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  • Sept. 1, 1794
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Sept. 1, 1794: Page 50

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    Article SURPRISING ANECDOTE OF A BLIND MAN. Page 1 of 1
Page 50

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

Surprising Anecdote Of A Blind Man.

SURPRISING ANECDOTE OF A BLIND MAN .

[ From Baron POLNITZ . ]

FROM Augsburg I came to Ulm , another imperial city . Theugh all the country is level , yet it is very tiresome to travellers because ofthe pavement of the causeys ; but , thanks to'the snow which has levelled the roads , I have not been much incommoded , though on the other hand I was near being lost in the snow , such an amazing quantity of it having fallen for two days , that the roads could not be

distinguished . My guide , though grown grey in the business of a postillion on that road , did not know the way . I was in danger every moment of sinking into a ditch ; when , just as we entered ' a valley , my postillion sounded his horn , to give notice to any- carriages or horses that might happen to meet us to make way , when a voice from the hollow called out to the postillion , Who is that ? Stephen ? Oh , cried the postillion , Is it you , Christopher ? God be thanked that I have met you I

Then turning towards me , he said , with an air of satisfaction , Now , sirj you are out of all danger , for here is a blind man that will conduct us to the place we are going to . — I thought my postillion mad , but we had not advanced many yards before I perceived a poor old man stone ? blind , as I soon found , who offered to be my guide . I consented , and he walked so fast before the chaise that the horses followed him in a gentle trot till we came safe to the stage . There he told me , that

about fifteen years ago he lost his sight , by the breaking of an imposthume in his eyes , after suffering such horrible pains for two months that he blest himself for the loss of his sight . When I asked him if he was not veiy sorry for it , he said , that at first it made him melancholy for some time , but that he always comforted himself by the remembrance of the torment he had undergone in the loss of his sight ; and that he thought it was much better to be blind and to have his healthj

than to see and suffer the pains he had endured ; but that now he was so used to his condition it gave him no concern . When I asked him if he should not be g lad to recover his sig ht , lip said , Yes , if it . were possible ; but that if he must undergo the same pain to recover it as he had felt in the loss of it , he had rather a thousand times continue blind ; When I told him my surprise that he should find out the way better thaii those who have their sihthe told methat since he had been blind he

g , , came regularly on Sundays and saint ' s-days where he had met us to hear mass , and that , therefore , the road Was become familiar to him . He added , that he sometimes went alone to beg three or four leagues from Ids village , which was half a league from the hollow way where 1 met with him . After giving him some money to supply his wants I dis ? missed him ; and could not but admire the goodness of Divine

Provi-dence , which , though it had afflicted the poor wretch with what to me seems more terrible than death , gave him strength to bear his misfortune with patience , and to be of such great use to those in a happier .situation

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-09-01, Page 50” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01091794/page/50/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 1
A CHARGE Article 8
A SHORT SKETCH OF THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY Article 13
ANECDOTES OF BENSERADE. Article 18
AUTHENTIC AND INTERESTING NARRATIVE OF THE ADVENTURES OF THE MUTINEERS Article 19
TO THE READER. Article 19
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 27
OF THE INFLUENCE OF THE FEMALE CHARACTER ON THE MANNERS OF MEN. Article 27
FEMALE CHARACTER Article 33
MR. TASKER'S LETTERS Article 37
MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE OF ROBERSPIERRE. Article 39
A GENUINE LETTER Article 49
SURPRISING ANECDOTE OF A BLIND MAN. Article 50
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS AT NAPLES. Article 51
MASONIC TOKENS. Article 54
ANECDOTES OF MOLIERE. Article 55
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 59
POETRY. Article 61
SONG INSCRIBED TO DELIA. Article 63
THE CANDLESTICK, Article 63
THE FAREWELL. Article 64
TEMPERANCE. Article 65
OCCASIONAL ADDRESS Article 66
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 67
OF LOVE. Article 67
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 68
PROMOTIONS. Article 76
Untitled Article 76
Untitled Article 77
BANKRUPTS. Article 78
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Page 50

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

Surprising Anecdote Of A Blind Man.

SURPRISING ANECDOTE OF A BLIND MAN .

[ From Baron POLNITZ . ]

FROM Augsburg I came to Ulm , another imperial city . Theugh all the country is level , yet it is very tiresome to travellers because ofthe pavement of the causeys ; but , thanks to'the snow which has levelled the roads , I have not been much incommoded , though on the other hand I was near being lost in the snow , such an amazing quantity of it having fallen for two days , that the roads could not be

distinguished . My guide , though grown grey in the business of a postillion on that road , did not know the way . I was in danger every moment of sinking into a ditch ; when , just as we entered ' a valley , my postillion sounded his horn , to give notice to any- carriages or horses that might happen to meet us to make way , when a voice from the hollow called out to the postillion , Who is that ? Stephen ? Oh , cried the postillion , Is it you , Christopher ? God be thanked that I have met you I

Then turning towards me , he said , with an air of satisfaction , Now , sirj you are out of all danger , for here is a blind man that will conduct us to the place we are going to . — I thought my postillion mad , but we had not advanced many yards before I perceived a poor old man stone ? blind , as I soon found , who offered to be my guide . I consented , and he walked so fast before the chaise that the horses followed him in a gentle trot till we came safe to the stage . There he told me , that

about fifteen years ago he lost his sight , by the breaking of an imposthume in his eyes , after suffering such horrible pains for two months that he blest himself for the loss of his sight . When I asked him if he was not veiy sorry for it , he said , that at first it made him melancholy for some time , but that he always comforted himself by the remembrance of the torment he had undergone in the loss of his sight ; and that he thought it was much better to be blind and to have his healthj

than to see and suffer the pains he had endured ; but that now he was so used to his condition it gave him no concern . When I asked him if he should not be g lad to recover his sig ht , lip said , Yes , if it . were possible ; but that if he must undergo the same pain to recover it as he had felt in the loss of it , he had rather a thousand times continue blind ; When I told him my surprise that he should find out the way better thaii those who have their sihthe told methat since he had been blind he

g , , came regularly on Sundays and saint ' s-days where he had met us to hear mass , and that , therefore , the road Was become familiar to him . He added , that he sometimes went alone to beg three or four leagues from Ids village , which was half a league from the hollow way where 1 met with him . After giving him some money to supply his wants I dis ? missed him ; and could not but admire the goodness of Divine

Provi-dence , which , though it had afflicted the poor wretch with what to me seems more terrible than death , gave him strength to bear his misfortune with patience , and to be of such great use to those in a happier .situation

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