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  • Jan. 1, 1866
  • Page 28
  • REPRINT OF SCARCE, OR CURICUS, BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY.
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The Masonic Press, Jan. 1, 1866: Page 28

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    Article REPRINT OF SCARCE, OR CURICUS, BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY. ← Page 2 of 6 →
Page 28

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

Reprint Of Scarce, Or Curicus, Books On Freemasonry.

concealing the library in which the original is deposited . The author is nowhere named , but we find , by several passages in this work , that he was a Greek born , and lived at Alexandria , under the reign of Marcus Aurelius . There is no room . to doubt but this work is a fiction . The event of sundry enterprises proving in a manner such as a reader would wish or hope , the unexpected return and rencounter of several personages , but

above all , the great number of discourses directly from the persons themselves , sufficiently evince that our author has not tied himself down to such real facts , which tho common circumstances of life make liable to a greater confusion ; and that he takes upon him the entire disposal , not only of the actions , but eA'en of the thoughts of those persons he brings upon the stage . The particular advantage which he proposed to himself obliged him to

employ his pen in this kind of writing . History , properly so called , has beyond dispute its excellencies . It is an improvement of the mind which we expect from every one who undertakes to cultivate education . History is essential to the professions of some , and a recreation almost universally coveted by others , whoso main business seems tho most distant from it . It is one of the chief springs of true philosophy , by the knowledge it gives

us of human passions and prejudices . It is accounted the most sure guide in politics , by furnishing one single person Avith the experience of all preceding ages . In short , it is looked upon by some as a great foundation of moral instructions , by the reiterated examples it lays before us of good and evil . But with regard to this last property , I belieA r e , when we come to examine the matter narrowly , Ave shall find history fall far short of fiction , Avhen the latter is employed in such a manner as becomes every prudent writer—¦

that is , with an eye to form the maimers of men . History , in itself , is but a collection of facts , guided by providence , for ends generally unknown to us ; and though everything be wonderfully well ordered , pursuant to the mysterious views of tho divine wisdom and justice , the consequences oi mens actions are frequently , to our eyes , but a series of disappointed projects and crimes unpunished . A A iew of Avhat has happened in the world is , strictly speaking , no other than a review of what passes in a place of

public resort . Neither the one or the other is in anywise moral but b y the reflections of tho spectator or relator . In a word , mere history is rather an object than a doctrine . But in a fictitious Avork the case is very different . The moral author , if his undertaking he narrative , generally makes it his business to represent his hero adorned with all the virtues proper to his state and condition . Ho places him in all such circumstances as may ive him room to exercise

g these virtues . He sets him in opposition not only to wicked men , but to such whose virtues are weak and wavering , that their different characters may make that of his hero shine forth with the greater lustre . His images are accompanied with judgments already formed , and explicit advices . In a word , his instructions are rendered perfect , as well by doctrine as example . Wo might combine and melt down numbers of the great men

in kistoiy , and unite the events of many ages , before -we should find those materials for wonder and imitation which a judicious author of a fiction Avill often produce in , but a small part of , the life of one single hero . The two works we have hitherto seen of this kind , Telemachus and the Travels of Cyrus , perfectly answer this idea . It is not a comparison with history , which is of a quite different nature , but a comparison of good fictitious works , which will more and more discover the pernicious folly of romances , Avhen by that term AVC mean an advantageous , or if but a

“The Masonic Press: 1866-01-01, Page 28” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msp/issues/mxr_01011866/page/28/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
NUMBER ONE. Article 4
"LIVE AND LET LIVE." Article 9
OBJECTS OF MASONIC REFORM. Article 11
MASONIC ANTIQUITIES, DOCUMENTS, &c. JERUSALEM ENCAMPMENT, MANCHESTER. Article 20
REPRINT OF SCARCE, OR CURICUS, BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 27
THE RITE OF MISRAIM. Article 32
NOTES AND QUERIES FOR FREEMASONS. Article 36
MASONIC ENCLAVES. Article 38
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 38
EVENTS AND THINGS TO BE REMEMBERED. Article 41
CLOTHING FOR THE RISING STAR OF WESTERN INDIA. Article 43
REVIEWS. Article 43
POETRY. Article 44
THE MASONIC REPORTER. Article 46
KNIGHT TEMPLARY. Article 47
CRAFT FREEMASONRY. Article 50
OBITUARY. Article 50
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 51
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Reprint Of Scarce, Or Curicus, Books On Freemasonry.

concealing the library in which the original is deposited . The author is nowhere named , but we find , by several passages in this work , that he was a Greek born , and lived at Alexandria , under the reign of Marcus Aurelius . There is no room . to doubt but this work is a fiction . The event of sundry enterprises proving in a manner such as a reader would wish or hope , the unexpected return and rencounter of several personages , but

above all , the great number of discourses directly from the persons themselves , sufficiently evince that our author has not tied himself down to such real facts , which tho common circumstances of life make liable to a greater confusion ; and that he takes upon him the entire disposal , not only of the actions , but eA'en of the thoughts of those persons he brings upon the stage . The particular advantage which he proposed to himself obliged him to

employ his pen in this kind of writing . History , properly so called , has beyond dispute its excellencies . It is an improvement of the mind which we expect from every one who undertakes to cultivate education . History is essential to the professions of some , and a recreation almost universally coveted by others , whoso main business seems tho most distant from it . It is one of the chief springs of true philosophy , by the knowledge it gives

us of human passions and prejudices . It is accounted the most sure guide in politics , by furnishing one single person Avith the experience of all preceding ages . In short , it is looked upon by some as a great foundation of moral instructions , by the reiterated examples it lays before us of good and evil . But with regard to this last property , I belieA r e , when we come to examine the matter narrowly , Ave shall find history fall far short of fiction , Avhen the latter is employed in such a manner as becomes every prudent writer—¦

that is , with an eye to form the maimers of men . History , in itself , is but a collection of facts , guided by providence , for ends generally unknown to us ; and though everything be wonderfully well ordered , pursuant to the mysterious views of tho divine wisdom and justice , the consequences oi mens actions are frequently , to our eyes , but a series of disappointed projects and crimes unpunished . A A iew of Avhat has happened in the world is , strictly speaking , no other than a review of what passes in a place of

public resort . Neither the one or the other is in anywise moral but b y the reflections of tho spectator or relator . In a word , mere history is rather an object than a doctrine . But in a fictitious Avork the case is very different . The moral author , if his undertaking he narrative , generally makes it his business to represent his hero adorned with all the virtues proper to his state and condition . Ho places him in all such circumstances as may ive him room to exercise

g these virtues . He sets him in opposition not only to wicked men , but to such whose virtues are weak and wavering , that their different characters may make that of his hero shine forth with the greater lustre . His images are accompanied with judgments already formed , and explicit advices . In a word , his instructions are rendered perfect , as well by doctrine as example . Wo might combine and melt down numbers of the great men

in kistoiy , and unite the events of many ages , before -we should find those materials for wonder and imitation which a judicious author of a fiction Avill often produce in , but a small part of , the life of one single hero . The two works we have hitherto seen of this kind , Telemachus and the Travels of Cyrus , perfectly answer this idea . It is not a comparison with history , which is of a quite different nature , but a comparison of good fictitious works , which will more and more discover the pernicious folly of romances , Avhen by that term AVC mean an advantageous , or if but a

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