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A SERMON PREACHED AT THE Pariſh-Church of St. Anne, Weſtminſter, On Thurſday, May the 10th, 1758. BEFORE THE GOVERNORS OF THE MIDDLESEX-HOSPITAL, FOR Sick and Lame; and for Lying-in Married Women.

By THOMAS FRANCKLIN, A. M. Miniſter of Queen-Street Chapel, Lincoln's-Inn-Fields, and Fellow of Trinity-College, Cambridge.

Publiſhed at the Requeſt of the SOCIETY.

LONDON: Printed in the Year MDCCLVIII.

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May the 10th, 1758. Ordered,

That the Thanks of this Society be given to the Rev. Mr. Francklin, for his Sermon preached before Us this Day; and that he be deſired to print the ſame.

Northumberland Preſident.
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To the Right Honourable HUGH, Earl of NORTHUMBERLAND, Preſident,

And the Reſt of the Governors and Contributors TO THE MIDDLESEX-HOSPITAL, THIS SERMON Preached and Publiſhed at their Requeſt Is Dedicated by Their Obedient Humble Servant THOMAS FRANCKLIN.

[1]
LUKE. X. v. 37.

Go, and do thou likewiſe.

WHEN we ſeriouſly conſider the frail, corrupt, and diſtreſsful State of Human Nature; when we reflect on the general Lot and Portion of Mortality; when we call to Mind to what Variety of Evils we are ſubject, to how many Diſeaſes our Bodies are expoſed, and by how many Anxieties our Minds may be depreſſed and tormented, we are naturally led to imagine that it muſt be the Buſineſs, Concern and Intereſt of every Individual to lighten as much as poſſible the general Burthen; that every Office of Tenderneſs and Humanity to our Fellow-creatures would of Courſe be duly and punctually performed by every one of us, as well knowing that all the poor Aid and Aſſiſtance which each particular could lend, would ſtill be much too little and inſignificant Preſervatives againſt the univerſal Calamity; that the moſt we can do is to ſoften the Diſtreſs which we cannot prevent, to ſooth thoſe Sorrows which we cannot remove, and to pour Balm into thoſe Wounds which we cannot heal.

[2]To diffuſe this Spirit of Love and Tenderneſs, to increaſe this Philanthropy, to make Man ſociable to Man, God, the Father, hath implanted in every Breaſt a Principle of Benevolence, and God, the Son, hath in his holy Religion ſtrengthened, dignifyed and improved it. This Principle ſhineth forth with diſtinguiſhed Luſtre in every Page of the Goſpel of Chriſt; it is taught by his Precepts and enforced by his Example: and there is not perhaps any part of Holy Writ, wherein it is more viſibly or more warmly inculcated, than in the ſhort and beautiful Parable before us, wherein the Virtue of Humanity towards the diſtreſſed is painted in the livelieſt Colours, and propoſed to us as an Object of our Applauſe and of our Imitation alſo.

As the following Diſcourſe therefore is intended to enforce this Principle, I cannot I think more ſurely engage your Attention to it, than by

FIRST, Running over, as briefly as poſſible, the principal Circumſtances of this affecting Narration.

AND Secondly, applying them to the preſent ſimilar Occaſion.

