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Articles/Ads
Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Ad Untitled Page 1 of 1 Article Untitled Page 1 of 1 Article To Correspondents. Page 1 of 1 Article REVIEWS Page 1 of 1 Article REVIEWS Page 1 of 1
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Ad00612
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS . PATRON : HER MA . | KSTV THE QUEEN . PRESIDENT : HIS ROVAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCE OK WALES , K . G ., M . W . G . M . THE RT . HON . VISCOUNT HOLMESDALE , R . W . Provincial Grand Master of Kent , has kindly consented to Preside at the 85 th ANNIVERSARY FESTIVAL , to be held Un WEDNESDAY , jyth June , 1 SS 3 . The services of Brethren as Stewards are earnestly solicited . Particulars , with information as to " Special Privileges " in connection with the " Preparatory School Building Fund , " attainable only to 31 st December , 1 SS 3 , may be obtained on application . FREDERICK BINCKES , V . Pat . ( P . G . Stwd . ) , Secretary . Office , C , Freemasons' Hall , W . C , I 21 st December , 1 SS 2 .
Ad00611
LONDON AND NORTHWESTERN RAILWAY . ROYAL MAIL ROUTE . The EXPRESS TRAINS of the LONDON and NORTH-WESTERN RAILWAY afford the most expeditious means of reaching the principal towns in the North of England , the Midland manufacturing districts , Scotland , Ireland , and Wales , including Liverpool , Manchester , Birmingham , Chester , Dublin , Shrewsbury , Leamington , Wolverhampton , Preston , Carlisle , Glasgow , Edinburgh , Perth , Dundee , Aberdeen , Inverness . A fast and frequent service of trains is run from London to Birmingham in 3 hours , London to Manchester in 4 = ; hours , London to Liverpool in 5 hours . WEST COAST ROUTE TO AND FROM SCOTLAND . —Direct trains to and from London ( Euston ) , Birmingham , Liverpool , Manchester , & c , and Edinburgh , Glasgow , Greenock-, Perth , Aberdeen , Inverness , and the north . Drawing-room carriages , fitted with Lavatory Accommodation are run by the Day Expresses j the Sleeping Saloons by the night trains . For full particulars of Train Service seethe Company ' s Time Books and Bills . OMNIBUSES FOR USE OF FAMILY PARTIES Travelling by London and North-Western Railway . — The London and North-Western Railway . Company provide Small Omnibuses , capable of carrying six persons inside and two outside , with the usual quantity of luggage , to meet trains at Euston Station , London , Limestreet Station , Liverpool , and at London-road Station , Manchester , when previously ordered . The Omnibuses will also be sent to any Hotels or private residences for the . conveyance to Euston Station ( in time for any of the down * trains ) of parties proposing to travel by London and North Western Railway . Orders for these vehicles can be given cither direct to the Station Masters at the various termini , or by advising the Station Masters at the starting point of the journey ( if a London and North-Western Station ) . The charge for the use of an Omnibus will be One Shilling per mile ( Driver and a . reasonable quantity of Luggage included ) , with a minimum charge of Three Shillings . G . FINDLAY , General Manager . Euston Station , December , 1 SS 2 .
Ad00606
DREADNOUGHT SEAMENS ' HOSPITAL , Greenwich , S . E ., and DISPENSARY , Well-street , London Docks , K ., for Sailors of all Nations . No admission ticket or voting papers of any sort required , but both are entirely free to the whole maritime world , irrespective ot race , creed , or nationality . Since establishment upwardsof 225 , 000 have been relieved from no less than forty-two different countries , and the number of patients during 1 SS 1 , was 7132 , as compared with 4245 , the average of the preceding ten years . Qualification of a governor one guinea annually , or a donation of ten guineas . New annual subscriptions or contributions will be thankfully received by the bankers , Messrs . Williams , Deacon and Co ., 20 , Birchin-lanc , li . C , or by the Secretary at the Hospital . Funds are urgently needed for this truly Cosmopolitan Charity , which is supported by voluntary contributions . W . T . EVANS , Secretary .
