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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Aug. 17, 1861
  • Page 10
  • CAVOUR AN ENGINEER.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 17, 1861: Page 10

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    Article MEMORIAL TO BRO. SIR CHARLES BARRY. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article CAVOUR AN ENGINEER. Page 1 of 1
    Article CAVOUR AN ENGINEER. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE GEORGE STREET "MODEL." * Page 1 of 3 →
Page 10

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

Memorial To Bro. Sir Charles Barry.

In accordance with the last paragraph in the above letter , the present meeting of subscribers to the Barry Memorial Fund has been called . - It remains only to state , before leaving the matter generally to their consideration , that the subscription up to the present time amounts to £ 974 4 s ., of which £ 601 7 s ., as appears by the bankers ' book on the table , have been paid into the Trustee ' s account at Messrs . Drummonds' ; and , secondly , that if nominated to serve

upon a working committee , for the further prosecution of the subject we have all at heart , the following gentlemen will be prepared to serve .- —The Hon . AV . Cooper , Sir Charles Eastlako , WTite , Esq ., T . L . Donaldson , Esq ., Owen Jones , Esq ., T . Hayter Lewis , Esq ., Arthur Hunt , Esq ., J . Gibson , Esq ., David Eoherts , Esq ., T . II . AVyatt , Esq ., G . Godwin , Esq ., ancl Charles Lucas , Esq . From some to whom application has been made , no answers have been received , but it is not considered that there is reason to

apprehend disinclination on the part of any of the gentlemen who have been invited to serve on the Committee . Iu addition to the list of subscriptions , the sum of £ 50 has been placed in the hands of the Hon . Secretary , Mr . Nelson , by a very strenuous supporter of the memorial , to defray the expenses of printing , advertising , ancl incidental disbursements ; of this sum , £ 13 remains unexpended . ")

M . DIGBT AVYATT , TT „ , . CHAEI . ES C . KHOT , j Hon - Secretaries . Rooms of the Royal Society of British Architects , 9 , Conduit-street , August 6 , 1861 . A otcs of thanks to the Institute for the use of the meetingroom , and to the Chairman for presiding , concluded the business of the meetins .

Cavour An Engineer.

CAVOUR AN ENGINEER .

The late Count Camillo Benso di Cavour , the Italian statesman , began life as a military engineer . The current number of the Quarterlg , in a valuable memoir of him , says : — " Like most young men of rank , Camillo was sent to the military academy . The army was then almost the only career open to a youth of noble birth . The civil service of the State was despised , and fow in his position could be prepared for it by a suitable

education . He soon distinguished himself by his diligence ancl ability , and was chosen as a royal page , then the next step to successful entrance into patrician life . His position at the Court seems to have been irksome to him . He took little pains to conceal his distaste for it , and was soon dismissed from his duties . Returning with renewed energies to his studies , chiefly directed by the celebrated astronomer Plana , he completed his military education at eighteen , leaving the Academy with the rank of Lieutenant of

Engineers , and the reputation of an able mathematician and one of the most industrious pupils of the institution . He was soon employed as an engineer , although only nineteen years old , in important works . In a letter , dated the 9 th March , 1829 , he writes , — 'I have passed the whole winter in the Apennines , to make the plan of a new fort , the object of which would be to close the road between Nice ancl Genoa . ' !—a singular entry into life of the statesman who , thirty years later , was called upon to transfer the frontiers of his country to this very line of defence . From Genoa ,

fie was sent to finish some works at L'Esseillon , —a fort perched upon precipitous heights , ancl commanding the pass of the Mont Cenis into Ital y . He writes with a keen enjoyment of tho grand mountain scenery which surrounds it . He had formed an early friendship with the late Mr . William Brockedon . That distinguished Alpine traveller had heen the first to describe those beautiful passes and valleys , now the favourite resort of the English tourist , which lead from the spotless summits and stern grandeur of the

Swiss Alps , through almost imperceptible gradations of gloomy pine-forests , shady chesnut-groves , smiling vine-yards , and conventcrowned hills , into the sunny plains of Italy . He had sent his magnificent work on The Passes of the Alps to the young Count . To no one could the gift have been more grateful . He was proud of his glorious native valleys , and jealous of their reputation . In the letter we have just quoted , the first of a series of great interest

addressed to his English friend , he writes : — ' Having , with the exception of the Stelvio , explored all the passes you so well describe , I have seen , ivith the liveliest pleasure , that , doing full justice to the picturesque beauties of our valleys , you give so charming a description of them . The Piedmontese , who have hitherto been sacrificed on this score to the Swiss , should be grateful to you for what you have clone for them . You sustain their cause in tho most triumphant manner , by making known to all Europe the singularl y picturesque scenery of Mount Geneve , and the magnificent valley of Aosta , which are in no way inferior