A certain Man, ſays the Parable, went down from Jeruſalem to Jericho; unfortunately for him, his Journey lay thro' a loneſome and melancholy Deſart; a Place, as we are inform'd by thoſe who were well acquainted with its Situation, ſo remarkable for the frequent Murthers and Robberies committed there as to be called, the bloody Way; perpetually infeſted by the Sons of Rapine and Violence. By ſome of theſe our unhappy Traveller was beſet; [3] and being unable and probably unwilling to reſiſt, was quickly overpowered by them. They attacked and plundered Him, and not content with their Spoil, to their Injuſtice added Inhumanity alſo, they ſtripped and wounded him, and left him half dead. In this miſerable and diſtreſſed Condition he remained, we may ſuppoſe, a long Time, expecting with Impatience the Arrival of ſome charitable Traveller to aſſiſt him; when at laſt, as the ſacred Hiſtorian relates it, there came down a certain Prieſt that way; a Sight no doubt inexpreſſibly agreeable to a Man in ſo dreadful a Condition; a Perſon of his own Religion, and a Teacher of it alſo; One who; beſides the common Ties of Humanity, was in a more eſpecial Manner bound by his Order and Profeſſion to Acts of Charity and Beneficence; ſuch a one, he had Reaſon to expect, would have gladly embraced the Opportunity of doing good, and flown with Pleaſure to his Aſſiſtance; how great then muſt have been his Grief and Diſappointment when the Prieſt paſſed by on the other Side! The unfeeling Man muſt doubtleſs have heard his Groans and ſeen his Diſtreſs; but he purpoſely avoided croſſing over that he might not be obliged to ſtop and relieve him; he redoubled his Speed therefore, and, without the leaſt Regard to the Diſtreſs of an unhappy Brother, proceeded on his Journey. To add to the Calamity of the poor Traveller, we are told that a Levite likewiſe, when he was at the Place, came and looked on him, and paſſed by on the other Side! It is impoſſible perhaps to read this Account without making the following reflection. How does every one, who hears the Circumſtances of this melancholy Relation, deteſt ſuch Behaviour, and abhor ſuch Inhumanity! and yet at the ſame Time how many amongſt us are guilty of it! Do we not, almoſt every Day and every Hour, meet with Objects worthy of our Compaſſion and Relief, and yet are we not too apt, with the Prieſt and the Levite, to paſs by on the other Side? But to proceed. [4] What the diſappointed Traveller did not find, where he had Reaſon to hope, he met with, where he had no Expectation of it. A certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was, and when he ſaw him, he had Compaſſion on him, and went to him, and bound up his Wounds, pouring in Oil and Wine, and ſet him on his own Beaſt, and brought him to an Inn, and took care of him. The Samaritans, it muſt here be remembered, were deteſted by the Jews as Corruptors of the true Religion, and Deſerters from the true Worſhip: The Traveller therefore, who had already been neglected by the Prieſt and the Levite, Men who embraced the ſame religious Principles as himſelf, could not rationally expect that his avowed Enemy, the Samaritan, would take the leaſt notice of him; he was notwithſtanding moſt agreeably deceived; for the Samaritan, as we have ſeen, performed every Office of Friendſhip, every Act of Charity, neceſſary on the Occaſion; not content with ſoftening his paſt Evils and Misfortunes, he endeavoured to provide againſt his future Wants; when he departed, ſays the Parable, he took out Two pence, and gave them to the Hoſt, and ſaid unto him, take care of him, and whatſoever thou ſpendeſt more, when I come again, I will repay thee.

THUS generouſly and beneficently did the good Samaritan behave towards the truly worthy Object of his Compaſſion; no Wonder therefore that our Bleſſed Saviour ſhould propoſe this Example to the young Lawyer, and diſmiſs him in the Words of my Text with Go, and do thou likewiſe; that is, ‘"* Since you commend the Samaritan for acting like a Neighbour to the Jew, do you learn to act like a Neighbour to the Samaritan."’ and to every other Fellow-creature in Diſtreſs.

[5]THE Maxim inculcated in the Parable (and which indeed ſeems to have been the chief Scope and Deſign of it) has been often, but cannot be too often, repeated and enforced to us: Namely, that no national or religious Prejudices, no Difference of Party, [...]ect, or Opinion, no private Jealouſy, Pique, or Animoſity ſhould ever be ſuffered to diminiſh, weaken, or counteract the noble, univerſal Principles of Benevolence and Humanity towards each other. The good Samaritan, we ſee, extended his Bounty and Compaſſion to the diſtreſſed Traveller, without any Regard to his oppoſite Opinions; he conſidered him not as a Jew, whom he as a Samaritan was at Enmity with, but as a Man and a Fellow-creature, whom he therefore, as Man and Fellow-creature, was bound to relieve.

THE Words of the Text therefore may very properly be conſidered as ſpoken with a View not only to inſtruct the inquiſitive Lawyer, to whom they were immediately addreſſed, but as written for our Learning alſo, as conveying an uſeful Admonition to all Mankind, and exhorting them to the Imitation of this illuſtrious Example; happy are thoſe who have the Virtue and the Reſolution to follow it!

PERMIT me then to apply the Circumſtances of the Parable to the preſent ſolemn Occaſion.

