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  • Jan. 27, 1883
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The Boys' School And Its Critic.

But Captain Nicols when he writes with something like a becoming sense of his responsibility is quite another person . He tells us the sole object of his letter was " an honest endeavour to prevent a repetition of the unseemly treatment which visitors to the Institution may be

subjected to , and to ameliorate the social regime with regard to the lads themselves , " while in the very next paragraph , the desire to " ameliorate the social regime" disappears altogether , and we learn that the " whole gravamen " of his complaint is this , " that owing to the brusqueness of

our reception , by Dr . Morris , " and the cynical curtness of his remarks , wo were obliged to abridge our visit and had to wait three-quarters of an hour at the railway station . " Here the " unseemly treatment" resolves itself into a certain " brusqueness" of manner , and a " cynical

curtness in the remarks of the head master , while , as to the abridged visit , and the very serious consequences it entailed , in the shape of a three-quarters of an hour's detention at the railway station , we cordially sympathise with Captain Nicols on the latter score , but we fail to see how ,

under any circumstances , a visit of even twenty minutes or half an hour can be sufficiently long to enable him or any one else , to form an opinion , favourable or unfavourable , of the system pursued at a large school and its " social regime , " that is to say , of course

an opinion that is worth listening to . We should like to hear what Captain Nicols would say if Dr . Morris , after spending half an hour in a barrack , should take upon himself to publicly condemn the interior economy of the regiment quartered there , and the social regime

under which the men belonging to it were placed , as well as the bearing of the officer in command , because , in his opinion , the latter having been interrupted in the performance of his military duties was , —we will even go so far as to suggest , —a little brusque in his manner and curt in his

remarks . A man who is suddenly called away from his work to attend on visitors may receive them with courtesy , yet not endue it with any excess of cordiality , and he is necessarily curt in his remarks because he still has his work to complete . But a lack of cordiality in receiving visitors and

curtness in answering their inquiries do not constitute " unseemly treatment . " And , after all , the brusqueness of manner and the cynical curtness of speech come before us

not aa matters of fact , but as matters of opinion , and may be regarded as having about the same value as the wholesale condemnation of a school system and its " social regime " after a ten minutes' experience of their character .

Of course , it is not surprising that Captain Nicols should reiterate the statement he made as " S . X ., " and proclaim every word of it to be true ; but we must remind our readers that his statements are only matters of opinion . It appeared to him and his friend that " a want of system "

prevailed , and that more " surveillance " was required over the domestic arrangements , and even this opinion he is kind enough to qualify by suggesting that they might haye been annoyed at their reception . He did not raise his voice against " the unsatisfactory state of things " at Wood

Green , but against what appearedho be such , while " the awestruck manner" of the little boys can only have been a fancy . Thus the reiteration of the original statement carries with it no greater weight than the original statement itself , and how utterly valueless is the latter may be

judged from Captain Nicols ' s first letter—the " S . X . " one—in which he says , "Thus , practically we saw nothing of the School . " He may well disclaim for himself the province of judge , when he publicly condemns what practicall y he knows nothing about . We can also well

understand why Captain Nicols preferred writing originally nnder the initials he adopted . He assigns as his first reason for this preference that he did not wish to make what he and his friend " considered a public matter too much of a private grievance . " Next he tells us " the whole

gravamen of their complaint was " the brusqueness " of their reception by the head master and "the cynical curtness of his remarks . " But be this a matter of fact , or only a matter of opinion , what else is it than a " private grievance ? " No one will venture to say that Dr . Morris ' s

manner , whatever it may havo been , when receiving two visitors on a particular day , is a matter of the slightest interest to the world at large . We have already remarked tnat a lack of cordiality in receiving people is not the same thing as meting out to them " unseemly treatment , " and we will go further , and say , that even the greatest possible discourtesy on Dr . Morris ' s part would not justify tne wholesale condemnation of the School of which he is

The Boys' School And Its Critic.

the head master , and its system and " social regime . " However , Dr . Morris , who has been some eight years at Wood Green , and against whose manner of receiving visitors we have never yet heard one word of complaint , will no donbt answer this attack at the proper time and in the proper place .

