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  • Oct. 1, 1855
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 1, 1855: Page 4

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the enraptured listeners to his eloquence— " ye are my wings ;"—or whether the aisgust presence of the judge suggests to these candid inquirers the necessity of seeing both sides of the subject ( but only one at a time ) , —it is quite clear , that except for these results of their contentions , professional opinions on matters of law would be at a

sad discount with the public . There is one simple method indeed by which the law of any question may be ascertained without going into court . Let the interested person endeavour , without prejudice , to ascertain , either by his own moral sense , or by the advice of judicious friends , which is the side of justice ; and he may pretty safely conclude that law is on the other side .

Professional questions are sometimes extremely difficult , especially if the evidence required is not easily procured . And this is particularly the case in the medical profession . The following curious instance was recently brought before the Medical Society of London . A child less than two years of age had been observed to walk lame for some days . A surgeon was consulted , who could find no cause

for the lameness , and the child was taken to a consulting surgeon of the highest eminence , who pronounced the case " incipient hip disease . " He ordered the hip joint to be encased in an immoveable frame-work , with a view of making the joint stiff for life , as the only mode of preventing the destruction of the joint by ulceration , to the

extreme danger of the patient ' s life . Moreover , the child was ordered to the sea-side . After a month ' s residence on the coast , a surgeon in practice there was requested to examine the joint . He did so , and pronounced it sound ; and even ridiculed the idea of incipient disease . The splint was taken off , and the child managed to walk . The

lameness had disappeared , to the great joy of the parents . On the next day , however , the child was as lame as ever . It was now thought that the affection was sympathetic of some insidious form of dyspepsia . Medicine was administered with this view , and immediately the limb was again restored ; the child walked , and ran , and jumped with the greatest glee . Clever doctor ! But stay;—in a day or two the

child was as lame as ever , nay worse ; nothing could ^ persuade the poor child to place its foot on the ground . Another dose was administered , and with the same happy result . But again and again lameness recurred , and that for weeks and months together . Other opinions were sought , other explanations offered , other remedies

tried : but the end was mystery . At length , some eight months after the first attack of lameness , the child complained of a sore place on the instep , on examining which , the nurse perceived a little boil , from the centre of which projected the point of a rusty needle . This being extracted , the lameness never recurred . The needle had entered the

limb , when , and where , and how , is unknown , but had evidently in its travels occasionally penetrated some nerve , and thus lamed the child , and puzzled the doctors . Such cases as these should teach the profession a lesson which all are slow to learn , Nothing is more difficult than for a professional man to acknowledge himself as ignorant on a given point as his clients .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-10-01, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01101855/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
METROPOLITAN. Article 35
ROSE CROIX. Article 34
PROVINCIAL. Article 35
GERMANY. Article 60
Obituary. Article 61
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 34
CATHEDRAL CHURCHES. Article 14
MASONIC INSCRIPTION FOR A FOUNTAIN. Article 14
ON THE SCARABCEUS. Article 15
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 18
PROFESSIONAL AUTHORITY. Article 1
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 23
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 32
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 30
IRELAND Article 58
COLONIAL. Article 59
AMERICA. Article 60
CORNWALL. Article 62
NOTICE. Article 63
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH Article 6
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

the enraptured listeners to his eloquence— " ye are my wings ;"—or whether the aisgust presence of the judge suggests to these candid inquirers the necessity of seeing both sides of the subject ( but only one at a time ) , —it is quite clear , that except for these results of their contentions , professional opinions on matters of law would be at a

sad discount with the public . There is one simple method indeed by which the law of any question may be ascertained without going into court . Let the interested person endeavour , without prejudice , to ascertain , either by his own moral sense , or by the advice of judicious friends , which is the side of justice ; and he may pretty safely conclude that law is on the other side .

Professional questions are sometimes extremely difficult , especially if the evidence required is not easily procured . And this is particularly the case in the medical profession . The following curious instance was recently brought before the Medical Society of London . A child less than two years of age had been observed to walk lame for some days . A surgeon was consulted , who could find no cause

for the lameness , and the child was taken to a consulting surgeon of the highest eminence , who pronounced the case " incipient hip disease . " He ordered the hip joint to be encased in an immoveable frame-work , with a view of making the joint stiff for life , as the only mode of preventing the destruction of the joint by ulceration , to the

extreme danger of the patient ' s life . Moreover , the child was ordered to the sea-side . After a month ' s residence on the coast , a surgeon in practice there was requested to examine the joint . He did so , and pronounced it sound ; and even ridiculed the idea of incipient disease . The splint was taken off , and the child managed to walk . The

lameness had disappeared , to the great joy of the parents . On the next day , however , the child was as lame as ever . It was now thought that the affection was sympathetic of some insidious form of dyspepsia . Medicine was administered with this view , and immediately the limb was again restored ; the child walked , and ran , and jumped with the greatest glee . Clever doctor ! But stay;—in a day or two the

child was as lame as ever , nay worse ; nothing could ^ persuade the poor child to place its foot on the ground . Another dose was administered , and with the same happy result . But again and again lameness recurred , and that for weeks and months together . Other opinions were sought , other explanations offered , other remedies

tried : but the end was mystery . At length , some eight months after the first attack of lameness , the child complained of a sore place on the instep , on examining which , the nurse perceived a little boil , from the centre of which projected the point of a rusty needle . This being extracted , the lameness never recurred . The needle had entered the

limb , when , and where , and how , is unknown , but had evidently in its travels occasionally penetrated some nerve , and thus lamed the child , and puzzled the doctors . Such cases as these should teach the profession a lesson which all are slow to learn , Nothing is more difficult than for a professional man to acknowledge himself as ignorant on a given point as his clients .

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