Ad00607
FOUNDRY TO LET , with Smiths ' Shop . Stables can be hud adjoining . Formerly occupied by Messrs . Cutler , Parker-street , Little Queenstreet , 1 lolborn . Apply at the Freemason Office , iG , Great Queen-street ( opposite Freemasons' Hall ) .
Ad00608
STABLING . —TO BE LET , excellent THREE-STALL STABLE and CARRIAGE HOUSE , in Parker-street . —Apply , Freemason Ofiice , iC , Great Queen-street , W . C .
Ad00610
Twelfth Edition , post-free , is . DR . WATTS on ASTHMA and BRONCHITIS . A Treatise on the only Sueccssful Method of Curing these Diseases . By ROBERT G . WATTS , M . D ., F . R . S . L ., F . C . S ., & c , 5 , Bulstrode-strcet , Cavendish-square , London . London : C . Mitchell and Co ., Red Lion-court . Fleet-street .
Ad00609
ANY Gentleman who is a Freemason , having SPAKE TIME at his disposal , and wishing to occupy it profitably , will do well by applying by letter to Mr . M . Underwood , 45 , Ludgatc-hill , London .
Ad00600
ROYAL SEA BATHING INFIRMARY , MARGATE . ESTABLISHED 1791 , THE ONLY ONE EXCLUSIVELY FOR SCROFULOUS POOR . COL . CREATON , TREASURER . JOHN M . CLABON , ESQ ., HON . SECRETARY . This Hospital requires aid . An extra liberal diet table is of necessity required on account of the exhausting nature of this terrible disease . Donors of £ 10 IOS ., Annual Subscribers of £ 1 is ., can recommend patients . 250 beds . Average number of Inpatients per year , 750 , and of applicants over 1000 . Bankers , the Bank of England ; Coutts and Co . ; and Cobb and Co ., Margate . Offices : No . 30 , Charing Cross , W . IOHN THOMAS WALKER , Secretary .
Ad00604
TO OUR READERS . THE FREEMASON is published every Friday morning , price 3 d ., and contains the fullest and latest information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Subscriptions , including Postage;—United States , ,,..,,.. , Canada , the Continent , India , China , Cevlon United kingdom . the Colonics & c . Arabia ,, & c . 13 s . 6 d . 15 s . 6 d . 17 s . 6 d . Remittances may be made in Stamps , but Post OHicc Orders or Cheques arc preferred , the former payable to GEORGE KEXXINO , Chief Office , Lcndon . the latter crossed London Joint Stock Bank .
Ad00605
TO ADVERTISERS . THE FREEMASON has a large circulation in all parts of the Globe . In it the official Reports of the Grand Lodges of England , Ireland , and Scotland are published with the specia sanction of the respective Grand Masters , and it contains a complete record of Masonic worn in this country , our Indian Empire , and the Colonies . The vast accession to the ranks of the Order during the past few years , and the increasing interest manifested in its doings , has given the Freemason a position and influence which few journals can lay claim to , and the proprietor can assert with confidence that announcements appearing in its columns challenge the attention of a very large and influential body of readers . Advertisements for the current week's issue are received up to Six o ' clock on Wednesday evening .
Ar00613
SATURDAY , DECEMBER 30 , 1882 .
To Correspondents.
To Correspondents .
P . M . —Will P . M . kindly send full name and address of brother referred to , and we will forward the documents direct . A LEWIS . —No such rule is in force as far as we are aware . — The following stand over : — Priory Lodge , No . 1000 ; Abbey Lodge , No . 11 S 4 . Excelsior Mark Lodge , No . 22 G .
BOOKS . & c . RECEIVED . "The Broad Arrow , " "The Citizen , " "The Blackburn Standard , " "The Hull Packet , " "The Royal Cornwall Gazette , " "The Manchester Courier , " " Night and Day " ( Christmas Number ) , "The Keystone , " "The Canadian Craftsman , " "The Masonic Record , " "The Watchman , " " La Revista Masonica , " " The Court Circular . "
Reviews
REVIEWS
THE LIFE OF THE BISHOP OF WINCHESTER . Vol . III .
