summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:06:29 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:06:29 -0700
commit67e9ac20710ec4ecdfa69644dd86b6ad7d3094a0 (patch)
tree1db96c0ec25d303e7a05db5568733afccf102303
initial commit of ebook 19852HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--19852-h.zipbin0 -> 98936 bytes
-rw-r--r--19852-h/19852-h.htm4550
-rw-r--r--19852.txt4275
-rw-r--r--19852.zipbin0 -> 94182 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
7 files changed, 8841 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/19852-h.zip b/19852-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a67f973
--- /dev/null
+++ b/19852-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/19852-h/19852-h.htm b/19852-h/19852-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fac6ee5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/19852-h/19852-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,4550 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>The Gipsies' Advocate</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
+<!--
+ P { margin-top: .75em;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+ }
+ H1, H2 {
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ }
+ H3, H4 {
+ text-align: left;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ }
+ BODY{margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ }
+ TD { vertical-align: top; }
+ .blkquot {margin-left: 4em; margin-right: 4em;} /* block indent */
+
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+ .pagenum {position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: right;
+ color: gray;}
+
+ .citation {vertical-align: super;
+ font-size: .8em;
+ text-decoration: none;}
+ // -->
+ /* XML end ]]>*/
+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">The Gipsies' Advocate, by James Crabb</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Gipsies' Advocate, by James Crabb
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Gipsies' Advocate
+ or, Observations on the Origin, Character, Manners, and Habits of
+ The English Gipsies
+
+
+Author: James Crabb
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2006 [eBook #19852]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIPSIES' ADVOCATE***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1831 edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1 style="text-align: center">THE GIPSIES&rsquo; ADVOCATE;<br />
+<span class="smcap">or</span>,<br />
+OBSERVATIONS<br />
+<span class="smcap">on the</span><br />
+ORIGIN, CHARACTER, MANNERS, AND HABITS<br />
+<span class="smcap">of</span><br />
+The English Gipsies:</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">to which are
+added</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">many interesting anecdotes</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">on the</span><br />
+SUCCESS THAT HAS ATTENDED THE PLANS OF SEVERAL<br />
+BENEVOLENT INDIVIDUALS, WHO ANXIOUSLY<br />
+DESIRE THEIR CONVERSION TO GOD.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">BY JAMES CRABB,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">author of</span>
+&ldquo;<span class="smcap">the penitent magdalen</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;The Son of Man is come to seek and to
+save that which is lost.&rdquo;<br />
+&ldquo;Let that mind be in you which was in Christ Jesus.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">seeley</span>, <span
+class="smcap">fleet street</span>; <span class="smcap">westley and
+davis</span>, <span class="smcap">ave-maria-lane</span>; <span
+class="smcap">hatchard</span>, <span class="smcap">piccadilly</span>; <span
+class="smcap">lindsay and co.</span>, <span class="smcap">south
+street</span>, <span class="smcap">andrew street</span>, <span
+class="smcap">edinburgh</span>; <span class="smcap">collins</span>, <span
+class="smcap">glasgow</span>; <span class="smcap">wakeman</span>, <span
+class="smcap">dublin</span>, <span class="smcap">wilson and son</span>,
+<span class="smcap">york</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">1831.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page ii--><a name="pageii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. ii</span><span class="smcap">baker and son</span>, <span
+class="smcap">printers</span>, <span class="smcap">southampton</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page iii--><a name="pageiii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. iii</span><span class="smcap">to</span><br />
+THE JUDGES, MAGISTRATES,<br />
+<span class="smcap">and</span><br />
+Ministers of Christ,<br />
+<span class="smcap">as the</span><br />
+ORGANS OF PUBLIC JUSTICE, AND REVEALED TRUTH,<br />
+THE GIPSIES&rsquo; ADVOCATE<br />
+<span class="smcap">is most</span><br />
+RESPECTFULLY AND SINCERELY DEDICATED<br />
+<span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+THE AUTHOR.</p>
+<h2><!-- page v--><a name="pagev"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+v</span>PREFACE.</h2>
+<p>The Author of the following pages has been urged by numerous friends,
+and more particularly by his own conscience, to present to the Christian
+Public a brief account of the people called Gipsies, now wandering in
+Britain.&nbsp; This, to many readers, may appear inexpedient; as Grellman
+and Hoyland have written largely on this neglected part of the human
+family.&nbsp; But it should be recollected, that there are thousands of
+respectable and intelligent christians, who never have read, and never may
+read either of the above authors.&nbsp; The writer of the present work is
+partly indebted for the sympathies he feels, and which he wishes to awaken
+in others toward these miserable wanderers, to various authors who have
+written on them, but more particularly to <!-- page vi--><a
+name="pagevi"></a><span class="pagenum">p. vi</span>Grellman and Hoyland,
+who, in addition to the facts which came under their own immediate notice,
+have published the observations of travellers and others interested in the
+history of this people.&nbsp; A list of these authors may be seen in the
+Appendix.</p>
+<p>But his knowledge of this people does not entirely depend on the
+testimony of others, having had the opportunity of closely examining for
+himself their habits and character in familiar visits to their tents, and
+by allowing his door to be free of access to all those encamped near
+Southampton, when they have needed his help and advice.&nbsp; Thus has he
+gained a general knowledge of their vicious habits, their comparative
+virtues, and their unhappy modes of life, which he hopes the following
+pages will fully prove, and be the means of placing their character in the
+light of truth, and of correcting various mistakes respecting them, which
+have given rise to many unjust and injurious prejudices against them.</p>
+<p><!-- page vii--><a name="pagevii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+vii</span>The Author could have enlarged the present work very
+considerably, had he detailed all the facts with which he is well
+acquainted.</p>
+<p>His object, however, was to furnish a work which should be concise and
+cheap, that he might be the means of exciting among his countrymen an
+energetic benevolence toward this despised people; for it cannot be denied
+that many thousands of them have never given the condition of the Gipsies a
+single thought.</p>
+<p>Such a work is now presented to the public.&nbsp; Whether the author has
+succeeded, will be best known to those persons who have the most correct
+and extensive information relative to the unhappy race in question.&nbsp;
+Should he be the honoured instrument of exciting in any breasts the same
+feelings of pity, mercy, love and zeal for these poor English heathens, as
+is felt and carried into useful plans for the heathens abroad, by
+christians of all denominations; he will then be certain that, by the <!--
+page viii--><a name="pageviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+viii</span>blessing of the Redeemer, the confidence of the Gipsies will be
+gained, and, that they will be led to that Saviour, who has said,
+<i>Whosoever cometh unto me</i>, <i>I will in no wise cast him out</i>.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 9--><a name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+9</span>CHAP. I.&nbsp; On the Origin of the Gipsies.</h2>
+<p>Of the Origin of these wanderers of the human race, the learned are not
+agreed; for we have no authentic records of their first emigrations.&nbsp;
+Some suppose them to be the descendants of Israel, and many others, that
+they are of Egyptian origin.&nbsp; But the evidence adduced in confirmation
+of these opinions appears very inconclusive.&nbsp; We cannot discover more
+than fifty Hebrew words in the language they speak, and they have not a
+ceremony peculiar to the Hebrew nation.&nbsp; They have not a word of
+Coptic, and but few of Persian derivation.&nbsp; And they are deemed as
+strangers in Egypt at the present time.&nbsp; They are now found in many
+countries of Europe, Asia, and Africa, in all of which they speak a
+language <i>peculiar to themselves</i>.&nbsp; On the continent of America
+alone are there none of them found.&nbsp; Grellman informs us that there
+were great numbers in Lorraine, and that they dwelt in its forests, before
+the French Revolution of 1790.&nbsp; He <!-- page 10--><a
+name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>supposes that there are
+no less than 700,000 in the world, and that the greatest numbers are found
+in Europe.&nbsp; Throughout the countries they inhabit, they have kept
+themselves a distinct race of people in every possible way.</p>
+<p>They never visit the Norman Isles; and it is said by the natives of
+Ireland, that their numbers are small in that country.&nbsp; Hoyland
+informs us, that many counties in Scotland are free of them, while they
+wander about in other districts of that country, as in England.&nbsp; He
+has also informed us, sec. 6, of a colony which resides during the winter
+months at Kirk Yetholm in the county of Roxburgh. <a
+name="citation10"></a><a href="#footnote10" class="citation">[10]</a></p>
+<p>Sir Thomas Brown, in his work entitled &ldquo;<span class="smcap">Vulgar
+Errors</span>,&rdquo; says, that they were seen first in Germany, in the
+year 1409.&nbsp; In 1418, they were found in Switzerland; and in 1422, in
+Italy.&nbsp; They appeared in France, on the 17th August, 1427.&nbsp; It is
+remarkable that, when they first came into Europe, they were black, and
+that the women were still blacker than the men.&nbsp; From Grellman we
+learn, that &ldquo;in Hungary, there are 50,000; in Spain, 60,000; and that
+they are innumerable in Constantinople.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It appears from the statute of the 22nd of Henry VIII, made against this
+people, that they must at that time have been in England some years, and
+must have increased much in number, and in crime.&nbsp; In the 27th of that
+reign, a law was made against the importation <!-- page 11--><a
+name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>of such persons,
+subjecting the importer to 40<i>l</i> penalty.&nbsp; In that reign also
+they were considered so dangerous to the morals and comfort of the country,
+that many of them were sent back to Calais.&nbsp; Yet in the reign of
+Elizabeth, they were estimated at 10,000. <a name="citation11a"></a><a
+href="#footnote11a" class="citation">[11a]</a></p>
+<p>Dr Walsh says, that the Gipsies in Turkey, like the Jews, are
+distinguishable by indelible personal marks, dark eyes, brown complexion,
+and black hair; and by unalterable moral qualities, an aversion to labour,
+and a propensity to petty thefts. <a name="citation11b"></a><a
+href="#footnote11b" class="citation">[11b]</a></p>
+<p>The celebrated traveller, Dr Daniel Clarke, speaks of great numbers of
+Gipsies in Persia, who are much encouraged by the Tartars.&nbsp; Formerly,
+and particularly on the Continent, they had their counts, lords, and dukes;
+but these were titles without either power or riches.</p>
+<p>The English Gipsies were formerly accustomed to denominate an aged man
+and woman among them, as their king and queen; but this is a political
+distinction which has not been recognized by them for many years.</p>
+<p>If we suppose the Gipsies to have been heathens before they came into
+this country, their separation <!-- page 12--><a name="page12"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 12</span>from pagan degradation and cruelty, has been
+attended with many advantages to themselves.&nbsp; They have seen neither
+the superstitions of idolatry, nor the unnatural cruelties of
+heathenism.&nbsp; They are not destitute of those sympathies and
+attachments which would adorn the most polished circles.&nbsp; In
+demonstration of this, we have only to make ourselves acquainted with the
+fervour and tenderness of their conjugal, parental, and filial
+sensibilities,&mdash;and the great care they take of all who are aged,
+infirm, and blind, among them.&nbsp; Were these highly interesting
+qualities sanctified by pure religion, they would exhibit much of the
+beauty and loveliness of the christian character.&nbsp; I am aware that an
+opinion is general, that they are cruel to their children; but it may be
+questioned if ebullitions of passion are more frequent among them, in
+reference to their children, than among other classes of society; and when
+these ebullitions, which are not lasting, are over&mdash;their conduct
+toward their children is most affectionate.&nbsp; The attachment of Gipsy
+children to their parents is equally vivid and admirable; it grows with
+their years, and strengthens even as their connections increase. <a
+name="citation12"></a><a href="#footnote12" class="citation">[12]</a>&nbsp;
+And indeed the affection that sisters and brothers have one for the other
+is very great.&nbsp; A short time since, the little sister of a <!-- page
+13--><a name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>Gipsy youth
+seventeen years of age, was taken ill with a fever, when his mind became
+exceedingly distressed, and he gave way to excessive grief and weeping.</p>
+<p>Those who suppose these wanderers of mankind to be of Hindostanee or
+Suder origin, have much the best proof on their side.&nbsp; A real Gipsy
+has a countenance, eye, mouth, hands, ancle, and quickness of manners,
+strongly indicative of Hindoo origin.&nbsp; This is more particularly the
+case with the females.&nbsp; Nor is the above mere assertion.&nbsp; The
+testimony of the most intelligent travellers, many of whom have long
+resided in India, fully supports this opinion.&nbsp; And, indeed, persons
+who have not travelled on the Asiatic Continent, but who have seen natives
+of Hindostan, have been surprised at the similarity of manners and features
+existing between them and the Gipsies.&nbsp; The Author of this work once
+met with a Hindoo woman, and was astonished at the great resemblance she
+bore in countenance and manners to the female Gipsy of his own country.</p>
+<p>The Hindoo Suder delights in horses, tinkering, music, and fortune
+telling; so does the Gipsy.&nbsp; The Suder tribes of the same part of the
+Asiatic Continent, are wanderers, dwelling chiefly in wretched
+mud-huts.&nbsp; When they remove from one place to another, they carry with
+them their scanty property.&nbsp; The English Gipsies imitate these erratic
+tribes in this particular.&nbsp; They wander from place to place, and carry
+their <!-- page 14--><a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+14</span>small tents with them, which consist of a few bent sticks, and a
+blanket. <a name="citation14"></a><a href="#footnote14"
+class="citation">[14]</a>&nbsp; The Suders in the East eat the flesh of
+nearly every unclean creature; nor are they careful that the flesh of such
+creatures should not be putrid.&nbsp; How exactly do the Gipsies imitate
+them in this abhorrent choice of food!&nbsp; They have been in the habit of
+eating many kinds of brutes, not even excepting dogs and cats; and when
+pressed by hunger, have sought after the most putrid carrion.&nbsp; It has
+been a common saying among them&mdash;<i>that which God kills</i>, <i>is
+better than that killed by man</i>.&nbsp; But of late years, with a few
+exceptions, they have much improved in this respect; for they now eat
+neither dogs nor cats, and but seldom seek after carrion.&nbsp; But in
+winter they will dress and eat snails, hedge-hogs, and other creatures not
+generally dressed for food.</p>
+<p>But the strongest evidence of their Hindoo origin is the great
+resemblance their own language bears to the Hindostanee.&nbsp; The
+following Vocabulary is taken from Grellman, Hoyland, and Captain
+Richardson.&nbsp; The first of these respectable authors declares, that
+twelve out of thirty words of the Gipsies&rsquo; language, are either
+purely Hindostanee, or nearly related to it.</p>
+<p>The following list of words are among those which bear the greatest
