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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Oct. 1, 1855
  • Page 26
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 1, 1855: Page 26

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Page 26

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

Untitled Article

Embassies an # Foreign Courts : a History of Diplomacy . By the Royito Englishman . London : Eoutledge and Co . ( 1 st Notice . )—Certain periodical cleansings are as necessary for our national , as for our domestic well-being . It is true they occasion much dust , ill temper , and fatigue ; nobody would be willingly " at home" upon a washing

day . Moreover , vanity , which was bursting with plethora in the fancied amplitude of possession , wanes towards marasmus , when we discover " a hole in our best coat , " a crack so extensive in our most valuable cabinet as to defy farther splicing and veneer ; that " the ring of our grandfather ' s , worth , " as we estimated , " forty marks , " turns out " mere copper , some eight-penny matter . " Nevertheless ,

though things are out of their places for a while , disorganization is the parent of remedy ; if superfluous ornaments long unswept have gendered dirt , we clear away cobwebs and come at hidden rents ; substitute new and strong , for old and useless furniture ; in a word , make a judicious clearance of abuses , and open our chambers to those unpaid but most efficient sanative commissioners— -light and ventilation .

To no man—not excluding the pseudo-prophet of the Times , that ex post facto wizard of the Pates- —is his country more indebted , as to literature , than to the Roving Englishman , whose writings , we need hardly say , at the present crisis are especially opportune . Systems , like books , have their passages of improvement and monotony ; the

Roving Englishman has discovered the qualification of a true traveller , in putting the mark , turning down the page for observation at the right places , particularly in connection with that subtle practice which teaches ambassadors—honest gentlemen !—how best to lie abroad for the good of their country !

Endowed with a singularly graphic power of description ; keen observation , a strong vein of original humour , and—we are enabled to state from authority—a position which gives him at once the entree to the most secret fastnesses of the diplomatic abuses he developes , he preserves throughout an equanimity of judgment , which renders his statements of indisputable value . If prejudice appear at all , it is

at least against injustice ; if the cautery of his satire becomes venom , it is when speaking of a fiddling plenipotentiary , who breaks open locks in one court , or a servile driveller , who has been forty years without learning its language at another . Doubtless the revelations he makes will startle those who buy their political opinions every morning for 4 * d . at Printing House Square ; for ourselves , we share not the surprisal , for we were prepared long ago to find that long

series of political misapprehensions , terminating in jealousies and war , were traceable to the same spirit of close patronage and improper promotion , of imbecility and ignorance in diplomacy , which has destroyed our troops and corrupted our official excellence . It appears that the author expected the public would soon ask certain questions about the progress and good behaviour of its ambassadors ; he thought that elderly gentlemen of the Stubbleian school do not receive new impressions very readily ; that their minds , or rather

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-10-01, Page 26” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01101855/page/26/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
METROPOLITAN. Article 35
ROSE CROIX. Article 34
PROVINCIAL. Article 35
GERMANY. Article 60
Obituary. Article 61
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 34
CATHEDRAL CHURCHES. Article 14
MASONIC INSCRIPTION FOR A FOUNTAIN. Article 14
ON THE SCARABCEUS. Article 15
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 18
PROFESSIONAL AUTHORITY. Article 1
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 23
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 32
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 30
IRELAND Article 58
COLONIAL. Article 59
AMERICA. Article 60
CORNWALL. Article 62
NOTICE. Article 63
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH Article 6
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Page 26

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

Untitled Article

Embassies an # Foreign Courts : a History of Diplomacy . By the Royito Englishman . London : Eoutledge and Co . ( 1 st Notice . )—Certain periodical cleansings are as necessary for our national , as for our domestic well-being . It is true they occasion much dust , ill temper , and fatigue ; nobody would be willingly " at home" upon a washing

day . Moreover , vanity , which was bursting with plethora in the fancied amplitude of possession , wanes towards marasmus , when we discover " a hole in our best coat , " a crack so extensive in our most valuable cabinet as to defy farther splicing and veneer ; that " the ring of our grandfather ' s , worth , " as we estimated , " forty marks , " turns out " mere copper , some eight-penny matter . " Nevertheless ,

though things are out of their places for a while , disorganization is the parent of remedy ; if superfluous ornaments long unswept have gendered dirt , we clear away cobwebs and come at hidden rents ; substitute new and strong , for old and useless furniture ; in a word , make a judicious clearance of abuses , and open our chambers to those unpaid but most efficient sanative commissioners— -light and ventilation .

To no man—not excluding the pseudo-prophet of the Times , that ex post facto wizard of the Pates- —is his country more indebted , as to literature , than to the Roving Englishman , whose writings , we need hardly say , at the present crisis are especially opportune . Systems , like books , have their passages of improvement and monotony ; the

Roving Englishman has discovered the qualification of a true traveller , in putting the mark , turning down the page for observation at the right places , particularly in connection with that subtle practice which teaches ambassadors—honest gentlemen !—how best to lie abroad for the good of their country !

Endowed with a singularly graphic power of description ; keen observation , a strong vein of original humour , and—we are enabled to state from authority—a position which gives him at once the entree to the most secret fastnesses of the diplomatic abuses he developes , he preserves throughout an equanimity of judgment , which renders his statements of indisputable value . If prejudice appear at all , it is

at least against injustice ; if the cautery of his satire becomes venom , it is when speaking of a fiddling plenipotentiary , who breaks open locks in one court , or a servile driveller , who has been forty years without learning its language at another . Doubtless the revelations he makes will startle those who buy their political opinions every morning for 4 * d . at Printing House Square ; for ourselves , we share not the surprisal , for we were prepared long ago to find that long

series of political misapprehensions , terminating in jealousies and war , were traceable to the same spirit of close patronage and improper promotion , of imbecility and ignorance in diplomacy , which has destroyed our troops and corrupted our official excellence . It appears that the author expected the public would soon ask certain questions about the progress and good behaviour of its ambassadors ; he thought that elderly gentlemen of the Stubbleian school do not receive new impressions very readily ; that their minds , or rather

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