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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1796
  • Page 35
  • EXCERPTA ET COLLECTANEA.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Dec. 1, 1796: Page 35

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    Article EXCERPTA ET COLLECTANEA. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article FATAL PESTILENCE IN THE AIR, IN THE REIGN OF HENRY III. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 35

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Excerpta Et Collectanea.

wife pretended to go distracted , and was sent to a village a few miles out of town , where the Captain had a little box for his convenience . There they took their full swing uninterrupted . Some time after the . daughter was sent to school ; but she had not been there long , befor ' e the remembrance of what she had been a witness of awoke her conscience in most horrid and frightful dreams . Says -the young

lady , that was her bed-fellow , ' What is the reason that you start and scream so ? ' ' There ' s a spirit in the room !—there ' s Mr . Stobbine ' s spirit!—See how dreadful it looks !'—In the morning , the young lady acquainted the school-mistress with ,. the accident of the preceding night . She sent for a clergyman to talk with the young-Miss , to whom she discovered the whole affair . It was

communicated to a diligent justice of the peace in the neighbourhood , who dispatched proper warrants , and he soon had the parties concerned in his power , who were all brought before him , without any knowledge of one another ' s being taken up , till they all met together , in the greatest confusion and dismay , which evidenced their guiit . They were committed to the Gatehouseand brought the

, next sessions to the Old Bailey , tried and condemned upon the evidence of the child , to the entire satisfaction of the court and country , and ail present . The Captain was condemned to the gibbet ; Mrs . Myltystre was hanged ; and thrown into the gully-hole , to rot , near the house in Wapping , where she had formerly lived ; the apothecary was anatomized ; and the wife was strangled and

burnt , according to custom in such like cases . They were attended at Tyburn by an Irish Priest of the Romish Church , called Mac-Arthy , who gave them absolution , and they all died negative . '

Fatal Pestilence In The Air, In The Reign Of Henry Iii.

FATAL PESTILENCE IN THE AIR , IN THE REIGN OF HENRY III .

[ n ; o . » . i A SCAF . CE OLD CIIIIOSICLE . ] THE ijth day of March ( says an ancient record from which this account is taken ) the newe mooue was scene , where the chaunge by nature should not have beene ' tyil the 16 th day following-, and for the space of 15 days that then next ensuedthe sunnethe moone ,

, , and starres , appeared of a red colour . And herewith the whole face of the earth seemed as it had been shadowed with a thicke myst , or smoke , the winde notwithstanding remaining north and north east . And herewith began a sore drought , continuing a long time , the which , together with morning frosts , and northerly windes , destroved he fruitcs and other growing tilings , which were blasted in such wise ,

that although , at the first , it was a very forwarde yeare , and great pientie towardes of corne and fruite , yet by the meanes aforesaid , the same was great ! - / hindered , and specially in the summer season , which the sunne ' s heat increased , and the drought still continued . The residue of suche fruitcs as then remayned , withered away , so that scarce a tenth p . irt w ;; s left , and yet there was indifferent store . For if the abundaunce which the blossomes promised had come for-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-12-01, Page 35” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01121796/page/35/.
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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 COURTSHIP AND COQUETRY. Article 7
COPY OF THE INSCRPITION ON THE FOUNDATION STONE OF WEARMOUTH BRIDGE. Article 9
A SERMON, Article 10
ON DEATH. Article 14
PREDILECTION OF THE TURKS FOR THE GAME OF CHESS. Article 17
ESSAYS ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH HISTORY AND CLASSICAL LEARNING. Article 18
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF EDWARD KELLY, THE ALCHEMIST. Article 24
ON THE MUSIC OF THE ANCIENTS. Article 26
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 29
ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF PROMISSORY NOTES AND PAPER CREDIT. Article 31
EXCERPTA ET COLLECTANEA. Article 34
FATAL PESTILENCE IN THE AIR, IN THE REIGN OF HENRY III. Article 35
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 38
POETRY. Article 48
WINTER, AN ODE. Article 49
SONNET, ON SEEING JULIA GATHERING ROSES IN THE DEW. Article 50
EPITAPH, ON AN OLD FAVOURITE DOG. Article 50
A SONG. Article 51
A SONG. Article 51
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 52
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 52
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 58
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 59
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 60
INTELLIGENCE OF IMPORTANCE FROM THE LONDON GAZETTES. Article 60
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. Article 64
OBITUARY. Article 69
L1ST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
INDEX TO THE SEVENTH VOLUME. Article 74
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Page 35

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

Excerpta Et Collectanea.

wife pretended to go distracted , and was sent to a village a few miles out of town , where the Captain had a little box for his convenience . There they took their full swing uninterrupted . Some time after the . daughter was sent to school ; but she had not been there long , befor ' e the remembrance of what she had been a witness of awoke her conscience in most horrid and frightful dreams . Says -the young

lady , that was her bed-fellow , ' What is the reason that you start and scream so ? ' ' There ' s a spirit in the room !—there ' s Mr . Stobbine ' s spirit!—See how dreadful it looks !'—In the morning , the young lady acquainted the school-mistress with ,. the accident of the preceding night . She sent for a clergyman to talk with the young-Miss , to whom she discovered the whole affair . It was

communicated to a diligent justice of the peace in the neighbourhood , who dispatched proper warrants , and he soon had the parties concerned in his power , who were all brought before him , without any knowledge of one another ' s being taken up , till they all met together , in the greatest confusion and dismay , which evidenced their guiit . They were committed to the Gatehouseand brought the

, next sessions to the Old Bailey , tried and condemned upon the evidence of the child , to the entire satisfaction of the court and country , and ail present . The Captain was condemned to the gibbet ; Mrs . Myltystre was hanged ; and thrown into the gully-hole , to rot , near the house in Wapping , where she had formerly lived ; the apothecary was anatomized ; and the wife was strangled and

burnt , according to custom in such like cases . They were attended at Tyburn by an Irish Priest of the Romish Church , called Mac-Arthy , who gave them absolution , and they all died negative . '

Fatal Pestilence In The Air, In The Reign Of Henry Iii.

FATAL PESTILENCE IN THE AIR , IN THE REIGN OF HENRY III .

[ n ; o . » . i A SCAF . CE OLD CIIIIOSICLE . ] THE ijth day of March ( says an ancient record from which this account is taken ) the newe mooue was scene , where the chaunge by nature should not have beene ' tyil the 16 th day following-, and for the space of 15 days that then next ensuedthe sunnethe moone ,

, , and starres , appeared of a red colour . And herewith the whole face of the earth seemed as it had been shadowed with a thicke myst , or smoke , the winde notwithstanding remaining north and north east . And herewith began a sore drought , continuing a long time , the which , together with morning frosts , and northerly windes , destroved he fruitcs and other growing tilings , which were blasted in such wise ,

that although , at the first , it was a very forwarde yeare , and great pientie towardes of corne and fruite , yet by the meanes aforesaid , the same was great ! - / hindered , and specially in the summer season , which the sunne ' s heat increased , and the drought still continued . The residue of suche fruitcs as then remayned , withered away , so that scarce a tenth p . irt w ;; s left , and yet there was indifferent store . For if the abundaunce which the blossomes promised had come for-

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