+resemblance to that language.</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><!-- page 15--><a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+15</span><i>Gipsy</i>.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><i>Hindostanee</i>.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><i>English</i>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Ick, Ek,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ek,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>One.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Duj, Doj,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Du,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Two.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Trin, Tri,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Tin,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Three.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Schtar, Star,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Tschar,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Four.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Pantsch, Pansch,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Pansch,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Five.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Tschowe, Sshow,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Tscho,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Six.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Efta,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Hefta, Sat,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Seven.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Ochto,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Aute,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Eight.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Desch, Des,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Des,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ten.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Bisch, Bis,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Bis</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Twenty.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Diwes,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Diw,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Day.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Ratti,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ratch,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Night.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Cham, Cam,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Tschanct</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>The sun.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Panj,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Panj,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Water.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Sonnikey,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Suna,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Gold.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Rup,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ruppa,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Silver.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Bal,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Bal,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>The hair.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Aok,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Awk,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>The eye.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Kan,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Kawn,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>The ear.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Mui,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Mu,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>The mouth.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Dant,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Dant,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>A tooth.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Sunjo,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Sunnj,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>The hearing.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Sunj,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Sunkh,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>The smell.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Sik,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Tschik,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>The taste.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Tschater,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Tschater,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>A tent.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Rajah,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Raja,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>The prince.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Baro,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Bura,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Great.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Kalo,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Kala,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Black.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Grea,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Gorra,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Horse.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Ker,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Gurr,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>House.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Pawnee,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Paniee,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Brook, drink, water.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><!-- page 16--><a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+16</span>Bebee,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Beebe,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Aunt.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Bouropanee,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Bura-panee,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ocean, wave.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Rattie,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Rat,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Dark night,</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Dad,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Dada,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Father.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Mutchee,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Muchee,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Fish.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>This language, called by themselves Slang, or Gibberish, invented, as
+they think, by their forefathers for secret purposes, is not merely the
+language of <i>one</i>, or a <i>few </i>of these wandering tribes, which
+are found in the European Nations; but is adopted by the vast numbers who
+inhabit the earth.</p>
+<p>One of our reformed Gipsies, while in the army, was with his regiment at
+Portsmouth, and being on garrison duty with an invalid soldier, he was
+surprised to hear some words of the Gipsy language unintentionally uttered
+by him, who was a German.&nbsp; On enquiring how he understood this
+language, the German replied, that he was of Gipsy origin, and that it was
+spoken by this race in every part of his native land, for purposes of
+secrecy. <a name="citation16"></a><a href="#footnote16"
+class="citation">[16]</a></p>
+<p><!-- page 17--><a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>A
+well known nobleman, who had resided many years in India, taking shelter
+under a tree during a storm in this country, near a camp of Gipsies, was
+astonished to hear them use several words he well knew were Hindostanee;
+and going up to them, he found them able to converse with him in that
+language.</p>
+<p>Not long ago, a Missionary from India, who was well acquainted with the
+language of Hindostan, was at the Author&rsquo;s house when a Gipsy was
+present; and, after a conversation which he had with her, he declared,
+that, her people must once have known the Hindostanee language
+<i>well</i>.&nbsp; Indeed Gipsies have often expressed surprise when words
+have been read to them out of the Hindostanee vocabulary.</p>
+<p>Lord Teignmouth once said to a young Gipsy woman in Hindostanee, <i>Tue
+burra tschur</i>, that is, <i>Thou a great thief</i>.&nbsp; She immediately
+replied; No&mdash;<i>I am not a thief</i>&mdash;<i>I live by fortune
+telling</i>.</p>
+<p>It can be no matter of surprise that this language, as spoken among this
+people, is generally corrupted, when we consider, that, for many centuries,
+they have known nothing of elementary science, and have been strangers to
+books and letters.&nbsp; Perhaps the secrecy necessary to effect many of
+their designs, has been the greatest means of preserving its scanty remains
+among them.&nbsp; But an attempt to prove that they are <i>not</i> of <!--
+page 18--><a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>Hindoo
+origin, because they do not speak the Hindostanee with perfect correctness,
+would be as absurd as to declare, that, our Gipsies are not natives of
+England, because they speak very incorrect English.&nbsp; The few words
+that follow, and which occurred in some conversations the Author had with
+the most intelligent of the Gipsies he has met, prove how incorrectly they
+speak <i>our</i> language; and yet it would be worse than folly to attempt
+to prove that they are not natives of England.</p>
+<p>Expencival <i>for</i> expensive.</p>
+<p>Cide <i>for</i> decide.</p>
+<p>Device <i>for</i> advice.</p>
+<p>Dixen <i>for</i> dictionary. <a name="citation18"></a><a
+href="#footnote18" class="citation">[18]</a></p>
+<p>Ealfully <i>for</i> equally.</p>
+<p>Indistructed <i>for</i> instructed.</p>
+<p>Gemmem <i>for</i> gentleman.</p>
+<p>Dauntment <i>for</i> daunted.</p>
+<p>Spiteliness <i>for</i> spitefulness.</p>
+<p>Hawcus Paccus <i>for</i> Habeas Corpus.</p>
+<p>Increach <i>for</i> increase.</p>
+<p>Commist <i>for</i> submit.</p>
+<p>Brand, in his observations on <span class="smcap">Popular
+Antiquities</span>, is of opinion that the first Gipsies fled from Asia,
+when the cruel Timur Beg ravaged India, with a view to proselyte the
+heathen to the Mohammedan religion; at which time about 500,000 human
+beings were butchered by him.&nbsp; Some suppose, that, soon <!-- page
+19--><a name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 19</span>after this
+time, many who escaped the sword of this human fury, came into Europe
+through Egypt; and on this account were called, in English, <span
+class="smcap">Gipsies</span>.</p>
+<p>Although there is not the least reason whatever to suppose the Gipsies
+to have had an Egyptian origin, and although, as we have asserted in a
+former page, they are strangers in that land of wonders to the present day;
+yet it appears possible to me, that Egypt may have had something to do with
+their present appellation.&nbsp; And allowing that the supposition is well
+founded, which ascribes to them a passage through Egypt into European
+nations, it is very likely they found their way to that place under the
+following circumstances.</p>
+<p>In the years 1408 and 1409, Timur Beg ravaged India, to make, as has
+already been observed, proselytes to the Mohammedan delusion, when he put
+hundreds of thousands of its inhabitants to the sword.&nbsp; It is very
+rational to suppose, that numbers of those who had the happiness not to be
+overtaken by an army so dreadful, on account of the cruelties it
+perpetrated, should save their lives by flying from their native land, to
+become wandering strangers in another.&nbsp; Now if we assert that the
+Gipsies were of the Suder cast of Asiatic Indians, and that they found
+their way from Hindostan into other and remote countries when Timur Beg
+spread around him terrors so dreadful, it is natural to ask, why did not
+some of the other casts of India accompany them?&nbsp; This objection has
+no weight at all when we consider the hatred and contempt <!-- page 20--><a
+name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>poured upon the Suder
+by all the other casts of India.&nbsp; The Bramins, Tschechteries, and
+Beis, were as safe, though menaced with destruction by Timur Beg, as they
+would have been along with the Suder tribes, seeking a retreat from their
+enemy in lands where he would not be likely to follow them.&nbsp; Besides,
+the other casts, from time immemorial, have looked on their country as
+especially given them of God; and they would as soon have suffered death,
+as leave it.&nbsp; The Suders had not these prepossessions for their native
+soil.&nbsp; They were a degraded people&mdash;a people looked on as the
+lowest of the human race; and, with an army seeking their destruction, they
+had every motive to leave, and none to stay in Hindostan.</p>
+<p>It cannot be determined by what track the forefathers of the Gipsies
+found their way from Hindostan to the countries of Europe.&nbsp; But it may
+be presumed that they passed over the southern Persian deserts of Sigiston,
+Makran and Kirman, along the Persian Gulph to the mouth of the Euphrates,
+thence to Bassora into the deserts of Arabia, and thence into Egypt by the
+Isthmus of Suez.</p>
+<p>It is a fact not unworthy a place in these remarks on the origin of this
+people, that they do not like to be called Gipsies, unless by those persons
+whom they have reason to consider their real friends.&nbsp; This probably
+arises from two causes of great distress to them&mdash;<i>Gipsies are
+suspected and hated as the perpetrators of all crime</i>&mdash;<i>and they
+are almost universally prosecuted as vagrants</i>.&nbsp; Is it to be
+wondered at, that to strangers, <!-- page 21--><a name="page21"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 21</span>they do not like to acknowledge themselves as
+Gipsies?&nbsp; I think not.</p>
+<p>We will conclude our remarks on the origin of these erratic sons of
+Adam, by adding the testimony of Col. Herriot, read before the Royal
+Asiatic Society, Sir George Staunton in the chair.&nbsp; That gentleman,
+giving an account of the Zingaree of India, says, that this class of people
+are frequently met with in that part of Hindostan which is watered by the
+Ganges, as well as the Malwa, Guzerat, and the Decan: they are called Nath,
+or Benia; the first term signifying a <i>rogue</i>&mdash;and the second a
+<i>dancer</i>, or <i>tumbler</i>.&nbsp; And the same gentleman cites
+various authorities in demonstration of the resemblance between these
+Gipsies and their neglected brethren in Europe.&nbsp; Nor does he think
+that the English Gipsies are so degraded as is generally supposed; in
+support of which he mentions some instances of good feeling displayed by
+them under his own observation, while in Hampshire.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 22--><a name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+22</span>CHAP. II.&nbsp; Observations on the Character, Manners, and Habits
+of the English Gipsies.</h2>
+<p>The origin of this people is by no means of so much importance as the
+knowledge of their present character, manners and habits, with the view to
+the devising of proper plans for the improvement of their condition, and
+their conversion to christianity: for to any one who desires to love his
+neigbour as himself, their origin will be but a secondary
+consideration.</p>
+<p>Fifty years ago the Gipsies had their regular journeys, and often
+remained one or two months in a place, when they worked at their
+trades.&nbsp; And as access to different towns was more difficult than at
+the present day, partly from the badness of the roads and partly from the
+paucity of carriers, they were considered by the peasantry, and by small
+farmers, of whom there were great numbers in those days, as very useful
+branches of the human family; I mean the industrious and better part of
+them.&nbsp; At that period they usually encamped in the farmers&rsquo;
+fields, or slept in their barns; and not being subject to the <i>driving
+system</i>, as they now are, they seldom robbed hedges; for their fires
+were replenished with dead-wood procured, without any risk of fines or
+imprisonments, from decayed trees and wooded banks.&nbsp; And it is proper
+to suppose, <!-- page 23--><a name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+23</span>that, at such a time, their outrages and depredations were very
+few.</p>
+<p>It has already been stated that the Gipsies are very numerous, amounting
+to about 700,000.&nbsp; It is supposed that there are about 18,000 in this
+kingdom.&nbsp; But be they less or more, we ought never to
+forget&mdash;that they are branches of the same family with
+ourselves&mdash;that they are capable of being fitted for all the duties
+and enjoyments of life&mdash;and, what is better than all, that they are
+redeemed by the same Saviour, may partake of the same salvation, and be
+prepared for the same state of immortal bliss, from whence flows to the
+universal church of Christ, that peace which the world cannot take from
+her.&nbsp; Their condition, therefore, at once commands our sympathies,
+energies, prayers, and benevolence.</p>
+<p>Gipsies in general are of a tawny or brown colour; but this is not
+wholly hereditary.&nbsp; The chief cause is probably the lowness of their
+habits; for they very seldom wash their persons, or the clothes they wear,
+their linen excepted.&nbsp; Their alternate exposures to cold and heat, and
+the smoke surrounding their small camps, perpetually tend to increase those
+characteristics of complexion and feature by which they are at present
+distinguishable.</p>
+<p>It is not often that a Gipsy is seen well-dressed, even when they
+possess costly apparel; but their women are fond of finery.&nbsp; They are
+much delighted with broad lace, large ear-drops, a variety of rings, and
+glaring colours; and, when they possess the <!-- page 24--><a
+name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 24</span>means, shew how great a
+share they have of that foolish vanity, which is said to be inherent in
+females, and which leads many, destitute of the faith, and hope, and love,
+and humility of the gospel, into utter ruin.</p>
+<p>A remarkable instance of the love of costly attire in a female Gipsy, is
+well known to the writer.&nbsp; The woman alluded to, obtained <i>a very
+large sum of money</i> from three maiden ladies, pledging that it should be
+doubled by her art in conjuration.&nbsp; She then decamped to another
+district, where she bought a blood-horse, a black beaver hat, a new
+side-saddle and bridle, a silver-mounted whip, and figured away in her
+ill-obtained finery at the fairs.&nbsp; It is not easy to imagine the
+disappointment and resentment of the covetous and credulous ladies, whom
+she had so easily duped.</p>
+<p>Nor indeed are the males of this people less addicted to the love of gay
+clothing, if it suited their interests to exhibit it.&nbsp; An orphan, only
+ten years of age, taken from actual starvation last winter, and who was fed
+and clothed, and had every care taken of him, would not remain with those
+who wished him well, and who had been his friends; but returned to the camp
+from which he had been taken, saying, that he <i>would be a Gipsy</i>,
+<i>and would wear silver buttons on his coat</i>, <i>and have topped
+boots</i>; and when asked how he would get them, he replied&mdash;<i>by
+catching rats</i>.</p>
+<p>Some Gipsies try to excel others in the possession of silver
+buttons.&nbsp; They will sometimes give as much as fifteen pounds for a
+set.&nbsp; The females too spend many <!-- page 25--><a
+name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>pounds on weighty gold
+rings for their fingers.&nbsp; The Author has by him, belonging to a Gipsy,
+three massy rings soldered together, and with a half sovereign on the top,
+which serves instead of a brilliant stone.&nbsp; We pity a vain Gipsy whose
+eyes are taken, and whose heart delights in such vulgar pomp.&nbsp; Are not
+those equally pitiable, who estimate themselves only by the gaiety,
+singularity, or costliness of their apparel?&nbsp; The Saviour has given us
+a rule by which we may judge persons in reference to their dress, as well
+as in other ostensibilities of character&mdash;<i>by their fruits ye shall
+know them</i>.</p>
+<p>The Gipsies are not strangers to pawn-brokers shops; but they do not
+visit these places for the same purposes as the vitiated poor of our
+trading towns.&nbsp; A pawnshop is their bank.&nbsp; When they acquire
+property illegally, as by stealing, swindling, or fortune-telling, they
+purchase valuable plate, and sometimes in the same hour pledge it for
+safety.&nbsp; Such property they have in store against days of adversity
+and trouble, which on account of their dishonest habits, often overtake
+them.&nbsp; Should one of their families stand before a Judge of his
+country, charged with a crime which is likely to cost him his life, or to
+transport him, every article of value is sacrificed to save him from death,
+or apprehended banishment.&nbsp; In such cases they generally retain a
+Counsellor to plead for the brother in adversity.</p>
+<p>At other times they carry their plate about with them, and when visited
+by friends, they bring out from dirty bags, a silver tea-pot, and a