THANKS be to God, our own Times, heedleſs and unwary as they are, cannot be condemned as inſenſible to the Feelings of Compaſſion, or Strangers to the Virtues of Humanity; we behold with Pleaſure and Satisfaction the Spirit of Mercy and Tenderneſs diffuſing itſelf on every Side. That Poverty, which our [6] Extravagance produces, our Pity relieves, and we at leaſt endeavour to heal the Wounds which we have made, Hoſpitals, Schools, and Foundations riſe up, flouriſh, and increaſe amongſt us; and publick Vice and Folly is, in ſame Meaſure, covered and extenuated by public Generoſity and Beneficence.

*A certain ſuperficial and declamatory but faſhionable Writer of the preſent Age has indeed lately endeavoured (tho' we hope in vain endeavoured) to make Virtue aſhamed, and put Charity out of countenance, to degrade our Pity into Weakneſs, and melt away our Humanity and Compaſſion into Fear, Cowardice, and Effeminacy: But ſurely Waters thus ſweet and ſalutary can never flow from ſo ſordid and corrupt a Fountain. Our Charity, I am ſatisfyed, ariſeth from a nobler Motive. I would fain perſuade myſelf (and, if it be an Error, it is at leaſt an amiable one) that it proceeds from that generous benevolent Principle, which diſtinguiſhes and naturally ſprings from the Religion which we profeſs, the Religion of Jeſus Chriſt, the good, the charitable, the righteous; from that Beneficence which his example taught, and which only his divine Precepts could inſpire. This is the leading, ſtrong, and actuating Principle that directs the Heart even in this otherwiſe degenerate Age; it is this, which has already raiſed in ſo many the Ambition to become good Samaritans, the Ambition of uſing, like him, their Liberty to releaſe the Captive, their Health to ſupport the Sick, their Abundance to relieve the Indigent.

AND amongſt all the fair Copies of this noble Picture, induſtriouſly drawn by various Hands, there is not perhaps one which [7] comes ſo near to the Original, as that Charity which we are here met to countenance and recommend; a Charity ſo extenſive in its Nature, ſo uſeful in its Effects, and ſo highly conducive to the Good of the Community, as to deſerve all the Approbation we can give, and all the Aſſiſtance we can beſtow.

THE Almighty Creator of all things hath of his infinite Mercy ordained that Man ſhall not in this Vale of Sorrow be afflicted beyond what he is able to bear. The Misfortunes incident to Mortality ſeldom preſs too hard and too cloſely upon each other, and where they are permitted to accumulate, Power and Opportunity are given to Men to divide, and by dividing to leſſen the Weight of them. Evils indeed, which when ſeparate may be overpowered, when united become intolerable.

POVERTY, whilſt ſhe is ſtrengthened by Health, can ſtruggle with Misfortune; but if ſhe is oppreſſed by Sickneſs, ſhe ſinks down, and is unequal to the Conflict; Sickneſs, on the other hand, whilſt ſhe is relieved and ſupported by the lenient Hand of Affluence, lifts up her Head, and ſmiles on the Bed of Anguiſh; but if Penury entereth into the Chamber, her Wounds bleed afreſh, her Pains increaſe, and ſhe drops into Deſpair, and Death. What Praiſe then, what Admiration is due to that Hand which brings a Remedy for this complicated Diſorder! Behold a Hand is ſtretched out; a Building is raiſed to receive the Sick, the Poor and the Miſerable. This noble Charity has provided every Mitigation of theſe dreadful Evils which Humanity could ſuggeſt.

BUT this Hoſpital opens its charitable Arms to receive not only the Sick, but the Lame alſo.

[8]THE greater Part of the Poor in this Metropolis, it is well known, live by the Work of their Hands; they are obliged [...]o earn their daily Bread by the Sweat of their Brows; their Support and Maintenance therefore muſt depend on the Health of their Bodies, the unimpaired Vigour and Activity of their Limbs; and when, by any unfortunate Accident, theſe are hurt or weakened they are left intirely deſtitute. In ſo large and populous a City innumerable Accidents muſt inevitably happen, which no human Foreſight could prevent, no human Prudence could guard againſt. Here, if Aſſiſtance is not immediately given, it can be of no Service; if the Remedy is not at hand to be adminiſtered, it may as well not be adminiſtered at all. Before the Erection of this and other Edifices of the ſame kind, the Poor in ſuch diſtreſsful Situations were left to periſh in the Streets: The Levite perhaps only looked at them; the Prieſt, without regarding them, paſſed by on the other Side. Their Pains were either finiſhed by Death, or cruelly protracted by the Ignorance of Empirics, who lay hold of every Occaſion to try wanton Experiments on the Poor, and play with the Lives of their Fellow-creatures. How noble then, how neceſſary, and how beneficial is the Inſtitution which can prevent ſuch Evils, relieve ſuch Diſtreſs, and ſoften ſuch Calamities!