Cavour An Engineer.

to the most beautiful parts of Switzerland . We shall be indebted to you as one of the first amongst strangers who , divesting himself of those accepted prejudices which assigned to Helvetia alone all the beauties of the Alps , has rendered complete and signal justice to a country which so well deserves to be known . ' "

The George Street "Model." *

THE GEORGE STREET "MODEL . " *

"Better go to a 'Model , '" was the advising of Will Shakley to Simon Flustrum , the latter of whom had that evening arrived in London by way of the Caledonian Eoad . " What 1 " said Flustrum , " what 1 " And this from my friend Shakley ! What ! do you think I have turned wholly to thieving since we were last together in the country , ancl so am only worthy now of being lodged in such a big and strong house as I saw this afternoon just before my getting into London—the 'Model Prison '

, , as they told me it was ?" " Oh , Flustrum ! Flustrum ! " rejoined Will , with an evident sore feeling , " I had no such meaning , but meant one of those places called ' models' welch have been bnilt up by the gentry for us poor folk , ancl in which you single men strangers , on arriving in town , may have better and cheaper lodgings than are to be commonly had in private houses . " ' " Your hand , Will , for that explanation , " was the pleased reply

of Simon . " And where are any of these models to he found ?" " One close by , — -just close by , " said Will ; " and where I put up myself for a while just before I got married . This street we are in now is called Crown Street : at its top is St . Giles ' s Church ; and a little way from the church is George Street , and in that street is the ' model ; ' and a pretty good one , too , it is , as I know from experience . But come , I will show you the way to it ; and let us go at oncefor it generallfills very welland by any delay a chance

, y , might be lost in finding an opening . " This short statement , then , will suffice to indicate one of the many ways by which these single men's Model Lodging Houses get filled from time to time ; ancl that they are usually so well filled the return recently made at the annual meeting of the society wherewith this one of . George Street is connected is proof ; the number of inmates then given being ninety-nine , which is within a very few in number of all the heels there obtainable .

I , myself , the writer of this account , came to find a passing harbourage in this George-street " model , " and , therefore , to learn so much about the place , it is not necessary here to tell : enough to let it be known that the statements now to be made will be strictly

faithful , inconsequence of this intimacy with the place ; or such as they only truly can see who make use of their own eyes , though taking care the while that no blinding " glamour" creates any falsification of the mental vision . AVill the reader , then , gentle or ungentle , come along for a short time in my company , on this special undertaking ? The street—George-street—itself has no very inviting appearance on the whole , it being narrow , and the houses , looking along

the left side , as one enters from Broad-street , St . Giles' , of but a so-so kind ; while , on the right hand , is a pretty conspicuous range of side-wall belonging to a Ragged School ; then comes the sturdylike " Model ; " next the back parts of a French Protestant church , ancl the Rev . Mr , Brock's chapel , both whose admission portals are in Bloomsbury-street ; while above the rears of these two buildings is the blank side of one ofthe large business houses which have their shops and front windows in New Oxford-street .

The situation , then , of our " model" is pretty favourable as a Avorking man's lodging ; so much of the bustling , if not of the brilliant , being seen and carried on in the surrounding neighbourhood ; Dudley-street , on the south , exhibiting , among its abundant Irishry , a galooe of all sorts of old shoes , old garments , ancl almost everything else old , even to the single old halfpenny ballad of former times ; while northward is the superb Oxford-street ; and , still more direct north , the long , spacious , and constantly thronged

Tottenham Court-road—the sideways with their pedestrianism , ancl the centre with its hurry of 'bus and cab . Nestling , therefore , in perfect quietness in the George-street mentioned , where never the wheel of a 'bus is seen to run , and rarely that of a cab ( for sometimes , indeed , a cab-brought lodger will come to this George-street , with travelling-trunk , travellinghat , & c ); nestling here , some hundred men , aged , middle-aged , and down to mere youthfulnesstake then- nihtlslumbersand

, gy , if they so please , their daily meals—breakfast , dinner , tea ancl supper ; a large and strange gathering to be found within the roofage of one building ; and it is neither hospital nor barracks , but where each ancl all enjoy the utmost freedom ; and more , perhaps , in some particulars , than could be conceded in the private house .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-08-17, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_17081861/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XLTV. Article 1
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 2
MASONIC ADVENTURE. Article 3
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHAÆOLOGY. Article 4
ARTISTIC LABOUR AT THE BUILDING OF ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL. Article 6
GENERAL ARCHITECTURAL INTELLIGENCE. Article 6
MEMORIAL TO BRO. SIR CHARLES BARRY. Article 8
CAVOUR AN ENGINEER. Article 10
THE GEORGE STREET "MODEL." * Article 10
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 12
NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART. Article 13
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 15
THE MASONIC BANQUET AT NORWICH. Article 15
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 16
GRAND LODGE. Article 16
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
SCOTLAND. Article 17
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Memorial To Bro. Sir Charles Barry.