+cream-jug and spoons <!-- page 26--><a name="page26"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 26</span>of the same metal.&nbsp; Their plate is by no
+means paltry.&nbsp; Of course considerable property in plate is not very
+generally possessed by them.</p>
+<p>The Gipsies of this country are very punctual in paying their
+debts.&nbsp; All the Shop-keepers, with whom they deal in these parts, have
+declared, that they are some of their best and most honest customers.&nbsp;
+For the payment of a debt which is owing to one of their own people, the
+time and place are appointed by them, and should the debtor disappoint the
+creditor, he is liable by their law of honour to pay double the amount he
+owes; and he must pay it by personal servitude, if he cannot with money, if
+he wish to be considered by his friends honest and respectable.&nbsp; They
+call this law <i>pizharris</i>.</p>
+<p>There are few of these unhappy people that can either read or
+write.&nbsp; Yet a regular and frequent correspondence is kept up between
+the members of families who have had the least advantage of the sort; and
+those who have had no advantages whatever, correspond through the kindness
+of friends who write for them.&nbsp; Numerous are the letters which they
+receive from their relatives in New South Wales, to which Colony so many
+hundreds of this unsettled race have been transported.&nbsp; Their letters
+are usually left at one particular post-office, in the districts where they
+travel; and should such letters not be called for during a long period,
+they are usually kept by the post-master, who is sure they will be claimed,
+sooner or later.&nbsp; A long journey will be no impediment, when a letter
+is expected; <!-- page 27--><a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+27</span>for a Gipsy will travel any distance to obtain an expected favour
+of the kind.&nbsp; They are never heard to complain of the heavy expense of
+postage.</p>
+<p>We have already observed that there are many genuine features of
+humanity in the character of this degraded and despised people.&nbsp; Their
+constantly retaining an affectionate remembrance of their deceased
+relatives, affords a striking proof of this statement.&nbsp; And their
+attachment to the horse, donkey, rings, snuffbox, silver-spoons, and all
+things, except the clothes, of the deceased relatives, is very
+strong.&nbsp; With such articles they will never part, except in the
+greatest distress; and then they only pledge some of them, which are
+redeemed as soon as they possess the means.</p>
+<p>Most families visit the graves of their near relatives, once in the
+year; generally about the time of Christmas.&nbsp; Then the depository of
+the dead becomes a rallying spot for the living; for there they renew their
+attachments and sympathies, and give and receive assurances of continued
+good will.&nbsp; At such periods however they are too often addicted to
+feasting and intemperance.</p>
+<p>The graves of the deceased of this people, are usually kept in very good
+order in the various Church yards where they lie interred.&nbsp; This is
+done by the Sextons, for which they are annually remunerated.&nbsp;
+Sometimes large sums of money are expended on the erection of head-stones;
+and in one instance a monument was erected in the County of Wilts at
+considerable cost.&nbsp; It is not very long since, that the parents of a
+deceased <!-- page 28--><a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+28</span>Gipsy child, whom they loved very much, paid a great sum to have
+it buried in the Church.</p>
+<p>The Gipsies have a singular custom of burning all the clothes belonging
+to any one among them deceased, with the straw, litter, &amp;c, of his
+tent.&nbsp; Whether this be from fear of infection, or from superstition,
+the Author has not been able to learn.&nbsp; Perhaps both unite in the
+continuation of a custom which must be attended with some loss to them. <a
+name="citation28"></a><a href="#footnote28" class="citation">[28]</a></p>
+<p>Seldom do these mysterious sons and daughters of Adam unite themselves
+in the holy obligations of marriage, after the form of the Established
+Church of our land.&nbsp; Nor, indeed, for so sacred a union, have they
+<i>any ceremony at all</i>.&nbsp; The parents on each side are consulted on
+such occasions, and if their consent be obtained, the parties become, after
+their custom, <i>husband and wife</i>.&nbsp; Should the parents object,
+like the thoughtless and imprudent persons in higher life, who flee to
+Gretna Green, the Gipsy lovers also escape from their parents to another
+district.&nbsp; When the couple are again met by the friends of the female,
+they take her from her protector; but if it appear that he has treated her
+kindly, and is likely to continue to do so, they restore her to him, and
+all objections and animosities are forgotten.</p>
+<p>As it seldom happens that they now stay more than a few days in one
+place, the Gipsy, his wife, and each <!-- page 29--><a
+name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>of their children, may
+severally belong to different parishes.&nbsp; This is an objection to their
+ultimate settlement in any one place.&nbsp; It will be some time before
+this objection can be removed: not till the present generation of Gipsies
+has passed away, and their posterity cease to make the wilderness their
+homes, choosing a parish for a permanent place of settlement.</p>
+<p>It may naturally be expected that these inhabitants of the field and
+forest, the lane and the moor, are not without a knowledge of the medicinal
+qualities of certain herbs.&nbsp; In all slight disorders they have
+recourse to these remedies, and frequently use the inner bark of the elm,
+star-in-the-earth, parsley, pellitory-in-the-wall, and wormwood.&nbsp; They
+are not subject to the numerous disorders and fevers common in large towns;
+but in some instances they are visited with that dreadful scourge of the
+British nation, the Typhus fever, which spreads through their little camp,
+and becomes fatal to some of its families.&nbsp; The small-pox and measles
+are disorders they very much dread; but they are not more disposed to
+rheumatic affections than those who live in houses.&nbsp; It is a fact,
+however, that ought not to be passed over here, that when they leave their
+tents to settle in towns, they are generally ill for a time.&nbsp; The
+children of one family that wintered with us in 1831, were nearly all
+attacked with fever that threatened their lives.&nbsp; This may be
+occasioned by their taking all at once to regular habits, and the
+renunciation of that exercise to which they have been so long accustomed,
+<!-- page 30--><a name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 30</span>with
+some disposing qualities in their change of diet and the atmosphere of a
+thickly populated town.</p>
+<p>This people often live to a considerable age, many instances of which
+are well known.&nbsp; In his tent at Launton, Oxfordshire, died in the year
+1830, more than a hundred years of age, James Smith, called by some, the
+King of the Gipsies.&nbsp; By his tribe he was looked up to with the
+greatest respect and veneration.&nbsp; His remains were followed to the
+grave by his widow, who is herself more than a hundred years old, and by
+many of his children, grand-children, great grand-children, and other
+relatives; and by several individuals of other tribes.&nbsp; At the funeral
+his widow tore her hair, uttered the most frantic exclamations, and begged
+to be allowed to throw herself on the coffin, that she might be buried with
+her husband.&nbsp; The religion of the Redeemer would have taught her to
+say, <i>The Lord gave</i>, <i>and the Lord hath taken away</i>; <i>blessed
+be the name of the Lord</i>.</p>
+<p>A woman of the name of B--- lived to the reputed age of a hundred and
+twenty years, and up to that age was accustomed to sing her song very
+gaily.&nbsp; Many events in the life of this woman were very
+remarkable.&nbsp; In her youth she was a noted swindler.&nbsp; At one time
+she got a large sum of money, and other valuable effects, from a lady; for
+which and other offences, she was condemned to die.&nbsp; A petition was
+presented to George the Third, to use the Gipsy&rsquo;s own expression, who
+told the author, <i>just after he had set </i><!-- page 31--><a
+name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span><i>up business</i>,
+that is, begun to reign, and he attended to its prayer.&nbsp; The sentence
+was reversed, and her life was consequently spared.&nbsp; But, poor woman,
+she repented not of her sins; for she taught her daughter to commit the
+same crimes for which she had been condemned; so that her delivery from
+condemnation led to no salutary reformation.</p>
+<p>The mutual attachment which subsists between the nominal husband and
+wife, is so truly sincere, that instances of infidelity, on either side,
+occur but seldom.&nbsp; They are known strictly to avoid all conversation
+of an unchaste kind in their camps, except among the most degraded of them;
+and instances of young females having children, before they pledge
+themselves to those they love, are rare.&nbsp; This purity of morals, among
+a people living as they do, speaks much in their favour.</p>
+<p>The anxiety of a Gipsy parent to preserve the purity of the morals of a
+daughter, is strongly portrayed in the following fact.&nbsp; The author
+wished to engage as a servant the daughter of a Gipsy who was desirous of
+quitting her vagrant life; but her mother strongly objected for some time;
+and when pressed for the reason of such objection, she named the danger she
+would be in a town, far from a mother&rsquo;s eye.&nbsp; It would be well
+if all others felt for their children as did this unlettered Gipsy.&nbsp;
+After having promised that the morals of the child should be watched over,
+she was confided to his care.&nbsp; And the author has known a Gipsy parent
+correct with stripes a grown daughter, <!-- page 32--><a
+name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>for mentioning what a
+profligate person had talked about.</p>
+<p>The following is an instance of conjugal attachment.&nbsp; A poor woman,
+whose eldest child is now under the care of the Society for the improvement
+of the Gipsies, being near her confinement, came into the neighbourhood of
+Southampton, to be with her friends, who are reformed, during the
+time.&nbsp; This not taking place so soon as she expected, and having
+promised to meet her husband at a distance on a certain day, he not daring
+to shew himself in Hampshire, she determined on going to him; and having
+mounted her donkey, set off with her little family.&nbsp; She had a
+distance of nearly fifty miles to travel, and happily reached the desired
+spot, where she met her husband before her confinement took place.&nbsp;
+The good people at Warminster, near which place she was, afforded her kind
+and needful assistance; and one well-disposed lady became God-mother to the
+babe, who was a fine little girl; the grateful mother pledging that, at a
+proper age, she should be given up to Christians to be educated.</p>
+<p>Before this woman left Southampton, referring to many kind attentions
+shewn her by the charitable of that place, she was heard to say,
+<i>Well</i>&mdash;<i>I did not think any one would take such trouble for
+me</i>!</p>
+<p>Professing to be church people whenever they speak of religion, the
+Gipsies generally have their children baptized at the church near which
+they are born, <!-- page 33--><a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+33</span>partly because they think it right, and partly, perhaps chiefly,
+to secure the knowledge of the parish to which the child belongs; for every
+illegitimate child is parishioner in the parish in which it happens to be
+born.&nbsp; They will sometimes apply to the parish officers for something
+toward the support of a child, which they call <i>settling the
+baby</i>.</p>
+<p>The sponsors at baptism are generally branches of the same family, and
+they speak of their God-children with pleasure, who in return manifest a
+high feeling of respect for them, and superstitiously ask their blessing on
+old Christmas-days, when in company with them.&nbsp; It is worthy of remark
+that all the better sort of Gipsies teach their children the <span
+class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s Prayer</span>.</p>
+<p>The anxiety evidenced by some parish officers to prevent these families
+from settling in their districts, has occasionally led the Gipsies to act
+unjustifiably by menacing them with the settlement of a number of their
+families; but this, from their perpetual wandering, need never be
+feared.&nbsp; Happy would it be for the Gipsies as a people, if these civil
+officers did encourage them to stay longer in their neighbourhood; for they
+then might be induced to commence and persevere in honest, industrious and
+regular habits.&nbsp; Not long ago thirty-five Gipsies came to a parish in
+Hampshire, to which they belonged, and demanded of the overseers ten
+pounds, declaring that, if that sum were not given them, they would remain
+there.&nbsp; Seven pounds were advanced, and they soon left the place.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 34--><a name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+34</span>CHAP. III.&nbsp; The Character, Manners and Habits of the English
+Gipsies, continued.</h2>
+<p>From the mode of living among the Gipsies, the parents are often
+necessitated to leave their tents in the morning, and seldom return to them
+before night.&nbsp; Their children are then left in or about their solitary
+camps, having many times no adult with them; the elder children then have
+the care of the younger.&nbsp; Those who are old enough gather wood for
+fuel; nor is stealing it thought a crime.&nbsp; By the culpable neglect of
+the parents in this respect, the children are often exposed to accidents by
+fire; and melancholy instances of children being burnt and scalded to
+death, are not unfrequent.&nbsp; The author knows one poor woman, two of
+whose children have thus lost their lives, during her absence from her
+tent, at different periods: and very lately a child was scalded to death in
+the parish where the author writes.</p>
+<p>The Gipsies are not very regular in attending to the calls of appetite
+and hunger.&nbsp; Their principal meal is supper, and their food is
+supplied in proportion to the success they have had through the day; or, to
+use their own words, <i>the luck they have met with</i>.</p>
+<p>Like the poor of the land through which they wander, they are fond of
+tea, drinking it at every meal.&nbsp; <!-- page 35--><a
+name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 35</span>When times are hard
+with them, they use English herbs, of which they generally carry a stock,
+such as agrimony, ground-ivy, wild mint, and the root of a herb called
+spice-herb.</p>
+<p>The trades they follow are generally chair-mending, knife-grinding,
+tinkering, and basket-making, the wood for which they mostly steal.&nbsp;
+Some of them sell hardware, brushes, corks, &amp;c.; but in general,
+neither old nor young among them, do much that can be called labour.&nbsp;
+And it is lamentable that the greatest part of the little they do earn, is
+laid by to spend at their festivals; for like many tribes of uncivilized
+Indians, they mostly make their women support their families, who generally
+do it by swindling and fortune-telling.&nbsp; Their baskets introduce them
+to the servants of families, of whom they beg victuals, to whom they sell
+trifling wares, and tell their fortunes, which indeed is their principal
+aim, as it is their greatest source of gain.&nbsp; They have been awkwardly
+fixed, both servants and the Gipsy fortune-teller, when the lady of the
+house has unexpectedly gone into the kitchen and surprised them while thus
+employed; and sometimes, to avoid detection, the obnoxious party has been
+hurried into a closet, or butler&rsquo;s pantry, where there has been much
+plate.&nbsp; Few are aware of the losses that have attended the conduct of
+unprincipled servants in this, as in other respects.&nbsp; It may be hoped
+that few families would knowingly look over conduct so improper, so
+dangerous.</p>
+<p>Many of these idle soothsayers endeavour to persuade <!-- page 36--><a
+name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 36</span>the people whom they
+delude, that the power to foretell future events, is granted to them from
+heaven, to enable them to get bread for their families.&nbsp; It would be
+well were the prognostications of these women encouraged only among
+servants; but this is not the case.&nbsp; They are often invited into gay
+and fashionable circles, whom they amuse, if, by the information possessed
+by the parties, they are not cunning enough to deceive.&nbsp; They are well
+paid, and are thus encouraged in their iniquity by those who ought to know,
+and <i>teach them</i> better.&nbsp; But it is astonishing how many
+<i>respectable</i> people are led away with the artful flattery of such
+visitors.&nbsp; They forget that the Gipsy fortune-teller has often made
+herself acquainted with their connexions, business, and future prospects,
+and consider not that God commits not his secrets to the wicked and
+profane.&nbsp; They use not the reason heaven has given them, and are
+therefore more easily led astray by these crafty deceivers.</p>
+<p>They generally prophesy good.&nbsp; Knowing the readiest way to deceive,
+to a young lady they describe a handsome gentleman, as one she may be
+assured will be her &ldquo;husband.&rdquo;&nbsp; To a youth they promise a
+pretty lady, with a large fortune.&nbsp; And thus suiting their deluding
+speeches to the age, circumstances, anticipations and prospects of those
+who employ them, they seldom fail to please their vanity, and often gain a
+rich reward for their fraud.</p>
+<p>They suit their incantations, or their pretended means of gaining
+knowledge, to their employers.&nbsp; Two <!-- page 37--><a
+name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 37</span>female servants went
+into the camp of some Gipsies near Southampton, to have their fortunes told
+by one well known to the author, and a great professor of the art.&nbsp; On
+observing them to appear like persons in service, she said to a companion,
+<i>I shall not get my books or cards for them</i>; <i>they are but
+tenants</i>.&nbsp; And calling for a frying-pan, she ordered them to fill
+it with water, and hold their faces over it.&nbsp; This being done, she
+proceeded to flatter and to promise them great things, for which she was
+paid 1<i>s</i> 6<i>d</i> each.&nbsp; This is called the frying-pan
+fortune.&nbsp; But it ought to be remembered that all fortune-telling is
+quite as contemptible.</p>
+<p>These artful pretenders to a knowledge of future events, generally
+discover who are in possession of property; and if they be superstitious
+and covetous, they contrive to persuade them there is a lucky stone in
+their house, and that, if they will entrust to them, <i>all</i>, or a
+<i>part of their money</i>, they will double and treble it.&nbsp; Sorry is
+the author to say that they often gain their point.&nbsp; Tradesmen have
+been known to sell their goods at a considerable loss, hoping to have the
