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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1797
  • Page 42
  • MASONIC INTELLIGENCE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Nov. 1, 1797: Page 42

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    Article MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. ← Page 2 of 2
Page 42

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Masonic Intelligence.

merce will be promoted , ready intercourse afforded , the benighted weary traveller pass the rapid stream with ease and safety , and the lives ofthe people will be saved . Of all the inventions of human art , there are few , if any , of so great utility aud benefit to mankind , asthat of bridges : we have reason , therefore , to presume , that men had very early some construction or contrivance of this nature ; and

yet we do not find , among the monuments of the most distant antiquity , any vestige or memorial of such constructions ; but , in the age we now live in , men have not only found out , the very best methods of erecting bridges , but it likewise redounds greatly to the honour and happiness of this ancient kingdom of Scotland , that so many of our noblemen , gentlemen , and indeed all ranks of the people , do generously contribute to so many and great undertakings of this kind .

i rom bridges , my Brethren , an excellent moral lesson is taught us , and that is , that human society cannot subsist without concord and mutual good offices ; for , like the working of an arch-stone , it would fall to the ground , if one p iece did not depend upon , and properly support another . ' All that now remains is , that I , for myself , and in name of the whole fraternity of Free and Accepted Masonsshouldas I now do

, , , take this opportunity of returning our sincere thanks to all the noblemen , gentlemen , and all persons , who have so generously contributed to this laudable undertaking ; and , in a particular manner to those gentlemen who first projected , and have , in the most remarkable manner , promoted this useful , necessary work , and who still continuewith unwearied applicationto exert themselves

to-, , wards its finishing . May health and affluence ever attend all the contributors while here on earth , and may Heaven be their final reward !' The inscription on the stone was IN DEI NOMINE ,

MONTEBO BAY , JAMAICA , APRIL 22 , 1797 . LAST Monday the St . James ' s and Union Lodges , joined by the Hanover Lodge , and a respectable number of visiting Brethren , commemorated the Festival of St . John the Baptist . At eleven a

procession was formed in the usual order , preceded by the band of the 83 d regiment from the Court-house to the church , where prayers were read by the Reverend Brother Little , and an excellent discourse delivered by Brother Ricard . After divine service , the Brethren returned in form to the Court-house , and adjourned till half past threewhen they sat down to an elegant entertainmentmade a

, , collection for the poor , and passed the . day in convivial friendship and perfect harmony . During dinner , and at different intervals in the afternoon and evening , the band ofthe 8 3 d regiment played several agreeable interludes , which gave great satisfaction , and diffused a spit rit of gaiety oyer the whole company ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-11-01, Page 42” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01111797/page/42/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON. Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
MEMOIR OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE RICHARD HELY HUTCHINSON, Article 4
LIFE OF MR. GARRICK. Article 6
ON THE INFLUENCE OF GOVERNMENT ON THE MENTAL FACULTIES. Article 8
OBSERVATIONS ON THE YELLOW FEVER. Article 11
TRAITS OF THE SCOTCH CHARACTER. Article 12
OBSERVATIONS ON THE ENGLISH STYLE OF WRITING. Article 14
THE CHANGE OF CLIMATE IN THE MIDDLE COLONIES OF NORTH-AMERICA, Article 16
HISTORY OF THE SCIENCES FOR 1797. Article 18
ON THE PRESENT STATE OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY. Article 20
THE COLLECTOR. Article 22
ON THE INFELICITIES OF THE LEARNED. Article 27
AUTHENTIC PARTICULARS OF THE EVER MEMORABLE DEFEAT OF THE DUTCH FLEET, UNDER THE COMMAND OF ADMIRAL DE WINTER, Article 30
PLAN OF THE ACTION BETWEEN THE ENGLISH AND DUTCH FLEETS, Article 33
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF ADMIRAL LORD DUNCAN. Article 36
ADMIRAL DE WINTER, Article 37
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 43
POETRY. Article 51
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 55
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 57
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 58
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 63
OBITUARY. Article 70
LIST OF BANKRUPTS Article 74
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Page 42

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

Masonic Intelligence.

merce will be promoted , ready intercourse afforded , the benighted weary traveller pass the rapid stream with ease and safety , and the lives ofthe people will be saved . Of all the inventions of human art , there are few , if any , of so great utility aud benefit to mankind , asthat of bridges : we have reason , therefore , to presume , that men had very early some construction or contrivance of this nature ; and

yet we do not find , among the monuments of the most distant antiquity , any vestige or memorial of such constructions ; but , in the age we now live in , men have not only found out , the very best methods of erecting bridges , but it likewise redounds greatly to the honour and happiness of this ancient kingdom of Scotland , that so many of our noblemen , gentlemen , and indeed all ranks of the people , do generously contribute to so many and great undertakings of this kind .

i rom bridges , my Brethren , an excellent moral lesson is taught us , and that is , that human society cannot subsist without concord and mutual good offices ; for , like the working of an arch-stone , it would fall to the ground , if one p iece did not depend upon , and properly support another . ' All that now remains is , that I , for myself , and in name of the whole fraternity of Free and Accepted Masonsshouldas I now do

, , , take this opportunity of returning our sincere thanks to all the noblemen , gentlemen , and all persons , who have so generously contributed to this laudable undertaking ; and , in a particular manner to those gentlemen who first projected , and have , in the most remarkable manner , promoted this useful , necessary work , and who still continuewith unwearied applicationto exert themselves

to-, , wards its finishing . May health and affluence ever attend all the contributors while here on earth , and may Heaven be their final reward !' The inscription on the stone was IN DEI NOMINE ,

MONTEBO BAY , JAMAICA , APRIL 22 , 1797 . LAST Monday the St . James ' s and Union Lodges , joined by the Hanover Lodge , and a respectable number of visiting Brethren , commemorated the Festival of St . John the Baptist . At eleven a

procession was formed in the usual order , preceded by the band of the 83 d regiment from the Court-house to the church , where prayers were read by the Reverend Brother Little , and an excellent discourse delivered by Brother Ricard . After divine service , the Brethren returned in form to the Court-house , and adjourned till half past threewhen they sat down to an elegant entertainmentmade a

, , collection for the poor , and passed the . day in convivial friendship and perfect harmony . During dinner , and at different intervals in the afternoon and evening , the band ofthe 8 3 d regiment played several agreeable interludes , which gave great satisfaction , and diffused a spit rit of gaiety oyer the whole company ,

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