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  • Dec. 1, 1797
  • Page 73
  • MONTHLY CHRONICLE.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Dec. 1, 1797: Page 73

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    Article MONTHLY CHRONICLE. ← Page 4 of 9 →
Page 73

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Monthly Chronicle.

which they relate , or of any others , which the enemy might bring forward as the terms of peace , has been , on his Majesty ' s part , repeatedly called for , as often promised by the French Plenipotentiaries , but to this day has never yet been obtained . The rupture of the negociation is not therefore to be ascribed to any pretensions ( however inadmissible ) urged as the price of peace ; nor to any ultimate difference on terms , however exorbitant ; but to the evident and fixed determination ofthe enemy to prolong the contest , and to pursue , at all hazards , their hostile designs against the prosperity and safety of Ihese'kingdoms .

While this determination continues to prevail , his Majesty ' s earnest wishes and endeavours to rsstore peace to his subjects must be fruitless . But his sentiments remain unaltered . He looks with anxious expectation to the moment when the Government of France may shew a disposition and spirit in any degree corresponding to his own . And he renews , even now , and before all Europe , the solemn declaration , that , in spite of repeated provocations , and at the very moment when his claims have been strengthened and confirmed by fresh success , whichby the blessing of Providencehas recently attended his armshe is yet

, , , ready ( if the calamities of war can now be closed ) to conclude peace on the same moderate and equitable principles and terms which he has before proposed : the rejection of such terms must now , more than ever , demonstrate the implacable animosity and insatiable ambition of those with whom he has to contend , and to them alone must the future consequences of the prolonging of the war be ascribed . . If such unhappily is the spirit by which they are still actuated , his Majesty can

neither hesitate as to the principles of his own conduct , nor doubt the sentiments and determination of his people . He will not be wanting to them , and he is confident they will not be wauling to themselves . He has an anxious , but a sacred and indispensable duty to fulfil : he will discharge it with resolution , constancy , and firmness . Deeply as he must regret the continuance of a war , so destructive in its progress , and so burthensome even in its success , he knows the character of the brave people whose interests and honourare entrusted to him . — These it is the first object of his life to maintain ; and he is convinced , that

neither the resources nor the spirit of his kingdoms will be found inadequate to this arduous contest , or unequal tolheimportar . ee and value ofthe objects which are at stake . He trusts , that the favour of Providence , bv which they have always hitherto been supported against all their enemies , will be still extended to them ; and that , under this protection , his faithful subjects , by a resolute and vigorous application of the means which fhey possess , will be enabled to vindicate the independence of their country , and to resist with just indignation the assumed superiority of an against whom they have fought with the courageand

sucenemy , , cess , and glory of their ancestors , and who aims at nothing less than to destroy at once whatever has contributed to the prosperity and greatness of the British empire : all the channels of its industry , and all the sources of its power ; its security from abroad , its tranquility at home , and , above all , that constitution , on which alone depends the undisturbed enjoyment of . its religion , laws , and liberties . Westminster , October 2 $ , 1797 .

NEGOCIATION AT LISLE . , As the British Cabinet has published an official account of the correspondence between Lord Malmesbury and the French Commissioners , which is of high importance to every person in this country , we feei the propriety of giving such a view of it in our miscellany as is necessary to understand the precise meaning of both parties , omitting only what is superfluous . The correspondence begins with a letter from Lord Grenville to M . Delacroix ,

as follows : No . 1 . — ' The signature ofthe preliminaries ofa peace , the definitive conclusion of which is to put an end to the continental war , appears to afford to the two governments of Great Britain and France a natural opportunity and new facilities for the renewal of pacific negociations between them : a part of the obstacles which might have retarded this salutary work no longer existing ; and the inte-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-12-01, Page 73” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 28 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01121797/page/73/.
  • List
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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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Page 73

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

Monthly Chronicle.

which they relate , or of any others , which the enemy might bring forward as the terms of peace , has been , on his Majesty ' s part , repeatedly called for , as often promised by the French Plenipotentiaries , but to this day has never yet been obtained . The rupture of the negociation is not therefore to be ascribed to any pretensions ( however inadmissible ) urged as the price of peace ; nor to any ultimate difference on terms , however exorbitant ; but to the evident and fixed determination ofthe enemy to prolong the contest , and to pursue , at all hazards , their hostile designs against the prosperity and safety of Ihese'kingdoms .

While this determination continues to prevail , his Majesty ' s earnest wishes and endeavours to rsstore peace to his subjects must be fruitless . But his sentiments remain unaltered . He looks with anxious expectation to the moment when the Government of France may shew a disposition and spirit in any degree corresponding to his own . And he renews , even now , and before all Europe , the solemn declaration , that , in spite of repeated provocations , and at the very moment when his claims have been strengthened and confirmed by fresh success , whichby the blessing of Providencehas recently attended his armshe is yet

, , , ready ( if the calamities of war can now be closed ) to conclude peace on the same moderate and equitable principles and terms which he has before proposed : the rejection of such terms must now , more than ever , demonstrate the implacable animosity and insatiable ambition of those with whom he has to contend , and to them alone must the future consequences of the prolonging of the war be ascribed . . If such unhappily is the spirit by which they are still actuated , his Majesty can

neither hesitate as to the principles of his own conduct , nor doubt the sentiments and determination of his people . He will not be wanting to them , and he is confident they will not be wauling to themselves . He has an anxious , but a sacred and indispensable duty to fulfil : he will discharge it with resolution , constancy , and firmness . Deeply as he must regret the continuance of a war , so destructive in its progress , and so burthensome even in its success , he knows the character of the brave people whose interests and honourare entrusted to him . — These it is the first object of his life to maintain ; and he is convinced , that

neither the resources nor the spirit of his kingdoms will be found inadequate to this arduous contest , or unequal tolheimportar . ee and value ofthe objects which are at stake . He trusts , that the favour of Providence , bv which they have always hitherto been supported against all their enemies , will be still extended to them ; and that , under this protection , his faithful subjects , by a resolute and vigorous application of the means which fhey possess , will be enabled to vindicate the independence of their country , and to resist with just indignation the assumed superiority of an against whom they have fought with the courageand

sucenemy , , cess , and glory of their ancestors , and who aims at nothing less than to destroy at once whatever has contributed to the prosperity and greatness of the British empire : all the channels of its industry , and all the sources of its power ; its security from abroad , its tranquility at home , and , above all , that constitution , on which alone depends the undisturbed enjoyment of . its religion , laws , and liberties . Westminster , October 2 $ , 1797 .

NEGOCIATION AT LISLE . , As the British Cabinet has published an official account of the correspondence between Lord Malmesbury and the French Commissioners , which is of high importance to every person in this country , we feei the propriety of giving such a view of it in our miscellany as is necessary to understand the precise meaning of both parties , omitting only what is superfluous . The correspondence begins with a letter from Lord Grenville to M . Delacroix ,

as follows : No . 1 . — ' The signature ofthe preliminaries ofa peace , the definitive conclusion of which is to put an end to the continental war , appears to afford to the two governments of Great Britain and France a natural opportunity and new facilities for the renewal of pacific negociations between them : a part of the obstacles which might have retarded this salutary work no longer existing ; and the inte-

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