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  • April 1, 1881
  • Page 41
  • NURSERY DECORATION AND HYGIENE.
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The Masonic Magazine, April 1, 1881: Page 41

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Nursery Decoration And Hygiene.

NURSERY DECORATION AND HYGIENE .

THOUGH we have no " wife ? ' of our bosom" to " lay down the law , " or alarm us with her extravagant actions ; though for us , as the poet sings , it will be true , at the supreme hour of life , that No maiden with dishevelled hair , Shall feign or feel decorous woe ; and therefore " nursery decoration and h yg iene" is a subject on which we

ought not to enter , yet being cosmopolitan in our taste , our temper , our proclivities , and our proceedings , and knowing so many matrons interested deepl y about " baby , " we have thought it well to print the following paper . In Soribner for January , 1881 , is a very remarkable paper under the above headings , and as it may interest some young mothers , and some old mothers amongst us , we beg to call their attention to the following hints and directions as to nursery " decoration and h yg iene . " "We shall all be struck with the idea of the " fine lady , " and as bachelors , we do confess we think there is great deal in it .

My idea of a model nursery , ' said a fine lady , not long ago , " is a padded room , with barred windows , and everything in it , when not in use , hung out of reach upon the walls . Then , one might sit downstairs in the drawing room , and read , or practice , or receive with a mind at rest . " But what uf the melancholy little starlings caged above , piping their woeful plaint , "I can ' t get out ? " And , in many cases , it is no wonder they should want to get out .

The truism in the following passage will be appreciated by our readers : To the nursery are generally consigned , year after year , all the faded fineries from downstairs , the worn carpets , the slightly soiled chintz , the decrepit tables and chairs . It is a Hotel des Invalides for retired furniture . This , of course , does not apply to the first nursery , fitted up with floating draperies of pink and blue , with fine embroidery and cobweb lace , with costly cradle and dainty basket , for the installation of that unparalleled wonder—His Serene Highness , Baby Number One—with a prime minister in attendance , to whom all

this magnificence appears but dross , whose manner is of the mildly enduring sort , as becomes one who has been used to better things , but , in spite of all , condescends to exalt , with her presence , for a space , these humble scenes ! During a little while Baby reclines at ease amid his princely surroundings , but , by and by , when abandoned by his prime minister , the natural self-assertion of man takes possession of him . He kicks over the bassinet , rends his filmy envelope of silk and lawn , makes ducks and drakes of the interior of his dressingbasket , sets the ivory brushes afloat in his bath-tub , and cuts his teeth upon any object within reachother than the coral and bells provided for the ban infatuated

god-, purpose y father . Then , at last , does an indignant and long-suffering household turn upon this aggressive ruler , and send him into banishment . An usurper sits upon his throne , who is , in turn , displaced , and goes to join his hapless comrade condemned to hard labour in the thirdstory Siberia ; and so until the ranks are full , till the pink and blue has faded out of the draperies , and a new baby has ceased to be a wonder .

Wc are inclined , however , to agree with the following practical suggestions : To redress the wrongs of these little exiles , in the matter of brightening their place of retirement , is a task outside the limit of any society as yet organized in behalf of injured innocence , but none the less is a worthy and important one . We enter the average nursery to find it , perhaps , darkened by heavy moreen curtains of a style compelling their retirement from any of the modernized rooms downstairs ; with a velvet or Brussels carpet with half-effaced pattern of lilies and roseslong since trodden into dingy uniformitof tintand

, y , a rug of another colour that , as they say in France , swears at all the rest . The paper upon the walls , soiled by finger-marks , has a pattern of green and yellow stripes . The furniture is cumbrous and shabby ; the fire hidden from sight by an iron guard , where draperies for ever hang . Homely articles of wearing apparel depend from door and chair backs ; combs and brushes mingle with medicine bottles and spoons upon the dressing bureau . If the nurse rallies , in a frantic attempt to put things to rights , her idea , generally , is to clear the floor of blocks and toys , and rigidly taboo their re-appearance—bidding the children amuse

“The Masonic Magazine: 1881-04-01, Page 41” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01041881/page/41/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
HISTORY OF THE AIREDALE LODGE, No. 387, Article 1
THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY AND CRITICISM. Article 6
CURIOUS LIST OF LODGES, A.D. 1736. Article 8
AUTUMN. Article 13
MYSTICISM. Article 14
WAS SHAKESPEARE A FREEMASON ? Article 15
A TWILIGHT SONG ON THE RIVER FOWEY. Article 19
A TALE OF VENICE IN 1781. Article 20
A NEW HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 21
OLD BOOKS. Article 24
SPRING. Article 29
CONISHEAD PRIORY. Article 30
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 34
FAITH AND LOVE. Article 36
AFTER ALL. Article 36
NURSERY DECORATION AND HYGIENE. Article 41
BRO. THOMAS TOPHAM, THE STRONG MAN. Article 43
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Nursery Decoration And Hygiene.