That " the Committee of Management and Bro . Binckes as Secretary would trouble themselves far more about facts affecting the Institution than the names of individual visitors " is more than probable , and , if we mistake not , it will bo for this very reason that they will resent more

deeply than even the Masonic public generally the letter of Captain Nicols . Any vice in the system of administration at Wood Green directly concerns them , because it affects their character as the executive body . But Captain Nicols , as we have shewn , has established no facts at all

much less facts which call for any interference on the part of the Committee and Bro . Binckes with the magisterial functions of Dr . Morris , and the manner in which he discharges them . If , however , they think it consonant with their dignity to express any opinion on Captain Nicols ' s

letter , it will probably be to suggest to him the propriety of in future submitting to them any private or personal grievance he may have , or imagine he has , against the School authorities at Wood Green , instead of promoting it to the rank of a public grievance , and airing it publicly in the columns of one of our Masonic journals .

The last paragraph of his second letter declares that " if the publication of this correspondence will eventually benefit the School , our object will have been attained . " We fail to see how his publicly condemning the head master , the system , and the social regime o £ the School ,

and comparing it disadvantageously with other schools , can benefit the School any more than it can be said that a man is benefited when some one knocks him down in order to set him on his feet again . Were it an established fact that the system pursued at Wood Green was a vicious one ,

there would be good reason—indeed there would be an absolute necessity—for proclaiming and recognising it with a view to its being set aside in favour of one to which no exception could be taken . But there is ample testimony

that it works admirably ; and though in all human institutions there is always room for improvement , we have yet to learn that a system which turns out well-behaved and well-trained boys will be improved by wholesale condemnation in a public newspaper .

There is only one remark we are desirous of adding . We necessarily hear a good many things said about persons and things , and they do not always happen to be complimentary . For instance , we have heard it said , and we are not to be blamed for having heard it , any more than we are

prepared to advance it as an established fact ; we say , we have heard it remarked that Bro . Capt . Nicols is a haw-haw-ish kind of being , who carries himself rather [[ majestically , speaks slightingly of Militia Officers , and boasts that his Lodge consists only of " gentlemen . " Of course we have

not lived all the years of onr life without being perfectly well aware that in every grade of society there are people who have a very high opinion of themselves , and a very poor opinion of others . They are the salt of the earth , and none else will compare with them . Heaven forbid we

shonld be understood as including Bro . Nicols amongst these worthy , albeit self-sufficient and self-opinionated , personages , but as ho has expressed himself in public with greater freedom than good taste and gentlemanly feeling are usually held to warrant of Dr . Morris ' s bearing

and manner of communicating information , there can be no harm in our suggesting that , if , by the remotest chance in the world , it should happen that Capt . Nicola even in the slightest degree answers to the desscription we have heard of him , and to which ;

we repeat , we attach no importance even as a matter of opinion , it is just possible Dr . Morris may have been less cordial in his reception of him in consequence , and more curt in his remarks than is his custom . Head masters being , as a rule , scholars and gentlemen , and what is more to the

purpose , kings in their own several domains , do not care to be addressed with anything approaching to a supercilious haughtiness , and still less do they care about being patronised , as it were , by those who go to them seeking

information . If they experience any " unseemly treatment " of this kind , they wisely ignore it , but it does not conduce towards making their manner more cordial than good breeding prescribes , or their discourse more effusive than is absolutely necessary in order to satisfy inquiries . This ,

