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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Sept. 1, 1793
  • Page 32
  • ON THE PRISONS OF THE METROPOLIS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Sept. 1, 1793: Page 32

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Page 32

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

On The Prisons Of The Metropolis.

ON THE PRISONS OF THE METROPOLIS .

To THE PRINTER . SIR , A German Traveller being shewn the . vast Cathedral of St . Paul ' s , is said to have demanded of his Cicerone , Whetner it were not the Church of England of which he had heard so much and often ? Ridiculous this mistake must appear to us , I

so as question whether any reasonable or benevolent man , Mr . ^ nntei ; would be inclined , or indeed be able to laugh , if he were asked by a foreigner , Whether the King ' s Bench Prison were not the Jail ot Great Britain ? The high and g loomy walls which form its circumference appeared to me to : cover a large surface ot the soil of Liberty—they have kept pace with the improvements of the the

town , and extended their pomajria in no doubt same proportion as luxury and commerce have increased the inhabitants ofthe capital . A man who , like myself , wanders from one extremity ot the metropolis to the other , and thinks as he wanders , will form meditations more useful than pleasant from the survey of the numerous prisons and hospitals of this high-viced-city . w hat a mass is confined within

of guilt and misfortune , - of vice and misery , those walls ! What a part of the Commonwealth is constantly under punishment or cure , and in either case unhappy ! We behold a town of wretchedness , perhaps of crimes , a Poneropohs , policed , as Montaigne expresses it , by their vices themselves . and society organized from necessity , not virtue *; a town within a town , drafted and peopled from it by folly , wickedness , and misfortune . If we turn our eyes from these gloomy spectacles to behold the wealth of our Merchants , the state of our Nobles , our

River covered by a forest of masts , the population of our streets , the increase and luxury of our building ; our new Theatres , the squares , the crescents , circus ' s , aud all the imaginations of a sickly and pampered taste ; is it not a melancholy reflection , Sir , that each " of these should demand its proportion of jail and hospital , and that the balance should be struck with constant and even hand

a between Luxury and Distress , Prodigality and Indolence , Prosperity and Misfortune 1 Nations have ever entertained a foolish vanity , and endeavoured to magnify the extent and population of -their metropolitan cities beyond the truth . I was walking tin *

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1793-09-01, Page 32” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01091793/page/32/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
TO OUR READERS. Article 2
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE: OR, GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 4
A CHARGE, Article 8
THE CHARGE. Article 9
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 15
A NARRATIVE OF THE SUFFERINGS OF LIEUTENANT GEORGE SPEARING, Article 15
ON THE IMPRESSION OF REALITY ATTENDING DRAMATIC REPRESENTATIONS. Article 21
TWO CURIOUS PHILOSOPHICAL PAPERS. WRITTEN BY Dr. FRANKLIN, Article 27
No. II. Article 30
ON THE PRISONS OF THE METROPOLIS. Article 32
FURTHER PARTICULARS IN ADDITION TO OUR ACCOUNT OF THE EARL OF MOIRA. Article 34
INSTANCES OF COWARDICE AND COURAGE IN THE SAME PERSONS. Article 36
FLORIO; OR, THE ABUSE OF RICHES. Article 39
ON THE TITLE OF ESQUIRE. Article 41
AN ORIENTAL FABLE. Article 45
ANECDOTES OF DR. GOLDSMITH. Article 48
THE WOODEN LEG: AN HELVETIC TALE. Article 54
ANECDOTE ON MR. ADDISON. Article 56
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASON'S MAGAZINE. Article 57
THE LOYAL AND AFFECTIONATE ADDRESS OF THE FREEMASONS OF CORNWALL. Article 57
CHARLES II. AND VOSSIUS. Article 58
TALE OF A NUMIDIAN CHIEF. Article 59
ON AFFECTATION. Article 60
HAIL AND THUNDER STORMS IN CHESHIRE, Article 62
CHARACTERS IN HARRY THE EIGHTH's TIME. Article 64
LA FAYETTE's STATEMENT OF HIS OWN CONDUCT. Article 66
FRENCH BRAVERY. Article 69
TO THE PRINTER OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 70
Untitled Article 70
PHILIP OF MACEDON. Article 71
ON EDUCATION. Article 72
SKETCHES OF FOREIGN LITERATURE. Article 75
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 78
POETRY. Article 79
NOBLEMAN's SEAT IN CORNWALL. Article 80
THE CHELSEA PENSIONER. Article 82
A MORAL SKETCH, Article 83
EXPECTANCY. Article 84
THE MOSS ROSE BUD. Article 84
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 85
Untitled Article 88
Untitled Article 88
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Page 32

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

On The Prisons Of The Metropolis.

ON THE PRISONS OF THE METROPOLIS .

To THE PRINTER . SIR , A German Traveller being shewn the . vast Cathedral of St . Paul ' s , is said to have demanded of his Cicerone , Whetner it were not the Church of England of which he had heard so much and often ? Ridiculous this mistake must appear to us , I

so as question whether any reasonable or benevolent man , Mr . ^ nntei ; would be inclined , or indeed be able to laugh , if he were asked by a foreigner , Whether the King ' s Bench Prison were not the Jail ot Great Britain ? The high and g loomy walls which form its circumference appeared to me to : cover a large surface ot the soil of Liberty—they have kept pace with the improvements of the the

town , and extended their pomajria in no doubt same proportion as luxury and commerce have increased the inhabitants ofthe capital . A man who , like myself , wanders from one extremity ot the metropolis to the other , and thinks as he wanders , will form meditations more useful than pleasant from the survey of the numerous prisons and hospitals of this high-viced-city . w hat a mass is confined within

of guilt and misfortune , - of vice and misery , those walls ! What a part of the Commonwealth is constantly under punishment or cure , and in either case unhappy ! We behold a town of wretchedness , perhaps of crimes , a Poneropohs , policed , as Montaigne expresses it , by their vices themselves . and society organized from necessity , not virtue *; a town within a town , drafted and peopled from it by folly , wickedness , and misfortune . If we turn our eyes from these gloomy spectacles to behold the wealth of our Merchants , the state of our Nobles , our

River covered by a forest of masts , the population of our streets , the increase and luxury of our building ; our new Theatres , the squares , the crescents , circus ' s , aud all the imaginations of a sickly and pampered taste ; is it not a melancholy reflection , Sir , that each " of these should demand its proportion of jail and hospital , and that the balance should be struck with constant and even hand

a between Luxury and Distress , Prodigality and Indolence , Prosperity and Misfortune 1 Nations have ever entertained a foolish vanity , and endeavoured to magnify the extent and population of -their metropolitan cities beyond the truth . I was walking tin *

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