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  • Dec. 1, 1902
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The Masonic Illustrated, Dec. 1, 1902: Page 26

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    Article A Homœopathic Dose. ← Page 3 of 4 →
Page 26

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

A Homœopathic Dose.

to me more dignified to die when you choose , because you choose , than to hang on till you have to go . And when one thinks what life is ! Day after day of boredom ! Evening after evening of boredom ! There ' s nothing worth doing , and I ' m sick of it . As Hamlet remarked , 'Man delights not me nor woman either '; and , as for things , they bore me

desperately . I have brought you here to witness my end . There's not going to be any fuss or mess . Besides , you ' re a doctor , and it ' s your trade to see people die . It would be no use for you to try and prevent me , for if I don't do it to-night I can do it to-morrow . . . . "

'' Sir George , " said Lonsdale , quietly , " I understand . You needn't talk to me about boredom . That is all a sham . You have been to a doctor , and he has told you what I , being also a doctor , can see for myself . " " What do you mean ? I have been to no doctor

What do you see ? What do you mean ?" " If vou haven ' t been to a doctor , " said Lonsdale , slowly , " I advise you to go to one , Vou needn't trouble about removing yourself from this world . You'll be removed without your troubling . " " What do you mean ? " asked Sir George , jumping up in his excitement and turning , if possible , a shade paler than hi ? natural pallor .

" That you ' re a consumptive—that a little invisible microbe has invaded your tissues and decided on your death—and that you know it , and are only parading all this nonsense about suicide because vou know the time is short . Talk of life being like a party ! You are like a man who says he is leaving a party because he is bored , after he has been kicked

towards the door b y a . page-boy I " Sir George turned paler than ever . This comparison , borrowed from his own , struck home . The Doctor , watching him narrowly , saw the advantage he had gained . He was too practised a student of men not to know how often it happens that where entreaties and arguments may alike fail

to move , some striking simile may arrest the imagination and produce an immediate efleet . " It ' s false ! " said Sir George . '' There is nothing wrong with me . How can vou tell ? What do vou know ? It ' s a

random assertion ! " Will vou take a second opinion on the matter ? If Sir Theodore Merlon , for instance , agrees with me , will you believe ? " " Sir Theodore Merlon ? Of course , he ' s the leading man for that : but— " he hesitated— "but there ' s no lime . "

' Your engagements in the next world can hardly be so pressing , " said the Doctor , drily . "Why not postpone the matter for twenty-four hours , and we can meet again when the question is settled . " Sir George paced up and down the room in great agitation . " A consumptive ! " he muttered angrily at intervals .

" Kicked out by the page-boy ! By a horrible minute worm ! Xo , by God ! It shall not be said ! . . It shall not be done ! . . Lonsdale , are you certain or are you fooling me ? If you are fooling me—why , by all that ' s holy , you shall not fool me . Listen , I'll put off the matter for

twentyfour hours . I'll see Merlon . And if you ' re right—if this horrible thing is true—why , then , I'll stay and light it out ! I ' m no coward , in spite of what that old idiot said at the club to-night . If there ' s something to light for I'll slay and light—and I'll back myself to win ! But if there ' s nothing—if you ' re fooling me—why , then , I swear

" Don ' t swear anything , " said the Doctor , cheerfully . " But remember , that ' s a bargain . If there ' s anything to light for , you ' re going to stay and light . " "And nowj" thought the Doctor to himself , "I must square Merlon . "

For if Sir George had not been blul ' ling , the Doctor certaiulv had . Xo doubt Sir George—never a robust manwas out of health ; but there were no svmptoms of such nvicrobic ravages as the Doctor had suggested . It had been a sudden inspiration to appeal to his vanity on the question of courage , and since it had been so far successful , it would be a pilv not to follow it up .

" It all depends on Merton , " rellected the Doctor . " I don ' t know if he would think it worth while helping in a case like this . I ' m not perfectly sure myself if it ' s very kind to keep alive a man who doesn ' t want to live . Still , that ' s what I ' m here for . And there ' s Sybil . S ybil must be considered first . "

He made it his business to go next morning to see Sir Theodore Merton . He explained the case to the great authority on pulmonary complaints , and the latter promised to do his best . " After all , there are so many different ways of telling the

truth , " said the Doctor . " Like statistics , the truth may be made to suggest anything . " The great authority smiled , and the Doctor took his leave . He waited impatiently for his next interview with Sir George . It came sooner than he expected , for Sir George

hurried over to see him the moment Sir Theodore Merton had pronounced on his case . " It seems you ' re right ! " he exclaimed ; and the Doctor noted with satisfaction that the tone was not entirely one of disappointment . " He tried to spare me , but I understood

what he meant ! I ' m ill ! But he said that if I took myself in hand at once I might recover . I shitII recover . I ' m going abroad at once . I ' m to live out of doors night and day . I ' m going to cheat this beastly disease ; but when I ' ve recovered •—when I ' m myself again—when I ' ve shown inv pluck—then , remember , I shall just come home and . . . "

"And kill yourself ? " said the Doctor , smiling . "Just you wait and see ! When you ' ve recovered from an illness you'll see how you'll cling to life—unless , of course , you had the inlluenza ! It ' s easv to want to die when you ' re ill : it ' s

iairly easy when you re well ; its impossible when you re convalescent . " " Here ' s a note Merton gave me for you . He tells me to put myself unreservedly in your hands . " The Doctor ran his eye rapidly over the lines . " Out of health generally ... I have not contradicted anything

you or he suggested . . . . Carry out your own ideas . . Most people in his condition take to drink . As he shows no inclination that wav I see no reason whv he should

not recover completely . " I wish , " said Sir George , " I do wish I could persuade you to come with me to look after me . Money ' s no object , as you know . Couldn't you give up your practice for a year and see me through ? " " Impossible ! " ejaculated the Doctor .