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1883-01-27, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_27011883/page/3/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
INSTALLATION OF SUCCESSORS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
THE BOYS' SCHOOL AND ITS CRITIC. Article 2
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 4
REVIEWS. Article 4
INSTALLATION MEETINGS, &c. Article 5
ST. JOHN'S LODGE, No. 221, BOLTON. Article 5
FIDELITY LODGE, No. 230. Article 5
CAMALODUNUM LODGE, No. 660. Article 6
FIDELITY LODGE, No. 663, WILTSHIRE. Article 6
GREAT NORTHERN LODGE, No. 1287. Article 6
KILBURN LODGE, No. 1608. Article 7
ALEXANDRA LODGE, No. 1511. Article 7
BOSCAWEN LODGE, No. 699, CHACEWATER. Article 7
GALLERY LODGE, No. 1928. Article 7
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Untitled Article 9
ROYAL ARCH. Article 9
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 10
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 11
THE GREAT CITY LODGE, So. 1426. Article 11
COVENT GARDEN LODGE, No. 1614. Article 12
SPHINX LODGE. No. 1329. Article 13
TRUE LOVE AND UNITY LODGE, No. 248, BRIXHAM. Article 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Boys' School And Its Critic.

But Captain Nicols when he writes with something like a becoming sense of his responsibility is quite another person . He tells us the sole object of his letter was " an honest endeavour to prevent a repetition of the unseemly treatment which visitors to the Institution may be

subjected to , and to ameliorate the social regime with regard to the lads themselves , " while in the very next paragraph , the desire to " ameliorate the social regime" disappears altogether , and we learn that the " whole gravamen " of his complaint is this , " that owing to the brusqueness of

our reception , by Dr . Morris , " and the cynical curtness of his remarks , wo were obliged to abridge our visit and had to wait three-quarters of an hour at the railway station . " Here the " unseemly treatment" resolves itself into a certain " brusqueness" of manner , and a " cynical

curtness in the remarks of the head master , while , as to the abridged visit , and the very serious consequences it entailed , in the shape of a three-quarters of an hour's detention at the railway station , we cordially sympathise with Captain Nicols on the latter score , but we fail to see how ,

under any circumstances , a visit of even twenty minutes or half an hour can be sufficiently long to enable him or any one else , to form an opinion , favourable or unfavourable , of the system pursued at a large school and its " social regime , " that is to say , of course

an opinion that is worth listening to . We should like to hear what Captain Nicols would say if Dr . Morris , after spending half an hour in a barrack , should take upon himself to publicly condemn the interior economy of the regiment quartered there , and the social regime

under which the men belonging to it were placed , as well as the bearing of the officer in command , because , in his opinion , the latter having been interrupted in the performance of his military duties was , —we will even go so far as to suggest , —a little brusque in his manner and curt in his

remarks . A man who is suddenly called away from his work to attend on visitors may receive them with courtesy , yet not endue it with any excess of cordiality , and he is necessarily curt in his remarks because he still has his work to complete . But a lack of cordiality in receiving visitors and

curtness in answering their inquiries do not constitute " unseemly treatment . " And , after all , the brusqueness of manner and the cynical curtness of speech come before us

not aa matters of fact , but as matters of opinion , and may be regarded as having about the same value as the wholesale condemnation of a school system and its " social regime " after a ten minutes' experience of their character .

Of course , it is not surprising that Captain Nicols should reiterate the statement he made as " S . X ., " and proclaim every word of it to be true ; but we must remind our readers that his statements are only matters of opinion . It appeared to him and his friend that " a want of system "

prevailed , and that more " surveillance " was required over the domestic arrangements , and even this opinion he is kind enough to qualify by suggesting that they might haye been annoyed at their reception . He did not raise his voice against " the unsatisfactory state of things " at Wood

Green , but against what appearedho be such , while " the awestruck manner" of the little boys can only have been a fancy . Thus the reiteration of the original statement carries with it no greater weight than the original statement itself , and how utterly valueless is the latter may be

judged from Captain Nicols ' s first letter—the " S . X . " one—in which he says , "Thus , practically we saw nothing of the School . " He may well disclaim for himself the province of judge , when he publicly condemns what practicall y he knows nothing about . We can also well

understand why Captain Nicols preferred writing originally nnder the initials he adopted . He assigns as his first reason for this preference that he did not wish to make what he and his friend " considered a public matter too much of a private grievance . " Next he tells us " the whole

gravamen of their complaint was " the brusqueness " of their reception by the head master and "the cynical curtness of his remarks . " But be this a matter of fact , or only a matter of opinion , what else is it than a " private grievance ? " No one will venture to say that Dr . Morris ' s

manner , whatever it may havo been , when receiving two visitors on a particular day , is a matter of the slightest interest to the world at large . We have already remarked tnat a lack of cordiality in receiving people is not the same thing as meting out to them " unseemly treatment , " and we will go further , and say , that even the greatest possible discourtesy on Dr . Morris ' s part would not justify tne wholesale condemnation of the School of which he is