WHEN the good Samaritan ſaw the poor Traveller, lame, wounded, and ſtripped, he did not, before he relieved him, aſk what Sect, Nation, or Profeſſion he was of, Phariſee, or Sadducee, Jew or Samaritan, but flew immediately to his Aſſiſtance. To the Honour of the Middleſex Hoſpital be it remembered, that the Example before us hath in this Particular been cloſely copyed by it. The Generality of Patients are not admitted into this Place without Letters of Recommendation, that ſo the Merit and Condition of the [9] Object to be relieved may be more fully and thoroughly known; a Precaution highly proper and commendable; but at the ſame Time all Accidents are admitted without Recommendation: In theſe Circumſtances no Recommendation indeed is neceſſary but what the Afflicted carry with them; at ſuch a Time, but to look up for Releif is to demand it of us, and but to want Aſſiſtance is to deſerve it.

BUT the chief Pride and Glory of this extenſive Charity is ſtill behind; and that is, the Relief which this Hoſpital beſtows on the weaker and more helpleſs Sex, when they are moſt weak, and unable to help themſelves; when the Snares of Death compaſs them round about, and the Pains of Hell get hold upon them. Need I repreſent to you, that in this dangerous and diſtreſsful Hour all the Aſſiſtances, all the Conveniencies, all the Superfluities of Affluence united are frequently found inſufficient; the Powers of Medicine are too often ineffectual; the Reſources of human Art, the Improvements of human Knowledge are all too weak to relieve the Pangs, and ſtop the Agonies of Nature; at this perilous Time, all the Tenderneſs of officious Friendſhip, and all the Endearments of Love and Affection are required to ſoften the Diſtreſs and mitigate the Pains of the afflicted Sufferer. What then muſt their Condition be, who at ſuch an Hour have no Home to receive, no Friends to cheriſh, no Remedies near to aſſiſt or ſupport them! In Behalf of ſuch Objects I need not, I am ſure, addreſs myſelf to the ſofter Sex; there is an Advocate, I know, within your own Breaſts that will make all I can ſay ſuperfluous; Nature, that beſt of Orators, will plead the Cauſe of your afflicted Siſters with irreſiſtable Eloquence; ſhe will point out to you your Duty, and direct you in the Practice of it: If you are Women, if you are Mothers, if you are Chriſtians, I need not aſk your Aid, Protection and Support.

[10]HAVING thus enumerated the many Benefits and Advantages of this extenſive Charity, and dwelt with Pleaſure on the ſeveral Branches of it, permit me to draw theſe Rays into a Point, and ſhew you this benignant Sun in all its Heat and Luſtre: Permit me to lead your Imaginations to a Scene which your own Eyes may at any Time ſee in reality.

BEHOLD a Groupe of ſordid and miſerable Beings, their Faces pale with Sickneſs, their Bodies emaciated by Diſtemper, their Hearts depreſſed by Sorrow and Deſpair; obſerve ſome of them ſo weak and diſabled as to want the Power of reaching to the Hand that is ſtretched out to relieve them: Behold others with Limbs broken and diſtorted, deprived of Life and Motion, and with the Eye of Anguiſh looking up for immediate Aſſiſtance; behind them advances a drooping Train of mournful Females, oppreſſed at once by the Throes of Travail and the Weight of Penury, and labouring with all their Sex's Imbecility under a double Burthen: Alas! Nature ſhrinks, Humanity ſhudders at the Proſpect. But ſee, the Clouds divide, a Dawn of Comfort appears to diſpel the Gloom, and beautify the Horizon; obſerve the fair Companion of Faith and Hope, ſweet Charity, approaching towards them; ſhe lifts them up with benignant Hand, and conducts them to her beloved Aſylum. Paſs but a little Time, and mark what ſucceeds to the firſt melancholy Scene. Behold the ſame Objects that entered into the Palace of Charity now returning from it; obſerve the ſudden, the aſtoniſhing Change; the Face of the Sick is lighted up with Smiles; the Roſes of Health bloom upon his Cheek; the Warmth of Gratitude glows upon his Countenance; the Luſtre of Joy ſparkles in his Eye. Behold the lame Man once more rejoycing in the Activity of his Limbs, [11] and returning with freſh Vigour and Spirit to labour for your Service: And laſtly, contemplate the happy Woman, bearing now with Pleaſure what ſhe had ſo long borne with Anguiſh and Diſquietude; ſhe carries in her Arms a ſmiling Infant, bleſſes her God, praiſes her Benefactors, and forgets all her Pangs for joy that a Man is born into the World.

