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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Dec. 24, 1864
  • Page 17
  • LITERARY EXTRACTS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 24, 1864: Page 17

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

Literary Extracts.

LITERARY EXTRACTS .

A EEJIIKKABLE CURB . '—Dr . Douglas related to me the following story , which exhibits thc curative advantages of a lenient system of treatment in dealing with the insane - . — " Several years ago , a very bad case of mental aberration was brought to " the asylum . It was that of a well-to-do farmer , a " married man , whose recovery was considered all but hopeless . After thc lapse of several

months , this patient escaped , wandered about the country , and was finally returned to Beauporfc . Dr . Douglas , being addicted to fishing , was one day induced to take this poor man with him on an angling expedition . He appeared highly delighted with the excursion and the sport . Next morning , greatly to tho surprise of the physicianthe patient requested that he might

, be suffered to renew the same recreation , faithfully promising to return to the institution . After considerable hesitation , permission was accorded , although grave doubts were entertained of the man ' s sincerity . This privilege , however , was not abused ; and as the patient seemed to improve by the gentle excitement the amusement occasioned , he was allowed to indulge his

predilections very frequently . Permanent recovery was the gratifying result . Por three years this man has been residing on his farm in the full enjoyment of mental health . Ho keeps up a regular correspondence with Mr . Douglas , to whose leniency he attributed his freedom from a malady with which he had been so longafflicted . — "English America ,. " BI J Samuel Datj .

Ar01702

EOYAL ACADEMY OI ? Am-s . —At the award of medals and prizes on last Saturday , the Travelling Studentship in Architecture of £ 100 for a year was gained by Mr . Richard Plienc Spiers , eldest son of Bro . Alderman Spiers , Deputy Provincial Grand Master for Oxfordshire . The subject was " a museum of natural history and science , " and the whole work had to be clone within tho walls of the Academy iu a period of thirty

clays . The drawings comprise an elevation , plans of the two principal floors , and a perspective view . Mr . Spiers obtained last year tlie silver medal and books for his measured drawings of St . Stephen's , Walbrook ; and the gold medal , books , and a scholarship for an original design for the vestibule and staircase of a royal palace , subsequently exhibited in the Academy . Last year he was initiated in the Churchill Lodge , Oxford , and he has passed the greater part of the present year in Italy .

The Week.

THE WEEK .

Tnii COURT . —The Queen and younger branches of the Royal Family remain at Osborne , whither they proceeded on Saturday . The Prince and Princess of Wales are still at their , seat in Norfolk . GENEEATJ HOME NEWS . —At last , after a lengthened series of weeks , in which there has been a high rate of mortality , the

deaths ! in the metropolis have fallen to nearly the average rate . The deaths last week were 1 , 449 , the estimated average , 1 , 434 . For the same time the births were 1 , 952 , which is slightly below the average . AVe have to record another decrease in the pauperism of the" cotton manufacturing districts . According to the returns of | the Poor-law' Board there appears to have

been a net decrease in the twenty-eight unions , on comparing the numbers relieved by the ^' guardians in the second wicb the first week of the present month , amounting to 1 , 360 . The unions which were chiefly concerned in the production of this result are the following : —Ashton-nnder-Lyne , which diminished by 470 ; Bury by 160 ; Blackburn by 130 ; Burnley by 260 ; Haslingden by 250 ; Rochdale by 120 ; and Stockport by 130 . The able-bodied paupers ( adult males and females )

decreased by 867 , leaving , however , 27 , 400 of that class still on the union lists . The disbursements for outdoor relief in the week amounted to £ 6 , 287 ; or £ 100 less than the Guardians distributed in the first week of the current month . Mr . Farnall ' s report upon the condition of the twenty-seven unions included in his returns shows that in the three weeks ending on the 10 th inst . there was a total reduction of 5 , 503 in the

number of persons receiving- parochial relief . Ashton , Stockport , Haslingden , Oldham , Burnley , Bury , Todmorden , and Preston present the greatest improvement . The average per centage of pauperism iu the population of the twenty-seven unions on the 10 th insfc . was 5 ' 2 ; in the corresponding week of 1861 ifc was 3-0 ; and in the same week of 1863 ifc was 0-6 . A painful disclosure was made at the meeting of the Hulme Relief Committee . It was stated that a deficiency of £ 2 , 400

had been discovered in the accounts of the treasurer—a person who seems to have enjoyed the full confidence of the Committee . Ifc was decided to make every effort to meet this loss , and with that object a subscription was at once opened by the gentlemen present . The Gazette of Tuesday contains the promised commission to inquire into the state of

middleclass schools , having reference to any endowments that may be available for tbe purpose . Lord Taunfcon is chairman , and the principal other commissioners are Lord Stanley , Lord Lyttlefcon , Sir Stafford Northcote , Dean Hook , of Chichester ; Dr . Temple , of Rugby ; Mr . Baines , M . P . ; Mr . AV . E . Forster , M . P . ; Mr . Thomas Dyke Acland , & c . The directors and guardians of

the poor in the parish of St . Pancras have taken the first step in organising a movement throughout tho country to resist the recommendation made by a select committee of the House of Commons last session , that Roman Catholic chaplains paid out of the poor-rates should be introduced into workhouses .