+money doubled to them by the supposed power of these wicked females, who
+daringly promise to multiply the blessings of Providence.</p>
+<p>If the fortune-teller cannot succeed in obtaining a large sum at first,
+from such credulous dupes, she commences with a small one; and then
+pretending it to be too insignificant for the planets to work upon, she
+soon gets it doubled, and when she has succeeded <!-- page 38--><a
+name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 38</span>in getting all she can,
+she decamps with her booty, leaving her mortified victims to the just
+punishment of disappointment and shame, who are afraid of making their
+losses known, lest they should be exposed to the ridicule they
+deserve.&nbsp; Parties in Gloucestershire, Dorsetshire, and Hampshire, have
+been robbed in this manner of considerable sums, even as much as three and
+four hundred pounds, the greatest part of which has been spent in
+Hampshire.</p>
+<p>A young lady in Gloucestershire allowed herself to be deluded by a Gipsy
+woman of artful and insinuating address, to a very great extent.&nbsp; This
+lady admired a young gentleman, and the Gipsy promised that he would return
+her love.&nbsp; The lady gave her all the plate in the house, and a gold
+chain and locket, with no other security than a vain promise that they
+should be restored at a given period.&nbsp; As might be expected, the
+wicked woman was soon off with her booty, and the lady was obliged to
+expose her folly.&nbsp; The property being too much to lose, the woman was
+pursued, and overtaken.&nbsp; She was found washing her clothes in a Gipsy
+camp, with the gold chain about her neck.&nbsp; She was taken up; but on
+restoring the articles, was allowed to escape.</p>
+<p>The same woman afterwards persuaded a gentleman&rsquo;s groom, that she
+could put him in possession of a great sum of money, if he would first
+deposit with her, all he then had.&nbsp; He gave her five pounds and his
+watch, and borrowed for her ten more of two of his friends.&nbsp; She
+engaged to meet him at midnight in a <!-- page 39--><a
+name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 39</span>certain place a mile
+from the town where he lived, and that he there should dig up out of the
+ground a silver pot full of gold, covered with a clean napkin.&nbsp; He
+went with his pick-axe and shovel at the appointed time to the supposed
+lucky spot, having his confidence strengthened by a dream he happened to
+have about money, which he considered a favourable omen of the wealth he
+was soon to receive.&nbsp; Of course he met no Gipsy; she had fled another
+way with the property she had so wickedly obtained.&nbsp; While waiting her
+arrival, a hare started suddenly from its resting place, and so alarmed
+him, that he as suddenly took to his heels and made no stop till he reached
+his master&rsquo;s house, where he awoke his fellow servants and told to
+them his disaster.</p>
+<p>This woman, who made so many dupes, rode a good horse, and dressed both
+gaily and expensively.&nbsp; One of her saddles cost &pound;30.&nbsp; It
+was literally studded with silver; for she carried on it the emblems of her
+profession wrought in that metal; namely, a half-moon, seven stars, and the
+rising sun.&nbsp; Poor woman! <i>her</i> sun is now nearly set.&nbsp; Her
+sins have found her out.&nbsp; She has been in great distress on account of
+a son, who was transported for robbery; but has never thought of seeking,
+as a penitent, refuge in the God of mercy; for seeing one of her reformed
+companions reading the New Testament, she exclaimed, <i>That book will make
+you crazy</i>, at the same time calling her a fool for burning her
+fortune-telling book.&nbsp; Her condition is now truly wretched; for her
+ill-gotten gains are all fled, and she is dragging out a miserable
+existence, refusing <!-- page 40--><a name="page40"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 40</span>still to seek the mercy of God, and despising
+those who have made him their refuge.</p>
+<p>Another woman, whom the author would also call a <i>bad</i> Gipsy, who
+likewise practised similar deceptions, having persuaded a person to put his
+notes and money in a wrapper and lock it up in a box, she obtained the
+liberty of seeing it in his presence, that she might pronounce certain
+words over it; and although narrowly watched, she contrived to steal it,
+and to convey into the box a parcel similar in appearance, but which on
+examination, contained only a bundle of rubbish.&nbsp; This money amounted
+to several hundred pounds.&nbsp; She was immediately pursued and taken with
+the whole amount about her person.&nbsp; She was also allowed to escape
+justice, because the covetous old man neither wished to expose himself, nor
+waste his money in a prosecution.</p>
+<p>The daughter of this woman has followed the same evil and infamous
+practices; and the crime has descended to her through several
+generations.&nbsp; Many circumstances like the above are hid to prevent the
+shame that would assuredly follow their exposure.&nbsp; But the day of
+Christ will exhibit both these deceivers and their dupes, who are equally
+heinous in the sight of God.&nbsp; It were well if such characters had paid
+more attention to the words of the apostle Paul&mdash;<i>And having food
+and raiment</i>, <i>let us therewith be content</i>.&nbsp; <i>They that
+will be rich</i>, <i>fall into temptation</i>, <i>and a snare</i>, <i>and
+into many foolish and hurtful lusts</i>, <i>which drown men in
+destruction</i>.&nbsp; <i>The love of money is the root of all </i><!--
+page 41--><a name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+41</span><i>evil</i>; <i>which</i>, <i>while some have coveted after</i>,
+<i>they have erred from the faith</i>, <i>and pierced themselves through
+with many sorrows</i>.</p>
+<p>Not to mention many other facts with which the author is acquainted, and
+which he would relate, were he not likely thereby too much to enlarge his
+work, he will conclude this chapter with observing, that, thankfulness to
+Almighty God, for the blessings we enjoy, less anxiety about future events,
+and more confidence in what God has revealed in his word and providence,
+would leave no room for the encouragement of Gipsy fortune-tellers, and
+their craft would soon be discontinued.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 42--><a name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+42</span>CHAP. IV.&nbsp; The Character, Manners, and Habits of the English
+Gipsies, continued.</h2>
+<p>Among this poor and destitute people, instances of great guilt,
+depravity and misery are too common; nor can it be otherwise expected,
+while they are destitute of the knowledge of salvation in a crucified and
+ascended Saviour.&nbsp; One poor Gipsy, who had wandered in a state of
+wretchedness, bordering on despair, for nearly forty years, had not in all
+that time, <i>heard of the Name which is above every name</i>; <i>for there
+is salvation in no other</i>; till in his last days some Christian directed
+him to the Bible, as a book that tells poor sinners the way to God.&nbsp;
+He gave a woman a guinea to read its pages to him; and he remunerated
+another woman, who read to him the book of Common Prayer.&nbsp; The last
+few years of his life were marked by strong conviction of sin.&nbsp; His
+children thought he must have been a murderer.&nbsp; They often saw him
+under the hedges at prayer.&nbsp; In his last moments he received comfort
+through a pious minister, who visited him in his tent, and made him
+acquainted with the promises of the gospel.</p>
+<p>A similar instance has been related by a clergyman known to the author;
+nor should the interview of <!-- page 43--><a name="page43"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 43</span><span class="smcap">George the Third</span>
+with a poor Gipsy woman, be forgotten; for a brighter example of
+condescending kindness is not furnished in the history of kings.&nbsp; This
+gracious monarch became the minister of instruction and comfort to a dying
+Gipsy, to whom he was drawn by the cries of her children, and saw her
+expire cheered by the view of that redemption he had set before her.</p>
+<p>But how few are there of the tens of thousands of Gipsies, who have died
+in Britain, that, whether living or dying, have been visited by the
+minister or his people!&nbsp; The father of three orphan children lately
+taken under the Care of the Southampton Committee for the improvement of
+the Gipsies, had lived an atheist, but such he could not die.&nbsp; He had
+often declared there was no God; but before his death, he called one of his
+sons to him and said&mdash;<i>I have always said there was no God</i>,
+<i>but now I know there is</i>; <i>I see him now</i>.&nbsp; He attempted to
+pray, but knew not how!&nbsp; And many other Gipsies have been so afraid of
+God, that they dreaded to be alone.</p>
+<p>It is a fact not generally known, that the Gipsies of this country have
+not much knowledge of one another&rsquo;s tribes, or clans, and are very
+particular to keep to their own.&nbsp; Nor will those who style themselves
+respectable, allow their children to marry into the more depraved
+clans.</p>
+<p>The following are a few of the family names of the Gipsies of this
+country:&mdash;Williams, Jones, Plunkett, <!-- page 44--><a
+name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 44</span>Cooper, Glover, Carew
+(descendants of the famous Bamfield Moore Carew), Loversedge, Mansfield,
+Martin, Light, Lee, Barnett, Boswell, Carter, Buckland, Lovell, Corrie,
+Bosvill, Eyres, Smalls, Draper, Fletcher, Taylor, Broadway, Baker, Smith,
+Buckly, Blewett, Scamp, and Stanley.&nbsp; Of the last-named family there
+are more than two hundred, most of whom are known to the author, and are
+the most ancient clans in this part of England.</p>
+<p>It is a well-authenticated fact, that many persons pass for Gipsies who
+are not.&nbsp; Such persons having done something to exclude them from
+society, join themselves to this people, and marrying into their clans,
+become the means of leading them to crimes they would not have thought of,
+but for their connection with such wicked people.&nbsp; Coining money and
+forging notes are, however, crimes which cannot be justly attributed to
+them.&nbsp; Indeed it has been too much the custom to impute to them a
+great number of crimes of which they either never were guilty, or which
+could only be committed by an inconsiderable portion of their race; and
+they have often suffered the penalty of the law, when they have not in the
+least deserved it.&nbsp; They have been talked of by the public, and
+prosecuted by the authorities, as the perpetrators of every vice and
+wickedness alike shocking to civil and savage life.&nbsp; Nor is this to be
+wondered at, living as they do, so remote from observation and the walks of
+common life.</p>
+<p><!-- page 45--><a name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+45</span>Whoever has read Grellman&rsquo;s Dissertation on the Continental
+Gipsies, and supposes that those of England are equally immoral and
+vicious, will be found greatly mistaken.&nbsp; The former are a banditti of
+robbers, without natural affection, living with each other almost like
+brutes, and scarcely knowing, and assuredly never caring about the
+existence of God; some of them are even counted cannibals.&nbsp; The
+Gipsies of this country are altogether different; for monstrous crimes are
+seldom heard of among them.</p>
+<p>The author is not aware of any of them being convicted of
+house-breaking, or high-way robbery.&nbsp; Seldom are they guilty of
+sheep-stealing, or robbing henroosts. <a name="citation45"></a><a
+href="#footnote45" class="citation">[45]</a>&nbsp; Nor can they be justly
+charged with stealing children; this is the work of worthless beggars who
+often commit far greater crimes than the Gipsies.</p>
+<p>They avoid poaching, knowing that the sporting gentlemen would be severe
+against them, and that they would not be permitted to remain in the lanes
+and commons near villages.&nbsp; They sometimes take osiers from the banks
+and coppices of the farmer, of which they make their baskets; and
+occasionally have been known to steal a sheep, but never when they have had
+any thing to eat, or money to buy it with; for according to a proverb they
+have among themselves, <i>they despise those who risk their necks for their
+bellies</i>.</p>
+<p>The author however recollects a transgression of the <!-- page 46--><a
+name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>sort in the county of
+Hants.&nbsp; Eight Gipsy men united in stealing four sheep: four were
+chosen by lot for the purpose.&nbsp; They sharpened their knives, rode to
+the field, perpetrated the act, and before day-break brought to their camp
+the sheep they had engaged to steal; and, before the evening of the same
+day, they were thirty miles distant.&nbsp; But when pressed by hunger, they
+have been known to take a worse method than this.&nbsp; For as the farmers
+seldom deny them a sheep that has died in the field, if they apply for it,
+<i>so many</i> were found dead in this way, that a certain farmer suspected
+the Gipsies of occasioning their deaths.&nbsp; He therefore caused one of
+these animals to be opened, and discovered a piece of wool in its throat,
+with which it had been suffocated.&nbsp; The Gipsies, who had no objection
+to creatures that die in their blood, had killed all these sheep in the
+above manner.</p>
+<p>Horse-stealing is one of their principal crimes, and at this they are
+very dextrous.&nbsp; When disposed to steal a horse, they select one a few
+miles from their tent, and make arrangements for disposing of it at a
+considerable distance, to which place they will convey it in a night.&nbsp;
+An old and infirm man has been known to ride a stolen horse nearly fifty
+miles in that time.&nbsp; They pass through bye-lanes, well known to them,
+and thus avoid turnpikes and escape detection.</p>
+<p>Unless they are taught better principles than at present they possess,
+and unless those on whom they impose, use their understandings, it is to be
+feared that swindling also will long continue among them; for <!-- page
+47--><a name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>they are so
+ingenious in avoiding detection.&nbsp; When likely to be discovered, a
+change of dress enables them to remove with safety to any distance.&nbsp;
+Instances of this kind have been innumerable.&nbsp; But as it is the aim of
+this book to solicit a better feeling towards them, rather than expose them
+to the continuation of censure, the writer will not enter into further
+detail in reference to their crimes, than barely to shew the great evils
+into which they have been led by many of those in high life, who have long
+encouraged them in the savage practice of prize-fighting.&nbsp; Pugilism
+has been the disgrace of our land, and our nobility and gentry have not
+been ashamed to patronize it.</p>
+<p>Not long ago a fight took place in this county which will be a lasting
+disgrace to the neighbourhood.&nbsp; One of the pugilists, a Gipsy, in the
+pride of his heart, said during the fight, that he <i>never would be beaten
+so long as he had life</i>.&nbsp; The poor wretch fought till not a feature
+of his countenance could be seen, his head and face being swollen to a
+frightful size, and his eyes quite closed.&nbsp; He attempted to tear them
+open that he might see his antagonist; and was at last taken off the
+stage.&nbsp; Not satisfied with this brutal scene, the spectators offered a
+purse of ten guineas for another battle.&nbsp; This golden bait caught the
+eye of another Gipsy, who, but a few months before, had ruptured a
+blood-vessel in fighting.&nbsp; Throwing up his hat on the stage, the sign
+of challenge, he was soon met with a fellow as degraded as himself, but
+with much more strength and activity.&nbsp; He was three times laid
+prostrate <!-- page 48--><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+48</span>at the feet of his antagonist, and was taken away almost
+lifeless.&nbsp; His conqueror put a half-crown into his hand as he was
+carried off, saying, it was a little something for him to drink.&nbsp;
+About three months after this, the author saw this poor Gipsy in his tent,
+in the last stage of a consumption; but he was without any marks of true
+penitence.&nbsp; Surely the way of wickedness is full of misery!</p>
+<p>What a disgrace is this demoralizing mode of amusement to our
+country!&nbsp; Degrading to the greatest degree, it is nevertheless pursued
+with avidity by all classes of people; and large bets are often depending
+on these brutal exercises.&nbsp; Gentlemen, noblemen, and even ladies, are,
+on such occasions, mixed with the most degraded part of the
+community.&nbsp; In the instance referred to it is said, that fifty pounds
+were taken by admitting carriages into the field in which the fight took
+place.&nbsp; Where were the peace-officers at this time?&nbsp; Perhaps some
+of them spectators of the horrid scene!</p>
+<p>Verily our men of rank and fortune are guilty in encouraging these
+shocking practices; and they are little better than murderers, who goad
+their fellow-men on to fight by the offer of money.&nbsp; Such persons are
+frequently instruments of sending sinners, the most unprepared, into the
+presence of a righteous God.&nbsp; What an account will they have to give
+when they meet the victims of their amusement at the bar of Christ!</p>
+<p>The Gipsies often fight with each other at fairs, and <!-- page 49--><a
+name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 49</span>other places where they
+meet in great numbers.&nbsp; This is their way of settling old grudges; but
+so soon as one yields, the quarrel is made up, and they repair to a public
+house to renew their friendship.&nbsp; This forgiving spirit is a pleasing
+trait in their character.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 50--><a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+50</span>CHAP. V.&nbsp; Further Account of the English Gipsies.</h2>
+<p>It has been the lot of Gipsies in all countries to be despised,
+persecuted, hated, and have the vilest things said about them.&nbsp; In
+many cases they have too much merited the odium which they have experienced
+in continental Europe; but certainly they are not deserving of universal
+and unqualified contempt and hatred in this nation.&nbsp; The dislike they
+have to rule and order has led many of them to maim themselves by cutting
+off a finger, that they might not serve in either the army or the navy: and
+I believe there is one instance known, of some Gipsies murdering a witness
+who was to appear against some of their people for horse-stealing: the
+persons who were guilty of the deed have been summoned to the bar of
+Christ, and in their last moments exclaimed with horror and despair,
+&ldquo;Murder, murder.&rdquo;&nbsp; But these circumstances do not stamp
+their race without exception as infamous monsters in wickedness.&nbsp; Not
+many years since several of their men were hung in different places for
+stealing fourteen horses near Bristol, who experienced the truth of that
+scripture, <i>be sure your sins will find you out</i>.&nbsp; Indeed there