A SCENE ſo dreadful and ſo pleaſing; a Contraſt ſo ſtriking, muſt ſurely warm the coldeſt Heart to Senſibility, and open the narroweſt Mind to Sentiments of Love and Compaſſion, of Tenderneſs and Humanity. To reflect that by our little Contributions, by ſetting aſide our Superfluities only, we have it in our Power to produce ſo aſtoniſhing a Change in the Circumſtances and Condition of our Fellow-creatures, muſt doubtleſs afford that heart-felt Pleaſure which is infinitely ſuperior to every wordly Enjoyment: A Pleaſure which the Contributors to this noble Charity have felt, and long, I truſt, will continue to feel.

LET us not then, my Brethren, be weary of well-doing; when the Edifice is large and ſpacious it muſt ſtand in need of continual Repairs to maintain and ſupport it: This Charity, as I have before obſerved to you, is in its Nature very extenſive; the Fund, therefore, raiſed to preſerve it muſt be extenſive alſo; the Number of Patients who are perpetually applying for Admittance, ſhew the Neceſſity of punctually continuing the old, and earneſtly ſoliciting new Subſcriptions to it. Add to which, that the Hardneſs of the Times, together with the Scarcity and Dearneſs of Proviſions of every kind, oblige many to take Shelter in this Place, who little thought they ſhould ever have ſtood in need of it.

[12]LEAVE not therefore, my Brethren, this Labour of Love unfiniſhed: Let each Perſon, already concerned in the Support of this Hoſpital, conſider the Whole as one miſerable and helpleſs Individual whom he has taken under his Protection. The good Samaritan, we may remember, not only bound up the Traveller's Wounds and poured Oil into them, but ſet him upon his Horſe, lodged and paid for him, and when at laſt he left him, provided in ſome Meaſure for his future Wants. If it would be cruel to neglect an Individual whom we had taken under our Care, ſo would it likewiſe be, but in a much higher Degree, with regard to the whole Charity. To withdraw the Aid we had once given, would cancel at once all the Merit of the Obligation; nor would it excuſe thoſe, who acted in this Manner, that what they ſubtracted from one Charity was beſtowed on another, that it was the ſame Stream of Beneficence directed to a different Channel. This is the Child whom we have adopted, we are not to transfer our parental Affection to any other, but to conſider ourſelves as bound in Honour and Conſcience to feed and maintain it. I mention this, becauſe Charities, God be thanked, are daily increaſing amongſt us; and the Fickleneſs of Men's Diſpoſitions may diſpoſe ſome to change the Objects of their Bounty: In this Caſe, as the Seeds of Benevolence ſprouted up and bloſſomed in one Place they would wither and decay in another; Charity would by degrees defeat its own End and Purpoſe, and, like the Suicides of our Age, finally deſtroy itſelf.

To conclude, let us all devoutly intreat the Lord and Father of Mercies, that he would pour into our Hearts the Spirit of Mercy; that he would imprint ſtrongly on our Minds the Image of the good Samaritan, and teach us to go, and do likewiſe. Let us intreat [13] him that our Charity may increaſe, our Humanity and Compaſſion be daily ſtrengthened and improved; that he will permit them to cover from his Eyes the multitude of our Sins, and that in kind Regard to the Poor and Afflicted whom he loveth, he will not be extreme to mark what we have done amiſs; but, in the laſt and great Day, will ſuffer thoſe whom we have relieved to plead in our Behalf; that ſo, howſoever we may have offended him, he may yet look upon us with Eyes of Compaſſion; and ſay unto us, becauſe we have conſidered the Poor and Miſerable, well have ye done, my good and faithful Servants, enter ye into the Joy of your Lord.

FINIS.

