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  • June 1, 1877
  • Page 18
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1877: Page 18

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    Article SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. ← Page 2 of 5 →
Page 18

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

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

that this difference must ancl ought to exist . Without it the resources of the world would never be developed ; for if every man possessed sufficient for his needs there Avould bo no work , no interchange of commodities , ancl therefore no carrying far and wide of civilization ; all Avould

pass through a dreamy eventless existence , like the South Sea Islanders , who , finding everything to their hand , take it , ancl develop nothing , but from generation to generation remain just ivhere they always have been , and would be , Avere it not for the AvaA'e of civilization carried to their

shores by the tide of commercial enterprise . These differences of social station and extent of possessions being a recognised fact , it follows that , to say nothing of those who are unfortunate in the scramble

for Avealth , or of those who by reckless speculation or improvident extravagance fall from a position of plenty to that of indigence , there must always be a largo number of people , Avhose time being fully occupied in working for others , can lay by little or nothing for themselves .

This is not , of course , the case with all ; for some have , by dint of extra intelligence , or perseverance in some fortunatel y chosen path of labour , reversed the aboA'ementioned process , aud risen from poverty to affluence ; but the number of such cases is so small , that it need not be taken into calculation in the consideration

of that part of the subject ivith which Ave are now dealing , namely , all those classes Avithout capital . Now it is obvious that , at some period or other , the great mass of the best ancl most industrious of the class Ave have just spoken ofmust necessarilyfrom sheer

, , inability to Avork longer , if not at an earlier period from illness , be reduced to that dead level of poverty , reaching which they can no longer support themselves , but must instead be supported by those ivho in time gone by have been maintained or

even enriched by the fruits of their labour ; how they are to be supported ive may now briefly consider . Our present system known as the "Poor Laws , " is , for every conceivable reason , probably as bad as coidd by any possibility be devised ; it is degrading and Avanting in the princi ples of common humanity ,

besides being , as we humbly conceive , thoroughly ineffectual . AVitness the sad revelations so frequently dragged into light at Coroners' Inquests , of the man or woman poor , aye oven to the death , but self-respectful even to self-destruction . AVitness the starvation of many a poor

fellow-creature , who perishes rather than submit to the degradation of the conditional pittance doled out to them by our " Law . " AVhy many a poor man , not too particular Avith which brand of the "Law " he shall bo marked , prefers tho comparative

luxury of the felon ' s cell to the oft-times brutal meagreness of the AVorkhouse Ward . ll o ? 7 c-house , indeed ; for a poor old creature Avhose body is already bent double with work , and ivhose mind is well-ni gh as crooked b y reason of ceaseless toil 1 Can

it be that in this vaunted land of Christian charity the Work-honse is your sole haven of rest ? Too true , alas ! it is that this is in most eases the only relief allotted to those AVIIO have spent lives of toil in our behoofand to those wholess fortunate

, , than ourselves , early falling out of the race , have unwillingly become pensioners on our charity . But there is Out-door Relief , says one of our gentle readers , to whom Ave reply : " Dicl you ever in your hour of sorest need apply to an officer ,

Avho" Dressed in a little brief authorit y Plays such fantastic tricks before high Heaven As make the angels Aveep " 1 Try it , friend , ancl tell us Avhether , if even you should be sufficiently fortunate

to obtain the miserable dole , it be not so seasoned Avith a sense of infamy that you Avould not rather almost perish than again court such an ordeal . But in many places you AVIII not get it at all , but you will be offered the " House-test" with

, which precious invention our sapient Giiardians-of-the-Poor have determined to sift out now , and make a clean siveep in the future of , pauperism altogether , for

"Statesmen , they AATio are so restless in their wisdom , they AVho have a broom still ready in their hands

To rid the world of nuisances . . . have them pronoune'd A burden of the earth , "

