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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Jan. 2, 1864
  • Page 22
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 2, 1864: Page 22

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

The Week.

THE WEEK .

THE COURT . —Her Majesty and the other members of the Royal family are quietly spending the Christinas holidays at Osborne . GENERAL HOME NEWS . —The health of London continues at a favourable average . The births have fallen considerably . AVherever the English language is read and understood , tbe

announcement that Mr . Thackeray is dead will be received with deep emotion . Our great novelist died on Thursday morning , the 24 th ult . It seems that he had repeatedly suffered from attacks of a dangerous nature , but that of late he had been congratulating himself upon the non-recurrence of his old complaint , and was working in high spirits at a

novel which unfortunately must for ever remain a fragment . He was committed to the dust at Kensal Green on AVednesday last , surrounded by many whom he loved in life , and these were but representative of the far larger circle of his admirers in general society . In fact , he dies universally lamented as an author , a man , and a

gentleman"Aud the tear that is shed , while in silence it rolls , Shall long keep his memory green in our souls . " The true author is immortal . He being dead yet speaketh . The Hon . and A ery Rev . Dr . Pakenham , Dean of St . Patrick ' s , is dead . He was uncle of the present Earl of Longford , and brother-in-law of the great Duke of AVelllngton . The public will be curious to know who is selected to fill the seat that has

become identified with tlie memory of Swift . Colonel Crawley has been fully and honourably acquitted of the two charges upon which he was tried by court-martial at Aldershot . The charges were—first , that the arrest of Sergeant-Major Lilley was carried out "with unnecessary and undue severity , whereby Lilley and his wife were subjected to great and

grievous hardships and sufferings ; " and , in the next place , that when these " great and grievous hardships and sufferings " were made known during the sittings of the Mhow court-martial , he threw tbe responsibility upon the adjutant , Mr . Fitzsimon , whereas , "in truth and in fact , " he knew that the adjutant had acted in the matter under his " express order and direction . "

At the winter assizes for South Lancashire , among tho eases brought on was the charge against Mr . Standish , of Duxbury Hall , a magistrate of the county , of assaulting two men under

somewhat singular circumstances . The indictment contained three counts . The first and gravest part of the charge was abandoned , and the prisoner pleaded guilty to the other counts . It was urged on his behalf that he committed the offence with vjhich he was charged while suffering from nervous derangement ; and the attention of the Court was called to the circumstance , that while in India during the mutiny he received

a sunstroke . Ho was sentenced to a month's imprisonment , and further ordered to pay a fine of £ 300 . ——On Monday a women named Alice Holt , who had been found guilty of poisoning her mother at tho last Chester Assizes , was executed in front of Chester goal . After her conviction the wrethched woman attempted to throw the crime upon a man with whom

she cohabited ; but her statements on this subject were not quite consistent . Her courage failed her at the place of execution ; and the executioner , probably overcome by his struggles with tho victim of the law , performed his work clumsily . The whole scene is described as inexpressibly fearful . A . horrible murder and attempt at suicide was discovered at St .

Helen's , near Liverpool , on Monday morning . A single woman , a cripple , who kept a dame school , was found in her bed with her throat cut , quite dead ; and in thesame bed , undressed , was lying a married man , named Clithero , with a

The Week.

wound in his throat and fast d ying . There is some hope of his recovery , however . He found means to say that they proposed to commit suicide together , but there is some reason to think that he had stolen into her room and murdered her , after which he probably resolved to destroy himself . —•—George A'ictor Townley , whose execution for the murder of Miss Goodwin was fixed to take place for Thursday last has , as wo are

informed by a telegram from Derby , been respited until the further commands of Her Majesty are made known . FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . —If we may judge from the most recent news from Athens the new King has not been able to appease the jealousies and turbulent disposition of the Greeks . The sittings of the National Assembly aro reported to be of a

very riotous character , and the provinces were getting up an address to the King to dissolve it and to grant a new constitution . Athens is also disturbed by disputes between the police and the National Guard for the right to man the military posts . The situation of the King of Denmark has become one ot extreme difficulty . On the one hand pressed by England and

Russia , and it is even said by Sweden , to withdraw the common constitution , and on the other deserted by his Ministers for his proposed compliance with the demand . If the King refuses to follow the advice of England and Russia , those Powers leave him at the mercy of the German Confederation ; if he bonds to their importunities he alienates the affections of his faithful

