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    Article LIFE OF MR. GARRICK. Page 1 of 4 →
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Life Of Mr. Garrick.

LIFE OF MR . GARRICK .

[ CONCLUDED FIIOM OUR LAST . ] "IPHIS season was the last in which Mr . Garrick could be said to have ¦ * - acted in the regular course of his profession . From this time he declined performing any new characters ; and , by the advice of his physician , he determined to give himself some relaxation from care and fatigue . He therefore made the arrangements necessary for

carrying on the entertainments during his absence ; and on the rjfh of September , 17 6 3 , he left London , to make the tour of France and Italy . To supply his place , he engaged Mr . Powell , whose success was equal to the abilities he possessed . The interval from this period , until April 1765 , Mr . Garrick employed in travelling through the principal parts of Europe ; and was

, at every place where he resided , received in the most honourable manner . While he sta 3 ed at Paris , he amused himself with reading Fontaine ' s Fables , which pleased him so much , that he was induced to attempt an imitation of them . He consequently wrote one , called The Sick Monkey , which he transmittted over to a friend , to be ready for publication immediately on his arrival . It accordingly made its

appearance in two or three days after , with the following motto ' Thursday afternoon David Garrick , Esq . arrived at his house in Southampton-street , Covent Garden . Public Advertiser , April 37 , 176 $ . ' And he had the pleasure of hearing the sentiments of his friends upon it ; many of whom mistook it for a satire upon him , and

accordingly expressed themselves in very warm terms on the occasion . On his arrival he resumed the management of the Theatre , and introduced some improvements which had been suggested by his observations on the conduct of the foreign stages . He produced the next season several new pieces , and in the beginning of 17 66 , the comedy of The Clandestine Marriage , written in concert with Mr .

Colman . He also , at the request cf his Majesty , appeared again on the stage . In that year died Mr . Quin and Mr . Cibber . Their deaths were pathetically taken notice of in the prologue to the Clandestine Marriage ; and for the former Mr . Garrick wrote an epitaph , which was placed over his tomb in the cathedral church of Bath . The year 176 9 was remarkable for the celebration of a jubilee at Stratford the 6 th 7 thand & th ol in honour

upon Avon , , , September , of Shakespear ; a ceremony which much engaged the public attention , although it was treated by some as a subject worthy only of ridicule . The circumstance which gave rise to it happened some time before , and was as follows : A clergyman , into whose possession the house once belonging to our great poet had come , found that a mulberry tree , which grew in the garden , and which had been planted according to tradition by -Shakespear himself , overshadowed too VOL . ix , 3 »

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-12-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01121797/page/10/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON. Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
MEMOIR OF THE REV. WILLIAM ROMAINE, A. M. Article 4
A REVIEW OF THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE EDMUND BURKE. Article 7
LIFE OF MR. GARRICK. Article 10
ON THE INFELICITIES OF THE LEARNED. Article 13
THE COLLECTOR. Article 15
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ANTIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Article 18
ON THE INFLUENCE OF GOVERNMENT ON THE MENTAL FACULTIES. Article 20
OBSERVATIONS ON THE ENGLISH STYLE OF WRITING Article 25
ON FAMILY GOVERNMENT. Article 26
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 27
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 30
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 34
POETRY. Article 40
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 44
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 48
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 49
SECOND SESSION OF THE EIGHTEENTH PARLIAMENT. Article 54
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 58
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 70
OBITUARY. Article 79
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 81
INDEX TO THE NINTH VOLUME. Article 83
Untitled Article 86
LONDON: Article 86
A REVIEW OF THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE EDMUND BURKE. Article 87
ACCOUNT OF THE BIRTH-PLACE AND MONUMENT OF BUCHANAN. Article 90
VOLTAIRE. Article 92
SINGULAR WILL. Article 92
ON THE DECLINE AND FALL OF THE DUTCH REPUBLIC. Article 94
THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF PETER PORCUPINE; Article 101
THE SAD EFFECTS OF A FAUX PAS. Article 108
THE CHANGE OF CLIMATE IN THE MIDDLE COLONIES OF NORTH-AMERICA. Article 110
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 114
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 116
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 117
CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF THE MOST REMARKABLE OCCURRENCES IN THE YEAR 1797. Article 137
Untitled Article 157
LIST OF BANKRUPTS . Article 159
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Life Of Mr. Garrick.

LIFE OF MR . GARRICK .

[ CONCLUDED FIIOM OUR LAST . ] "IPHIS season was the last in which Mr . Garrick could be said to have ¦ * - acted in the regular course of his profession . From this time he declined performing any new characters ; and , by the advice of his physician , he determined to give himself some relaxation from care and fatigue . He therefore made the arrangements necessary for

carrying on the entertainments during his absence ; and on the rjfh of September , 17 6 3 , he left London , to make the tour of France and Italy . To supply his place , he engaged Mr . Powell , whose success was equal to the abilities he possessed . The interval from this period , until April 1765 , Mr . Garrick employed in travelling through the principal parts of Europe ; and was

, at every place where he resided , received in the most honourable manner . While he sta 3 ed at Paris , he amused himself with reading Fontaine ' s Fables , which pleased him so much , that he was induced to attempt an imitation of them . He consequently wrote one , called The Sick Monkey , which he transmittted over to a friend , to be ready for publication immediately on his arrival . It accordingly made its

appearance in two or three days after , with the following motto ' Thursday afternoon David Garrick , Esq . arrived at his house in Southampton-street , Covent Garden . Public Advertiser , April 37 , 176 $ . ' And he had the pleasure of hearing the sentiments of his friends upon it ; many of whom mistook it for a satire upon him , and

accordingly expressed themselves in very warm terms on the occasion . On his arrival he resumed the management of the Theatre , and introduced some improvements which had been suggested by his observations on the conduct of the foreign stages . He produced the next season several new pieces , and in the beginning of 17 66 , the comedy of The Clandestine Marriage , written in concert with Mr .

Colman . He also , at the request cf his Majesty , appeared again on the stage . In that year died Mr . Quin and Mr . Cibber . Their deaths were pathetically taken notice of in the prologue to the Clandestine Marriage ; and for the former Mr . Garrick wrote an epitaph , which was placed over his tomb in the cathedral church of Bath . The year 176 9 was remarkable for the celebration of a jubilee at Stratford the 6 th 7 thand & th ol in honour

upon Avon , , , September , of Shakespear ; a ceremony which much engaged the public attention , although it was treated by some as a subject worthy only of ridicule . The circumstance which gave rise to it happened some time before , and was as follows : A clergyman , into whose possession the house once belonging to our great poet had come , found that a mulberry tree , which grew in the garden , and which had been planted according to tradition by -Shakespear himself , overshadowed too VOL . ix , 3 »

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