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-06-01, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061877/page/18/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 2
A TRIP TO DAI-BUTSU. Article 5
LECTURES ON "NUMBER ONE AND HOW TO TAKE CARE OF HIM." Article 6
GLEANINGS FROM OLD DOCUMENTS. Article 8
A YEAR AFTER: THE MAIDEN'S STORY. Article 10
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 11
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, NO 114, IPSWICH. A.D, 1762. Article 14
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 17
"THE DYING GLADIATOR." Article 21
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 22
THE OCEAN. Article 24
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 25
DENTED HIM MASONIC BURIAL. Article 27
A TERRIBLE CATALOGUE. Article 29
FREEMASONRY—ITS PERSISTENCE AND WORK. Article 32
COUSIN WILL. Article 34
THE WOUNDED CAPTAIN. Article 35
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 36
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 37
FAITH, HOPE, AND CHARITY. Article 39
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 39
THE WAKENING. Article 43
A LONDON ADVENTURE: Article 43
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Page 18

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

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

that this difference must ancl ought to exist . Without it the resources of the world would never be developed ; for if every man possessed sufficient for his needs there Avould bo no work , no interchange of commodities , ancl therefore no carrying far and wide of civilization ; all Avould

pass through a dreamy eventless existence , like the South Sea Islanders , who , finding everything to their hand , take it , ancl develop nothing , but from generation to generation remain just ivhere they always have been , and would be , Avere it not for the AvaA'e of civilization carried to their

shores by the tide of commercial enterprise . These differences of social station and extent of possessions being a recognised fact , it follows that , to say nothing of those who are unfortunate in the scramble

for Avealth , or of those who by reckless speculation or improvident extravagance fall from a position of plenty to that of indigence , there must always be a largo number of people , Avhose time being fully occupied in working for others , can lay by little or nothing for themselves .

This is not , of course , the case with all ; for some have , by dint of extra intelligence , or perseverance in some fortunatel y chosen path of labour , reversed the aboA'ementioned process , aud risen from poverty to affluence ; but the number of such cases is so small , that it need not be taken into calculation in the consideration

of that part of the subject ivith which Ave are now dealing , namely , all those classes Avithout capital . Now it is obvious that , at some period or other , the great mass of the best ancl most industrious of the class Ave have just spoken ofmust necessarilyfrom sheer

, , inability to Avork longer , if not at an earlier period from illness , be reduced to that dead level of poverty , reaching which they can no longer support themselves , but must instead be supported by those ivho in time gone by have been maintained or

even enriched by the fruits of their labour ; how they are to be supported ive may now briefly consider . Our present system known as the "Poor Laws , " is , for every conceivable reason , probably as bad as coidd by any possibility be devised ; it is degrading and Avanting in the princi ples of common humanity ,

besides being , as we humbly conceive , thoroughly ineffectual . AVitness the sad revelations so frequently dragged into light at Coroners' Inquests , of the man or woman poor , aye oven to the death , but self-respectful even to self-destruction . AVitness the starvation of many a poor

fellow-creature , who perishes rather than submit to the degradation of the conditional pittance doled out to them by our " Law . " AVhy many a poor man , not too particular Avith which brand of the "Law " he shall bo marked , prefers tho comparative

luxury of the felon ' s cell to the oft-times brutal meagreness of the AVorkhouse Ward . ll o ? 7 c-house , indeed ; for a poor old creature Avhose body is already bent double with work , and ivhose mind is well-ni gh as crooked b y reason of ceaseless toil 1 Can

it be that in this vaunted land of Christian charity the Work-honse is your sole haven of rest ? Too true , alas ! it is that this is in most eases the only relief allotted to those AVIIO have spent lives of toil in our behoofand to those wholess fortunate

, , than ourselves , early falling out of the race , have unwillingly become pensioners on our charity . But there is Out-door Relief , says one of our gentle readers , to whom Ave reply : " Dicl you ever in your hour of sorest need apply to an officer ,

Avho" Dressed in a little brief authorit y Plays such fantastic tricks before high Heaven As make the angels Aveep " 1 Try it , friend , ancl tell us Avhether , if even you should be sufficiently fortunate

to obtain the miserable dole , it be not so seasoned Avith a sense of infamy that you Avould not rather almost perish than again court such an ordeal . But in many places you AVIII not get it at all , but you will be offered the " House-test" with

, which precious invention our sapient Giiardians-of-the-Poor have determined to sift out now , and make a clean siveep in the future of , pauperism altogether , for

"Statesmen , they AATio are so restless in their wisdom , they AVho have a broom still ready in their hands

To rid the world of nuisances . . . have them pronoune'd A burden of the earth , "

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