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  • Oct. 27, 1866
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 27, 1866: Page 18

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    Article Poetry. ← Page 2 of 2
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Poetry.

He passed again , and lo ! the well , By summers never dried , Had cooled ten thousand parching tongues , And saved a life beside . 0 , germ ! 0 , font ! 0 , word of love 1 O , thought at random cast ! Ye were but little at the first , But mighty at the last .

The Week.

THE WEEK .

THE COURT . —The Queen opened the Aberdeen Waterworks on the 16 th instant , at Invercanuie . Her Majesty was accompanied by Prince and Princess Christian , Princess Louise , and Prince Arthur . The Royal party drove to Ballater , where a special train was in readiness , which conveyed them to a temporary station at Inchmarle , where her Majesty was received

by Sir James Burnett , Lord Lieutenant of Kincardineshire , and Mr . Davidson of I . uchmarlo , through whose grounds the Royal family proceeded to Invcrcannie . On arriving at the Reservoir the Queen was received by Sir Alexander Anderson , Lord Provost of Aberdeen , and the Police Commissioners ( by whom tho works were undertaken ) , the Earl of Kintore , Lord

Lieutenant of Aberdeenshire , the members for the counties of Aberdeenshire and Kincardineshire , and many of tho gentry of tbe neighbourhood . A detachment of the volunteers of the district mounted as a guard of honour . After the delivery of a prayer by the Rev . Mr . Hutchinson , minister of the parish , the Lord Provost of Aberdeen presented an address to the Queen , whe was graciously pleased to read an answer . Her Majesty then

turned a watercock ( which admitted the water into the reservoir ) , ancl declared the woiks to be open . At the conclusion of the ceremony the Royal party returned by the same route to Balmoral . The Queen drove in the afternoon with Prince and Princess Christian . —Tbe Queen went out on the 17 th inst . accompanied by Princess Christian and Princess Louise , and attended by the Duchess of Roxburghe . —The Queen went

out on the ISth instant , accompanied by Princess Louise and Princess Beatrice , and attended by the Duchess of Roxburghe . —The Queen and Princess Christian drove to Abergoldio and visited the Duchess of Aumale on the 10 th instant . In the afternoon her Majesty went out , accompanied by the Duchess of Aumale and Princess Louise . —The Queen , accompanied by

Prince and Princess Christian , ancl attended by . the Duchess of Roxburghe , went to the Lynn of Qcioich on the 20 th inst . —Tho Queen , Prince and Princess Christian and Princess Louise attended divine service on the 21 st inst . in the parish church of Crathie , accompanied hy the Duchess of Roxburghe and Colonel Ponsonby . The Rev . John M'ilurlric , of St . Bernard's , officiated . —The Queen went out , accompanied by Princess Louise ancl attended by the Hon . Emily Cathcart , on the 22 nd instant .

GENEEAE HO-MB NEWS . —The Registrar-General's weekly return gives to cholera lit deaths , and to diarrhoea 55 , being on the two 55 less than the previous return . This is very satisfactory . But , on the other hand , we have to lament an increase iu the total number of deaths , chiefly due to bronchitis , caused by the approach of winter . ' The return gives some interesting facts about the water supply and the

discharge of sewage . ID show ? , also , that the filtration of water through animal charcoal can bo performed without the least difficulty . Tho medical officers of several districts have reported the sanilaiy measures adopted under their nuthoritr .

The rumoured acceptance hy Sir Hugh Cairns of the vacant Lord Justiceship is confirmed . The announcement has occasioned some surprise in legal circles ; but the learned gentleman's decision has probably been influenced by the delicate state of his health . Mr . Bolt , Q . C ., will be the new Solicitor-General . The Duke of Edinburgh was made a citizen of Glasgow on tho ISth inst . His Royal Highness

made a speech on the occasion , which was something more than the formal acknowledgment usually made hy members of the Royal family ou such occasions . Subsequently the Duke inaugurated tl ' . e statue of the late Prince Consort which has been erected in Glasgow . The cattle-plague returns show that the disease lias almost ceased out of England .