Some of us , perhaps , better knew the late Bishop of Winchester by the title of the Bishop of Oxford ; and some of us may well remember his pleasant presence and the " Attic salt" with what he was wont to season his always effective conversation . No one , as the French say , was a better " raconteur , " —a teller of stories ; no one ever delivered
his witty or pointed , or impressive little speeches in society with more " verve , " or more realism , or more actual effect . It was said at one lime that he was an " actor , " that his outcome in speech was " mimetic " and prepared ; but nothing was more untrue . His wit was alike spontaneous and genial , neat and original , kindly and apt ; and you hardly ever heard him say a severe thing , and , certainly , never an ill-natured thing of anybody . We think , however ; that the
editor has been gunty in this volume of grave indiscretion in respect of his father's memory , and has been forgetful of the chief duty of a careful supervisor of special literary extracts from the lives and records , the sayings and doings of the defunct , which is to curtail rather than to expand , to suppress rather than dilate . People who keep diaries , not even excepting bishops , arc still mortal , and not exempt from the little miseries and drawbacks of humanity . The diaries we call our own arc not always written
in the same humour , or in the same kindly frame of mind as regards others or ourselves . A touch of the liver , an attack of lumbago , a fit of the gout , a prevalence of indigestion , will make us look at things with " the saffron hue" of sickly thought , " and at such moments wc affect to be discontented with the world and ourselves , and are often very unjust towards others . Many of the injudicious paragraphs thus unwisely printed are distinctly wanting in the needful characteristics of fitness , reality , veracity , without which the "Ana " of the most assiduous
Reviews
diarist degenerate into idle gossip or perverse twaddle . Many of these passages to which exception has been taken and attention called , ought to have been suppressed , and serious responsibility rests upon the editor for giving to the world passages which , sparing no one , can only hurt the feelings of many . And then comes the still more serious fact , they are not correct , and thus detract from the brichtness
of the good Bishop ' s portraiture . These " epea pteroenta " ought never to have been . printed , we repeat . Some of the sayings are very good , such as when Lady Burdett Coutts asks , " I suppose , Bishop , you do not know what a drysalter is ? " " Oh , yes , " replied the Bishop , " Tate and Brady . " So , too , his encounters with Lord Westbury are very amusing . As , when , for instance , Lord Westbury " met him after
his resignation , and said , " Have I met thee , O mine enemy ? " " Do you remember the rest of the quotation ?" replied the Bishop . "See I . Kings xxi . 20 . " YVhen the Bishop wrote to him about a Clergy Resignation Bill , and , among other causes , mentioned loss of mental faculties , Lord Westbury replies , "he could not contemplate such a contingency , as he had never met any clergyman who had any mind , except his lordship . "
KELLY'S POST OFFICE DIRECTORY . This most valuable book of reference for London and Londoners is in , we believe , its eighty-fourth year of appearance , and is equall y useful as needful . Its great bulk may be somewhat objectionable , but it can nowjbc obtained in two volumes . It chronicles , among other changesthe striking
, facts that eleven streets have been renamed , eighteen have been renumbered , eighty-two new names of streets have been given in 1 SS 2 . It has other features of interest , and is alike indispensable for all offices and libraries , as well as for all who are interested in the whereabouts of individuals in the "little village . "
DIARIES AND POCKET BOOKS . These are so many that it almost becomes hopeless to commend and useless to criticize . Most people treat themselves to , or are treated to by others , with a pocket book . We arc inclined to think that experience seems to be setting in against diaries , seeing how much annoyance is often caused by posthumous revelations and careless
extracts . We may mention among the industrious caterers " pro bono publico " Messrs . De la Rue and Co ., Messrs . T . and J . Smith and Co ., Messrs . Hudson and Kearn ( famous for blotting pads ) , Messrs . Charles Letts and Co ., Messrs . Harrison and Sons , "cum multis aliis . " We can also mention with pleasure the City Diary of Messrs . Collinridge and Co . The two Masonic Pocket Books appeal forcibly to our Cosmopolitan Craft . Whitaker ' s Almanack
is well-known to many , while the Law and Commercial Diary of Messrs . Dunn and Co . has many devotees and clients . We venture to think that , except as business memos , " cues " to the memory of financial or other rates , diaries are better used sparingly . The long paragraphs which they often contain of conscious and unconscious selfconfession and self-laudation , are neither good for ourselves after all , nor for others . But on this , as on many other matters , there will be great divergence of opinion .
