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  • Oct. 1, 1855
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 1, 1855: Page 5

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Page 5

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Untitled Article

The public may also learn what they are to expect when they demand from a professional man that knowledge which it is impossible he should possess . Thus he is often expected to give the history , past , present , and future , of the case presented for his opinion . As a

general rule , the causes of disease are little known to the medical man ; but he is always expected to give a full account of them . Equally unreasonable it is to expect from a solicitor a positive decision as to the result of a coming trial . Why , " the glorious uncertainty of the law" is his very life .

But with regard to the profession of arms , —a body of men whom recent events have taught us to respect and almost revere , —who shall gainsay the tactics of our military and naval commanders , now that victory has stamped them at once with wisdom and power ? So long as the event was doubtful , it was easy to sit in Printing-house Square , and happily ignorant of the smell of gun-powder , to scrutinize

the hidden plans and tactics of those to whom the fate of Europe was committed ; and in language which , though big and blustering , might afterwards be turned either way , so to prefigure the coming events as that either a victory or a defeat might seem to careless readers to justify the self-eulogium , showing how clearly the results had all been foreseen . Yerily , these heroes of the quill are stealthy , if not valorous , knights .

As to the conduct of our successive governments in the disastrous commencement of the war , it were treason and treachery to believe that there are two opinions in the country . Never was so awful a sacrifice of human life made at the shrine of low , selfish partizanship ; and while justly regarding diplomacy as a species of professional

science , w e hold ourselves justified in denouncing not the policy , for policy has no place in the proceedings , but the selfishness ^ the reclclessness , the brutal disregard of the health and lives of the defenders of their country , which last winter ' s campaign revealed as the attributes of those to whose management the conduct of the war wad committed . Our recent successes shall never obliterate from our

minds the remembrance of that national crime . No doubt it was jovial fun to certain parties in the state to make widows and orphans just for a freak , to send out the pride of the national blood to starve and rot , and die unheeded and unpitied . It was congenial to this merry company to rebuke with severity the medical remonstrances which , at the suggestions of humanity , were reiterated from the camp and from the hospital . And is it not now a pretty thing to

say , as all history will say , that when the British government would have destroyed its whole military force , just by letting them perish for want of necessaries , the wreck of the- army w as saved by a woman ! Yes ; Miss Nightingale fed the men who would have starved , restored the wounded who would have died , and thus rescued the army from defeat ; and by saving the army , saved Europe . There are men who will not believe the truth of the tradition of Joan of Arc . Let them read the records of the Nightingale campaign . This lady ' s zeal , prowess , energy , and magnanimity , has never been

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-10-01, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01101855/page/5/.
  • 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 public may also learn what they are to expect when they demand from a professional man that knowledge which it is impossible he should possess . Thus he is often expected to give the history , past , present , and future , of the case presented for his opinion . As a

general rule , the causes of disease are little known to the medical man ; but he is always expected to give a full account of them . Equally unreasonable it is to expect from a solicitor a positive decision as to the result of a coming trial . Why , " the glorious uncertainty of the law" is his very life .

But with regard to the profession of arms , —a body of men whom recent events have taught us to respect and almost revere , —who shall gainsay the tactics of our military and naval commanders , now that victory has stamped them at once with wisdom and power ? So long as the event was doubtful , it was easy to sit in Printing-house Square , and happily ignorant of the smell of gun-powder , to scrutinize

the hidden plans and tactics of those to whom the fate of Europe was committed ; and in language which , though big and blustering , might afterwards be turned either way , so to prefigure the coming events as that either a victory or a defeat might seem to careless readers to justify the self-eulogium , showing how clearly the results had all been foreseen . Yerily , these heroes of the quill are stealthy , if not valorous , knights .

As to the conduct of our successive governments in the disastrous commencement of the war , it were treason and treachery to believe that there are two opinions in the country . Never was so awful a sacrifice of human life made at the shrine of low , selfish partizanship ; and while justly regarding diplomacy as a species of professional

science , w e hold ourselves justified in denouncing not the policy , for policy has no place in the proceedings , but the selfishness ^ the reclclessness , the brutal disregard of the health and lives of the defenders of their country , which last winter ' s campaign revealed as the attributes of those to whose management the conduct of the war wad committed . Our recent successes shall never obliterate from our

minds the remembrance of that national crime . No doubt it was jovial fun to certain parties in the state to make widows and orphans just for a freak , to send out the pride of the national blood to starve and rot , and die unheeded and unpitied . It was congenial to this merry company to rebuke with severity the medical remonstrances which , at the suggestions of humanity , were reiterated from the camp and from the hospital . And is it not now a pretty thing to

say , as all history will say , that when the British government would have destroyed its whole military force , just by letting them perish for want of necessaries , the wreck of the- army w as saved by a woman ! Yes ; Miss Nightingale fed the men who would have starved , restored the wounded who would have died , and thus rescued the army from defeat ; and by saving the army , saved Europe . There are men who will not believe the truth of the tradition of Joan of Arc . Let them read the records of the Nightingale campaign . This lady ' s zeal , prowess , energy , and magnanimity , has never been

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