Danish subjects . Up to Saturday the efforts to form a new Ministry had not been successful . The Federal civil commissioners have fixed on Altona as their place of business . Duke Frederick has been proclaimed in several towns . It is stated that the Danes will evacuate Rendsborg and Frcderickstadt . A telegram from Copenhagen says it is most probable the present

Ministryremain in onice . INDIA AND JAPAN . —Advices from Bombay to the 14 th inst . state that there had been no more fighting on the north-west frontier . The wound ' received by General Chamberlain , who commanded the troops despatched to quell the revolt , seems to have been sufficiently serious to oblige the gallant officer to withdraw from the field , and to hand over the direction of the expedition to General Garvoch . Sir AVilliam Densionthe

, governor of Madras , has temporarily assumed the functions of Viceroy . AMERICA . —The New York intelligence brought by the Columbia may be very briefly summarised . General Longstreet , who does not appear to havo been retreating with any hot haste from Knoxville , turned upon the pursuing Federals on the 14 thand drove them back some distance with considerable

, loss . New York advices of the ISth state that the fighting in that quarter was still progressing ; and it is added that Union citizens were leaving Knos . vllle—a puzzling statement of which no explanation is vouchsafed . The Federals are said to have abandoned Look-out Mountain , Missionary Ridge , and other points , from which General Grant recently drove tlie Confederates . On the 15 th the bombardment of Charleston was

still in progress , but the Federal shells had caused trifling damage . The House of Representatives at AVashington had , by a majority of 93 to 04 , passed a resolution in favour of prosecuting the war , so long as the rebels are found in arms . The Chesapeake , which was seized by a number of Confederate passengers while on a voyage from New York to Portland , had been re-captured .

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

JUSTICE . —A . brother is not justified on the night of election of the W . M . to canvass for votes in a room adjoining the lod"o by delivering the brethren a card with the name of his favoured candidate written upon it . The conduct of the brother should be brought before the lodge , the members of which must themselves decide upon the course to be pursued with regard to him . They can suspend him from his

membership , leaving him to appeal to the Board of General Purposes if he thinks fit ; or they can at once lay a complaint , against the brother before the board just named .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1864-01-02, Page 22” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_02011864/page/22/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
THE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE. AND MASONIC MIRROR. Article 3
Untitled Article 5
MOTHER KILWINNING. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
MASONIC POWERS. Article 12
LODGE OF EMERGENCY. Article 12
Untitled Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 17
Obituary. Article 20
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 21
THE WEEK. Article 22
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 22
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Week.

THE WEEK .

THE COURT . —Her Majesty and the other members of the Royal family are quietly spending the Christinas holidays at Osborne . GENERAL HOME NEWS . —The health of London continues at a favourable average . The births have fallen considerably . AVherever the English language is read and understood , tbe

announcement that Mr . Thackeray is dead will be received with deep emotion . Our great novelist died on Thursday morning , the 24 th ult . It seems that he had repeatedly suffered from attacks of a dangerous nature , but that of late he had been congratulating himself upon the non-recurrence of his old complaint , and was working in high spirits at a

novel which unfortunately must for ever remain a fragment . He was committed to the dust at Kensal Green on AVednesday last , surrounded by many whom he loved in life , and these were but representative of the far larger circle of his admirers in general society . In fact , he dies universally lamented as an author , a man , and a

gentleman"Aud the tear that is shed , while in silence it rolls , Shall long keep his memory green in our souls . " The true author is immortal . He being dead yet speaketh . The Hon . and A ery Rev . Dr . Pakenham , Dean of St . Patrick ' s , is dead . He was uncle of the present Earl of Longford , and brother-in-law of the great Duke of AVelllngton . The public will be curious to know who is selected to fill the seat that has

become identified with tlie memory of Swift . Colonel Crawley has been fully and honourably acquitted of the two charges upon which he was tried by court-martial at Aldershot . The charges were—first , that the arrest of Sergeant-Major Lilley was carried out "with unnecessary and undue severity , whereby Lilley and his wife were subjected to great and

grievous hardships and sufferings ; " and , in the next place , that when these " great and grievous hardships and sufferings " were made known during the sittings of the Mhow court-martial , he threw tbe responsibility upon the adjutant , Mr . Fitzsimon , whereas , "in truth and in fact , " he knew that the adjutant had acted in the matter under his " express order and direction . "

