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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1796
  • Page 42
  • SINGULARITIES OF MR. HOWARD, THE PHILANTHROPIST.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1796: Page 42

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    Article SINGULARITIES OF MR. HOWARD, THE PHILANTHROPIST. ← Page 4 of 4
Page 42

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

Singularities Of Mr. Howard, The Philanthropist.

I entreated him to go on till I either shewed by words or actions that I was weary . He proceeded thus : — " My next business was to eat and drink sparingly of that adopted dish and bottle . My ease , vivacity , and spirits , augmented . My clothing , & c . underwent a similar reform ; the effect of all which isand has been for many that I am

, years , neither affected by seeing my carriage dragged up a mountain , or driven down a valley . If an accident happens , I am prepared for it ; I mean so far as respects unnecessary terrors : and I am proof against all changes in the atmosphere , wet clothes , wet feet , night air , damp beds , damp houses , transitions from heat to cold , and the long train of hypochondriac affections .

" Believe me , we are too apt to invert the remedies which we ought to prescribe to ourselves—for instance , we are for ever givinghot things , when we should administer cold . On my going down to my house last week in Bedfordshire , the overseer of my grounds met me with a pail full of comfortable things , as he called them , which he was carrying to one of my cowswhich was afflicted sorelwith

, y , as he called it , a racket ty complaint in her bowels . I ordered him" to throw away his pail of comforts , and take to the poor beast a pail of cold water . " Cold water , your honour 1 " exclaimed the man , with every mark of consternation . " Would you kill the poor dumb creature ? Why , she is in such desperatiousnain , that 1 don ' t think a bucket

of sheer brandy would have any more effect upon her , than if I were to pour it against a dead wall . " " No matter- for that , " said I , " take her a pail of water ! Suppose , honest friend , she had all her life run wild in a'forest , and fell into , the sickness under which she now labours , dost thou think that Nature would ever carry her the hot comforts you have got in that pail ? " " Nature , your honour ! but with submission

, Nature must , when either man or beast is sick , be clapped on the back a little : if not , Nature will let them die . " " Not she , truly : if they are recoverable , she will , on the contrary , make them well . Depend upon it , she is the best physician in the world , though she has not taken her degrees in the college ; and so make haste to throw away what is . now in your pail , and fill it as I directed ; forwhether die

, my cow or live , she shall have nothing but grass and cold water . " Though the poor fellow dared not any longer resist , I could see plainly that he put me down as having lost , not onl y my senses , but my humanity . However , the cure did veiy well ; and I am satisfied , that if we were to trust more to Nature , and suffer her to supply her own remedies to cure her own diseasesthe formidable

, catalogue of human maladies would be reduced to a third of their present number . Dr . Sydenham , I think , reckons sixty different kinds of fevers , for example ; of these 1 cannot suppose less than fifty are either brought about ,, or rendered worse , by misapplication of improper remedies , or by our . own violation of the laws of nature . And . the same , 1 take it , mav be said of other disorders . "