+is not a family among them that has not to mourn over the loss of some
+relative for <!-- page 51--><a name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+51</span>the commission of this crime.&nbsp; But even in this respect their
+guilt has been much over-rated; for in many cases it is to be feared they
+have suffered innocently.&nbsp; There was formerly a reward of 40<i>l</i>
+to those who gave information of offenders, on their being capitally
+convicted.&nbsp; Those of the lower orders, therefore, who were destitute
+of principle, had a great temptation before them to swear falsely in
+reference to Gipsies; and of which it is known they sometimes availed
+themselves, knowing that few would befriend them.&nbsp; For the sake of the
+above sum, vulgarly, but too justly called <i>blood-money</i>, they
+perjured themselves, and were much more wicked than the people they
+accused.&nbsp; But the Gipsies were thought to be universally depraved, and
+no one thought it worth his while to investigate their innocence.&nbsp; Let
+us be thankful that many at the present day look upon them with better
+feelings.</p>
+<p>Very lately one of these vile informers swore to having seen a Gipsy man
+on a horse that had been stolen; and although it came out on the trial,
+that it was night when he observed him, and that he had never seen him
+before, which ought to have rendered his evidence invalid, the prisoner was
+convicted and condemned to die.&nbsp; His life was afterwards spared by
+other facts having been discovered and made known to the judge, after he
+had left the city.</p>
+<p>The Gipsies in this country have for centuries been accused of
+child-stealing; and therefore it is not to be wondered at, that, when
+children have been missing, the Gipsies should be taxed with having stolen
+them.&nbsp; <!-- page 52--><a name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+52</span>About thirty years since, some parents who had lost a child,
+applied to a man at Portsmouth, well known in those days, by the name of
+Payne, or Pine, as an astrologer, wishing to know from him what was become
+of it.&nbsp; He told them <i>to search the Gipsy tents for twenty miles
+round</i>.&nbsp; The distressed parents employed constables, who made
+diligent search in every direction to that distance, but to no purpose; the
+child was not to be found in their camps.&nbsp; It was however soon
+afterwards discovered, drowned in one of its father&rsquo;s pits, who was a
+tanner.&nbsp; Thus was this pretended astrologer exposed to the ridicule of
+those who but a short time before foolishly looked on him as an oracle.</p>
+<p>On another occasion the same accusation was brought against the Gipsies,
+and proved to be false.&nbsp; The child of a widow at Portsmouth was lost,
+and after every search was made on board the ships in the harbour, and at
+Spithead, and the ponds dragged in the neighbourhood, to no effect, it was
+concluded that the Gipsies had stolen him.&nbsp; The boy was found a few
+years afterwards, at Kingston-upon-Thames, apprenticed to a chimney
+sweeper.&nbsp; He had been enticed away by a person who had given him
+sweet-meats; but not by a Gipsy.</p>
+<p>I may be allowed here to say a word about this boy&rsquo;s mother.&nbsp;
+She was a good and pious woman, and had known great trials.&nbsp; Her
+husband was drowned in her presence but a short time before she lost her
+son in the mysterious way mentioned; and before he was heard of, she was
+removed to the enjoyment of a better <!-- page 53--><a
+name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>world.&nbsp; Her death
+was a very happy one, for it took place while she was engaged in public
+worship.&nbsp; <i>Many are the afflictions of the righteous</i>, <i>but the
+Lord delivereth them out of them all</i>.</p>
+<p>Instances have been known of house-breakers leaving some of their stolen
+goods near the tents of the Gipsies; and these being picked up by the
+children, and found upon them, have been the cause of much unjust suffering
+among them.&nbsp; The grandfather of three little orphans now under the
+care of the Southampton Committee, was charged with stealing a horse, and
+was condemned and executed; although the farmer of whom he bought it, came
+forward and swore to the horse being the same which he had sold him.&nbsp;
+His evidence was rejected on account of some slight mistake in the
+description he gave of it.&nbsp; When under the gallows, the frantic Gipsy
+exclaimed&mdash;<i>Oh God</i>, <i>if thou dost not deliver me</i>, <i>I
+will not believe there is a God</i>!</p>
+<p>The following anecdote will prove the frequent oppression of this
+people.&nbsp; Not many years since, a collector of taxes in a country town,
+said he had been robbed of fifty pounds by a Gipsy; and being soon after at
+Blandford in Dorsetshire, he fixed on a female Gipsy, as the person who
+robbed him in company with two others, and said she was in man&rsquo;s
+clothes at the time.&nbsp; They were taken up and kept in custody for some
+days; and had not a farmer voluntarily come forward, and proved that they
+were many miles distant when the robbery was said to be perpetrated, they
+would have been tried for their lives, and probably <!-- page 54--><a
+name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 54</span>hanged.&nbsp; The woman
+was the wife of Wm. Stanley, (who was in custody with her,) who now reads
+the Scriptures in the Gipsy tents near Southampton.&nbsp; Their wicked
+accuser was afterwards convicted of a crime for which he was condemned to
+die, when he confessed that he had not been robbed at the time referred to,
+but had himself spent the whole of the sum in question.</p>
+<p>Another Gipsy of the name of Stanley was lately indicted at Winchester,
+for house-breaking, and had not his friends at great expense proved an
+<i>alibi</i>, it is likely he might have been executed.&nbsp; And in this
+way have they been suspected and persecuted ever since the days of Henry
+the Eighth.&nbsp; They have been hunted like wild beasts; their property
+has been taken from them; themselves have been frequently imprisoned, and
+in many cases their lives taken, or what to many of them would be much
+worse, they have been transported to another part of the world, for ever
+divided from their families and friends.</p>
+<p>In the days of Judge Hale, thirteen of these unhappy beings were hanged
+at Bury St Edmonds, for no other cause than that they were Gipsies; and at
+that time it was death without benefit of clergy, for any one to live among
+them for a month.&nbsp; Even in later days two of the most industrious of
+this people have had a small pony and two donkeys taken away merely on
+suspicion that they were stolen.&nbsp; They were apprehended and carried
+before a magistrate, to whom they proved that the animals were their own,
+<!-- page 55--><a name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 55</span>and
+that they had legally obtained them.&nbsp; The cattle were then pounded for
+trespassing on the common, and if their oppressed owners had not had money
+to defray the expenses, one of the animals must have been sold for that
+purpose.</p>
+<p>Not long ago, one of the Gipsies was suspected of having stolen lead
+from a gentleman&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; His cart was searched, but no lead
+being found in his possession, he was imprisoned for three months, for
+living under the hedges as a vagrant; and his horse, which was worth
+thirteen pounds, was sold to meet the demands of the constables.&nbsp; And
+another Gipsy, who had two horses in his possession, was suspected of
+having stolen them, but he proved that they were legally his
+property.&nbsp; He was committed for three months as a vagrant, and one of
+his horses was sold to defray the expenses of his apprehension,
+examination, &amp;c.</p>
+<p>While writing this part of the <span class="smcap">Gipsies&rsquo;
+Advocate</span>, the author knows that a poor, aged, industrious woman,
+with whom he has been long acquainted, had her donkey taken from her, and
+that a man with four witnesses swore that it was his property.&nbsp; The
+poor woman told a simple, artless tale to the magistrates, and was not
+fully committed.&nbsp; She was allowed two days to bring forward the person
+of whom she bought it.&nbsp; Conscious of her innocence, she was willing to
+risk a prison if she could recover her donkey, and establish her
+character.&nbsp; After a great deal of trouble and expense in dispatching
+messengers to bring forward <!-- page 56--><a name="page56"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 56</span>her witnesses, she succeeded in obtaining
+them.&nbsp; They had no sooner made their appearance than the accuser and
+his witnesses fled, and left the donkey to the right owner, the poor,
+accused and injured woman.</p>
+<p>It cannot be expected that oppression will ever reform this people, or
+cure them of their wandering habits.&nbsp; Far more likely is it to confirm
+them in their vagrant propensities.&nbsp; And as their numbers do not
+decrease, oppression will only render them the dread of one part of their
+fellow-creatures, while it will make them the objects of scorn and obloquy
+to others.</p>
+<p>It is the earnest wish of the author that milder measures may be pursued
+in reference to the Gipsies.&nbsp; To endeavour to improve their morals,
+and instruct them in the principles of religion, will, under the divine
+blessing, turn to better account than the hateful and oppressive policy so
+long adopted.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 57--><a name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+57</span>CHAP. VI.&nbsp; Further Account of the English Gipsies.</h2>
+<p>Many persons are of opinion in reference to the Gipsies, that, if all
+the parishes were alike severe in forcing them from their retreats, they
+would soon find their way into towns.&nbsp; But if this were the case, what
+advantage would they derive from it?&nbsp; In large towns, in their present
+ignorant and depraved state, would they not be still more wicked?&nbsp;
+They would change their condition only from bad to worse, unless they were
+treated better than they now are, and could be properly employed; but from
+the prejudice that exists among all classes of men against them, this is
+not likely to be the case: they would not be employed by any, while other
+persons could be got.&nbsp; At a hop plantation, so lately as 1830, Gipsies
+were not allowed to pick hops in some grounds, while persons as unsettled
+and undeserving, were engaged for that purpose.&nbsp; Had this been a
+parochial arrangement to benefit the poor of their own neighbourhood, who
+were out of employ, it were not blameable.</p>
+<p>If they were driven to settle in towns, and could not, generally
+speaking, obtain employment, it might soon become necessary to remove all
+their children to their own parishes; a measure not only very unhappy <!--
+page 58--><a name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>in itself,
+but one to which the Gipsies would never submit.&nbsp; Sooner would they
+die than suffer their children to go to the parish workhouses.</p>
+<p>The severe and unchristian-like treatment they meet with from many, only
+obliges them to travel further, and often drives them to commit greater
+depredations.&nbsp; When driven by the constables from their station, they
+retire to a more solitary place in another parish, and there remain till
+they are again detected, and again mercilessly driven away.&nbsp; But this
+severity does not accomplish the end it has in view; their numbers remain
+the same, and they retain the same dislike to the crowded haunts of
+man.&nbsp; For they only visit towns in small parties, offering trifling
+wares for sale, or telling fortunes; and this is done to gain a present
+support.</p>
+<p>In this neighbourhood there was lately a sweeping of the commons and
+lanes of the Gipsy families.&nbsp; Their horses and donkeys were driven
+off, and the sum of &pound;3 5<i>s</i> levied on them as a fine to pay the
+constables for thus afflicting them.&nbsp; In one tent during this
+distressing affair, there was found an unburied child, that had been
+scalded to death, its parents not having money to defray the expenses of
+its interment.&nbsp; The constables declared that it would make any heart
+ache to see the anguish the poor people were in, when thus inhumanly driven
+from their resting places; but, said they, <i>We were obliged to do our
+duty</i>.&nbsp; To the credit of these men, thirteen in number, it should
+be mentioned, that, with only one exception, they returned the <!-- page
+59--><a name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>fines to the
+people; and one of them, who is a carpenter, offered a coffin for the
+unburied child, should the parish be unwilling to bury it.</p>
+<p>In this instance of their affliction and grief, the propensity to accuse
+these poor creatures was strongly marked by a report charging them with
+having dug a grave on the common in which to bury it; a circumstance very
+far from their feelings and general habits.&nbsp; The fact was, some person
+had been digging holes in search of gravel, and these poor creatures
+pitched their tent just by one of them.</p>
+<p>It was supposed by many in this neighbourhood, that the poor wretches
+thus driven away, were gone out of the country; but this was not the
+case.&nbsp; They had only retired to more lonely places in smaller parties,
+and were all seen again a few days after at a neighbouring fair.&nbsp; This
+circumstance is sufficient to prove that they are not to be reclaimed by
+prosecutions and fines.&nbsp; It is therefore high time the people of
+England should adopt more merciful measures towards them in endeavouring to
+bring them into a more civilized state.&nbsp; The money spent in sustaining
+prosecutions against them, if properly applied, would accomplish this great
+and benevolent work.&nbsp; And without flattering any of its members, the
+author thinks the Committee at Southampton have discovered plans, wholly
+different to those usually adopted, which may prove much more effectual in
+accomplishing their reformation; for by these plans being put in prudent
+<!-- page 60--><a name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+60</span>operation, many have already ceased to make the lanes and commons
+their home; and their minds are becoming enlightened and their characters
+religious.</p>
+<p>In concluding this chapter it may not be improper to remark, that, bad
+as may be the character of any of our fellow-creatures, it is very
+lamentable that they should suffer for crimes of which individually they
+are not guilty.&nbsp; Let us hope that, in reference to this people, unjust
+executions have ceased; that people will be careful in giving evidence
+which involves the rights, liberties, and lives of their fellow-creatures,
+though belonging to the unhappy tribes of Gipsies; and above all, let us
+hope, that such measures will be pursued by the good and benevolent of this
+highly favoured land, as will place them in situations where they will
+learn to fear God, and support themselves honestly in the sight of all
+men.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 61--><a name="page61"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+61</span>CHAP. VII.&nbsp; Of the formation of the Southampton Committee,
+and the success that has attended its endeavours.</h2>
+<p>Although the Gipsies, on account of their unsettled habits, their
+disposition to evil practices, and that ignorance of true religion, which
+is inseparably connected with a life remote from all the forms of external
+worship, and from the influence of religious society, may be said to be in
+a most lamentably wretched state; yet is their condition not
+desperate.&nbsp; They are rational beings, and have many feelings
+honourable to human nature.&nbsp; They are not as the heathens of other
+countries, addicted to any system of idolatry; and what is of infinite
+encouragement, they inhabit a land of Bibles and of Christian ministers;
+and, although at present, they derive so little benefit from these
+advantages, there are many of them willing to receive instruction.&nbsp;
+The following details, to which I gladly turn, will shew that, when
+<i>patient</i> and <i>persevering</i> means are used, Gipsies may be
+brought to know God; and no body of people were ever yet converted to
+Christianity without means.&nbsp; The following circumstances gave rise to
+the idea of forming a society for the improvement of this people.</p>
+<p>In March, 1827, during the Lent Assizes, the author <!-- page 62--><a
+name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 62</span>was in Winchester, and
+wishing to speak with the sheriff&rsquo;s chaplain, he went to the court
+for that purpose.&nbsp; He happened to enter just as the judge was passing
+sentence of death on two unhappy men.&nbsp; To one he held out the hope of
+mercy; but to the other, <i>a poor Gipsy</i>, who was convicted of
+horse-stealing, he said, <i>no hope could be given</i>.&nbsp; The young
+man, for he was but a youth, immediately fell on his knees, and with
+uplifted hands and eyes, apparently unconscious of any persons being
+present but the judge and himself, addressed him as follows:
+&ldquo;<i>Oh</i>! <i>my Lord</i>, <i>save my life</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+judge replied, &ldquo;<i>No</i>; <i>you can have no mercy in this
+world</i>: <i>I and my brother judges have come to the determination to
+execute horse-stealers</i>, <i>especially Gipsies</i>, <i>because of the
+increase of the crime</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; The suppliant, still on his knees,
+entreated&mdash;&ldquo;<i>Do</i>, <i>my Lord Judge</i>, <i>save my
+life</i>! <i>do</i>, <i>for God&rsquo;s sake</i>, <i>for my wife&rsquo;s
+sake</i>, <i>for my baby&rsquo;s sake</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;<i>No</i>,&rdquo; replied the judge, &ldquo;<i>I cannot</i>: <i>you
+should have thought of your wife and children before</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; He
+then ordered him to be taken away, and the poor fellow was <i>rudely
+dragged</i> from his earthly judge.&nbsp; It is hoped, as a penitent
+sinner, he obtained the more needful mercy of God, through the abounding
+grace of Christ.&nbsp; After this scene, the author could not remain in
+court.&nbsp; As he returned, he found the mournful intelligence had been
+communicated to some Gipsies who had been waiting without, anxious to learn
+the fate of their companion.&nbsp; They seemed distracted.</p>
+<p>On the outside of the court, seated on the ground, <!-- page 63--><a
+name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 63</span>appeared an old woman,
+and a very young one, and with them two children, the eldest three years,
+and the other an infant but fourteen days old.&nbsp; The former sat by its
+mother&rsquo;s side, alike unconscious of her bitter agonies, and of her
+father&rsquo;s despair.&nbsp; The old woman held the infant tenderly in her
+arms, and endeavoured to comfort its weeping mother, soon to be a widow
+under circumstances the most melancholy.&nbsp; <i>My dear</i>,
+<i>don&rsquo;t cry</i>, said she, <i>remember you have this dear little