At the winter assizes for South Lancashire , among tho eases brought on was the charge against Mr . Standish , of Duxbury Hall , a magistrate of the county , of assaulting two men under

somewhat singular circumstances . The indictment contained three counts . The first and gravest part of the charge was abandoned , and the prisoner pleaded guilty to the other counts . It was urged on his behalf that he committed the offence with vjhich he was charged while suffering from nervous derangement ; and the attention of the Court was called to the circumstance , that while in India during the mutiny he received

a sunstroke . Ho was sentenced to a month's imprisonment , and further ordered to pay a fine of £ 300 . ——On Monday a women named Alice Holt , who had been found guilty of poisoning her mother at tho last Chester Assizes , was executed in front of Chester goal . After her conviction the wrethched woman attempted to throw the crime upon a man with whom

she cohabited ; but her statements on this subject were not quite consistent . Her courage failed her at the place of execution ; and the executioner , probably overcome by his struggles with tho victim of the law , performed his work clumsily . The whole scene is described as inexpressibly fearful . A . horrible murder and attempt at suicide was discovered at St .

Helen's , near Liverpool , on Monday morning . A single woman , a cripple , who kept a dame school , was found in her bed with her throat cut , quite dead ; and in thesame bed , undressed , was lying a married man , named Clithero , with a

The Week.

wound in his throat and fast d ying . There is some hope of his recovery , however . He found means to say that they proposed to commit suicide together , but there is some reason to think that he had stolen into her room and murdered her , after which he probably resolved to destroy himself . —•—George A'ictor Townley , whose execution for the murder of Miss Goodwin was fixed to take place for Thursday last has , as wo are

informed by a telegram from Derby , been respited until the further commands of Her Majesty are made known . FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . —If we may judge from the most recent news from Athens the new King has not been able to appease the jealousies and turbulent disposition of the Greeks . The sittings of the National Assembly aro reported to be of a

very riotous character , and the provinces were getting up an address to the King to dissolve it and to grant a new constitution . Athens is also disturbed by disputes between the police and the National Guard for the right to man the military posts . The situation of the King of Denmark has become one ot extreme difficulty . On the one hand pressed by England and

Russia , and it is even said by Sweden , to withdraw the common constitution , and on the other deserted by his Ministers for his proposed compliance with the demand . If the King refuses to follow the advice of England and Russia , those Powers leave him at the mercy of the German Confederation ; if he bonds to their importunities he alienates the affections of his faithful

Danish subjects . Up to Saturday the efforts to form a new Ministry had not been successful . The Federal civil commissioners have fixed on Altona as their place of business . Duke Frederick has been proclaimed in several towns . It is stated that the Danes will evacuate Rendsborg and Frcderickstadt . A telegram from Copenhagen says it is most probable the present

Ministryremain in onice . INDIA AND JAPAN . —Advices from Bombay to the 14 th inst . state that there had been no more fighting on the north-west frontier . The wound ' received by General Chamberlain , who commanded the troops despatched to quell the revolt , seems to have been sufficiently serious to oblige the gallant officer to withdraw from the field , and to hand over the direction of the expedition to General Garvoch . Sir AVilliam Densionthe

, governor of Madras , has temporarily assumed the functions of Viceroy . AMERICA . —The New York intelligence brought by the Columbia may be very briefly summarised . General Longstreet , who does not appear to havo been retreating with any hot haste from Knoxville , turned upon the pursuing Federals on the 14 thand drove them back some distance with considerable

, loss . New York advices of the ISth state that the fighting in that quarter was still progressing ; and it is added that Union citizens were leaving Knos . vllle—a puzzling statement of which no explanation is vouchsafed . The Federals are said to have abandoned Look-out Mountain , Missionary Ridge , and other points , from which General Grant recently drove tlie Confederates . On the 15 th the bombardment of Charleston was

still in progress , but the Federal shells had caused trifling damage . The House of Representatives at AVashington had , by a majority of 93 to 04 , passed a resolution in favour of prosecuting the war , so long as the rebels are found in arms . The Chesapeake , which was seized by a number of Confederate passengers while on a voyage from New York to Portland , had been re-captured .

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

JUSTICE . —A . brother is not justified on the night of election of the W . M . to canvass for votes in a room adjoining the lod"o by delivering the brethren a card with the name of his favoured candidate written upon it . The conduct of the brother should be brought before the lodge , the members of which must themselves decide upon the course to be pursued with regard to him . They can suspend him from his

membership , leaving him to appeal to the Board of General Purposes if he thinks fit ; or they can at once lay a complaint , against the brother before the board just named .

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