CHRISTMAS BOOKS . We must all be struck with the abundance of Christmas books , of a special Christmas literature , which appeals so forcibl y and pleasurably to the artistic tastes and cultured souvenirs of us all , young and old alike . Indeed , the appearance of our Christmas literature is a fact in itself of moment and meaning worth noting . Time wasas some of us can
, testify , when such things as Christmas cards , Christmas books , & c , were unknown . Even a quarter of a century back they were not in existence . Perhaps some few tales were specially published ; indeed , we believe Charles Dickc ns set the taste . But the present system of literary and artistic Christmas offerings was unheard of . We do not object to it ; on the contrary we approve of it : though we think it riirht to
say this , that it may be a question how far such devotion to , and profusion of a specific and passing literature , acts favourably either on artistic tastes or literary proclivities . That we may have too much even of a good thing is a fact some of ns are apt to forget ; but as this season is not one for grumbling or growling , or fault-finding or hypcrcriticism , let us take things as
we hnd them , and be contented , genial , and happy . Messrs . Routledge seem to have the sway in Christmas literature for the young . We note approvingly their numerous issues , alike admirably printed and artistically designed . Among numerous specimens of good reading and excellent taste , we may note " Grimm ' s Fairy Tales , " " Evenings at Home , " " Dinglcficld , " "The Rev . XV . C . Adams ' s
Travellers' Tales , " " Jcannette , " "Jumbo ' s Picture Book , " " Those Boys , " ' " Those Girls , " " Little Lays for Little Folk , " "The New House that Jack Built , " & c Dean and Son give us , with vividly coloured illustrations , "Sunny Hours and Pretty Flowers , " "Tiny Lawn
Tennis , " and " The Children ' s Kettle Drum . " "The Prince of the Hundred Songs , " by Mr . Vernon Lee , is a very effective work , and so arc " Caldecott ' s Songs , " "The Battery and the Boiler , " "The Girl ' s Own Book , " " The History of the Bible , " and many more , like " At Home" and "A Day in a Child ' s Life . "
MONEY LUNT . Advances on Property . Loans Negotiated . — £ 5 to jC IO ° o , with and without securities , at moderate Interest upon Promissory Notes , repayable at a fixed period , or by instalments ,- also upon Deeds , Life Policies , Furniture , Jewellery , Shares , Warrants , Stocks .
& c . Prompt attention , with secrecy . Trade bills discounted . Deposits received . THE LONDON BANK , 71 , Fleet-street , E . C ; SS , High-street , Islington , N . ; and 113 , Church-street , Edgware-road , W . Open daily Forms gratis . Established 1 S 3 S . E . J . READ , Secretary . —[ ADVT . 'J
lHVKStK , I 1 I .. ISTII . - D . IMMI 1 EX , li'R ' . —SEELHY ' II . IKU Kuilfifcl ! TRIIKSKS . —The world ' s recognition of unequalled excellence , Kcccving the only award of merit granted for trusses at the late international Medical Kxliibition , 1 K 81 . Made in every desirable and latest improved pattern , line steel springs , neatly covered with highly-polished hard rubber , light , cool , cleanly ; unaffected by time , use , or climate . Free from all sour , rusty , dialing , or
strapping unpleasantness . Used in bathing . Always reliable . The correct and skilful mechanical treatment of hernia or rupture a specialty . Under patronage of the world ' s most distinguished surgeons . Choice assortment of elastic surgical hosiery . Hells , improved suspensory bandages , shoulder braces . Establishments —74 , Fleet-street , London , li . C ., and 1347 , Chestnut-street , Philadelphia , U . S . A . —lAuvi' . ]
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Ad00612
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS . PATRON : HER MA . | KSTV THE QUEEN . PRESIDENT : HIS ROVAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCE OK WALES , K . G ., M . W . G . M . THE RT . HON . VISCOUNT HOLMESDALE , R . W . Provincial Grand Master of Kent , has kindly consented to Preside at the 85 th ANNIVERSARY FESTIVAL , to be held Un WEDNESDAY , jyth June , 1 SS 3 . The services of Brethren as Stewards are earnestly solicited . Particulars , with information as to " Special Privileges " in connection with the " Preparatory School Building Fund , " attainable only to 31 st December , 1 SS 3 , may be obtained on application . FREDERICK BINCKES , V . Pat . ( P . G . Stwd . ) , Secretary . Office , C , Freemasons' Hall , W . C , I 21 st December , 1 SS 2 .