An Account of the MIDDLESEX-HOSPITAL, for the Reception of Sick and Lame; and for Lying-in Married-Women, in Marybone-Fields, Oxford-Road.

[14]

THE happy Effects ariſing from the ſeveral Hoſpitals, erected about theſe two great Cities, for the Reception of diſeaſed Poor will ſufficiently juſtify the Inſtitution of this.

Nature and Religion patronize every Inſtance of Diſtreſs; but they moſt powerfully befriend that deepeſt of all Diſtreſſes, Sickneſs in Poverty. Sickneſs itſelf will excite Compaſſion, though alleviated by every Comfort and Advantage of Wealth. How much ſtronger a Sympathy then muſt ariſe at the Sight or Idea of Sickneſs embittered by Poverty! Or, conſidered in another View, how affecting is the Condition of Poverty diſabled by Sickneſs! This Affliction, extreme as it is, is known to be very frequent. Moſt Men are inclined, but few, very few in Compariſon, have the Power to relieve it. Public Contributions, therefore, ſeemed the moſt likely Means to effect what the private Bounty of Individuals could not: This gave Riſe, in the preſent charitable Age, to Infirmaries; and the Continuance and Increaſe of the voluntary Subſcriptions, by which they are ſupported, are the ſtrongeſt Argument that they have anſwered their End. But as there are ſome populous Parts of the Town, which on Account of their Diſtance, and the Number of their Poor, receive little Benefit from theſe [15] noble Deſigns, it is hoped, that the Situation of this Hoſpital, and its extenſive Uſe in providing for the Diſtreſſes of poor married Women with Child, will recommend it to the Aſſiſtance and Contribution of thoſe whom Humanity or Religion inſpire with Benevolence.

(inverted †)† The Qualification of a Governor of this Charity is an annual Subſcription of three Guineas; which alſo entitles the Subſcriber to recommend, and have in the Houſe at one Time, either one Sick or Lame Patient, or one Lying-in Woman, and to recommend Out-Patients. A Subſcription of five Guineas per Annum entitles the Subſcriber to recommend one Sick or Lame In-Patient, Out-Patients, and one Lying-in Woman. A Subſcription of thirty Guineas at one Payment, conſtitutes the Subſcriber a Governor for Life, with the laſt mentioned Privileges. Contributions of leſſer Sums than three Guineas per Annum are thankfully received, and intitle the Contributors to recommend one Sick or Lame In-Patient, and one Out-Patient at the ſame Time.

A Committee of the Governors (appointed quarterly) meet at the Hoſpital every Tueſday, at Ten of the Clock, to receive and diſcharge Patients, and to tranſact the other neceſſary Buſineſs of the Houſe; where every Governor, though not of the Committee, has a Right to be preſent, and his Attendance is received as a Favour. A Report of their Proceedings is made to the General Court held every Quarter, when the Reſolutions of this Committee are approved or rejected.

The Phyſicians viſit the Patients every Tueſday, Thurſday, and Saturday, and on intermediate Days, when particular Caſes require it. The Surgeons attend every Day.

Patients are admitted on a Letter of Recommendation from a Governor or Contributor, who may recommend In-Patients, and have Out-Patients on the Books, according to the Regulation abovementioned: [16] And when In-Patients are recommended, and there is not Room in the Houſe to receive them, they are put on the Liſt to be admitted on the firſt Vacancy, and in the mean Time are preſcribed for as Out-Patients. No Security is required for Burials. All Accidents are admitted without Recommendation. Tueſday being the Day appointed for the Admiſſion of Patients, they are expected to be at the Hoſpital, with their Recommendations at TEN of the Clock. The Phyſicians and Surgeons meet every Saturday at Twelve of the Clock, at the Hoſpital, where they give Advice gratis to all ſuch diſeaſed Poor who ſhall come, though unrecommended, and require it.

The charitable Deſigns of this Hoſpital were carried on for ſeveral Years in two convenient Houſes adjoining to each other in Windmill-Street, Tottenham-Court-Road, where the firſt Inſtitution in Auguſt 1745, was intended only for the Relief of the indigent Sick and Lame: But in July 1747, the Governors willing to render it more worthy of the Notice of the Public, by making it ſtill more uſeful, reſolved to extend their Plan to the Relief of the pregnant Wives of the induſtrious Poor: The firſt Example of this ſort of Charity within this Kingdom.