+baby</i>.&nbsp; Impelled by the sympathies of pity and a sense of duty, the
+author spoke to them on the evil of sin, and expressed his hope that the
+melancholy event would prove a warning to them, and to all their
+people.&nbsp; The poor man was executed about a fortnight after his
+condemnation.</p>
+<p>This sad scene, together with Hoyland&rsquo;s Survey of the Gipsies,
+which the author read about this time, combined to make a deep impression
+on his mind, and awaken an earnest desire which has never since decreased,
+to assist and improve this greatly neglected people.&nbsp; The more he
+contemplated their condition and necessities, the difficulties in the way
+of their reformation continued to lessen, and his hope of success, in case
+any thing could be done for them, became more and more confirmed.&nbsp; He
+could not forget the poor young widow whom he had seen in such deep
+distress at Winchester, and was led to resolve, if he should meet her
+again, to offer to provide for her children.</p>
+<p>Some weeks elapsed before he could hear any thing of her, till one day
+he saw the old woman sitting on <!-- page 64--><a name="page64"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 64</span>the ground at the entrance of Southampton, with
+the widow&rsquo;s infant on her knee.&nbsp; &ldquo;Where is your
+daughter?&rdquo; he inquired.&nbsp; &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; she replied,
+&ldquo;She is my niece; she is gone into the town.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Will
+you desire her to call at my house?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I will, sir,&rdquo;
+said the poor old woman, to whom the author gave his address.</p>
+<p>In about an hour after this conversation, the widow and her aunt
+appeared.&nbsp; After inviting them to sit down, he addressed the young
+woman thus:&mdash;&ldquo;My good woman, you are now a poor widow, and I
+wished to see you, to tell you that I would be your friend.&nbsp; I will
+take your children, if you will let me have them, and be a father to them,
+and educate them; and, when old enough to work, will have them taught some
+honest trade.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Thank you, sir,&rdquo; said she;
+&ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t like to part with my children.&nbsp; The chaplain
+at the prison offered to take my oldest, and to send her to London to be
+taken care of; but I could not often see her there.&rdquo;&nbsp; I replied,
+&ldquo;I commend you for not parting with her, unless you could
+occasionally see her; for I suppose you love your children
+dearly.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh! yes, sir,&rdquo; said the widow.&nbsp; The
+old aunt also added, &ldquo;Our people set great store by their
+children.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;I do not wish
+you to determine on this business hastily; it is a weighty one.&nbsp; You
+had better take a fortnight for consideration, and then give me a second
+call.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>How improbable did it then appear that this interview would ultimately
+lead to so much good to many of her people!&nbsp; When the fortnight
+expired, the widow <!-- page 65--><a name="page65"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 65</span>and her aunt again appeared, when the following
+conversation took place.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am glad you are come again,&rdquo;
+said their friend.&nbsp; &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the widow, &ldquo;and I
+will now let you have my Betsy;&rdquo; and the aunt immediately added,
+pointing to one of her grand-children, &ldquo;I will let you have my little
+<i>deary</i>, if you will take care of her.&nbsp; Her father,&rdquo;
+continued she, &ldquo;was condemned to die, but is transported for life,
+and her mother now lives with another man.&rdquo;&nbsp; The proposal was
+readily accepted; and three days after, these two children were brought
+washed very clean, and dressed in their best clothes.&nbsp; It was promised
+the women, that they should see their children whenever they chose, and all
+parties were pleased.&nbsp; The eldest of these children was six years of
+age; the widow&rsquo;s little daughter, only three.&nbsp; The first day
+they amused themselves with running up and down stairs, and through the
+rooms of the house.&nbsp; But when put to bed at night, they cried for two
+hours, saying that the house would fall upon them.&nbsp; They had never
+spent a day in a house before, and were at night like birds that had been
+decoyed, and then robbed of their liberty.&nbsp; A few kisses and some
+promises at length quieted them, and they went to sleep.</p>
+<p>After remaining with the author three days, they were removed to one of
+the Infants&rsquo; Schools, where they were often visited by the widow and
+her aunt.&nbsp; Soon after this the eldest girl was taken ill.&nbsp; A
+medical gentleman attended her at the tent, a little way from the town,
+whither her grandmother had begged <!-- page 66--><a
+name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 66</span>to remove her for
+change of air.&nbsp; But the sickness of this child <i>was unto
+death</i>.&nbsp; She was a lovely and affectionate girl, notwithstanding
+the disadvantages under which she had necessarily laboured.&nbsp; When on
+her bed, in the tent, suffering much pain, she was asked by a gentleman,
+&ldquo;Although you love Mr Crabb so much, would you rather live with him,
+or die, and go to Jesus?&rdquo;&nbsp; She answered, &ldquo;I would rather
+die and go to Jesus.&rdquo;&nbsp; Her death very much affected her
+grandmother.&nbsp; She would not leave the corpse, which she often
+affectionately embraced, till persuaded she would endanger her own
+life.&nbsp; This appeared a melancholy event to all who wished well to the
+Gipsies in the neighbourhood of Southampton.&nbsp; For the widow, fearing
+her child would become ill and die too, immediately removed her from the
+school.&nbsp; And many of the Gipsy people treated the women with great
+contempt, for giving up their children; and the prospects of doing them
+lasting good, became very much beclouded.&nbsp; It was however represented
+to them, that God was doing all things for the best, and their spirits were
+soothed; and in consequence, the little fatherless girl was again brought
+to the school.</p>
+<p>After this event, the women remained a considerable time in the
+neighbourhood, waiting to see if the little one, again given up to the
+author, would be kindly treated.&nbsp; By this detention they were often
+brought into the company of good people, whose kindness gained their
+confidence.&nbsp; They began to listen to invitations to settle in the
+town, and finally determined <!-- page 67--><a name="page67"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 67</span>on doing so.&nbsp; Even the <i>old</i> woman,
+who had lived under hedges for fifty years, and who had declared but a
+short time before, that she would not leave her tent for a palace, now
+gladly occupied a house; this greatly encouraged their friends, who well
+knew that it was not a small sacrifice, for a Gipsy to give up what is
+thought by them to be their liberty.</p>
+<p>A short time before these women removed from under the hedges, the
+sister of the unhappy man who had been executed, came out of Dorsetshire
+with her three children, on her way to Surry, where she had been accustomed
+to go to hop-picking.&nbsp; Encamping under the same hedge with the widow
+and her aunt, she was seen by the author in one of his visits to
+them.&nbsp; He found them one evening about six o&rsquo;clock at dinner,
+and took his seat near them; and while they were regaling themselves with
+broiled meat, potatoes, and tea, the following interesting conversation
+took place.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said the widow, &ldquo;this is my sister and her
+children.&rdquo;&nbsp; No one could have introduced this woman and her
+little ones with more easy simplicity than she did, while, by the smile on
+her swarthy countenance, she exhibited real heartfelt pleasure.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I am glad to see you, my good woman;&rdquo; said the author,
+&ldquo;are these your children?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo;
+replied she, very cheerfully.&nbsp; &ldquo;And where are you
+going?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I am going into Surry, sir.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Have you not many difficulties to trouble you in your way of
+life?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; answered she.&nbsp; The author
+continued, &ldquo;I wish you would let me have your children to provide for
+and <!-- page 68--><a name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+68</span>educate.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Not I, indeed,&rdquo; she replied
+sharply; &ldquo;others may part with their children, if they like, but I
+will never part with mine.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Well, my good woman, the
+offer to educate them has done no harm: let me hope it will do good.&nbsp;
+I would have you recollect that you have now a proposal made you of
+bettering their present and future condition.&nbsp; You and I must soon
+meet at the judgment-seat of Christ, to give an account of this meeting;
+and you know that I can do better for your little ones than you
+can.&rdquo;&nbsp; She was silent.&nbsp; The author then addressed these
+people and left the tents.</p>
+<p>The next day he visited the camp again, when the widow woman said,
+&ldquo;Sir, my sister was so <i>cut up</i> (putting her hand to her heart),
+with what you said last night, that she could not eat any more, and
+declared she felt as she never had done before; and she has determined to
+come and live with us at Michaelmas.&rdquo;&nbsp; What was still better, in
+consequence of what was said to this poor stranger, she did not go to the
+races, although she had stopped near Southampton for that purpose.</p>
+<p>From this time endeavours were made to confirm the woman&rsquo;s
+intentions to stay at Southampton, and to place her children with the
+other.&nbsp; She was asked, why she would not stay at Southampton
+then?&nbsp; &ldquo;Why, to tell you the truth,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;for
+it&rsquo;s no use to tell a lie about that, I don&rsquo;t want to bring my
+children to you, like vagabonds; and as we shall earn a good <i>bit</i> of
+money at hopping, I shall buy them some clothes; <!-- page 69--><a
+name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 69</span>and then, if you will
+take me a room at Michaelmas, I will surely return and live in Southampton,
+and my children shall go to school; but I will never give them up
+entirely.&rdquo;&nbsp; She continued with her sister till the house which
+had been taken for the latter was ready; during which time a gentleman from
+Ireland, then living near the encampment, had her children every day to his
+house, and taught them to read.&nbsp; The remembrance of him will be
+precious to them for ever.&nbsp; She came on the day appointed, and her
+children were put to the Infants&rsquo; School, where they have continued
+ever since, clean and respectable, and very diligent in their
+learning.&nbsp; They often explain the Scriptures to their mother.&nbsp;
+One of them has long been a monitor in the school.&nbsp; May she continue a
+credit to the institution in which she has been so far educated.</p>
+<p>Although the mother of these children is not yet decidedly pious, she is
+very much improved.&nbsp; She is now able to read her Testament with
+tolerable ease, takes great pleasure in receiving instruction, and we hope
+is deeply impressed with the importance of personal religion.&nbsp; She
+attends public worship diligently, and loves Christians, whom she once
+hated.&nbsp; She weeps with abhorrence over past crimes, and says she would
+rather have her hands cut off, than do as she has done.&nbsp; For more than
+twelve months after living at Southampton, she continued occasionally to
+tell fortunes for the gain it brought her.&nbsp; But a remarkable dream led
+her to see the wickedness of this practice; for it so terrified <!-- page
+70--><a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 70</span>her that she
+rose from her bed, lighted a fire, and burnt the book in which she had
+pretended to see the fortune of others.&nbsp; Large sums of money had been
+offered her for this volume; but, though in extreme poverty, she determined
+to make any sacrifice, rather than enrich herself by its sale.&nbsp; She
+dreamed that she was at the adult school, where she regularly attended,
+and, that while she was reading her Testament, it changed into a book of
+divination, and she began to tell the fortune of the lady who was teaching
+her; and while thus employed, she thought she heard awful thunderings, and
+the sound of trumpets; after which a tremendous tempest ensued, during
+which she fancied herself in an extensive plain, exposed to all the fury of
+the storm.&nbsp; She then thought the day of judgment was come, and that
+she was summoned to render up her account.&nbsp; She awoke in great terror,
+and as soon as she had a little recovered herself, arose and followed the
+example of those we read of in the Acts of the Apostles:&mdash;<i>And many
+of them which also used curious arts</i>, <i>brought their books
+together</i>, <i>and burned them before all men</i>; <i>and they counted
+the price of them</i>, <i>and found fifty thousand pieces silver</i>.&nbsp;
+Acts xix. 19.</p>
+<p>When relating this dream to a lady, she was asked whether she had
+formerly been in the habit of seeking by any means, the aid of the devil,
+in order to know future events; it having been asserted that many of the
+Gipsies had done so.&nbsp; She informed the lady that she never had done
+so, and that she thought none of <!-- page 71--><a name="page71"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 71</span>her people had any thing to do with him,
+otherwise than by giving themselves up to do wickedly.&nbsp; The devil
+tempted them to do still worse; as those who neglect to seek to God for
+help, must of course be under the power of the wicked one.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 72--><a name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+72</span>CHAP. VIII.&nbsp; Of the plans pursued by the Southampton
+Committee, and the success which has attended them, continued.</h2>
+<p>Sixteen reformed Gipsies are now living at Southampton, one of whom is
+the aged Gipsy whose history has been published by a lady. <a
+name="citation72"></a><a href="#footnote72" class="citation">[72]</a>&nbsp;
+There are also her brother and four of his children, her sister, who has
+been a wanderer for more than fifty years, and her daughter, three orphans,
+and a boy who has been given up to the Committee by his mother, a woman and
+her three children, and the young woman before mentioned, who has, since
+her reformation, lost her two children by the measles.</p>
+<p>In addition to those who have retired from a wandering life, and are
+pursuing habits of honest industry, three other families, whose united
+number is sixteen, begged the privilege of wintering with us in the
+beginning of 1831.&nbsp; These Gipsies regularly attended divine service
+twice on a Sunday, and on the work-day evenings the adults went to school
+to learn to read.&nbsp; The children were placed at one of the
+Infants&rsquo; Schools.&nbsp; The prospects of doing one of the families
+lasting good, <!-- page 73--><a name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+73</span>are rather dark, as they are grown old and hardened in crime; but
+the condition of the others is more encouraging.&nbsp; The children, who
+would gladly have stayed longer with us, were sickly; and it is
+apprehended, had not this been the case, the parents would have continued
+longer, that they might have gone to school.&nbsp; Two women, mother and
+daughter, in one family, are much interested in the worship of God, and
+already begin to feel the value of their souls; and both regret that they
+are under the necessity of submitting to the arbitrary will of the
+father.&nbsp; One of them declared that she could never more act as a
+Gipsy, and with weeping eyes she said, that, she feared she never should be
+pardoned, or saved.&nbsp; When directed to go to Jesus, she replied, she
+knew not how to go to him.&nbsp; In three days they will leave us, and it
+will be a painful separation.&nbsp; It was very gratifying to the author to
+see so many Gipsies attend the house of God, and he frequently recollected
+with pleasure, that promise of holy Scripture, <i>For as the rain cometh
+down</i>, <i>and the snow from heaven</i>, <i>and returneth not
+thither</i>, <i>but watereth the earth</i>, <i>and maketh it bring forth
+and bud</i>, <i>that it may give seed to the sower</i>, <i>and bread to the
+eater</i>: <i>so shall my word be that goeth forth of my mouth</i>: <i>it
+shall not return unto me void</i>, <i>but it shall accomplish that which I
+please</i>, <i>and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I send
+it</i>.&nbsp; <i>For ye shall go out with joy</i>, <i>and be led forth with
+peace</i>; <i>the mountains and the hills shall break forth before you into
+singing</i>, <i>and all the trees of the field shall clap their
+hands</i>.&nbsp; <i>Instead of the thorn shall come up the </i><!-- page
+74--><a name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 74</span><i>fur
+tree</i>, <i>and instead of the brier shall come up the myrtle tree</i>:
+<i>and it stall be to the Lord for a name</i>, <i>for an everlasting sign
+that shall not be cut off</i>.</p>
+<p>Six of the children are at an Infants&rsquo; School at Southampton, and
+three others attend a charity school; and another is learning to be a coach
+wheelwright.&nbsp; This youth has behaved so well in his situation, that he
+has been advanced by his master to a higher branch in the business.&nbsp;
+His fellow-workmen, who at first disliked him for being a Gipsy, have
+subscribed money to assist him in the purchase of additional tools, to
+which the foreman added five shillings, and the master <i>one
+pound</i>.&nbsp; This is a most encouraging circumstance.</p>
+<p>The aged man who has been so many years reformed, is a basket
+maker.&nbsp; He often visits his brethren in their tents, under the
+direction of the Committee, to give advice and instruction.&nbsp; His
+sister, lately reclaimed, takes care of the six Gipsy children, and is
+become very serious and industrious; and though in the decline of life, she
+receives but one shilling per week from the Committee.&nbsp; Two instances
+of the gratitude of this woman ought not to be omitted.</p>
+<p>The author&rsquo;s horse having strayed from the field, a sovereign was
+offered to any one who would bring it back to him.&nbsp; Several persons
+sought for it in vain.&nbsp; This old Gipsy woman was sent in quest of it,
+and in two days returned with the horse.&nbsp; Of course she was offered
+the sovereign that had been named as a reward; but she refused to take it,