Resolutions affirming that Roman Catholic inmates of workhouses now enjoyed full liberty of worship , and that communications be opened up with other parishes for a joint resistance to this new scheme , were unanimously agreed to . In a letter to a Devonshire clergyman , Mr . Gladstone pronounces the constitution of the present Court of Appeal in ecclesiastical causes to be " unsatisfactory , " anel expresses the opinion that "it is to

the bishops of the Church , in conjunction with the Queen's Ministers , that it principally appertains to consider in what way the constitution of that Court may most properly be amended . " ¦ At the meeting of the Metropolitan Board of Works ifc was agreed immediately to take steps for covering in the Ranelagh open sewer at Paddington . Several streets were renamed , and , among others , ifc was decided to abolish the old and picturesque name of Horsemonger-lane , so long attached to the

well-known thoroughfare in the Borough , and to replace ifc by the title of Union-road . The London , Chatham , and Dover Railway have commenced running trains across their bridge at Blackfriars into the new station at Ludgate-hill . There was no ceremony connected with the opening ; the first train crossed the bridge and ran into the station a little before eight

o ' clock in the morning , and after that there was a regular stream of trains going both ways across the bridge . There are four lines of rails laid down , but for the present only two are used . Tho station opened is a mere temporary one , and does not at all represent that which will afterwards be in use ; but as a

makeshift ifc seems to answer its purpose pretty well . The Secretary of the Financial Reform Association recently wrote a letter to Mr . Cobden , pointing out a passage in the hon . gentleman's Rochdale speech which seemed to ignore the fiscal burdens which the association seeks to remove . In his reply Mr . Cobden expresses his entire sympathy with the cause

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1864-12-24, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_24121864/page/17/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
Untitled Article 2
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 3
SOME NOTES ON PROGRESS. Article 4
THE FUTURE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 6
THE ANTIQUITY AND TEACHINGS OF MASONRY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
MASONRY IN AUSTRALIA. Article 11
THE ABBEY OF KILWINNING. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
INDIA. Article 15
CHINA. Article 16
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 16
LITERARY EXTRACTS. Article 17
Untitled Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Literary Extracts.

LITERARY EXTRACTS .

A EEJIIKKABLE CURB . '—Dr . Douglas related to me the following story , which exhibits thc curative advantages of a lenient system of treatment in dealing with the insane - . — " Several years ago , a very bad case of mental aberration was brought to " the asylum . It was that of a well-to-do farmer , a " married man , whose recovery was considered all but hopeless . After thc lapse of several

months , this patient escaped , wandered about the country , and was finally returned to Beauporfc . Dr . Douglas , being addicted to fishing , was one day induced to take this poor man with him on an angling expedition . He appeared highly delighted with the excursion and the sport . Next morning , greatly to tho surprise of the physicianthe patient requested that he might

, be suffered to renew the same recreation , faithfully promising to return to the institution . After considerable hesitation , permission was accorded , although grave doubts were entertained of the man ' s sincerity . This privilege , however , was not abused ; and as the patient seemed to improve by the gentle excitement the amusement occasioned , he was allowed to indulge his

predilections very frequently . Permanent recovery was the gratifying result . Por three years this man has been residing on his farm in the full enjoyment of mental health . Ho keeps up a regular correspondence with Mr . Douglas , to whose leniency he attributed his freedom from a malady with which he had been so longafflicted . — "English America ,. " BI J Samuel Datj .

Ar01702

EOYAL ACADEMY OI ? Am-s . —At the award of medals and prizes on last Saturday , the Travelling Studentship in Architecture of £ 100 for a year was gained by Mr . Richard Plienc Spiers , eldest son of Bro . Alderman Spiers , Deputy Provincial Grand Master for Oxfordshire . The subject was " a museum of natural history and science , " and the whole work had to be clone within tho walls of the Academy iu a period of thirty

clays . The drawings comprise an elevation , plans of the two principal floors , and a perspective view . Mr . Spiers obtained last year tlie silver medal and books for his measured drawings of St . Stephen's , Walbrook ; and the gold medal , books , and a scholarship for an original design for the vestibule and staircase of a royal palace , subsequently exhibited in the Academy . Last year he was initiated in the Churchill Lodge , Oxford , and he has passed the greater part of the present year in Italy .

