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  • April 1, 1856
  • Page 22
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 1, 1856: Page 22

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days with no food but musty bread , no drink but fetid water . " His first deposition was forced from him by the alternative of receiving two hundred blows . Muro ( a servant ) was kept for five days in complete darkness , and when on his way to be examined , a lieutenant in the army , who knew him , told him , as > if out of compassion , that unless he put his name to whatever the commissary

desired him to sign , he would be ruined for life . On being asked how it happens that he now maintains that he does not know Pironto , after having , when first confronted with that gentleman , at once recognized his person , Muro replies that the commissary had told him beforehand to lay his finger on the one of the four individuals standing in a row who had no mustachios ; and had obeyed . Sersale , a merchant , underwent such prolonged fasting , that his health is incurably

-undermined . ( The voice of the prisoner is faint , and he can scarcely stand . ) His wife was kept in prison for five days on bread and water , in order to frighten her into deposing to the truth of the charge against him . Cocozza , a solicitor , signed his interrogatory without reading it over , that being the condition of his release from a horrible criminate . The commissary required him to depose to Nisco ( one of his co-accused ) being the cashier of the sect of the Italian Unity . Caprio , a

carpenter , was urged by the commissary , in the presence of the head jailer and of the turnkey , Carmine Bisogni , to denounce JSTisco , and to declare on oath that he ( Caprio ) had received from that gentleman six thousand ducats , for the purpose of bribing the troops , and was promised his liberty if he did so . Errichiello , the master of a caf 6 , had been offered an employment worth twelve ducats a month , if he would second the views of the commissary . Bono , a chemist , was not once examined during the ten months of his incarceration . "

Passages from the Private and Official Life of the late Alderman Kelly , with Extracts from his Correspondence . By the Eev . C . Fell . Groombridge and Sons . — And pray , who was Alderman Kelly , that , before his remains are hardly cold in his grave ( he died on the 7 th September last ) , the Eev . Mr . Pell should rush with , express speed to the printer , and add one more to those nauseous

biographies in which every goose is made the swan of some narrowminded pharisaical circle ? He was the son of a poor but respectable farmer , who , from being shopman to a stationer in the Row , rose to be alderman and lord mayor . There is not one single incident in his whole life that raises him above the herd of others , who , passing through the same stages , have risen to the same elevation . If every respectable citizen is to be biographized by all the Fells who

may happen to have dined at their tables , we should soon labour under a plague worse than any of Egypt , The work itself is pompously written , with a great deal of the " I am more righteous than you " spirit , and the sooner it is handed over to the trunkmaker and cheesemonger the better for all parties . By the way , we see the title-page is dated 1856 , in accordance with a silly practice that it would be wiser to discontinue .

The Emigrant * sHomc ; or , How to Settle . By W . II . O . Kingston Groombridge—This little book , by the author of " Western Wanderings , " may be regarded as a sequel to his " How to Emigrate . " It is an interesting story of Australian life ; and as the former little volume was written to encourage emigration , the author confines himself in this to pointing out the class of persons who are unfit to succeed as colonists , and to those who do emigrate , the only sure means of success . Many of the characters are drawn from real life ;

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-04-01, Page 22” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01041856/page/22/.
  • 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

days with no food but musty bread , no drink but fetid water . " His first deposition was forced from him by the alternative of receiving two hundred blows . Muro ( a servant ) was kept for five days in complete darkness , and when on his way to be examined , a lieutenant in the army , who knew him , told him , as > if out of compassion , that unless he put his name to whatever the commissary

desired him to sign , he would be ruined for life . On being asked how it happens that he now maintains that he does not know Pironto , after having , when first confronted with that gentleman , at once recognized his person , Muro replies that the commissary had told him beforehand to lay his finger on the one of the four individuals standing in a row who had no mustachios ; and had obeyed . Sersale , a merchant , underwent such prolonged fasting , that his health is incurably

-undermined . ( The voice of the prisoner is faint , and he can scarcely stand . ) His wife was kept in prison for five days on bread and water , in order to frighten her into deposing to the truth of the charge against him . Cocozza , a solicitor , signed his interrogatory without reading it over , that being the condition of his release from a horrible criminate . The commissary required him to depose to Nisco ( one of his co-accused ) being the cashier of the sect of the Italian Unity . Caprio , a

carpenter , was urged by the commissary , in the presence of the head jailer and of the turnkey , Carmine Bisogni , to denounce JSTisco , and to declare on oath that he ( Caprio ) had received from that gentleman six thousand ducats , for the purpose of bribing the troops , and was promised his liberty if he did so . Errichiello , the master of a caf 6 , had been offered an employment worth twelve ducats a month , if he would second the views of the commissary . Bono , a chemist , was not once examined during the ten months of his incarceration . "

Passages from the Private and Official Life of the late Alderman Kelly , with Extracts from his Correspondence . By the Eev . C . Fell . Groombridge and Sons . — And pray , who was Alderman Kelly , that , before his remains are hardly cold in his grave ( he died on the 7 th September last ) , the Eev . Mr . Pell should rush with , express speed to the printer , and add one more to those nauseous

biographies in which every goose is made the swan of some narrowminded pharisaical circle ? He was the son of a poor but respectable farmer , who , from being shopman to a stationer in the Row , rose to be alderman and lord mayor . There is not one single incident in his whole life that raises him above the herd of others , who , passing through the same stages , have risen to the same elevation . If every respectable citizen is to be biographized by all the Fells who

may happen to have dined at their tables , we should soon labour under a plague worse than any of Egypt , The work itself is pompously written , with a great deal of the " I am more righteous than you " spirit , and the sooner it is handed over to the trunkmaker and cheesemonger the better for all parties . By the way , we see the title-page is dated 1856 , in accordance with a silly practice that it would be wiser to discontinue .

The Emigrant * sHomc ; or , How to Settle . By W . II . O . Kingston Groombridge—This little book , by the author of " Western Wanderings , " may be regarded as a sequel to his " How to Emigrate . " It is an interesting story of Australian life ; and as the former little volume was written to encourage emigration , the author confines himself in this to pointing out the class of persons who are unfit to succeed as colonists , and to those who do emigrate , the only sure means of success . Many of the characters are drawn from real life ;

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