During last week only eleven cases were reported . The inquest on the body of Edward AVihnott , the pugilist , who was killed in a light at Westminster , was resumed on the ISth inst ., and , after a good deal of evidence had been taken , was adjourned . Whilst a poor labouring man named Pnttytoot wns iVigging in a pit on Wandsworth Common , a

seam of gr . ivel gave way , and lie was buried beneath several tons of superincumbent earth ; yet he lived for three days afterwards . At the inquest the jury returned a verdict of accidental death . James AAludell , a painter , was charged at tho Marlborougli-street Police-court with

injuring a picture belonging to Miss Burdett Gout's . The prisoner was one of a number of workmen in the employment of Messrs . Banting , who were engaged in redecorating tiie interior of Jiiss Burdett Coutts' town house . A picture in the ball room of " Christ blessing little children . " ' was cut iu several places with a knife while the work was going , on , and suspicion fell on tho prisoner , against whom testimony

was given by his fellow-workmen . He declared that the whole afiair was a conspiracy to injure him . He was remanded . A singular charge of breaking the sabbath was preferred against a miller , at Longton , a few days since , by the Rev . Mr . AA alker , the incumbent of Edensor . The revci-eud gentleman stated his case in person . lie contended Lh . it as they had so much that

was unpleasant to encounter both in the way of sight and sound on six days of the wee '; , it was their duty to enforce the cessation of labour on the Sabbath . The mill , he asserted , was actually grinding flint , and not working off tlle superabundant water . His witnesses wero subjected to a rather lively cross-examination , and it did not appear by any means

clear that the mill was kept going for the ordinary purposes of labour . The magistrates stopped short the defendant ' s indignant disclaimer by dismissing the summons . For a long lime back there have been serious robberies on the Great Eastern llaiiwav . Goods have been lost in transit ancl no clue

to them could be discovered . It was suspected that they were thrown off the trucks at unguarded parts of the line , where they weie picked up by confederates of the railway servants . This conjecture seems to have been well founded ; for the police have taken into custody a man named Henry Buckle , who kept a shop at Stratford . Ou his premises there was found an

immense quantity of goods which had heen stolen from the railway . The prisoner was brought up at the Stratford Policecourt on the 19 th inst ., ancl remanded . Another theatre lias been destroyed by tire . On the 20 th inst . a new burlesque of " Dor Preischuts-. " was produced at the National Standard Theatre in Shoreditcb , and was

witnessed by a crowded houso . All went well , and after the performances were over the usual examination of the buildingwas made , and all apparently was right . However , at six o ' clock next morning it was found that the building was on fire , and though great efforts were made to check the flames they were

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1866-10-27, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_27101866/page/18/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE BELGIAN RIFLE MEETING AND FREEMASONRY. Article 1
MASONIC JURISPRUDENCE. Article 2
THE IDENTITY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 2
THE NEMESIS : A TALE OF THE DAYS OF TRAJAN. Article 3
HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN CORNWALL. Article 8
FREEMASONRY IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 9
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
LOST VOTES. Article 10
DEATH OF BRO. HORATIO GAMBELL. Article 11
Untitled Article 12
MASONIC MEM. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
Obituary. Article 15
REVIEWS. Article 16
SOUTH METROPOLITAN MASONIC HALL. Article 16
TALENT AND TACT. Article 17
Poetry. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Poetry.

He passed again , and lo ! the well , By summers never dried , Had cooled ten thousand parching tongues , And saved a life beside . 0 , germ ! 0 , font ! 0 , word of love 1 O , thought at random cast ! Ye were but little at the first , But mighty at the last .

The Week.

THE WEEK .

THE COURT . —The Queen opened the Aberdeen Waterworks on the 16 th instant , at Invercanuie . Her Majesty was accompanied by Prince and Princess Christian , Princess Louise , and Prince Arthur . The Royal party drove to Ballater , where a special train was in readiness , which conveyed them to a temporary station at Inchmarle , where her Majesty was received

by Sir James Burnett , Lord Lieutenant of Kincardineshire , and Mr . Davidson of I . uchmarlo , through whose grounds the Royal family proceeded to Invcrcannie . On arriving at the Reservoir the Queen was received by Sir Alexander Anderson , Lord Provost of Aberdeen , and the Police Commissioners ( by whom tho works were undertaken ) , the Earl of Kintore , Lord

Lieutenant of Aberdeenshire , the members for the counties of Aberdeenshire and Kincardineshire , and many of tho gentry of tbe neighbourhood . A detachment of the volunteers of the district mounted as a guard of honour . After the delivery of a prayer by the Rev . Mr . Hutchinson , minister of the parish , the Lord Provost of Aberdeen presented an address to the Queen , whe was graciously pleased to read an answer . Her Majesty then

turned a watercock ( which admitted the water into the reservoir ) , ancl declared the woiks to be open . At the conclusion of the ceremony the Royal party returned by the same route to Balmoral . The Queen drove in the afternoon with Prince and Princess Christian . —Tbe Queen went out on the 17 th inst . accompanied by Princess Christian and Princess Louise , and attended by the Duchess of Roxburghe . —The Queen went

out on the ISth instant , accompanied by Princess Louise and Princess Beatrice , and attended by the Duchess of Roxburghe . —The Queen and Princess Christian drove to Abergoldio and visited the Duchess of Aumale on the 10 th instant . In the afternoon her Majesty went out , accompanied by the Duchess of Aumale and Princess Louise . —The Queen , accompanied by

