Edinburgh Journal, No. 442, by 
Various 
 
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Title: Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 442 Volume 17, New Series, 
June 19, 1852 
Author: Various 
Editor: Robert Chambers and William Chambers 
Release Date: March 10, 2007 [EBook #20792] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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CHAMBERS'S EDINBURGH *** 
 
Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Richard J. Shiffer and the Online 
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CHAMBERS' EDINBURGH JOURNAL
CONDUCTED BY WILLIAM AND ROBERT CHAMBERS, 
EDITORS OF 'CHAMBERS'S INFORMATION FOR THE PEOPLE,' 
'CHAMBERS'S EDUCATIONAL COURSE,' &c. 
No. 442. NEW SERIES. SATURDAY, JUNE 19, 1852. PRICE 1-1/2d. 
 
THE OLD HOUSE IN CRANE COURT. 
The roaring pell-mell of the principal thoroughfares of London is 
curiously contrasted with the calm seclusion which is often found at no 
great distance in certain lanes, courts, and passages, and the effect is 
not a little heightened when in these by-places we light upon some old 
building speaking of antique institutions or bygone habits of society. 
We lately had this idea brought strikingly before us on plunging 
abruptly out of Fleet Street into Crane Court, in search of the 
establishment known as the Scottish Hospital. We were all at once 
transferred into a quiet narrow street, as it might be called, full of 
printing and lithographic offices, tall, dark, and rusty, while closing up 
the further end stood a dingy building of narrow front, presenting an 
ornamental porch. A few minutes served to introduce us to a 
moderate-sized hall, having a long table in the centre, and an arm-chair 
at the upper end, while several old portraits graced the walls. It was not 
without a mental elevation of feeling, as well as some surprise, that we 
learned that this was a hall in which Newton had spent many an 
evening. It was, to be quite explicit, the meeting-place of the Royal 
Society from 1710 till 1782, and, consequently, during not much less 
than twenty years of the latter life of the illustrious author of the 
Principia, who, as an office-bearer in the institution, must have often 
taken an eminent place here. We were not, however, immediately in 
quest of the antiquities of the Royal Society. Our object was to form 
some acquaintance with the valuable institution which has succeeded to 
it in the possession of this house. 
We must advert to a peculiarity of our Scottish countrymen, which can 
be set down only on the credit side of their character--their sympathy 
with each other when they meet as wanderers in foreign countries.
Scotland is just a small enough country to cause a certain unity of 
feeling amongst the people. Wherever they are, they feel that Scotsmen 
should stand, as their proverb has it, shoulder to shoulder. The more 
distant the clime in which they meet, they remember with the more 
intensity their common land of mountain and flood, their historical and 
poetical associations, the various national institutions which ages have 
endeared to them; and the more disposed are they to take an interest in 
each other's welfare. This is a feeling in which time and modern 
innovations work no change, and it is one of old-standing. 
When James VI. acceded to the throne of Elizabeth, he was followed 
southward by some of his favourite nobles, and there was of course an 
end put to that exclusive system of the late monarch which had kept 
down the number of Scotsmen in London, to what must now appear the 
astonishingly small one of fifty-eight. Perhaps some exaggerations 
have been indulged in with regard to the host of traders and craftsmen 
who went southward in the train of King James, but there can be no 
doubt, that it was considerable in point of numbers. But where wealth is 
sought for, there also, by an inevitable law of nature, is poverty. The 
better class of Scotchmen settled in London, soon found their feelings 
of compassion excited in behalf of a set of miserable 
fellow-countrymen who had failed to obtain employment or fix 
themselves in a mercantile position, and for whom the stated charities 
of the country were not available. Hence seems to have arisen, so early 
as 1613, the necessity for some system of mutual charity among the 
natives of Scotland in London. So far as can be ascertained, it was a 
handful of journeymen or hired artisans, who in that year associated to 
aid each other, and prevent themselves from becoming burdensome to 
strangers--an interesting fact, as evincing in a remote period the 
predominance of that    
    
		
	
	
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