Ad00611
LONDON AND NORTHWESTERN RAILWAY . ROYAL MAIL ROUTE . The EXPRESS TRAINS of the LONDON and NORTH-WESTERN RAILWAY afford the most expeditious means of reaching the principal towns in the North of England , the Midland manufacturing districts , Scotland , Ireland , and Wales , including Liverpool , Manchester , Birmingham , Chester , Dublin , Shrewsbury , Leamington , Wolverhampton , Preston , Carlisle , Glasgow , Edinburgh , Perth , Dundee , Aberdeen , Inverness . A fast and frequent service of trains is run from London to Birmingham in 3 hours , London to Manchester in 4 = ; hours , London to Liverpool in 5 hours . WEST COAST ROUTE TO AND FROM SCOTLAND . —Direct trains to and from London ( Euston ) , Birmingham , Liverpool , Manchester , & c , and Edinburgh , Glasgow , Greenock-, Perth , Aberdeen , Inverness , and the north . Drawing-room carriages , fitted with Lavatory Accommodation are run by the Day Expresses j the Sleeping Saloons by the night trains . For full particulars of Train Service seethe Company ' s Time Books and Bills . OMNIBUSES FOR USE OF FAMILY PARTIES Travelling by London and North-Western Railway . — The London and North-Western Railway . Company provide Small Omnibuses , capable of carrying six persons inside and two outside , with the usual quantity of luggage , to meet trains at Euston Station , London , Limestreet Station , Liverpool , and at London-road Station , Manchester , when previously ordered . The Omnibuses will also be sent to any Hotels or private residences for the . conveyance to Euston Station ( in time for any of the down * trains ) of parties proposing to travel by London and North Western Railway . Orders for these vehicles can be given cither direct to the Station Masters at the various termini , or by advising the Station Masters at the starting point of the journey ( if a London and North-Western Station ) . The charge for the use of an Omnibus will be One Shilling per mile ( Driver and a . reasonable quantity of Luggage included ) , with a minimum charge of Three Shillings . G . FINDLAY , General Manager . Euston Station , December , 1 SS 2 .
Ad00606
DREADNOUGHT SEAMENS ' HOSPITAL , Greenwich , S . E ., and DISPENSARY , Well-street , London Docks , K ., for Sailors of all Nations . No admission ticket or voting papers of any sort required , but both are entirely free to the whole maritime world , irrespective ot race , creed , or nationality . Since establishment upwardsof 225 , 000 have been relieved from no less than forty-two different countries , and the number of patients during 1 SS 1 , was 7132 , as compared with 4245 , the average of the preceding ten years . Qualification of a governor one guinea annually , or a donation of ten guineas . New annual subscriptions or contributions will be thankfully received by the bankers , Messrs . Williams , Deacon and Co ., 20 , Birchin-lanc , li . C , or by the Secretary at the Hospital . Funds are urgently needed for this truly Cosmopolitan Charity , which is supported by voluntary contributions . W . T . EVANS , Secretary .