In accordance with the last paragraph in the above letter , the present meeting of subscribers to the Barry Memorial Fund has been called . - It remains only to state , before leaving the matter generally to their consideration , that the subscription up to the present time amounts to £ 974 4 s ., of which £ 601 7 s ., as appears by the bankers ' book on the table , have been paid into the Trustee ' s account at Messrs . Drummonds' ; and , secondly , that if nominated to serve

upon a working committee , for the further prosecution of the subject we have all at heart , the following gentlemen will be prepared to serve .- —The Hon . AV . Cooper , Sir Charles Eastlako , WTite , Esq ., T . L . Donaldson , Esq ., Owen Jones , Esq ., T . Hayter Lewis , Esq ., Arthur Hunt , Esq ., J . Gibson , Esq ., David Eoherts , Esq ., T . II . AVyatt , Esq ., G . Godwin , Esq ., ancl Charles Lucas , Esq . From some to whom application has been made , no answers have been received , but it is not considered that there is reason to

apprehend disinclination on the part of any of the gentlemen who have been invited to serve on the Committee . Iu addition to the list of subscriptions , the sum of £ 50 has been placed in the hands of the Hon . Secretary , Mr . Nelson , by a very strenuous supporter of the memorial , to defray the expenses of printing , advertising , ancl incidental disbursements ; of this sum , £ 13 remains unexpended . ")

M . DIGBT AVYATT , TT „ , . CHAEI . ES C . KHOT , j Hon - Secretaries . Rooms of the Royal Society of British Architects , 9 , Conduit-street , August 6 , 1861 . A otcs of thanks to the Institute for the use of the meetingroom , and to the Chairman for presiding , concluded the business of the meetins .

Cavour An Engineer.

CAVOUR AN ENGINEER .

The late Count Camillo Benso di Cavour , the Italian statesman , began life as a military engineer . The current number of the Quarterlg , in a valuable memoir of him , says : — " Like most young men of rank , Camillo was sent to the military academy . The army was then almost the only career open to a youth of noble birth . The civil service of the State was despised , and fow in his position could be prepared for it by a suitable

education . He soon distinguished himself by his diligence ancl ability , and was chosen as a royal page , then the next step to successful entrance into patrician life . His position at the Court seems to have been irksome to him . He took little pains to conceal his distaste for it , and was soon dismissed from his duties . Returning with renewed energies to his studies , chiefly directed by the celebrated astronomer Plana , he completed his military education at eighteen , leaving the Academy with the rank of Lieutenant of

Engineers , and the reputation of an able mathematician and one of the most industrious pupils of the institution . He was soon employed as an engineer , although only nineteen years old , in important works . In a letter , dated the 9 th March , 1829 , he writes , — 'I have passed the whole winter in the Apennines , to make the plan of a new fort , the object of which would be to close the road between Nice ancl Genoa . ' !—a singular entry into life of the statesman who , thirty years later , was called upon to transfer the frontiers of his country to this very line of defence . From Genoa ,

fie was sent to finish some works at L'Esseillon , —a fort perched upon precipitous heights , ancl commanding the pass of the Mont Cenis into Ital y . He writes with a keen enjoyment of tho grand mountain scenery which surrounds it . He had formed an early friendship with the late Mr . William Brockedon . That distinguished Alpine traveller had heen the first to describe those beautiful passes and valleys , now the favourite resort of the English tourist , which lead from the spotless summits and stern grandeur of the

Swiss Alps , through almost imperceptible gradations of gloomy pine-forests , shady chesnut-groves , smiling vine-yards , and conventcrowned hills , into the sunny plains of Italy . He had sent his magnificent work on The Passes of the Alps to the young Count . To no one could the gift have been more grateful . He was proud of his glorious native valleys , and jealous of their reputation . In the letter we have just quoted , the first of a series of great interest

addressed to his English friend , he writes : — ' Having , with the exception of the Stelvio , explored all the passes you so well describe , I have seen , ivith the liveliest pleasure , that , doing full justice to the picturesque beauties of our valleys , you give so charming a description of them . The Piedmontese , who have hitherto been sacrificed on this score to the Swiss , should be grateful to you for what you have clone for them . You sustain their cause in tho most triumphant manner , by making known to all Europe the singularl y picturesque scenery of Mount Geneve , and the magnificent valley of Aosta , which are in no way inferior

