled Article 48
AN EASY METHOD OF DESTROYING BUGS. Article 48
FOR THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 49
INSTANCE OF DELICACY AND PRESENCE OF MIND. Article 49
Untitled Article 49
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 50
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 51
POETRY. Article 54
MASONIC ODE. Article 54
ON THE EPICUREAN, STOIC, AND CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHY. Article 55
ATHEISM Article 55
IRREGULAR ODE TO EVENING. Article 56
ELEGIAC STANZAS. Article 56
SONNET TO DELIA. Article 57
PETER PINDAR TO DR. SAYERS, Article 58
ON FORTITUDE. Article 60
SONG. Article 60
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 61
PROMOTIONS. Article 71
Untitled Article 72
Untitled Article 72
Untitled Article 72
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Thoughts Suggested By Beading A Treatise On The "Origin Of Language."

was new , her faculties not clouded as ours are—she could quickly make such progress as to believe that the fruit she had ate had the wonderful effect to make her know good and evil . And wherein does the good aud evil of a woman consist so much , as in the proper use of her tongue . What else could have made the fair sexin all agesso remarkable

, , for the power and force of their tongues ? The facetious Mr . Fielding says , in describing one of his battles— " Our landlady then entered , and made an attack with a weapon many men have fled from , who could face a battery of cannon . "—So ambitious was the first and most perfect of her sex to speak , that she willingly renounced immortality to obtain that faculty . Aud no doubt but this mark has

been set upon her daughters to keep in perpetual remembrance , that women first learned to speak from the Devil : —do not tve say such a woman has the Devil of a tongue ? Is not a scold called a Dragon , a Brimstone ? & c . It may , perhaps , be said , that since I found my hypothesis upon the history of Moses , and reject the authority of tra-, vellers ancient and modernand even of the wild Girl 30 years

, , after she was caught , that Moses , had this been true , would have mentioned it in his history . To this I answer , that Moses has been very short in that part of his history , and that he has said nothing to contradict it .

By the time Moses came to write his history , women had gained a great ascendant in the world by the superiority of their eloquence . His own preservation shewed how far the daughter of Pharaoh could counteract her King and father ' s positive command , that every male of that people should be put to death as soon as born . In . contradiction to this command , she not only preserved his life , but educated him in her father ' s courtand had all his wise men to instruct him :

, add to this , his politesse , his court education , and the obligations he lay under to that Princess , it would have been a conduct , Sir , quite the reverse-of every thing we can suppose , that Moses should have handed it down to all posterity that the Fair Sex had received so valuable an endowment from the Devil . Moses himself tells us , he was so much under the influence of his own wifethat he forbore

compli-, ance to the most positive law given to his people , that of circumcision , and that . no less authori ty than that of an angel from heaven could prevail upon her to perform that rite ; and after she had performed it , " A bloody husband hast thou been , " said she . Had Moses given us the contents of a speech to which this was the preambleconsidering he was a man of a meek temperand slow of speech

, , , I believe , Sir , you would join with me in pardoning Moses for his silence upon any subject that could in the least reflect upon the Fair-Sex ; more especially as , by his silence , he has not contradicted the truth .

I could say a great deal more in support of my hypothesis , did I not intend to write the History of Womankind , where this subject shall be more fully discussed , if I live to finish it . I shall here only add , that on the person who can believe that women were for thousands of

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