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  • Feb. 1, 1798
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1798: Page 15

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    Article WISDOM AND FOLLY: A VISION. ← Page 4 of 6 →
Page 15

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Wisdom And Folly: A Vision.

a hedge , another is sure to follow : if one goose cackle , the nocK cackle too ; even more sagacious animals than either sheep , asses , geese , or romance-ivri . ' ers—dogs themselves bark upon hearing other dogsdo the same , from the sympathetic spirit of barking . In a pack of hounds it is observed , that if a sagacious one gets a new scent , the rest follow . It is not surprising , therefore , that when Mrs . Ratcliflfe scented out hobgoblirs , the rest of the pack should open their throats .

Laura Maria , and many other friends of Mrs . Novel , go to the same lower regions of Fancy , which is excellent sporting-ground for hobgoblins . Of late , however , such quantities of monks , hobgoblins , and devils , have been caught , that it is feared , the breed is almost extinct . As sportsmen know well where to find a hare on her form , so do the novelists where to come upon a hobgoblin , on his form , which is commonly in some old castle , and in the tapestry of that castle .

' The learning required to form a novelist is not very extensive . Two . books , however , are indispensably necessary , —Satan ' s Invisible World , and the Gardener ' s Catalogue : the former as a magazine of fiends , the latter of trees . Davidson ' s Geography may be also useful , as it teaches that the Pyrenees are between France and Spain ; tlfat the Alps are between France and Italy ; that the Apennines run along Italjand that Naples is Sjuth from Venice ; mountainsmonksand

, , , murderers ; trees , towers , and trap-doors ; friars , fiends , and fairies , with castles and ghosts , mixed together at random , make an ollaporrida very delightful to Fools . " A Mrs . Smith , born in Wiseland , though so near the frontiers that it was almost doubtful to which Sovereign her allegiance belonged , paid her court to Mrs . Novel ; and received impregnation in

the mode above mentioned . She , as to land of nativitj ' , resembled one to whom she was very unlike in every thing else " LUCANUS AN APPULUS ANCEPS , " ' Having the misfortune not to see veiy clearly , she supposed the hillock , , bv the place of her nativity , to be the highest pinnacle

of Mount Wisdom . Her first child was a sprightly girl enough , but the rest were puny , peevish brats , and excessively vain ; eternally dunning people with the praises and private affairs of their mother . ' Mrs . Cannon was a most zealous loyalist to Folly . Before she paid her court to Mrs . Novel , she much amused people by taking two stools , trying to sit upon both , to secure one ; hitting neither ,

and so falling to the ground . She applied to Mrs . Novel to help her tip . She is very prolific : —her children are all loyal subjects to Folly . They are not , however , addicted to the fashionable exercise of ghost-hunting ; they satisfy themselves with monsters . She gives them all Quality names , that she and they may be supposed connected with Qualitya certain criterion of ability . One of them

, , under a feigned name , gave a history of ' the aforesaid misfortune of his Lady Mother ' s fall , laying the blame upon a mischiex'ous girl for kicking away the stools . That history was full of Lords , Earls , Marquises , and Dukes ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-02-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021798/page/15/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
ACCOUNT OF KIEN-LONG, EMPEROR OF CHINA. Article 4
NOTICE OF SIR ANDREW DOUGLAS. Article 6
A RETROSPECTIVE VIEW OF THE LITERATURE OF 1797. Article 7
WISDOM AND FOLLY: A VISION. Article 12
THE LIFE OF XIMENES, ARCHBISHOP OF TOLEDO. Article 18
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Article 30
A COLLECTION OF CHINESE PROVERBS AND APOTHEGMS, Article 36
AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY. Article 41
COLONEL TITUS's LETTER TO OLIVER CROMWELL. Article 43
THE COLLECTOR. Article 45
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS: Article 50
POETRY. Article 58
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 62
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 66
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Page 15

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

Wisdom And Folly: A Vision.

a hedge , another is sure to follow : if one goose cackle , the nocK cackle too ; even more sagacious animals than either sheep , asses , geese , or romance-ivri . ' ers—dogs themselves bark upon hearing other dogsdo the same , from the sympathetic spirit of barking . In a pack of hounds it is observed , that if a sagacious one gets a new scent , the rest follow . It is not surprising , therefore , that when Mrs . Ratcliflfe scented out hobgoblirs , the rest of the pack should open their throats .

Laura Maria , and many other friends of Mrs . Novel , go to the same lower regions of Fancy , which is excellent sporting-ground for hobgoblins . Of late , however , such quantities of monks , hobgoblins , and devils , have been caught , that it is feared , the breed is almost extinct . As sportsmen know well where to find a hare on her form , so do the novelists where to come upon a hobgoblin , on his form , which is commonly in some old castle , and in the tapestry of that castle .

' The learning required to form a novelist is not very extensive . Two . books , however , are indispensably necessary , —Satan ' s Invisible World , and the Gardener ' s Catalogue : the former as a magazine of fiends , the latter of trees . Davidson ' s Geography may be also useful , as it teaches that the Pyrenees are between France and Spain ; tlfat the Alps are between France and Italy ; that the Apennines run along Italjand that Naples is Sjuth from Venice ; mountainsmonksand

, , , murderers ; trees , towers , and trap-doors ; friars , fiends , and fairies , with castles and ghosts , mixed together at random , make an ollaporrida very delightful to Fools . " A Mrs . Smith , born in Wiseland , though so near the frontiers that it was almost doubtful to which Sovereign her allegiance belonged , paid her court to Mrs . Novel ; and received impregnation in

the mode above mentioned . She , as to land of nativitj ' , resembled one to whom she was very unlike in every thing else " LUCANUS AN APPULUS ANCEPS , " ' Having the misfortune not to see veiy clearly , she supposed the hillock , , bv the place of her nativity , to be the highest pinnacle

of Mount Wisdom . Her first child was a sprightly girl enough , but the rest were puny , peevish brats , and excessively vain ; eternally dunning people with the praises and private affairs of their mother . ' Mrs . Cannon was a most zealous loyalist to Folly . Before she paid her court to Mrs . Novel , she much amused people by taking two stools , trying to sit upon both , to secure one ; hitting neither ,

and so falling to the ground . She applied to Mrs . Novel to help her tip . She is very prolific : —her children are all loyal subjects to Folly . They are not , however , addicted to the fashionable exercise of ghost-hunting ; they satisfy themselves with monsters . She gives them all Quality names , that she and they may be supposed connected with Qualitya certain criterion of ability . One of them

, , under a feigned name , gave a history of ' the aforesaid misfortune of his Lady Mother ' s fall , laying the blame upon a mischiex'ous girl for kicking away the stools . That history was full of Lords , Earls , Marquises , and Dukes ,

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