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JOHN HINTON, at the King's-Arms in St. Paul's Church-Yard, London.

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Here bright Eloquence does always Imiles doth both Knowledge Delight impart In such a choice yet unaffected Style, The Force of Reason with y flours of Art.

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GENTRY, MERCHANTS, FARMERS and TRADESMEN.
To which occafionally will be added

An Impartial Account of Books in feveral Languages
and of the State of Learning in Europe

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Of the STAGE New OPERAS, PLAYS and ORATORIOS.
VOLVII.

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Publifhed Monthly according to Act of Parliament
By John Hinton at the Kings-Arms in St Pauls Church Yard.
Londen [Price Six Pence]

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Publifhed according to Act of Parliament,

For JOHN HINTON, at the King's-Arms in St. Paul's Church-Yard, London. 1750. [Price Six-Pence.]

THE

Univerfal Magazine

O F

Knowledge and Pleasure:

FOR

JULY, 1750.

VOL. VII.

The History of all Nations (Page 202, Vol. VI.) continued.

W

Scholar.

HO fucceeded Sefoftris? Tutor. He was fucceeded by his fon, Pheron, by the name of Sefoftris II, whofe history favours more of fiction than truth. However, even fiction has its ufe; as it teacheth us that nothing can be too grofs for the belief of a bigotted people.

Pheron performed nothing in the military way; but had the fame miffortune, as his father had, to be ftruck blind: which might be owing to fome infirmity derived from his parent. But the fuperftition of the times informs us, That this lofs of his fight was miraculous, and a punishment inflicted on him, for prefumptuoufly and infolently darting his javelin into the river Nile, much disturbed by a ftrong gale of wind, when it had overflowed the NUMB. XLIV. Vol. VII.

country to an unusual height. Upon this action, fay they, he was immediately feized with a pain in his eyes, and foon after, by a total darkness, under which he laboured till he was directed by the oracle at Butus, in the eleventh year of his blindnefs, to pay particular devotions to the God at Heliopolis, and to wash his eyes with the urine of a married woman, who had never known any man but her husband. He began with his own wife, and tried the water of many others amongst the great perfonages about his court, without fuccefs, till a poor gardener's wife, in a neighbouring village, afforded him the relief promifed by the oracle. Her he made his Queen; but he ba-. nifhed all the others, as fo many adul tereffes, to the city Eritkibolus, and condemned them to be burnt. Then he paid his vows to the Gods, by fe

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