The Week.

THE WEEK .

Tnii COURT . —The Queen and younger branches of the Royal Family remain at Osborne , whither they proceeded on Saturday . The Prince and Princess of Wales are still at their , seat in Norfolk . GENEEATJ HOME NEWS . —At last , after a lengthened series of weeks , in which there has been a high rate of mortality , the

deaths ! in the metropolis have fallen to nearly the average rate . The deaths last week were 1 , 449 , the estimated average , 1 , 434 . For the same time the births were 1 , 952 , which is slightly below the average . AVe have to record another decrease in the pauperism of the" cotton manufacturing districts . According to the returns of | the Poor-law' Board there appears to have

been a net decrease in the twenty-eight unions , on comparing the numbers relieved by the ^' guardians in the second wicb the first week of the present month , amounting to 1 , 360 . The unions which were chiefly concerned in the production of this result are the following : —Ashton-nnder-Lyne , which diminished by 470 ; Bury by 160 ; Blackburn by 130 ; Burnley by 260 ; Haslingden by 250 ; Rochdale by 120 ; and Stockport by 130 . The able-bodied paupers ( adult males and females )

decreased by 867 , leaving , however , 27 , 400 of that class still on the union lists . The disbursements for outdoor relief in the week amounted to £ 6 , 287 ; or £ 100 less than the Guardians distributed in the first week of the current month . Mr . Farnall ' s report upon the condition of the twenty-seven unions included in his returns shows that in the three weeks ending on the 10 th inst . there was a total reduction of 5 , 503 in the

number of persons receiving- parochial relief . Ashton , Stockport , Haslingden , Oldham , Burnley , Bury , Todmorden , and Preston present the greatest improvement . The average per centage of pauperism iu the population of the twenty-seven unions on the 10 th insfc . was 5 ' 2 ; in the corresponding week of 1861 ifc was 3-0 ; and in the same week of 1863 ifc was 0-6 . A painful disclosure was made at the meeting of the Hulme Relief Committee . It was stated that a deficiency of £ 2 , 400

had been discovered in the accounts of the treasurer—a person who seems to have enjoyed the full confidence of the Committee . Ifc was decided to make every effort to meet this loss , and with that object a subscription was at once opened by the gentlemen present . The Gazette of Tuesday contains the promised commission to inquire into the state of

middleclass schools , having reference to any endowments that may be available for tbe purpose . Lord Taunfcon is chairman , and the principal other commissioners are Lord Stanley , Lord Lyttlefcon , Sir Stafford Northcote , Dean Hook , of Chichester ; Dr . Temple , of Rugby ; Mr . Baines , M . P . ; Mr . AV . E . Forster , M . P . ; Mr . Thomas Dyke Acland , & c . The directors and guardians of

the poor in the parish of St . Pancras have taken the first step in organising a movement throughout tho country to resist the recommendation made by a select committee of the House of Commons last session , that Roman Catholic chaplains paid out of the poor-rates should be introduced into workhouses .

Resolutions affirming that Roman Catholic inmates of workhouses now enjoyed full liberty of worship , and that communications be opened up with other parishes for a joint resistance to this new scheme , were unanimously agreed to . In a letter to a Devonshire clergyman , Mr . Gladstone pronounces the constitution of the present Court of Appeal in ecclesiastical causes to be " unsatisfactory , " anel expresses the opinion that "it is to

the bishops of the Church , in conjunction with the Queen's Ministers , that it principally appertains to consider in what way the constitution of that Court may most properly be amended . " ¦ At the meeting of the Metropolitan Board of Works ifc was agreed immediately to take steps for covering in the Ranelagh open sewer at Paddington . Several streets were renamed , and , among others , ifc was decided to abolish the old and picturesque name of Horsemonger-lane , so long attached to the

well-known thoroughfare in the Borough , and to replace ifc by the title of Union-road . The London , Chatham , and Dover Railway have commenced running trains across their bridge at Blackfriars into the new station at Ludgate-hill . There was no ceremony connected with the opening ; the first train crossed the bridge and ran into the station a little before eight

o ' clock in the morning , and after that there was a regular stream of trains going both ways across the bridge . There are four lines of rails laid down , but for the present only two are used . Tho station opened is a mere temporary one , and does not at all represent that which will afterwards be in use ; but as a

makeshift ifc seems to answer its purpose pretty well . The Secretary of the Financial Reform Association recently wrote a letter to Mr . Cobden , pointing out a passage in the hon . gentleman's Rochdale speech which seemed to ignore the fiscal burdens which the association seeks to remove . In his reply Mr . Cobden expresses his entire sympathy with the cause

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