Page:Bassetts scrap book 1907 03-1909 02.djvu/14

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BASSETT'S SCRAP BOOK

SCRAPS OF INFORMATION.

Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information about it.—Samuel Johnson.

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Quotation.—Who said, "A gentleman will not affront me, and no other can?"

Ans.—Perhaps you mean, "A moral, sensible and well-bred man will not affront me and no other can." Cowper, in "Conversation."

———

The Devil.—Who wrote: "The Devil was sick, the Devil a monk would be; The Devil was well, the Devil a monk was he?"

Ans.—Rabelais, Book IV., Chap. xxiv.

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William Morgan.—Is it true that Captain Morgan was killed by the Masons for betraying their secrets?

Ans.—There was a William Morgan whose death was the immediate cause of the promotion of the anti-Masonic party. He was born in West Virginia, about 1775. He fought in the defense of New Orleans in 1815; removed to Canada in 1821, where he became a brewer and whence soon after he removed to Batavia, N. Y., and in August, 1826, disappeared; soon after a rumor had been spread that he was to reveal the secrets of the Masonic order. He was supposed to have been drowned in Lake Ontario. A corpse found near the mouth of the Niagara River was stated to be his, and much political capital was made of this so-called proof. Thurlow Weed, a leader in the anti-Masonic movement, cynically said