The great Increaſe of Patients, occaſioned by the Reputation of this two-fold Charity, obliged the Governors to think of enlarging their Edifice, as well as their Plan, and the kind Benevolence of the Public by Donations, Legacies, &c. enabled them in 1755, to erect a much larger and more convenient Building, in a high and airy Part of Marybone-Fields, near Oxford-Road, wherein the Apartments for the Reception of the Lying-in, are in a ſeparate Part of the Building, remote from the Sick and Lame; and that Ladies may conveniently viſit the Lying-in Patients, without being incommoded by the Sick and Lame, diſtinct Stair-Caſes lead to each, the Lying-in Wards having no Communication with the Sick [17] and Lame.—Married Women only are admitted (in the laſt Month of their Pregnancy) after they have been examined by the weekly Board, and on their producing an Affidavit made before a Juſtice of the Peace, of the Time and Place of their Marriage, and of the Settlement of the Huſband, with the Manner the ſaid Settlement was obtained, whether by Birth, Servitude or otherwiſe. And that this uſeful Branch of the Charity, the Midwifry Ward, may be made every Way beneficial, and not liable to any Objection, no Pupils will be admitted; the Whole being under the Direction of Dr. Brudenell Exton, Phyſician and Man-Midwife: And no Woman whatſoever, who has been able to prove her Marriage, and her Huſband's Settlement, ſo as to avoid burthening the Pariſh wherein the Hoſpital ſtands, has been refuſed Admittance.

The Number of Beds at preſent are Sixty-Four.

ForSick and Lame, In-Patients26
Accidents6
Lying in Married-Women23
Servants9
  64

The Servants of the Houſe are forbid to take any Gratuity of the Patients or their Friends, on any Pretence whatſoever, on Pain of Expulſion.

The Patients of this Hoſpital are attended, without Fee or Reward, by the following Gentlemen.

Such Perſons who are inclined to favour this charitable Deſign, are deſired to ſend their Subſcriptions, with their Names and Places of Abode to the Treaſurers, at the Weekly Committee, held every Tueſday in the Forenoon at the Hoſpital; and in order to ſupply the current Expence of this Charity the Subſcribers are requeſted to CONTINUE to pay their Yearly Subſcriptions in ADVANCE.

Subſcriptions and Benefactions are likewiſe taken in at Meſſrs. Honywood, Fuller, and Co. Bankers in Birchin-Lane; and at Mr. Giſlingham Cooper's, Banker in the Strand.

As every Governor has a Right to act at all Boards, and to enquire into the Affairs of the Society, they are hereby earneſtly entreated to make frequent Uſe of this Power, eſpecially by attending at the Weekly Board; and they may be aſſured that their doing ſo will be deemed a confiderable Addition to their Charity, and a very great Service to the Hoſpital.

Thoſe who are diſpoſed to be Benefactors, by their laſt Will, have the following Form of a Legacy recommended to them,

Item, I Give and bequeath unto A. B. and C. D. the Sum of [...] upon Truſt, and to the Intent that they or one of them do pay to the Treaſurer or Treaſurers, for the Time being, of a Society, who now call themſelves the Governors of the Middleſex-Hoſpital for the Reception of Sick and Lame; and for Lying-in Married-Women; which ſaid Sum of [...] I deſire may be paid out of my perſonal Eſtate, and be applied towards carrying on the charitable Deſigns of the ſaid Society.

The Charges of erecting this new Building, together with Furniture and convenient Sewers, amount to near 3000l. which by the charitable Aſſiſtance of the Nobility, Gentry and others, the Governors have been enabled to pay: But there are yet wanting proper Paving and a Wall to encloſe their Ground and Building, and render it as convenient as poſſible for the Uſes of the Charity; towards which uſeful and neceſſary Purpoſe the Governors, ever relying on the Director of all Charities, entertain lively Hopes that this laudable Deſign will ſtill continue to merit the Favour and Protection of the Public.

An Abſtract of the Accounts of the Hoſpital from the 30th of April, 1756, to the 30th of April, 1758.