+saying, she owed the author more than that; yea, all that she had, for the
+comfort <!-- page 75--><a name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+75</span>she was then enjoying.&nbsp; This was the language of an honest
+and grateful heart.&nbsp; On being compelled to take it, she bought herself
+some garments for the winter.</p>
+<p>On another occasion, when she was coming from some place which she had
+visited, and was detained on the road longer than she had expected, she
+became penniless; yet would she not beg, lest it might be looked on as one
+step towards turning back to habits she had entirely abandoned.&nbsp; She
+assured the author that she would rather have starved than return to her
+old trade of begging; and besides, added she, &ldquo;the people know that I
+am one of your reformed Gipsies, and I will never bring a reproach upon my
+best friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young widow was taught to make shoes; but becoming depressed in
+spirits after the death of her children, she has been placed in
+service.&nbsp; And another young Gipsy woman has also obtained a situation
+as a servant.</p>
+<p>But while the Committee has had to rejoice over the success that has
+attended its efforts, it has also experienced great and manifold
+disappointments.&nbsp; But its members are not discouraged, and it is hoped
+they never will be.</p>
+<p>One young woman stayed with the Committee a month, and then ran
+away.&nbsp; She was lamentably ignorant, and could never be brought to
+work. <a name="citation75"></a><a href="#footnote75"
+class="citation">[75]</a>&nbsp; Another <!-- page 76--><a
+name="page76"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 76</span>very promising in
+temper and habits, stayed in a family three months, and then left them to
+live again with her parents, who encouraged her to believe that she would
+be married to one of her clan.&nbsp; It may be hoped the knowledge she
+gained while in service may be useful to her at some future time.&nbsp; She
+is not, cannot be happy, and is sorry that she left her service and her
+friends.&nbsp; The father and mother have promised to stay in Southampton
+through the next winter, which they will be encouraged to do, with the hope
+of gaining instruction in the truths of religion.</p>
+<p>A woman, her four sons, and their grandmother, <a
+name="citation76"></a><a href="#footnote76" class="citation">[76]</a>
+joined the family of reformed Gipsies for a short time, and we had
+considerable hopes of them all, the two eldest boys excepted, who refused
+to work, and who grew much more vicious than when under the hedges.&nbsp;
+Their father had formerly been sentenced to death, but by the interest of a
+friend, the sentence was changed to fourteen years&rsquo; hard labour on
+board the hulks at Portsmouth, nearly nine of which had expired at the time
+his family came under the direction of the Committee.&nbsp; His wife
+intimating that if they were to apply for his release, it might be granted,
+and that then he might govern the boys, and make them work, his liberty was
+obtained.&nbsp; But within three days afterwards, <!-- page 77--><a
+name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 77</span>he declared he would
+not constrain any of his children to labour; they might do it or not, as
+they pleased.&nbsp; And, in the course of the week, he took them all away
+and went to Brighton.</p>
+<p>A lady then staying at that place, and who had known this family at
+Southampton, sent to the place where the Gipsies usually encamp, hoping to
+recall some of them to a sense of their duty, but was informed that the
+whole of the party had set off a few days before.&nbsp; Early on the
+following morning, a Gipsy called at the house of this lady, and offered to
+tell the fortunes of the servants.&nbsp; She was asked if she knew the
+woman who was enquired for the preceding day?&nbsp; She replied, that
+<i>she was the very person</i>.&nbsp; On hearing by whose servant she was
+addressed, she became almost speechless with shame, and said, <i>I would
+rather have met the king</i>.&nbsp; On recovering, she expressed great
+delight and gratitude that she was not forgotten by the lady, and declared
+she had been very unhappy since she had left Southampton, and that the sin
+of fortune-telling greatly distressed her mind; but that she knew not how
+to support her family without it.&nbsp; They had undergone many
+hardships.&nbsp; The little boys, she said, had frequently amused
+themselves with trying to spell the different things about their tent, and
+were often wishing for their Southampton fire.&nbsp; The next morning she
+brought them to see their kind benefactress.&nbsp; The youngest of them, a
+fine promising boy, both as to talent and disposition, was overjoyed at the
+meeting; his little eyes were filled with tears, and he could <!-- page
+78--><a name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 78</span>scarcely
+speak.&nbsp; He and his brother were immediately provided with clothing,
+and sent to the School of Industry; where, in addition to the religious
+instruction given them, they were taught reading, writing, arithmetic,
+digging, &amp;c.&nbsp; Their master has been much pleased with their
+progress.&nbsp; The mother was afterwards induced to stay at Brighton,
+being allowed a small sum weekly.&nbsp; She has been taught to read by some
+kind friends, and many hopes are entertained of her conversion to
+God.&nbsp; A letter has lately been received, which gives a very
+interesting account of her increase in knowledge and improvement in
+morals.</p>
+<p>A very promising Gipsy youth, who was placed with a coach-maker in
+Southampton, after working some time, cut his hand, and then relinquished
+his employment, to wander with his father, who is a rat-catcher.&nbsp; But
+it is hoped that he, as well as others of his brethren who have returned to
+their former courses, will be brought back, or find some other desirable
+and permanent abode; that what has been done by this society may not
+ultimately be lost.&nbsp; Indeed, while writing this, I am happy to be able
+to state, that the morals of this young man appear very correct, and that
+he has, by constant application, learned to read tolerably well since he
+left Southampton.&nbsp; He supports himself by selling brushes, lines, and
+corks, but talks very seriously of giving up his wandering habits to return
+to us again.</p>
+<p>Among the reclaimed Gipsies are three women who were notorious
+fortune-tellers, and who doubtless have <!-- page 79--><a
+name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 79</span>done much injury to the
+morals of society.&nbsp; They are now very promising; and there is a fair
+prospect of their children being saved from much sin and misery, as they
+are placed at Infants&rsquo; Schools, where they are gradually acquiring
+useful scriptural knowledge, and correctness of habits; in which, if they
+persevere, by the grace of the Redeemer, their present and everlasting
+welfare will be secured.&nbsp; Such examples of success amply repay the
+Committee for the trouble and expense already bestowed on the Gipsies; and
+it is hoped its members will be stimulated to every exertion in their power
+by the good done to those in a state of reformation and improvement, that
+the whole wandering race may be led into the right way.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 80--><a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+80</span>CHAP. IX.&nbsp; Of the plans pursued by the Southampton Committee,
+and the success which has attended them, continued.</h2>
+<p>A gipsy woman, of whose reformation we have already taken some notice,
+having gone to solicit the assistance of the parish to which one of her
+children belonged, met with many difficulties and troubles.&nbsp; She was
+not at this time destitute of the knowledge of religion.&nbsp; She had
+learned to read, and had become acquainted with the Scriptures, at an adult
+school, and by attending at a place of worship; and these instructions were
+not thrown away on her; for although she was frequently invited to eat and
+drink in the tents of the Gipsies on her journey, she conscientiously
+refused, fearing that what they were partaking of might not be honestly
+obtained.&nbsp; She informed them that her Testament had taught her better
+habits than those she had formerly known.&nbsp; Her children helped to keep
+alive her religious impressions.&nbsp; They often talked to her about the
+school from which she had taken them, of their lessons, and the
+observations of the master and mistress, on different parts of the
+Scriptures, and at other times they catechised each other on the objects
+that presented themselves on the road, in the same way they had been used
+to in the Infants&rsquo; Schools; to <!-- page 81--><a
+name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 81</span>which they often begged
+their mother to let them return.&nbsp; These circumstances, she has since
+said, made her so miserable that she felt she <i>could not live as she had
+done</i>.</p>
+<p>Some time after this, she made a visit to a parish in which another of
+her children was born, near Basingstoke.&nbsp; She entered the cottage of
+an old couple who sold fruit, &amp;c.&nbsp; Tea being proposed, the old
+woman expressed her surprise that she had not seen her visitor for so long
+a time, saying she was glad she was come, as she wanted her to tell her
+many things, meaning future events.&nbsp; She mentioned a great deal that
+another Gipsy woman had told her, on which the reformed one
+exclaimed&mdash;<i>Don&rsquo;t believe her</i>, <i>dame</i>.&nbsp; <i>It is
+all lies</i>.&nbsp; <i>She knows no more about it than you do</i>.&nbsp;
+<i>If you trust to what she says</i>, <i>you will be deceived</i>.&nbsp;
+The old woman was still more surprised, and asked <i>how she</i>, who had
+so often told their fortunes, and had promised them such good luck, could
+be so much altered?&nbsp; The woman taking her Testament from her bosom,
+replied, &ldquo;I have learned from this blessed book, and from my kind
+friends, <i>that all liars shall have their portion in the lake that
+burneth with brimstone and fire</i>; and rather than tell fortunes again, I
+would starve.&rdquo;&nbsp; She then opened her book and began reading a
+chapter, endeavouring to explain as she read, at which her host and hostess
+began to weep.&nbsp; She told them that though she knew she had been a
+great sinner, and was one still, yet she never had felt so happy as
+then.&nbsp; The old woman observed, that <i>she</i> could not <!-- page
+82--><a name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 82</span>say <i>she was
+happy</i>, and wished to know what she must do to feel happy.&nbsp; The
+Gipsy replied, you must leave off selling on Sundays, and go to a place of
+worship, and learn to read the Testament, and to pray, and <i>then</i> you
+will become happy.</p>
+<p>This poor Gipsy woman, who was so anxious to instruct those she had many
+times deceived, was soon after taken sick, at which time her distress of
+soul was very great; and she then said, were she to die, her <i>soul could
+not go to heaven</i>.</p>
+<p>Many were her temptations, while in great poverty, to renew the practice
+of fortune-telling.&nbsp; Several genteel parties have visited her, and
+sometimes offered her gold, tempting her to begin again the sins she had
+for ever given up; but, much to her credit, she at all times resolutely
+refused all such unholy gain.</p>
+<p>At one time some very gay young women called on her, desiring to have
+their fortunes told.&nbsp; Her Testament lay on the table, which she had
+but a short time before been reading, and pointing to it, she
+said&mdash;<i>That book</i>, <i>and that only</i>, <i>will tell your
+fortunes</i>; <i>for it is God&rsquo;s book</i>; <i>it is his own
+word</i>.&nbsp; She reproved them for their sin, and said, the Bible had
+told her, <i>all unrighteousness is sin</i>.&nbsp; They then requested she
+would not tell any one that they had called upon her.&nbsp; She
+replied&mdash;<i>Oh</i>! <i>you fear man more than God</i>!</p>
+<p>A few days since, this reformed woman was sweeping the pavement in front
+of her house, when two female servants came up, enquiring for the house of
+the fortune-teller; mourning over them for their folly, <!-- page 83--><a
+name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 83</span>she said&mdash;<i>My
+dears</i>, <i>she cannot tell your fortunes</i>.&nbsp; <i>I have been a
+professed fortune-teller</i>, <i>and have deceived hundreds</i>.&nbsp; She
+succeeded in persuading them to go home.</p>
+<p>At a meeting of Gipsies held at a gentleman&rsquo;s house, Jan. 1830,
+the youngest child of this woman said to her mother, <i>Mammy</i>, <i>who
+be all these folks</i>?&nbsp; The mother replied, <i>They are
+Gipsies</i>.&nbsp; <i>Was</i> I <i>ever like &rsquo;em</i>? asked the
+child.&nbsp; <i>Yes</i>, said the mother, <i>you was once a poor little
+Gipsy without stockings and shoes</i>, <i>and glad to beg a halfpenny of
+any body</i>.&nbsp; It is a circumstance not to be lamented, that the
+condition even of a little child, has been so much bettered by the
+exertions of the Committee.</p>
+<p>In addition to the encouragement afforded us by this woman, giving up
+with so much decision the practice of fortune-telling, the author must not
+forget to mention an instance of her forbearance of temper under
+provocation and outrage.&nbsp; She had, when a vagrant, a quarrel with some
+of her ignorant people of another tribe.&nbsp; Meeting with them after her
+reformation, she was severely beaten by them, and had her ear-drops torn
+from her ears, while they contemptuously called her <i>Methodist</i>.&nbsp;
+When asked, why she did not bring her persecutors to justice, she replied,
+<i>How can I be forgiven</i>, <i>if I do not forgive</i>?&nbsp; <i>That is
+what my Testament tells me</i>.</p>
+<p>The young widow we have before mentioned, continued to tell fortunes for
+some time after we had taken her children; but it pleased the Holy Spirit
+to awaken <!-- page 84--><a name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+84</span>her conscience, and to shew her the wickedness of such crimes, by
+which she was led to true repentance and reformation of character.</p>
+<p>After the death of both the children of this interesting individual, she
+went into the service of a kind and pious lady in London.&nbsp; For this
+situation she was prepared by one of equal benevolence in Southampton, who
+had her for some time in her own house for that purpose.&nbsp; She
+continued in this situation till the lady&rsquo;s death, and has since been
+in other service, where she has conducted herself so well as to prove she
+is become a sincere servant of Christ.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 85--><a name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+85</span>CHAP. X.&nbsp; Some Remarks on the Sin of Fortune-telling.</h2>
+<p>The author will be pardoned, he is willing to hope, by the kind reader,
+if he digress in one or two paragraphs in this part of his work, purposely
+to expose the great wickedness of prognostication and fortune-telling; as
+the whole is not only unsound, foolish, absurd and false, but is most
+peremptorily forbidden in the Scriptures.</p>
+<p>In the law of Moses it is commanded, that there should not be found
+among the people, any that used divination, or that was an observer of the
+times, or that was an enchanter: Deut. xiii. 10.&nbsp; In the prophecies of
+Malachi, the Lord has declared&mdash;<i>Thou shalt have no more
+soothsayers</i>: Mal. v. 12.&nbsp; Balaam and Balak were cursed of the Lord
+of Hosts; the former for using enchantments, and the latter for employing
+Balaam in this wicked work.&nbsp; <i>Woe to them that devise iniquity</i>:
+Micah, ii. 1.&nbsp; Those who employ unhappy Gipsy women, should think on
+the portion of the liar; Rev. xxi. 8: for the person who tempts another to
+utter falsehood by offering rewards, is equally guilty before God.&nbsp;
+<i>A companion of fools shall be destroyed</i>: Prov. <!-- page 86--><a
+name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 86</span>xiii. 20.&nbsp;
+<i>Though hand join in hand</i>, in sin, <i>the wicked shall not go
+unpunished</i>: Prov. xvi. 5.&nbsp; <i>The destruction of the transgressors
+and the sinners shall be together</i>: Isai. i. 28.&nbsp; It may be safely
+affirmed that the sin of those persons, who trifle with Gipsy women in
+having their fortunes told by them, nearly resembles that of the first king
+of Israel; who, by consulting, in his trouble, a wicked woman, who
+pretended to supernatural power, filled up the measure of those sins, by
+which he lost the protection of heaven, his crown, and his life, and by
+which he involved his family in the most ruinous calamity.</p>
+<p>Reader, have you encouraged any of these people in such crimes?&nbsp; If
+you have so far forgotten yourselves, the commands of God, and the curse
+that awaits you and those who deceive themselves the same way; reflect,
+before it be too late, on the evil into which you have willingly, wilfully,
+and without the least reasonable excuse, fallen, and on the guilt that must
+of necessity attach to your consciences thereby.&nbsp; Should you never
+meet those you encouraged to sin in this world, and therefore never have an
+opportunity of warning them of their danger, yet must you meet at the bar
+of Christ; and if then loaded with the weight of the sin in question, how
+awful will be your condition!&nbsp; Yourself and a fellow creature turned
+out for ever from God, and heaven, and hope!&nbsp; You may find mercy
+<i>now</i>, if you, by faith in the Redeemer, <i>seek for it</i>; and who
+can tell but if you sincerely pray for those <!-- page 87--><a
+name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 87</span>you led into sin, but
+that the mercy of which you part take, may find out them!&nbsp; May it even
+be so, to your everlasting comfort!</p>
+<p>Some have supposed that this contemptible practice was first introduced
+into Europe by the Gipsies: but such persons are greatly mistaken.&nbsp; In
+the dark ages of superstition, in which this wandering people came to our
+part of the world, prognostication and fortune-telling were carried on to
+an infinite extent; and so enraged were the deceivers of those days against
+the Gipsies, that they proclaimed they knew nothing of the <i>art</i>; that
+they were deceivers and impostors.</p>
+<p>It were well if the Gipsies were <i>now</i> the only persons addicted to
+such wickedness; but this is not the case; for it is well known that almost
+every town is cursed with an astrological, magical, or slight-of-hand
+fortune-teller.&nbsp; There are two now in Southampton; and their wretched
+abodes are visited not only by vain and ignorant servants, but often by
+those who belong to the higher circles, and not unfrequently by those who
+drive their carriages.</p>
+<p>To conclude this chapter, it may be safely said, that the sort of
+wickedness in question, is not only forbidden in the Scriptures, and will
+add much to the guilt of an impenitent death; but that it is calculated to
+give us the most airy anticipations, or oppress us with the most