NURSERY DECORATION AND HYGIENE .

THOUGH we have no " wife ? ' of our bosom" to " lay down the law , " or alarm us with her extravagant actions ; though for us , as the poet sings , it will be true , at the supreme hour of life , that No maiden with dishevelled hair , Shall feign or feel decorous woe ; and therefore " nursery decoration and h yg iene" is a subject on which we

ought not to enter , yet being cosmopolitan in our taste , our temper , our proclivities , and our proceedings , and knowing so many matrons interested deepl y about " baby , " we have thought it well to print the following paper . In Soribner for January , 1881 , is a very remarkable paper under the above headings , and as it may interest some young mothers , and some old mothers amongst us , we beg to call their attention to the following hints and directions as to nursery " decoration and h yg iene . " "We shall all be struck with the idea of the " fine lady , " and as bachelors , we do confess we think there is great deal in it .

My idea of a model nursery , ' said a fine lady , not long ago , " is a padded room , with barred windows , and everything in it , when not in use , hung out of reach upon the walls . Then , one might sit downstairs in the drawing room , and read , or practice , or receive with a mind at rest . " But what uf the melancholy little starlings caged above , piping their woeful plaint , "I can ' t get out ? " And , in many cases , it is no wonder they should want to get out .

The truism in the following passage will be appreciated by our readers : To the nursery are generally consigned , year after year , all the faded fineries from downstairs , the worn carpets , the slightly soiled chintz , the decrepit tables and chairs . It is a Hotel des Invalides for retired furniture . This , of course , does not apply to the first nursery , fitted up with floating draperies of pink and blue , with fine embroidery and cobweb lace , with costly cradle and dainty basket , for the installation of that unparalleled wonder—His Serene Highness , Baby Number One—with a prime minister in attendance , to whom all

this magnificence appears but dross , whose manner is of the mildly enduring sort , as becomes one who has been used to better things , but , in spite of all , condescends to exalt , with her presence , for a space , these humble scenes ! During a little while Baby reclines at ease amid his princely surroundings , but , by and by , when abandoned by his prime minister , the natural self-assertion of man takes possession of him . He kicks over the bassinet , rends his filmy envelope of silk and lawn , makes ducks and drakes of the interior of his dressingbasket , sets the ivory brushes afloat in his bath-tub , and cuts his teeth upon any object within reachother than the coral and bells provided for the ban infatuated

god-, purpose y father . Then , at last , does an indignant and long-suffering household turn upon this aggressive ruler , and send him into banishment . An usurper sits upon his throne , who is , in turn , displaced , and goes to join his hapless comrade condemned to hard labour in the thirdstory Siberia ; and so until the ranks are full , till the pink and blue has faded out of the draperies , and a new baby has ceased to be a wonder .

Wc are inclined , however , to agree with the following practical suggestions : To redress the wrongs of these little exiles , in the matter of brightening their place of retirement , is a task outside the limit of any society as yet organized in behalf of injured innocence , but none the less is a worthy and important one . We enter the average nursery to find it , perhaps , darkened by heavy moreen curtains of a style compelling their retirement from any of the modernized rooms downstairs ; with a velvet or Brussels carpet with half-effaced pattern of lilies and roseslong since trodden into dingy uniformitof tintand

, y , a rug of another colour that , as they say in France , swears at all the rest . The paper upon the walls , soiled by finger-marks , has a pattern of green and yellow stripes . The furniture is cumbrous and shabby ; the fire hidden from sight by an iron guard , where draperies for ever hang . Homely articles of wearing apparel depend from door and chair backs ; combs and brushes mingle with medicine bottles and spoons upon the dressing bureau . If the nurse rallies , in a frantic attempt to put things to rights , her idea , generally , is to clear the floor of blocks and toys , and rigidly taboo their re-appearance—bidding the children amuse

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