Ad00607
FOUNDRY TO LET , with Smiths ' Shop . Stables can be hud adjoining . Formerly occupied by Messrs . Cutler , Parker-street , Little Queenstreet , 1 lolborn . Apply at the Freemason Office , iG , Great Queen-street ( opposite Freemasons' Hall ) .
Ad00608
STABLING . —TO BE LET , excellent THREE-STALL STABLE and CARRIAGE HOUSE , in Parker-street . —Apply , Freemason Ofiice , iC , Great Queen-street , W . C .
Ad00610
Twelfth Edition , post-free , is . DR . WATTS on ASTHMA and BRONCHITIS . A Treatise on the only Sueccssful Method of Curing these Diseases . By ROBERT G . WATTS , M . D ., F . R . S . L ., F . C . S ., & c , 5 , Bulstrode-strcet , Cavendish-square , London . London : C . Mitchell and Co ., Red Lion-court . Fleet-street .
Ad00609
ANY Gentleman who is a Freemason , having SPAKE TIME at his disposal , and wishing to occupy it profitably , will do well by applying by letter to Mr . M . Underwood , 45 , Ludgatc-hill , London .
Ad00600
ROYAL SEA BATHING INFIRMARY , MARGATE . ESTABLISHED 1791 , THE ONLY ONE EXCLUSIVELY FOR SCROFULOUS POOR . COL . CREATON , TREASURER . JOHN M . CLABON , ESQ ., HON . SECRETARY . This Hospital requires aid . An extra liberal diet table is of necessity required on account of the exhausting nature of this terrible disease . Donors of £ 10 IOS ., Annual Subscribers of £ 1 is ., can recommend patients . 250 beds . Average number of Inpatients per year , 750 , and of applicants over 1000 . Bankers , the Bank of England ; Coutts and Co . ; and Cobb and Co ., Margate . Offices : No . 30 , Charing Cross , W . IOHN THOMAS WALKER , Secretary .
Ad00604
TO OUR READERS . THE FREEMASON is published every Friday morning , price 3 d ., and contains the fullest and latest information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Subscriptions , including Postage;—United States , ,,..,,.. , Canada , the Continent , India , China , Cevlon United kingdom . the Colonics & c . Arabia ,, & c . 13 s . 6 d . 15 s . 6 d . 17 s . 6 d . Remittances may be made in Stamps , but Post OHicc Orders or Cheques arc preferred , the former payable to GEORGE KEXXINO , Chief Office , Lcndon . the latter crossed London Joint Stock Bank .
Ad00605
TO ADVERTISERS . THE FREEMASON has a large circulation in all parts of the Globe . In it the official Reports of the Grand Lodges of England , Ireland , and Scotland are published with the specia sanction of the respective Grand Masters , and it contains a complete record of Masonic worn in this country , our Indian Empire , and the Colonies . The vast accession to the ranks of the Order during the past few years , and the increasing interest manifested in its doings , has given the Freemason a position and influence which few journals can lay claim to , and the proprietor can assert with confidence that announcements appearing in its columns challenge the attention of a very large and influential body of readers . Advertisements for the current week's issue are received up to Six o ' clock on Wednesday evening .
Ar00613
SATURDAY , DECEMBER 30 , 1882 .
To Correspondents.
To Correspondents .
P . M . —Will P . M . kindly send full name and address of brother referred to , and we will forward the documents direct . A LEWIS . —No such rule is in force as far as we are aware . — The following stand over : — Priory Lodge , No . 1000 ; Abbey Lodge , No . 11 S 4 . Excelsior Mark Lodge , No . 22 G .
BOOKS . & c . RECEIVED . "The Broad Arrow , " "The Citizen , " "The Blackburn Standard , " "The Hull Packet , " "The Royal Cornwall Gazette , " "The Manchester Courier , " " Night and Day " ( Christmas Number ) , "The Keystone , " "The Canadian Craftsman , " "The Masonic Record , " "The Watchman , " " La Revista Masonica , " " The Court Circular . "
Reviews
REVIEWS
THE LIFE OF THE BISHOP OF WINCHESTER . Vol . III .