Cavour An Engineer.

to the most beautiful parts of Switzerland . We shall be indebted to you as one of the first amongst strangers who , divesting himself of those accepted prejudices which assigned to Helvetia alone all the beauties of the Alps , has rendered complete and signal justice to a country which so well deserves to be known . ' "

The George Street "Model." *

THE GEORGE STREET "MODEL . " *

"Better go to a 'Model , '" was the advising of Will Shakley to Simon Flustrum , the latter of whom had that evening arrived in London by way of the Caledonian Eoad . " What 1 " said Flustrum , " what 1 " And this from my friend Shakley ! What ! do you think I have turned wholly to thieving since we were last together in the country , ancl so am only worthy now of being lodged in such a big and strong house as I saw this afternoon just before my getting into London—the 'Model Prison '

, , as they told me it was ?" " Oh , Flustrum ! Flustrum ! " rejoined Will , with an evident sore feeling , " I had no such meaning , but meant one of those places called ' models' welch have been bnilt up by the gentry for us poor folk , ancl in which you single men strangers , on arriving in town , may have better and cheaper lodgings than are to be commonly had in private houses . " ' " Your hand , Will , for that explanation , " was the pleased reply

of Simon . " And where are any of these models to he found ?" " One close by , — -just close by , " said Will ; " and where I put up myself for a while just before I got married . This street we are in now is called Crown Street : at its top is St . Giles ' s Church ; and a little way from the church is George Street , and in that street is the ' model ; ' and a pretty good one , too , it is , as I know from experience . But come , I will show you the way to it ; and let us go at oncefor it generallfills very welland by any delay a chance

, y , might be lost in finding an opening . " This short statement , then , will suffice to indicate one of the many ways by which these single men's Model Lodging Houses get filled from time to time ; ancl that they are usually so well filled the return recently made at the annual meeting of the society wherewith this one of . George Street is connected is proof ; the number of inmates then given being ninety-nine , which is within a very few in number of all the heels there obtainable .

I , myself , the writer of this account , came to find a passing harbourage in this George-street " model , " and , therefore , to learn so much about the place , it is not necessary here to tell : enough to let it be known that the statements now to be made will be strictly

faithful , inconsequence of this intimacy with the place ; or such as they only truly can see who make use of their own eyes , though taking care the while that no blinding " glamour" creates any falsification of the mental vision . AVill the reader , then , gentle or ungentle , come along for a short time in my company , on this special undertaking ? The street—George-street—itself has no very inviting appearance on the whole , it being narrow , and the houses , looking along

the left side , as one enters from Broad-street , St . Giles' , of but a so-so kind ; while , on the right hand , is a pretty conspicuous range of side-wall belonging to a Ragged School ; then comes the sturdylike " Model ; " next the back parts of a French Protestant church , ancl the Rev . Mr , Brock's chapel , both whose admission portals are in Bloomsbury-street ; while above the rears of these two buildings is the blank side of one ofthe large business houses which have their shops and front windows in New Oxford-street .

The situation , then , of our " model" is pretty favourable as a Avorking man's lodging ; so much of the bustling , if not of the brilliant , being seen and carried on in the surrounding neighbourhood ; Dudley-street , on the south , exhibiting , among its abundant Irishry , a galooe of all sorts of old shoes , old garments , ancl almost everything else old , even to the single old halfpenny ballad of former times ; while northward is the superb Oxford-street ; and , still more direct north , the long , spacious , and constantly thronged

Tottenham Court-road—the sideways with their pedestrianism , ancl the centre with its hurry of 'bus and cab . Nestling , therefore , in perfect quietness in the George-street mentioned , where never the wheel of a 'bus is seen to run , and rarely that of a cab ( for sometimes , indeed , a cab-brought lodger will come to this George-street , with travelling-trunk , travellinghat , & c ); nestling here , some hundred men , aged , middle-aged , and down to mere youthfulnesstake then- nihtlslumbersand

, gy , if they so please , their daily meals—breakfast , dinner , tea ancl supper ; a large and strange gathering to be found within the roofage of one building ; and it is neither hospital nor barracks , but where each ancl all enjoy the utmost freedom ; and more , perhaps , in some particulars , than could be conceded in the private house .

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