Prince and Princess Christian , ancl attended by . the Duchess of Roxburghe , went to the Lynn of Qcioich on the 20 th inst . —Tho Queen , Prince and Princess Christian and Princess Louise attended divine service on the 21 st inst . in the parish church of Crathie , accompanied hy the Duchess of Roxburghe and Colonel Ponsonby . The Rev . John M'ilurlric , of St . Bernard's , officiated . —The Queen went out , accompanied by Princess Louise ancl attended by the Hon . Emily Cathcart , on the 22 nd instant .

GENEEAE HO-MB NEWS . —The Registrar-General's weekly return gives to cholera lit deaths , and to diarrhoea 55 , being on the two 55 less than the previous return . This is very satisfactory . But , on the other hand , we have to lament an increase iu the total number of deaths , chiefly due to bronchitis , caused by the approach of winter . ' The return gives some interesting facts about the water supply and the

discharge of sewage . ID show ? , also , that the filtration of water through animal charcoal can bo performed without the least difficulty . Tho medical officers of several districts have reported the sanilaiy measures adopted under their nuthoritr .

The rumoured acceptance hy Sir Hugh Cairns of the vacant Lord Justiceship is confirmed . The announcement has occasioned some surprise in legal circles ; but the learned gentleman's decision has probably been influenced by the delicate state of his health . Mr . Bolt , Q . C ., will be the new Solicitor-General . The Duke of Edinburgh was made a citizen of Glasgow on tho ISth inst . His Royal Highness

made a speech on the occasion , which was something more than the formal acknowledgment usually made hy members of the Royal family ou such occasions . Subsequently the Duke inaugurated tl ' . e statue of the late Prince Consort which has been erected in Glasgow . The cattle-plague returns show that the disease lias almost ceased out of England .

During last week only eleven cases were reported . The inquest on the body of Edward AVihnott , the pugilist , who was killed in a light at Westminster , was resumed on the ISth inst ., and , after a good deal of evidence had been taken , was adjourned . Whilst a poor labouring man named Pnttytoot wns iVigging in a pit on Wandsworth Common , a

seam of gr . ivel gave way , and lie was buried beneath several tons of superincumbent earth ; yet he lived for three days afterwards . At the inquest the jury returned a verdict of accidental death . James AAludell , a painter , was charged at tho Marlborougli-street Police-court with

injuring a picture belonging to Miss Burdett Gout's . The prisoner was one of a number of workmen in the employment of Messrs . Banting , who were engaged in redecorating tiie interior of Jiiss Burdett Coutts' town house . A picture in the ball room of " Christ blessing little children . " ' was cut iu several places with a knife while the work was going , on , and suspicion fell on tho prisoner , against whom testimony

was given by his fellow-workmen . He declared that the whole afiair was a conspiracy to injure him . He was remanded . A singular charge of breaking the sabbath was preferred against a miller , at Longton , a few days since , by the Rev . Mr . AA alker , the incumbent of Edensor . The revci-eud gentleman stated his case in person . lie contended Lh . it as they had so much that

was unpleasant to encounter both in the way of sight and sound on six days of the wee '; , it was their duty to enforce the cessation of labour on the Sabbath . The mill , he asserted , was actually grinding flint , and not working off tlle superabundant water . His witnesses wero subjected to a rather lively cross-examination , and it did not appear by any means

clear that the mill was kept going for the ordinary purposes of labour . The magistrates stopped short the defendant ' s indignant disclaimer by dismissing the summons . For a long lime back there have been serious robberies on the Great Eastern llaiiwav . Goods have been lost in transit ancl no clue

to them could be discovered . It was suspected that they were thrown off the trucks at unguarded parts of the line , where they weie picked up by confederates of the railway servants . This conjecture seems to have been well founded ; for the police have taken into custody a man named Henry Buckle , who kept a shop at Stratford . Ou his premises there was found an

immense quantity of goods which had heen stolen from the railway . The prisoner was brought up at the Stratford Policecourt on the 19 th inst ., ancl remanded . Another theatre lias been destroyed by tire . On the 20 th inst . a new burlesque of " Dor Preischuts-. " was produced at the National Standard Theatre in Shoreditcb , and was

witnessed by a crowded houso . All went well , and after the performances were over the usual examination of the buildingwas made , and all apparently was right . However , at six o ' clock next morning it was found that the building was on fire , and though great efforts were made to check the flames they were

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