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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 1, 1856
  • Page 20
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 1, 1856: Page 20

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rally popular , and agree in the belief , that were It known in the dwellings of the poor , it would go far to supersede many debasing pursuits . At the same time , we are glad to observe the candid spirit in which the editor warns the devoted admirer of the game in which he himself evinces so heartfelt an interest , against that excess in its exercise which can change the most innocent of our recreations to sin , and would , in this case , bring ruin in its train as assuredly as does the career of the spendthrift or the gambler .

Doctor Antonio . A Tale . By the Author of " Lorenzo Benoni . " Edinburgh : Constable and Co . —The story opens in the spring of 1840 . Sir John Davenne is returning to England with his fair daughter , Lucy , whose delicate health had required the soothing influence of an Italian winter . As they are travelling along the

famous Cornice road between Genoa and Nice , the carriage is upset , by which Miss Lucy ' s ankle is sprained and her leg broken . Doctor Antonio comes by , like a deus ex machina , and by his care not only

is her wounded limb cured , but the interesting invalid is restored to sound health . The progress of her recovery , the varied and novel means adopted to strengthen a weak constitution and to develop a dormant mind , during her lengthened stay at a little w ayside osteria

are beautifully told ; and it is surprising what tender grace the writer throws upon such an apparently tame subject . A love , unacknowledged by both , springs up between the doctor and patient , and it is not until the arrival of a coarse-minded , loud-voiced " heavy dragoon " of a brother from India , who carries her away , that either is aware of

the strength of the bond that unites them . Antonio now devotes himself , heart and soul , to his country ; while Lucy , returning to

England , fulfils her destiny , as every right-minded baronet ' s daughter should do , by marrying Lord Cleverton . She is not happy with him , and after a six years' union is left a widow . The inexorable year of w eeds and mourning being ended , the widow , whose health had become very dilapidated , seeks the spot where in happier and earlier days she had first recovered her strength . But the osteria is in ruins , and Antonio has returned to Sicily , which is in arms to recover its liberty . , The year is now 1848 . She determines to follow him to

Palermo ; but while at Naples , she meets Antonio atone of the court receptions . They are soon on the old footing , and the doctor has only time to declare his passion , when , on the 15 th of May ( a day memorable in the bloody annals of liberty ) , he is nearly killed by a

Royalist soldier as he is tending the wounded on the barricades . "With Poerio and others , lie is tried ( nay , condemned untried ) by the infamous Navarro , and sentenced to nineteen years of irons . He is removed to the castle of Lscliia , whence lie might have escaped through Lucy ' s means ; but lie will not desert " his Jive noble

fellowprisoners , the least of them worth ten such as lie . " A plan is laid for rescuing all , when the police are put on the alert ; Antonio is removed to another place , and Lucy dies heartbroken . It is a simple tale , with no striking , stirring events , but as attractive in its natural siui-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-04-01, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01041856/page/20/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
LODGES IN THE WEST AND SOUTH, CANADA, MALTA, TRINIDAD-OUR DUTY. Article 1
FREEMASONRY IN GREAT BRITAIN. Article 7
NOTES OF A YACHT'S CRUISE TO BALAKLAVA. Article 11
THE WONDERS OF NATURE. Article 14
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 19
FACES IN THE EIRE. Article 25
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 26
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZIN AND MASONIC MIRROR. Article 27
MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 29
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 30
FINE ARTS. Article 30
THE MASONIC MIRROR. MASONIC REFORM Article 31
NOTICES OF MOTION. Article 36
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 37
METROPOLITAN. Article 41
INSTRUCTION. Article 47
PROVINCIAL. Article 47
ROYAL ARCH. Article 54
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 55
SCOTLAND. Article 56
COLONIAL. Article 60
SWITZERLAND. Article 62
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR MARCH. Article 62
Obituary. Article 65
NOTICE. Article 68
TO COEEESPONDENTS. Article 68
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

rally popular , and agree in the belief , that were It known in the dwellings of the poor , it would go far to supersede many debasing pursuits . At the same time , we are glad to observe the candid spirit in which the editor warns the devoted admirer of the game in which he himself evinces so heartfelt an interest , against that excess in its exercise which can change the most innocent of our recreations to sin , and would , in this case , bring ruin in its train as assuredly as does the career of the spendthrift or the gambler .

Doctor Antonio . A Tale . By the Author of " Lorenzo Benoni . " Edinburgh : Constable and Co . —The story opens in the spring of 1840 . Sir John Davenne is returning to England with his fair daughter , Lucy , whose delicate health had required the soothing influence of an Italian winter . As they are travelling along the

famous Cornice road between Genoa and Nice , the carriage is upset , by which Miss Lucy ' s ankle is sprained and her leg broken . Doctor Antonio comes by , like a deus ex machina , and by his care not only

is her wounded limb cured , but the interesting invalid is restored to sound health . The progress of her recovery , the varied and novel means adopted to strengthen a weak constitution and to develop a dormant mind , during her lengthened stay at a little w ayside osteria

are beautifully told ; and it is surprising what tender grace the writer throws upon such an apparently tame subject . A love , unacknowledged by both , springs up between the doctor and patient , and it is not until the arrival of a coarse-minded , loud-voiced " heavy dragoon " of a brother from India , who carries her away , that either is aware of

the strength of the bond that unites them . Antonio now devotes himself , heart and soul , to his country ; while Lucy , returning to

England , fulfils her destiny , as every right-minded baronet ' s daughter should do , by marrying Lord Cleverton . She is not happy with him , and after a six years' union is left a widow . The inexorable year of w eeds and mourning being ended , the widow , whose health had become very dilapidated , seeks the spot where in happier and earlier days she had first recovered her strength . But the osteria is in ruins , and Antonio has returned to Sicily , which is in arms to recover its liberty . , The year is now 1848 . She determines to follow him to

Palermo ; but while at Naples , she meets Antonio atone of the court receptions . They are soon on the old footing , and the doctor has only time to declare his passion , when , on the 15 th of May ( a day memorable in the bloody annals of liberty ) , he is nearly killed by a

Royalist soldier as he is tending the wounded on the barricades . "With Poerio and others , lie is tried ( nay , condemned untried ) by the infamous Navarro , and sentenced to nineteen years of irons . He is removed to the castle of Lscliia , whence lie might have escaped through Lucy ' s means ; but lie will not desert " his Jive noble

fellowprisoners , the least of them worth ten such as lie . " A plan is laid for rescuing all , when the police are put on the alert ; Antonio is removed to another place , and Lucy dies heartbroken . It is a simple tale , with no striking , stirring events , but as attractive in its natural siui-

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