The Boys' School And Its Critic.

the head master , and its system and " social regime . " However , Dr . Morris , who has been some eight years at Wood Green , and against whose manner of receiving visitors we have never yet heard one word of complaint , will no donbt answer this attack at the proper time and in the proper place .

That " the Committee of Management and Bro . Binckes as Secretary would trouble themselves far more about facts affecting the Institution than the names of individual visitors " is more than probable , and , if we mistake not , it will bo for this very reason that they will resent more

deeply than even the Masonic public generally the letter of Captain Nicols . Any vice in the system of administration at Wood Green directly concerns them , because it affects their character as the executive body . But Captain Nicols , as we have shewn , has established no facts at all

much less facts which call for any interference on the part of the Committee and Bro . Binckes with the magisterial functions of Dr . Morris , and the manner in which he discharges them . If , however , they think it consonant with their dignity to express any opinion on Captain Nicols ' s

letter , it will probably be to suggest to him the propriety of in future submitting to them any private or personal grievance he may have , or imagine he has , against the School authorities at Wood Green , instead of promoting it to the rank of a public grievance , and airing it publicly in the columns of one of our Masonic journals .

The last paragraph of his second letter declares that " if the publication of this correspondence will eventually benefit the School , our object will have been attained . " We fail to see how his publicly condemning the head master , the system , and the social regime o £ the School ,

and comparing it disadvantageously with other schools , can benefit the School any more than it can be said that a man is benefited when some one knocks him down in order to set him on his feet again . Were it an established fact that the system pursued at Wood Green was a vicious one ,

there would be good reason—indeed there would be an absolute necessity—for proclaiming and recognising it with a view to its being set aside in favour of one to which no exception could be taken . But there is ample testimony

that it works admirably ; and though in all human institutions there is always room for improvement , we have yet to learn that a system which turns out well-behaved and well-trained boys will be improved by wholesale condemnation in a public newspaper .

There is only one remark we are desirous of adding . We necessarily hear a good many things said about persons and things , and they do not always happen to be complimentary . For instance , we have heard it said , and we are not to be blamed for having heard it , any more than we are

prepared to advance it as an established fact ; we say , we have heard it remarked that Bro . Capt . Nicols is a haw-haw-ish kind of being , who carries himself rather [[ majestically , speaks slightingly of Militia Officers , and boasts that his Lodge consists only of " gentlemen . " Of course we have

not lived all the years of onr life without being perfectly well aware that in every grade of society there are people who have a very high opinion of themselves , and a very poor opinion of others . They are the salt of the earth , and none else will compare with them . Heaven forbid we

shonld be understood as including Bro . Nicols amongst these worthy , albeit self-sufficient and self-opinionated , personages , but as ho has expressed himself in public with greater freedom than good taste and gentlemanly feeling are usually held to warrant of Dr . Morris ' s bearing

and manner of communicating information , there can be no harm in our suggesting that , if , by the remotest chance in the world , it should happen that Capt . Nicola even in the slightest degree answers to the desscription we have heard of him , and to which ;

we repeat , we attach no importance even as a matter of opinion , it is just possible Dr . Morris may have been less cordial in his reception of him in consequence , and more curt in his remarks than is his custom . Head masters being , as a rule , scholars and gentlemen , and what is more to the

purpose , kings in their own several domains , do not care to be addressed with anything approaching to a supercilious haughtiness , and still less do they care about being patronised , as it were , by those who go to them seeking

information . If they experience any " unseemly treatment " of this kind , they wisely ignore it , but it does not conduce towards making their manner more cordial than good breeding prescribes , or their discourse more effusive than is absolutely necessary in order to satisfy inquiries . This ,

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