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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1796
  • Page 23
  • CURIOUS FACTS RELATIVE TO THE LATE CHARLES STUART, THE PRETENDER .
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Nov. 1, 1796: Page 23

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    Article CURIOUS FACTS RELATIVE TO THE LATE CHARLES STUART, THE PRETENDER . ← Page 3 of 3
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Curious Facts Relative To The Late Charles Stuart, The Pretender .

ancl protect him . " I own , " added Helvetius to me , " although I knew the danger to be greater of harbouring him at Paris than at Loudon ; and although I thought the family of Hanover not only the lawful sovereigns in England , but the only lawful sovereigns in Europe , as having the free consent of the people ; yet was I such a dupe to his flattery , that I invited him torn } ' house ; concealed him there , going

and coming , near two years ; had all his correspondence pass through my hands ; met with his partizans upon Pont Neuf ; and found at last that I had incurred all this danger aud trouble for the , most unworthy of all mortals : insomuch that I have been assured , when he went down to Nantz to embark on his expedition to Scotland , he took frightand refused to go on board ; and his attendantsthinking- the

, , matter gone too far , and that they would be affronted for his cowardice , -carried him in the night-time into the ship , pieds et mains lies . " I asked him , if he meant literally . " Yes , " said he , " literally : they tied him , and cairied him by main force . What think you now of this hero and conqueror r " ' Both Lord Marechal and Helvetius agree , that with all this strange

character , he was no bigot , but rather had learned from the philosophers at Paris to affect a contempt of all religion . You must know that both these persons thoughithey were ascribing to him an excellent quality . Indeed both of them used to laugh at me for my narrow way of thinking in these particulars . However , my dear Sir John , I hope you will do me the justice to acquit me .

' I doubt not but these circumstances will appear curious to Lord Plardwicke , to whom you will please to present my respects . I suppose his Lordship will think this unaccountable mixture of temerity and timidity in the same character not a littie singular . '

On The Music Of The Ancients.

ON THE MUSIC OF THE ANCIENTS .

TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREMASOTStS' MAGAZINE . T MUST acknowledge , Mr . Editor , that I have never been fully - " - convinced by the arguments advanced by Rousseau and other writerswho have decried the Grecian music , and have g iven a

, decided preference to the modern improvements in that delightful art . lam rather inclined to think , that we are now-incompetent to form a just judgment on this subject . Let us for a moment suppose , that the Greek and Latin languages had been totally and irrecoverably lost ; and that only some of their general rules of quantity and versification had been transmitted to usthrough the medium of some other

lan-, guage , without a single line of poetry to exemplify them . In such case , we should doubtless have been altogether at a loss to conceive how verse , constructed by such rules , could have been relished by persons of any taste or discernment : we should have wondered , par-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-11-01, Page 23” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01111796/page/23/.
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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
ON THE CABALISTICAL PHILOSOPHY OF THE JEWS. Article 5
THE LAND OF NINEVEH, A FRAGMENT. Article 6
ON PHILOSOPHY. Article 7
ON TRUTH. Article 9
CEREMONY OF OPENING WEARMOUTH BRIDGE; Article 10
THE CASE OF A DISTRESSED CITIZEN. Article 12
ON PUBLIC INGRATITUDE TO GREAT CHARACTERS. Article 14
ORIGINAL LETTER OF THE ASTRONOMER GALILEO. Article 19
CURIOUS FACTS RELATIVE TO THE LATE CHARLES STUART, THE PRETENDER . Article 21
ON THE MUSIC OF THE ANCIENTS. Article 23
SKETCHES OF CELEBRATED CHARACTERS. Article 26
ANECDOTE FROM THE FRENCH. Article 32
REMARKABLE INSTANCE OF AN UNFATHOMABLE LAKE DISAPPEARING. Article 33
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF THE CHARACTERS, CUSTOMS, AND MANNERS, OF THE SAVAGES OF CAPE BRETON. Article 33
REMARKABLE INSTANCE OF AN UNFATHOMABLE LAKE DISAPPEARING. Article 37
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF THE CHARACTERS, CUSTOMS, AND MANNERS , OF THE SAVAGES OF CAPE BRETON. Article 37
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 42
LITERATURE. Article 49
LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 49
POETRY. Article 50
HYMN, Article 51
SONNET. Article 51
THE COUNTRY CURATE. Article 52
SONNET. Article 53
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 54
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 55
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 56
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 56
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
INTELLIGENCE OF IMPORTANCE FROM THE LONDON GAZETTES. Article 68
LORD MALMESBURY's EMBASSY. Article 71
OBITUARY. Article 73
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 77
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Curious Facts Relative To The Late Charles Stuart, The Pretender .

ancl protect him . " I own , " added Helvetius to me , " although I knew the danger to be greater of harbouring him at Paris than at Loudon ; and although I thought the family of Hanover not only the lawful sovereigns in England , but the only lawful sovereigns in Europe , as having the free consent of the people ; yet was I such a dupe to his flattery , that I invited him torn } ' house ; concealed him there , going

and coming , near two years ; had all his correspondence pass through my hands ; met with his partizans upon Pont Neuf ; and found at last that I had incurred all this danger aud trouble for the , most unworthy of all mortals : insomuch that I have been assured , when he went down to Nantz to embark on his expedition to Scotland , he took frightand refused to go on board ; and his attendantsthinking- the

, , matter gone too far , and that they would be affronted for his cowardice , -carried him in the night-time into the ship , pieds et mains lies . " I asked him , if he meant literally . " Yes , " said he , " literally : they tied him , and cairied him by main force . What think you now of this hero and conqueror r " ' Both Lord Marechal and Helvetius agree , that with all this strange

character , he was no bigot , but rather had learned from the philosophers at Paris to affect a contempt of all religion . You must know that both these persons thoughithey were ascribing to him an excellent quality . Indeed both of them used to laugh at me for my narrow way of thinking in these particulars . However , my dear Sir John , I hope you will do me the justice to acquit me .

' I doubt not but these circumstances will appear curious to Lord Plardwicke , to whom you will please to present my respects . I suppose his Lordship will think this unaccountable mixture of temerity and timidity in the same character not a littie singular . '

On The Music Of The Ancients.

ON THE MUSIC OF THE ANCIENTS .

TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREMASOTStS' MAGAZINE . T MUST acknowledge , Mr . Editor , that I have never been fully - " - convinced by the arguments advanced by Rousseau and other writerswho have decried the Grecian music , and have g iven a

, decided preference to the modern improvements in that delightful art . lam rather inclined to think , that we are now-incompetent to form a just judgment on this subject . Let us for a moment suppose , that the Greek and Latin languages had been totally and irrecoverably lost ; and that only some of their general rules of quantity and versification had been transmitted to usthrough the medium of some other

lan-, guage , without a single line of poetry to exemplify them . In such case , we should doubtless have been altogether at a loss to conceive how verse , constructed by such rules , could have been relished by persons of any taste or discernment : we should have wondered , par-

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