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-01-01, Page 42” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011796/page/42/.
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Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 4
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 4
WILLIAM HENRY LAMBTON, Esq. M P. Article 5
PART OF A CHARGE LATELY DELIVERED TO A SOCIETY OF FREE MASONS ON AN EXTRAORDINARY OCCASION*. Article 8
ON THE PLEASURES OF THE TABLE AMONG THE GREEKS. Article 12
ON THE OVERFONDNESS OF PARENTS. Article 13
CHARACTER OF SIR EDWARD SEYMOUR. Article 15
OBSERVATIONS MADE IN A VISIT TO THE TOMBS OF WESTMINSTER ABBEY, IN DECEMBER. 1784, Article 16
THE STAGE. Article 23
RULES FOR THE GERMAN FLUTE. Article 25
ANECDOTE OF THE LATE MR. WHISTON. Article 26
ON THE MUTABILITY OF THE TIMES. Article 27
ANECDOTES. Article 28
TO THE EDITOR. Article 31
AN EASTERN APOLOGUE. Article 31
ACCOUNT OF, AND EXTRACTS FROM, THE NEWLY DISCOVERED SHAKSPEARE MANUSCRIPTS. Article 32
BRIEF MEMOIRS OF MR. SPILLARD, THE PEDESTRIAN. Article 35
PROCESS OF SCALPING AMONG THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS. Article 37
SINGULARITIES OF MR. HOWARD, THE PHILANTHROPIST. Article 39
A DISSERTATION ON THE MODERN ART OF SCRIBBLING. Article 43
EXTRAORDINARY EPITAPH Article 46
DESCRIPTION OF A GRAND COLLATION, Article 47
REMARKS ON MEN OF SPIRIT. Article 47
REMARKABLE REVERSE OF FORTUNE. Article 48
BIOGRAPHY. Article 49
POETRY. Article 53
ON SEEING A BEAUTIFUL YOUNG LADY IN TEARS, Article 54
SEPTEMBER *. Article 54
ODE FOR THE NEW YEAR, 1796. Article 57
MASONIC SONG. Article 58
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 59
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 61
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 67
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Page 42

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

Singularities Of Mr. Howard, The Philanthropist.

I entreated him to go on till I either shewed by words or actions that I was weary . He proceeded thus : — " My next business was to eat and drink sparingly of that adopted dish and bottle . My ease , vivacity , and spirits , augmented . My clothing , & c . underwent a similar reform ; the effect of all which isand has been for many that I am

, years , neither affected by seeing my carriage dragged up a mountain , or driven down a valley . If an accident happens , I am prepared for it ; I mean so far as respects unnecessary terrors : and I am proof against all changes in the atmosphere , wet clothes , wet feet , night air , damp beds , damp houses , transitions from heat to cold , and the long train of hypochondriac affections .

" Believe me , we are too apt to invert the remedies which we ought to prescribe to ourselves—for instance , we are for ever givinghot things , when we should administer cold . On my going down to my house last week in Bedfordshire , the overseer of my grounds met me with a pail full of comfortable things , as he called them , which he was carrying to one of my cowswhich was afflicted sorelwith

, y , as he called it , a racket ty complaint in her bowels . I ordered him" to throw away his pail of comforts , and take to the poor beast a pail of cold water . " Cold water , your honour 1 " exclaimed the man , with every mark of consternation . " Would you kill the poor dumb creature ? Why , she is in such desperatiousnain , that 1 don ' t think a bucket

of sheer brandy would have any more effect upon her , than if I were to pour it against a dead wall . " " No matter- for that , " said I , " take her a pail of water ! Suppose , honest friend , she had all her life run wild in a'forest , and fell into , the sickness under which she now labours , dost thou think that Nature would ever carry her the hot comforts you have got in that pail ? " " Nature , your honour ! but with submission

, Nature must , when either man or beast is sick , be clapped on the back a little : if not , Nature will let them die . " " Not she , truly : if they are recoverable , she will , on the contrary , make them well . Depend upon it , she is the best physician in the world , though she has not taken her degrees in the college ; and so make haste to throw away what is . now in your pail , and fill it as I directed ; forwhether die

, my cow or live , she shall have nothing but grass and cold water . " Though the poor fellow dared not any longer resist , I could see plainly that he put me down as having lost , not onl y my senses , but my humanity . However , the cure did veiy well ; and I am satisfied , that if we were to trust more to Nature , and suffer her to supply her own remedies to cure her own diseasesthe formidable

, catalogue of human maladies would be reduced to a third of their present number . Dr . Sydenham , I think , reckons sixty different kinds of fevers , for example ; of these 1 cannot suppose less than fifty are either brought about ,, or rendered worse , by misapplication of improper remedies , or by our . own violation of the laws of nature . And . the same , 1 take it , mav be said of other disorders . "

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