Some of us , perhaps , better knew the late Bishop of Winchester by the title of the Bishop of Oxford ; and some of us may well remember his pleasant presence and the " Attic salt" with what he was wont to season his always effective conversation . No one , as the French say , was a better " raconteur , " —a teller of stories ; no one ever delivered
his witty or pointed , or impressive little speeches in society with more " verve , " or more realism , or more actual effect . It was said at one lime that he was an " actor , " that his outcome in speech was " mimetic " and prepared ; but nothing was more untrue . His wit was alike spontaneous and genial , neat and original , kindly and apt ; and you hardly ever heard him say a severe thing , and , certainly , never an ill-natured thing of anybody . We think , however ; that the
editor has been gunty in this volume of grave indiscretion in respect of his father's memory , and has been forgetful of the chief duty of a careful supervisor of special literary extracts from the lives and records , the sayings and doings of the defunct , which is to curtail rather than to expand , to suppress rather than dilate . People who keep diaries , not even excepting bishops , arc still mortal , and not exempt from the little miseries and drawbacks of humanity . The diaries we call our own arc not always written
in the same humour , or in the same kindly frame of mind as regards others or ourselves . A touch of the liver , an attack of lumbago , a fit of the gout , a prevalence of indigestion , will make us look at things with " the saffron hue" of sickly thought , " and at such moments wc affect to be discontented with the world and ourselves , and are often very unjust towards others . Many of the injudicious paragraphs thus unwisely printed are distinctly wanting in the needful characteristics of fitness , reality , veracity , without which the "Ana " of the most assiduous
Reviews
diarist degenerate into idle gossip or perverse twaddle . Many of these passages to which exception has been taken and attention called , ought to have been suppressed , and serious responsibility rests upon the editor for giving to the world passages which , sparing no one , can only hurt the feelings of many . And then comes the still more serious fact , they are not correct , and thus detract from the brichtness
of the good Bishop ' s portraiture . These " epea pteroenta " ought never to have been . printed , we repeat . Some of the sayings are very good , such as when Lady Burdett Coutts asks , " I suppose , Bishop , you do not know what a drysalter is ? " " Oh , yes , " replied the Bishop , " Tate and Brady . " So , too , his encounters with Lord Westbury are very amusing . As , when , for instance , Lord Westbury " met him after
his resignation , and said , " Have I met thee , O mine enemy ? " " Do you remember the rest of the quotation ?" replied the Bishop . "See I . Kings xxi . 20 . " YVhen the Bishop wrote to him about a Clergy Resignation Bill , and , among other causes , mentioned loss of mental faculties , Lord Westbury replies , "he could not contemplate such a contingency , as he had never met any clergyman who had any mind , except his lordship . "
KELLY'S POST OFFICE DIRECTORY . This most valuable book of reference for London and Londoners is in , we believe , its eighty-fourth year of appearance , and is equall y useful as needful . Its great bulk may be somewhat objectionable , but it can nowjbc obtained in two volumes . It chronicles , among other changesthe striking
, facts that eleven streets have been renamed , eighteen have been renumbered , eighty-two new names of streets have been given in 1 SS 2 . It has other features of interest , and is alike indispensable for all offices and libraries , as well as for all who are interested in the whereabouts of individuals in the "little village . "
DIARIES AND POCKET BOOKS . These are so many that it almost becomes hopeless to commend and useless to criticize . Most people treat themselves to , or are treated to by others , with a pocket book . We arc inclined to think that experience seems to be setting in against diaries , seeing how much annoyance is often caused by posthumous revelations and careless
extracts . We may mention among the industrious caterers " pro bono publico " Messrs . De la Rue and Co ., Messrs . T . and J . Smith and Co ., Messrs . Hudson and Kearn ( famous for blotting pads ) , Messrs . Charles Letts and Co ., Messrs . Harrison and Sons , "cum multis aliis . " We can also mention with pleasure the City Diary of Messrs . Collinridge and Co . The two Masonic Pocket Books appeal forcibly to our Cosmopolitan Craft . Whitaker ' s Almanack
is well-known to many , while the Law and Commercial Diary of Messrs . Dunn and Co . has many devotees and clients . We venture to think that , except as business memos , " cues " to the memory of financial or other rates , diaries are better used sparingly . The long paragraphs which they often contain of conscious and unconscious selfconfession and self-laudation , are neither good for ourselves after all , nor for others . But on this , as on many other matters , there will be great divergence of opinion .