[19]
RECEIPTS.
 l.s.d.
Balance of the laſt Account1761711
Subſcriptions94080

BENEFACTIONS.
Lady Germain4200
Several Perſons unknown1526
Mr. Savage110
Mr. John Story550
Mr. George Hill550
Collected at St. Ann's Church May 26, 1757,82126
Ditto after Dinner50186
One Year's Dividend upon 400l. to Chriſtmas1200
Poor's Box15140
Fixtures at the old Houſe11110
Houſe Pupils Admiſſion for one Year15150
Building Subſcriptions865100
Intereſt on ditto2700
Neat Produce of the Benefit Play given by John Rich, Eſq Dec. 5, 1755.215195
Intereſt one Year and ten Months on the ſame19160
Produce of the Benefit Play Given by Meſſ. Garrick and Lacy, Dec. 21, 1757158170
Sale of 1700l. 3 per Cents.152676
 £ 418804

PAYMENTS.
 l.s.d.
Houſekeeping, Waſhing, &c.595810
Drugs, Medicines, &c.194176
Houſe-Bent and Taxes4672
Wages and Gratuities to the Secretary, Apothecary, Matron, Meſſenger, Nurſes, Menial Servants, &c.278155
Houſhold Furniture and Linen91510
Books, Stationary-Ware, and Printing.50310
Workmens Bills and Repairs2268
Charge of the Muſic at the Anniverſary Sermon May 26, 17574870
Burials1990
Towards Furniture for the new Building, from the Produce of the Play given by John Rich, Eſq and Intereſt thereon235155
To Mr. Gray as per Contract for Building the new Hoſpital225000
To Overſeer of the ſaid Work5000
Petty Charges on Building Account596
To making Sewers, paving and coping the Area, and levelling the Ground before the Hoſpital10000
To altering the Roof48100
Balance in Mr. John Horne's Hands15143
 £ 418804

Mr. John Horne's Account from April 30, 1758, to June 1, 1758.

To Balance in Mr. Horne's Hands as by the Account above15140
Received by Mr. Horne from Aprpil 30, 1758, to June 1, 1758.25146
 £ 176189

Paid Mr Goodge half Year's Rent due at Michaelmas, 17571500
Paid William Berners, Eſq 2 Years Ground Rent due at Lady-Day, 17583000
Paid ſundry Bills, &c.105197
Balance paid by Mr. Horne to John Machin, Eſq and Mr. Wm. Wright, joint Treaſurers25192
 £ 176189

An Account of Patients admitted from the firſt Inſtitution of this Hoſpital in Auguſt, 1745, to the 30th of April, 1756.

[20]
In-Patients1471
Out-Patients8875
 10346

Lying in Women1085

Admitted from the 30th of April, 1756, to the 1ſt of June, 1758.

In-Patients, 358.
Cured274
Diſcharged for Irregularity5
Incurable5
Died43
In the Houſe under Cure27
Never came in3
Diſcharged for an Impoſtor1
 358

Out-Patients, 2910.
Whereof have return'd Thanks as cured1119
Of ſuch as have not return'd Thanks, thought moſt of them believed to be cured1484
Incurable1
On the Books297
Diſcharged for Irregularity8
Ditto for an Impoſtor1
 2910

Lying-in Women, 340.
Delivered, whereof 5 had Twins308
Have not come in17
To come in when they think proper15
 340
TOTAL ADMITTED.
In-Patients1829
Out-Patients11785
 13614

Lying-in Women1425

A LIST OF THE GOVERNORS and CONTRIBUTORS TO THE Middleſex HOSPITAL.

[21]
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
K
L
M
N.
P.
R.
S.
T.
V.
W.
Y.

Note, Thoſe Gentlemen in the above Liſt marked thus *** are perpetual Governors. Thoſe marked thus ** are annual Governors of five Guineas and upwards. Thoſe marked thus * are annual Governors of three Guineas each; and are thereby entitled to recommend Sick and Lame Patients, and Lying-in Women, according to the Regulation in the Account of the Hoſpital preceding this Liſt.

Thoſe Ladies marked thus ††† are Benefactors of thirty Guineas; and are thereby entitled to the Privileges of a perpetual Governor. Thoſe marked thus †† are annual Subſcribers of five Guineas and upwards. Thoſe marked thus † are annual Subſcribers of three Guineas; and are thereby entitled to the Privileges in the foregoing Account.

Notes
*
See the preſent Biſhop of London's excellent Sermon, on this Parable. Vol. 4. Ser. 14.
*
See Dr, Brown's Eſtimate of the Manners, and Principles of the Times. Vol. 2. p 40.
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