Then he paused . If Sir George went with another doctor , or consulted other doctors when abroad , it was possible that all his trouble might be in vain . And there was Sybil . Doctor Lonsdale decided to make the sacrilice . Money , indeed , could not entirely repay what it would cost him to

abandon his practice for a whole winter ; but he knew that , as Sir George said , so far as money could repay him it would be no object to his client . So they started off to seek sunshine and an out-door life . Xever was there a more docile patient than Sir George . He obeyed all his doctor ' s multifarious orders , and his doctor

took good care they should be multifarious . And before many months were over , what with the out-door life in a perfect climate , what with the regular hours , the strict dietand—above all—the continual occupation , mental or physical , on which the doctor insisted , Sir George attained a condition of healthfulness such as he had never known in all his life

before . He began to take interest not only in his own case and things generally , but even in the state of the other invalids about him . Insensibly guided by his doctor , he began , for the first time , to feel that desire to relieve the sufferings of others which in itself is enough to give a

meaning to life . He hud never before realised the sense of fellowship with other men . He had been rich and they had been in want ; but it had never occurred to him to wish to help them . He had subscribed to a few charities as an irksome social custom , not as an expression of sympathy-But now he began to feel quite differently in the matter .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1902-12-01, Page 26” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01121902/page/26/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Essex. Dedication of a Masonic Hall at Colchester, Article 2
Installation Meeting of the Devonian Lodge, No. 2834. Article 7
A Girls' School Festival 100 years ago. Article 8
Untitled Article 9
An Old Masonic Snuff Box. Article 10
Sancta Maria Lodge, No. 2682. Article 10
Sir Edwarcl Letchworfh, F.S.A. Article 11
Bro. William James Hughan, P.G.D. England, &c. Article 12
Consecration of the Cheshunt Craft Lodge,No.2921, and the James Terry Mark Lodge,No.557. Article 13
Untitled Article 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Article 16
Untitled Ad 16
Masonry and the Popular World. Article 16
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 17
The late Bro. J. S. Eastes, P.G.D. Article 20
The Grand Orient. Article 21
Untitled Article 21
Untitled Ad 21
Untitled Ad 22
The Bangalore and Mysore Lodges of Southern Indla (E.C.) Article 23
The Blackall Lodge, No. 2207, Blackall, Queensland. Article 23
Untitled Ad 23
A Homœopathic Dose. Article 24
Untitled Ad 25
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 29
Untitled Ad 29
Untitled Ad 29
Untitled Ad 29
History of the Emulation Lod ge of Imp rovement, No . 256.——(Continued). Article 30
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Homœopathic Dose.

to me more dignified to die when you choose , because you choose , than to hang on till you have to go . And when one thinks what life is ! Day after day of boredom ! Evening after evening of boredom ! There ' s nothing worth doing , and I ' m sick of it . As Hamlet remarked , 'Man delights not me nor woman either '; and , as for things , they bore me

desperately . I have brought you here to witness my end . There's not going to be any fuss or mess . Besides , you ' re a doctor , and it ' s your trade to see people die . It would be no use for you to try and prevent me , for if I don't do it to-night I can do it to-morrow . . . . "

'' Sir George , " said Lonsdale , quietly , " I understand . You needn't talk to me about boredom . That is all a sham . You have been to a doctor , and he has told you what I , being also a doctor , can see for myself . " " What do you mean ? I have been to no doctor

What do you see ? What do you mean ?" " If vou haven ' t been to a doctor , " said Lonsdale , slowly , " I advise you to go to one , Vou needn't trouble about removing yourself from this world . You'll be removed without your troubling . " " What do you mean ? " asked Sir George , jumping up in his excitement and turning , if possible , a shade paler than hi ? natural pallor .

" That you ' re a consumptive—that a little invisible microbe has invaded your tissues and decided on your death—and that you know it , and are only parading all this nonsense about suicide because vou know the time is short . Talk of life being like a party ! You are like a man who says he is leaving a party because he is bored , after he has been kicked

towards the door b y a . page-boy I " Sir George turned paler than ever . This comparison , borrowed from his own , struck home . The Doctor , watching him narrowly , saw the advantage he had gained . He was too practised a student of men not to know how often it happens that where entreaties and arguments may alike fail

to move , some striking simile may arrest the imagination and produce an immediate efleet . " It ' s false ! " said Sir George . '' There is nothing wrong with me . How can vou tell ? What do vou know ? It ' s a

random assertion ! " Will vou take a second opinion on the matter ? If Sir Theodore Merlon , for instance , agrees with me , will you believe ? " " Sir Theodore Merlon ? Of course , he ' s the leading man for that : but— " he hesitated— "but there ' s no lime . "

' Your engagements in the next world can hardly be so pressing , " said the Doctor , drily . "Why not postpone the matter for twenty-four hours , and we can meet again when the question is settled . " Sir George paced up and down the room in great agitation . " A consumptive ! " he muttered angrily at intervals .