CHRISTMAS BOOKS . We must all be struck with the abundance of Christmas books , of a special Christmas literature , which appeals so forcibl y and pleasurably to the artistic tastes and cultured souvenirs of us all , young and old alike . Indeed , the appearance of our Christmas literature is a fact in itself of moment and meaning worth noting . Time wasas some of us can
, testify , when such things as Christmas cards , Christmas books , & c , were unknown . Even a quarter of a century back they were not in existence . Perhaps some few tales were specially published ; indeed , we believe Charles Dickc ns set the taste . But the present system of literary and artistic Christmas offerings was unheard of . We do not object to it ; on the contrary we approve of it : though we think it riirht to
say this , that it may be a question how far such devotion to , and profusion of a specific and passing literature , acts favourably either on artistic tastes or literary proclivities . That we may have too much even of a good thing is a fact some of ns are apt to forget ; but as this season is not one for grumbling or growling , or fault-finding or hypcrcriticism , let us take things as
we hnd them , and be contented , genial , and happy . Messrs . Routledge seem to have the sway in Christmas literature for the young . We note approvingly their numerous issues , alike admirably printed and artistically designed . Among numerous specimens of good reading and excellent taste , we may note " Grimm ' s Fairy Tales , " " Evenings at Home , " " Dinglcficld , " "The Rev . XV . C . Adams ' s
Travellers' Tales , " " Jcannette , " "Jumbo ' s Picture Book , " " Those Boys , " ' " Those Girls , " " Little Lays for Little Folk , " "The New House that Jack Built , " & c Dean and Son give us , with vividly coloured illustrations , "Sunny Hours and Pretty Flowers , " "Tiny Lawn
Tennis , " and " The Children ' s Kettle Drum . " "The Prince of the Hundred Songs , " by Mr . Vernon Lee , is a very effective work , and so arc " Caldecott ' s Songs , " "The Battery and the Boiler , " "The Girl ' s Own Book , " " The History of the Bible , " and many more , like " At Home" and "A Day in a Child ' s Life . "
MONEY LUNT . Advances on Property . Loans Negotiated . — £ 5 to jC IO ° o , with and without securities , at moderate Interest upon Promissory Notes , repayable at a fixed period , or by instalments ,- also upon Deeds , Life Policies , Furniture , Jewellery , Shares , Warrants , Stocks .
& c . Prompt attention , with secrecy . Trade bills discounted . Deposits received . THE LONDON BANK , 71 , Fleet-street , E . C ; SS , High-street , Islington , N . ; and 113 , Church-street , Edgware-road , W . Open daily Forms gratis . Established 1 S 3 S . E . J . READ , Secretary . —[ ADVT . 'J
lHVKStK , I 1 I .. ISTII . - D . IMMI 1 EX , li'R ' . —SEELHY ' II . IKU Kuilfifcl ! TRIIKSKS . —The world ' s recognition of unequalled excellence , Kcccving the only award of merit granted for trusses at the late international Medical Kxliibition , 1 K 81 . Made in every desirable and latest improved pattern , line steel springs , neatly covered with highly-polished hard rubber , light , cool , cleanly ; unaffected by time , use , or climate . Free from all sour , rusty , dialing , or
strapping unpleasantness . Used in bathing . Always reliable . The correct and skilful mechanical treatment of hernia or rupture a specialty . Under patronage of the world ' s most distinguished surgeons . Choice assortment of elastic surgical hosiery . Hells , improved suspensory bandages , shoulder braces . Establishments —74 , Fleet-street , London , li . C ., and 1347 , Chestnut-street , Philadelphia , U . S . A . —lAuvi' . ]