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  • Dec. 1, 1796
  • Page 69
  • OBITUARY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Dec. 1, 1796: Page 69

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Page 69

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

Obituary.

OBITUARY .

LATELY , m the 87 th year of his age , Thomas' Reid , D . D . professor of Moral Philosophy in the University of Glasgow . ' His ingenious and elaborate works , especially his " Inquiry into the Human Mind , " and his " Essays oh the Intellectual , " and the- " Active Powers of Man , " are noble and

lasting monuments' of his ' eriiin ' ent abilities ] his deep penetration , and his extensive learning . Dr . Reid-s merit as a teacher and an ' author is very generally known . He was unquestionably one of the profoundest philosophers of the age , and although some , who think it a' proof of weakness to differ from Mr . Hume ;

have slighted the speculations of Dr . Reid , and undervalued the ' mathematical-precision" which lie laboured to introduce , ' his Enquiry into the Senses will , probably , be coeval with our language . It-is founded on facts , which must' continue to interest men while their constitution continues unchanged . —If ' any p ' aFtbf this admirable work were to be selected as the most ingenious , the inquiry into the eve , into '

single and double vision , might be quoted . His other works are of a more popular cast : In all of them , however , ' there appears , accurate arrangement , and candid argument , with illustrations So clear anil copious , as . evince a correct knowledge of the . subject . Neither'his great acquirements , nor the success of his works ,

slackened his pursuit o'f hew knowledge . He studied the late improvements'in Chemistry , he observed the ' great political events which have happened , and contemplated those with which the time seems pregnant , with-the keen interest of one-just entering on life . Age , indeed , and a native love of-truth ; gave

him' a degree of impartiality , which is now as rare in politics as it has always been in theology ; so that hs spoke of every thing like a superior being who had purified his perceptions without impairing hi ; humanity . Pie venerated Religion ; not the noisy contentious systems which , lead itren to hate and persecute each other , but that sublime principle which regulates the

conduct by conirouling the selfish , pint animating ' the benevolent ' affections ! When vilified by intemperate Philosophers ' , | ie' made no reply , being satisfied with baying stated what he thoughf the truth ' ; and when , outraged by zealots who most falsely call'themselves Christians , he bore the outrage meekly ,

using ho terms either of complaint or reproach . He was , to ' the last mo i nient , ' free from that morose , ' querulous temper , which has ' been deemed inseparable from' age . ' Instead of repining at the prosperity o'f enjoyments bf the young , he delighted in promoting them ; ' and , after having lost all

his own family except one daughter , he continued to treat ' children with such condescension and benignity , that some very young one ' s noticed the peculiar kindness of his eye . ' Every scheme , which promised to improve'human nature , or to alleviate Human misery , found in him the most ardent support . He' was uncommonly active in establishing ' the irifirmarv at Aberdeen ; and

he was an early , vigorous , uniform promoter of that in' Glasgow . —Besides a very liberal subscription , he seldom visited the infirmary ' without leaving ' a new mark o'f his ' good will . His end accorded with the wisdom and goodness of his former fife . He used sometimes to say , ' ' ' I aiu ashamed of living

so long- after having ceased to be useful , " though at that very ' finie , he was acquiring orcdmmunicatingt . ' sefu ! knowledge . During his last' i . lm-ss , ' which was severe , he complained' of nothingbut the trouble that Wg ' ate his ' aflec ^ tionnte family ; and he looked to the grave as a place not of rest merely , but

of triumph . His late compositions contained allusions to his cwn decay ; allusions the rr . ore a / . ' ectii . g ' to Ji . S friends , because ' they seemed lhe genuine offspring of his feeli ' ngsj and were expressed 'with all tlie'dignitv of virtue . Last winter , in the Literary Society of Glasgowj he rend an ingenious discourse on lhe Muscles ; and after stating , fronh his own ' experience , the effects produced on them by age , he con-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-12-01, Page 69” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01121796/page/69/.
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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 69

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

Obituary.

OBITUARY .

LATELY , m the 87 th year of his age , Thomas' Reid , D . D . professor of Moral Philosophy in the University of Glasgow . ' His ingenious and elaborate works , especially his " Inquiry into the Human Mind , " and his " Essays oh the Intellectual , " and the- " Active Powers of Man , " are noble and

lasting monuments' of his ' eriiin ' ent abilities ] his deep penetration , and his extensive learning . Dr . Reid-s merit as a teacher and an ' author is very generally known . He was unquestionably one of the profoundest philosophers of the age , and although some , who think it a' proof of weakness to differ from Mr . Hume ;

have slighted the speculations of Dr . Reid , and undervalued the ' mathematical-precision" which lie laboured to introduce , ' his Enquiry into the Senses will , probably , be coeval with our language . It-is founded on facts , which must' continue to interest men while their constitution continues unchanged . —If ' any p ' aFtbf this admirable work were to be selected as the most ingenious , the inquiry into the eve , into '

single and double vision , might be quoted . His other works are of a more popular cast : In all of them , however , ' there appears , accurate arrangement , and candid argument , with illustrations So clear anil copious , as . evince a correct knowledge of the . subject . Neither'his great acquirements , nor the success of his works ,

slackened his pursuit o'f hew knowledge . He studied the late improvements'in Chemistry , he observed the ' great political events which have happened , and contemplated those with which the time seems pregnant , with-the keen interest of one-just entering on life . Age , indeed , and a native love of-truth ; gave

him' a degree of impartiality , which is now as rare in politics as it has always been in theology ; so that hs spoke of every thing like a superior being who had purified his perceptions without impairing hi ; humanity . Pie venerated Religion ; not the noisy contentious systems which , lead itren to hate and persecute each other , but that sublime principle which regulates the

conduct by conirouling the selfish , pint animating ' the benevolent ' affections ! When vilified by intemperate Philosophers ' , | ie' made no reply , being satisfied with baying stated what he thoughf the truth ' ; and when , outraged by zealots who most falsely call'themselves Christians , he bore the outrage meekly ,

using ho terms either of complaint or reproach . He was , to ' the last mo i nient , ' free from that morose , ' querulous temper , which has ' been deemed inseparable from' age . ' Instead of repining at the prosperity o'f enjoyments bf the young , he delighted in promoting them ; ' and , after having lost all

his own family except one daughter , he continued to treat ' children with such condescension and benignity , that some very young one ' s noticed the peculiar kindness of his eye . ' Every scheme , which promised to improve'human nature , or to alleviate Human misery , found in him the most ardent support . He' was uncommonly active in establishing ' the irifirmarv at Aberdeen ; and

he was an early , vigorous , uniform promoter of that in' Glasgow . —Besides a very liberal subscription , he seldom visited the infirmary ' without leaving ' a new mark o'f his ' good will . His end accorded with the wisdom and goodness of his former fife . He used sometimes to say , ' ' ' I aiu ashamed of living

so long- after having ceased to be useful , " though at that very ' finie , he was acquiring orcdmmunicatingt . ' sefu ! knowledge . During his last' i . lm-ss , ' which was severe , he complained' of nothingbut the trouble that Wg ' ate his ' aflec ^ tionnte family ; and he looked to the grave as a place not of rest merely , but

of triumph . His late compositions contained allusions to his cwn decay ; allusions the rr . ore a / . ' ectii . g ' to Ji . S friends , because ' they seemed lhe genuine offspring of his feeli ' ngsj and were expressed 'with all tlie'dignitv of virtue . Last winter , in the Literary Society of Glasgowj he rend an ingenious discourse on lhe Muscles ; and after stating , fronh his own ' experience , the effects produced on them by age , he con-

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