" Kicked out by the page-boy ! By a horrible minute worm ! Xo , by God ! It shall not be said ! . . It shall not be done ! . . Lonsdale , are you certain or are you fooling me ? If you are fooling me—why , by all that ' s holy , you shall not fool me . Listen , I'll put off the matter for

twentyfour hours . I'll see Merlon . And if you ' re right—if this horrible thing is true—why , then , I'll stay and light it out ! I ' m no coward , in spite of what that old idiot said at the club to-night . If there ' s something to light for I'll slay and light—and I'll back myself to win ! But if there ' s nothing—if you ' re fooling me—why , then , I swear

" Don ' t swear anything , " said the Doctor , cheerfully . " But remember , that ' s a bargain . If there ' s anything to light for , you ' re going to stay and light . " "And nowj" thought the Doctor to himself , "I must square Merlon . "

For if Sir George had not been blul ' ling , the Doctor certaiulv had . Xo doubt Sir George—never a robust manwas out of health ; but there were no svmptoms of such nvicrobic ravages as the Doctor had suggested . It had been a sudden inspiration to appeal to his vanity on the question of courage , and since it had been so far successful , it would be a pilv not to follow it up .

" It all depends on Merton , " rellected the Doctor . " I don ' t know if he would think it worth while helping in a case like this . I ' m not perfectly sure myself if it ' s very kind to keep alive a man who doesn ' t want to live . Still , that ' s what I ' m here for . And there ' s Sybil . S ybil must be considered first . "

He made it his business to go next morning to see Sir Theodore Merton . He explained the case to the great authority on pulmonary complaints , and the latter promised to do his best . " After all , there are so many different ways of telling the

truth , " said the Doctor . " Like statistics , the truth may be made to suggest anything . " The great authority smiled , and the Doctor took his leave . He waited impatiently for his next interview with Sir George . It came sooner than he expected , for Sir George

hurried over to see him the moment Sir Theodore Merton had pronounced on his case . " It seems you ' re right ! " he exclaimed ; and the Doctor noted with satisfaction that the tone was not entirely one of disappointment . " He tried to spare me , but I understood

what he meant ! I ' m ill ! But he said that if I took myself in hand at once I might recover . I shitII recover . I ' m going abroad at once . I ' m to live out of doors night and day . I ' m going to cheat this beastly disease ; but when I ' ve recovered •—when I ' m myself again—when I ' ve shown inv pluck—then , remember , I shall just come home and . . . "

"And kill yourself ? " said the Doctor , smiling . "Just you wait and see ! When you ' ve recovered from an illness you'll see how you'll cling to life—unless , of course , you had the inlluenza ! It ' s easv to want to die when you ' re ill : it ' s

iairly easy when you re well ; its impossible when you re convalescent . " " Here ' s a note Merton gave me for you . He tells me to put myself unreservedly in your hands . " The Doctor ran his eye rapidly over the lines . " Out of health generally ... I have not contradicted anything

you or he suggested . . . . Carry out your own ideas . . Most people in his condition take to drink . As he shows no inclination that wav I see no reason whv he should

not recover completely . " I wish , " said Sir George , " I do wish I could persuade you to come with me to look after me . Money ' s no object , as you know . Couldn't you give up your practice for a year and see me through ? " " Impossible ! " ejaculated the Doctor .

Then he paused . If Sir George went with another doctor , or consulted other doctors when abroad , it was possible that all his trouble might be in vain . And there was Sybil . Doctor Lonsdale decided to make the sacrilice . Money , indeed , could not entirely repay what it would cost him to

abandon his practice for a whole winter ; but he knew that , as Sir George said , so far as money could repay him it would be no object to his client . So they started off to seek sunshine and an out-door life . Xever was there a more docile patient than Sir George . He obeyed all his doctor ' s multifarious orders , and his doctor

took good care they should be multifarious . And before many months were over , what with the out-door life in a perfect climate , what with the regular hours , the strict dietand—above all—the continual occupation , mental or physical , on which the doctor insisted , Sir George attained a condition of healthfulness such as he had never known in all his life

before . He began to take interest not only in his own case and things generally , but even in the state of the other invalids about him . Insensibly guided by his doctor , he began , for the first time , to feel that desire to relieve the sufferings of others which in itself is enough to give a

meaning to life . He hud never before realised the sense of fellowship with other men . He had been rich and they had been in want ; but it had never occurred to him to wish to help them . He had subscribed to a few charities as an irksome social custom , not as an expression of sympathy-But now he began to feel quite differently in the matter .

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