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PASSING- EVENTS. 285
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XL—PASSING- EVENTS.
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—«». — il It is an ill wind which blows ...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Dear Mad&Ot, Is No The New Subject One I...
we find men have made some mistakes and _committed some mischiefs in take their abuses the government in work their with zeal of to the workhouses do greatest the good , exertion that or reme women d of y their the will evil jud escape , gment if they other , do and not errors the under mo and st - feel certain that
patient the men use who of made thoug these ht which mistake they s also can took bring pains to it and . We exercised may judgment , and that ferred only justif our to those clai y our m we to desire deem do better that unwise our rests or views upon morall shall our y c wrong ommon receive if womanhood attention we ensure , and ; that so be we they pre can
women for are But their reall , as visitors y visits more I would or judicious or supervisors care deprecate or and coun more of hasty sel workhouses useful to or produce inexperienced . , so any should , good action I effect say on decidedl to the be part of y that any of
real usethey must , go , with a recognised character , a right that , they shall receive shall be the , heard same and respect attended which to gentlemen I do not meet think with there , and would that be their mu remarks ch
diffi-. of culty workhouses from the too when great we number consider of the visitors distance inclined at which to attend these to usuall the inmates stand from the houses , of the gentryand their situations y
that If there ladies were of sense too many and judgment laborers , in should the field find , they the . ground would c pre ertainl -occup y useful turn ied ,
their objects energ ; and ies the in knowled some other ge gained direction at , the to some workhouse equally would needed afford and some of the best indications of the way in which they have to go .
I remain , dear Sincerely Madam , yours ,
C . S .
Passing- Events. 285
PASSING- EVENTS . 285
Xl—Passing- Events.
XL—PASSING- EVENTS .
—«». — Il It Is An Ill Wind Which Blows ...
_—«» . — il It is an ill wind which blows nobody any good" as the proverb has it , and dullest and flattest
in certainly the whol the e dail twelve y press is during largel the y indebted last month to , notedl the discussions y the of the rival , was Metropolitan there a greater Omnibus dearth Companies of news for , while the , filling at the same up of time its c there olumns is . evidence Never of the Liberalin the
Bel of prep ian aration Chambers for the the triump future hs . of The the maj Republicans ority in the elections s now going Reform coming g on . B , in ill Meanwhile the of United the , , approaching it States is our , province and 1 session the to discussion , augur deal with well at what home for the is on , time the and expected , that casting offers is
itself about to for our a hand comm . encement / Wednesday , the , November tercentenary 17 th of , being Q , ueen the Elizabeth three hundredth anniversary of her accession to the throne , the event was commemorated
generally throughout the metropolis , sermons , in many places of worship , ness bein especiall g as delivered a y sovereign . Recent on generall the attempts occasion y , and to , introduce wherein to her exertions tributes the Romish in were the cause rendered practice of Protestantism to of her auricular great the
confession celebration int of o this the event church but , no let doub the t private lent warmth foibles and of Elizabeth earnestness be to what thshe is enshrined , , in English memories as one of the greatest
Reformation sovereigns ey may , who to which ever Eng held land the , throne in a gr , eat the measure promoter , owes and her ch freedom ampion , of great that - wh
ness , and x _oower . We hail it as a happy © men that the sovereign ose
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), Dec. 1, 1858, page 285, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01121858/page/69/
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