+unreasonable despair.&nbsp; <i>Sufficient unto the day is the evil
+thereof</i>; why should we then afflict ourselves about ill-fortune in
+future years?&nbsp; If we <i>seek</i>, as the <!-- page 88--><a
+name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 88</span>first great object of
+life, <i>the kingdom of heaven</i>, <i>all </i>[necessary] <i>things shall
+be added</i>.&nbsp; And why should we deceive ourselves with gay and
+splendid expectations?&nbsp; <i>Riches make themselves wings and soon fly
+away</i>.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 89--><a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+89</span>CHAP. XI.&nbsp; Plans suggested to the pious and benevolent for
+promoting a Reformation among the Gipsies.</h2>
+<p>As no event happens without a cause, so no good is accomplished without
+means.&nbsp; It is in the power of man as an instrument, frequently to make
+his fellow-creatures either happy or miserable.&nbsp; And it may safely be
+asserted, that much of the ignorance, depravity, and consequent misery
+found in the world, are occasioned by the want of a united and persevering
+application of the energies of Christians, to the reformation of the most
+debased classes of Society.&nbsp; This backwardness to perform that which
+is good, with respect to our fellow men, must be accounted for, by the want
+of faith in God&rsquo;s word, and the little influence we allow the
+religion of the Saviour to have on our own hearts.&nbsp; It may also be
+occasioned by the strong evidences we have of the corruption of human
+nature, and the little good we see attend the labours of others: and we are
+often likewise discouraged because our own efforts fail.&nbsp; On these
+accounts, how often do we sigh for opportunities of doing good, whilst we
+neglect the openings of Providence in little things, which would frequently
+lead to the accomplishment of most important usefulness.&nbsp; Dr Johnson
+used to say, <!-- page 90--><a name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+90</span>&ldquo;He who waits to do a great deal of good at once, will never
+do any.&rdquo;&nbsp; Good is done by degrees.&nbsp; However small in
+proportion the benefit which follows <i>individual attempts</i> to do good,
+a great deal may thus be accomplished by perseverance, even in the midst of
+discouragements and disappointments.&nbsp; The first missionaries who
+visited England, had to contend with all the frightful cruelties of savage
+life, and the more horrid rites of Druidical worship.&nbsp; But now, though
+much wickedness abounds in England, it is, in a religious point of view,
+the paradise of the earth.&nbsp; May all those who wish to diffuse the
+genuine influences of Christianity among the poor Gipsies, imitate the
+example of the adorable Saviour, who <i>made himself of no reputation</i>,
+that he might enlighten the most ignorant, and impart happiness to the most
+miserable.</p>
+<p>It will not be denied that the Gipsies are capable of feeling the
+influence, and appreciating the worth of the Gospel: and no one will doubt
+that the earlier the plans are adopted for their improvement, the sooner
+will this desirable work be accomplished.</p>
+<p>The reader is requested to pay particular attention to the following
+suggestions.</p>
+<p>The establishment of an Institution to supply instruction to the Gipsies
+by regular Ministers, or Missionaries, would be of but little use.&nbsp;
+Indeed such a measure could scarcely be carried into effect.&nbsp; For the
+Gipsies, beside associating in very small companies, are perpetually driven
+from place to place.&nbsp; To supply them, therefore, with regular
+instruction, a preacher <!-- page 91--><a name="page91"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 91</span>would be necessary to every family; who would
+condescend to their mode of life, travel when they travelled, rest when
+they rested, and be content with the ground and straw for his bed, and a
+blanket tent for his covering!&nbsp; All this would subject them to great
+personal inconvenience, and at the same time be very expensive and highly
+improper.&nbsp; Neither would it be possible for ministers to be appointed
+occasionally and alternately to visit the Gipsies in different
+counties.&nbsp; For it might often happen that, before intelligence could
+be forwarded to those appointed to give them instruction, they might be
+removed by a peace officer, or have set out on a journey of several miles
+distance.&nbsp; Benevolent, zealous, and prudent persons may do much by
+visiting the camps near towns; and the most suitable parts of the day for
+promoting this object, are morning and evening.&nbsp; But the most simple
+and easy plans of instruction should invariably be adopted.</p>
+<p>To those persons who are afraid of visiting the Gipsies, lest they
+should be insulted, abused, and robbed, the author may be allowed to say
+that they have not the least grounds for such fears.&nbsp; In Scotland this
+fear is quite as general among the religious people as it is in England;
+and in that country the inhabitants are even afraid to prosecute them for
+their depredations and crimes.&nbsp; In England ladies are frequently known
+to visit their camps singly, when more than a mile from towns, and to sit
+and read and converse with them for a considerable time, with the greatest
+confidence and safety.</p>
+<p><!-- page 92--><a name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+92</span>There is not the least prospect of doing them good, by forcing
+instruction upon them.&nbsp; About the year 1748, the Empress Theresa
+attempted the improvement of the Gipsies in Germany, by taking away, by
+force, all their children of a certain age, in order to educate and protect
+them; but such an unnatural and arbitrary mode of benevolence, defeated its
+own object; and this is not to be wondered at: the souls of the free resist
+every effort of compulsion, whether the object be good or bad.&nbsp;
+Compulsatory instruction, therefore, would do no good among the
+Gipsies.&nbsp; But they are easily won by kindness, and whoever wishes
+really to benefit them, must convince them that this is his intention, by
+patiently bearing with the unpleasing parts of their characters, and by a
+willingness to lessen their distresses so far as it is in his power.&nbsp;
+Such kindness will never be lost upon them.&nbsp; Nor would the author
+recommend their being encouraged to live in Towns, except they are truly
+desirous of leading a new life, as it is almost certain that their morals
+would be greatly corrupted thereby: and they would be capable of more
+extensive injury to society, should they take to their wandering habits
+again.</p>
+<p>A correspondent of a friend of the author, has just communicated the
+following particulars, which prove the truth of the above remarks.</p>
+<p>There is in the neighbourhood of Harz, at Nordausen, a colony of
+Gipsies, to whom a Missionary has been sent from Berlin.&nbsp; His last
+letter speaks very favourably of their disposition to receive the word of
+<!-- page 93--><a name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+93</span>life.&nbsp; The manner of his introduction to them was by no means
+likely to ensure him a favourable reception.&nbsp; &ldquo;Here,&rdquo; said
+the person who brought him among them, &ldquo;you have a Missionary, who is
+come to convert you; now mind and be converted, or you shall go to
+prison.&rdquo;&nbsp; The effect this foolish speech produced on the Gipsies
+may be easily imagined, and likewise how useless it rendered the situation
+of the Missionary who desired to labour among them.&nbsp; They took to
+flight whenever they saw him approach, and thus, humanly speaking, there
+appeared not the least prospect of success, as the seed of the word could
+not so much as be sown.&nbsp; But <span class="smcap">He</span>, who alone
+is able to turn the heart, mercifully looked upon the work, and directed
+him to the right means effectually to bring it about.</p>
+<p>The Gipsies were obliged to cultivate the land on which they were
+permitted to reside; but being quite ignorant of agriculture, they were at
+a loss how to proceed.&nbsp; The missionary undertook himself to give them
+advice and assistance in the work.&nbsp; Seeing the success that attended
+his labours, they began to be much more diligent in the cultivation of
+their grounds, while their confidence daily increased in their missionary,
+and they became more accessible and willing to be taught.&nbsp; At last
+they asked him for what reason the people at Berlin had sent him among
+them? and when he told them, they were overpowered with gratitude, and
+melted into tears.&nbsp; Their attachment to him and the friends who had
+sent him, became stronger and stronger.&nbsp; In some cases, it may be
+true, the conquest of their <!-- page 94--><a name="page94"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 94</span>prejudices against the missionary, might
+proceed from the advantages they reaped by attending to his advice; and
+this is much to their credit, and is a most desirable improvement.&nbsp; It
+is hoped they will soon be led to attend sincerely to his religious
+instructions.</p>
+<p>A gentleman resident in one of the towns of Hampshire, was agreeably
+surprised one sabbath morning, by seeing a number of Gipsies at public
+worship; and on being induced to converse with them, was pleased to find
+that they regularly attended divine service at Southampton, and other
+places.&nbsp; He directed them to move their tents into a more commodious
+situation in one of his own fields.&nbsp; This unusual act of kindness,
+which however required no great sacrifice on his part, made so deep an
+impression on the hearts of this people, as is not likely to be forgotten:
+they will speak of his kindness as long as they live.&nbsp; This, as well
+as the instances we have mentioned already in this work, and many more
+which we may not notice, shew that we are not without opportunities of
+observing their gratitude for those favours that have been bestowed upon
+them.</p>
+<p>They receive with willingness one of their own people, who is now a
+reformed and pious character, living at Southampton, and whom we have named
+in a former page.&nbsp; They now rejoice, too, in the assurance that a
+great number of good Christians pity and love them, and are seeking to
+promote their present and everlasting happiness.</p>
+<p>It is therefore much to be wished, that committees of <!-- page 95--><a
+name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 95</span>ladies or gentlemen
+were formed in every town in the kingdom, and their attention directed to
+this neglected class of British subjects.&nbsp; An active person might be
+found in every place, to act under the sanction of such committees, who
+should visit their tents, instruct them in the Scriptures, and pray with
+and for them (the latter he should never neglect) by which means he would
+gain their confidence, and would always be looked on as a friend.&nbsp;
+Such a person should not be ashamed to speak kindly to them when he meets
+them in the street, or on the road.&nbsp; Indeed at all times he should
+converse with them plainly and affectionately about the great love of the
+Redeemer, in coming into this our world, to suffer and die for guilty
+sinners, of whom they make a number.&nbsp; But all the labour should not be
+confined to one person.&nbsp; Every member of these committees should be
+alive to this good work; as also all Christians, and especially
+ministers.</p>
+<p>But should there not be sufficient energy and benevolence in all towns
+to form a committee, two or three who are well disposed to the object, may
+unite together and accomplish a great deal.&nbsp; And should there not be
+found more than one person thus benevolently disposed, let not that one be
+discouraged.&nbsp; The single talent must not be neglected, should it be
+only the power to give a cup of cold water, or to speak one word about the
+water of life to a necessitous and perishing Gipsy; for it may not, cannot
+be in vain.&nbsp; Reader, are you doing what you can in this humble
+way?&nbsp; It may be, you would rather ascend the pulpit and preach <!--
+page 96--><a name="page96"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 96</span>to
+well-informed Christians, or visit the ignorant in your own town!&nbsp;
+This is well; but the other should not be left undone.&nbsp; The wanderers
+in the wilderness are not to be forgotten; the outcasts of society are to
+be sought after.&nbsp; Let us imitate our adorable Redeemer, <i>who went
+about doing good</i>, and who sought those who were not the least desirous
+of finding him.&nbsp; As an encouragement to British Christians, who are
+alive to the happiness of the Gipsies, they should know that there are many
+among them desirous of a new mode of life, as will appear by an application
+lately made to the author.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: right">&ldquo;<i>Bristol</i>, <i>Oct.</i>
+11<i>th</i>, 1830.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Sir,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am unwilling to let a parcel go to Southampton, without sending
+you a line to give you a little information respecting H---, of whom I made
+enquiry if she had called on the friends to whom I directed her?&nbsp; This
+was done by her; but she could obtain no employment.&nbsp; Both H--- and
+her husband conduct themselves in a very satisfactory manner.&nbsp; A young
+lady, I hope, will employ her soon; and, perhaps, in time she may get into
+regular work; but at present, she gets very little, and it is very
+necessary that the man should have employment.&nbsp; The cork trade is now
+over; (he used to sell corks.)&nbsp; They can have the loan of a donkey for
+two months for nothing, and that being the case, I told H--- to look out
+for a small cart, which I desired her to hire for a week, and sell coals
+<!-- page 97--><a name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 97</span>and
+potatoes in small quantities. <a name="citation97"></a><a
+href="#footnote97" class="citation">[97]</a>&nbsp; I have felt fearful lest
+you should think me too busy; but necessity has compelled me to do
+something, or they must have almost <i>starved</i>; and I cannot bear the
+thought of their wanting bread; knowing it must be a great temptation for
+them to return to their old habits.&nbsp; The man appears much altered for
+the better.&nbsp; He said one day, when they wanted food, that he would
+rather beg than oblige his wife to return to fortune-telling.&nbsp; H---
+tells me that her husband and she live happily, and that they have had
+words but once since they left their vagrant life.&nbsp; I am also happy to
+discover in her pleasing evidences of honesty, as she pays her weekly rent
+often before it is due, when she has money, fearing that she may spend it
+in food.&nbsp; Job, their son, has no work, but I hope that he will be able
+to help his father.&nbsp; Do, my dear Mr Crabb, pray for this little branch
+of your family.&nbsp; I have received two pounds for your Infants&rsquo;
+Schools, from Mr ---, and would send it now, but I have been obliged to
+expend a considerable part of it on these poor Gipsies.&nbsp; Do write to
+me when you can, and give me advice respecting this poor family.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The author must remark that, since the above letter was received, others
+also have been sent from two <!-- page 98--><a name="page98"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 98</span>ladies in that neighbourhood, which give the
+Southampton committee great pleasure.&nbsp; The following are extracts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have seen Mr ---, and have had a pleasing interview with Miss
+---, relating to the poor wanderers you wrote to me about.&nbsp; I have had
+the man and woman at my house.&nbsp; After having heard H--- read, I told
+her &lsquo;that the leprosy she had been reading of, represented the evil
+of our sinful heart; that we were born with it; that it prevailed in every
+part of the soul; and that we had lived always under its
+influence.&rsquo;&nbsp; She exclaimed, <i>dear me</i>! <i> I never heard
+the like of that before</i>! <i>now it seems good for me to know
+this</i>.&nbsp; She wept much.&nbsp; When I told her of the love of Christ,
+she appeared struck with her own extreme ingratitude.&nbsp; Her expressions
+were so simple and full of pathos, that my heart was quite overcome.&nbsp;
+She ran out of the room for her husband, and on her return, said,
+&ldquo;ah! <i>do talk</i> to my poor husband, just what you said to
+me.&rdquo;&nbsp; I found him not so interesting, but desirous of leaving
+his wandering life for ever, and get employment if possible.&nbsp; They
+have made some flower baskets for me; and hoping they may obtain orders for
+more, I have recommended them to my friends.&nbsp; I have heard of another
+family, consisting of fourteen souls, who encamp on Bedminster Down, and
+there by God&rsquo;s help, I intend to send a minister of Jesus, to try
+what can be done for them.&nbsp; There is also another family expected, who
+have a house of <i>their own</i> at <!-- page 99--><a
+name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 99</span>Bedminster, and who
+winter there.&nbsp; Should the Lord bless our humble endeavours, we must
+have a regular Committee, and set about our work in a workman-like manner;
+nothing short of a Colony will satisfy me.&nbsp; I intend to introduce this
+interesting subject at a party this evening, and hope the Lord will open
+the hearts of his people, to do good to those poor benighted
+wanderers.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The author has also just received from a clergyman in Scotland, a most
+interesting account of a colony of Gipsies in that country, where, I am
+happy to observe, they do not seem so much hunted as in England.&nbsp; And
+as the severity of their winters drive them into houses for three months,
+during that season, there is offered a fair opportunity to both ministers
+and kindly disposed Christians to do them good.&nbsp; The letter alluded to
+is most gladly inserted with the view to encourage the Christian
+denominations of England to imitate the benevolence, zeal, and industry of
+their much respected brethren the Scotch.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: right">&ldquo;<i>Yetholm Hall</i>, <i>Dec.</i>
+11<i>th</i>, 1830.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Sir,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Through the report of the Society for ameliorating the condition
+of that unfortunate race, the Gipsies, I am acquainted with your name, and
+with your benevolent exertions in their behalf.&nbsp; As the minister of a
+parish in which perhaps the largest colony of this people in Scotland
+reside, and naturally, therefore, very <!-- page 100--><a
+name="page100"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 100</span>much interested in
+any plan that promises to improve their condition, I take the liberty of
+writing you; not so much for the purpose of answering the numerous queries
+subjoined to the report, as of requesting your advice and opinion, with
+regard to what plan might be adopted for the improvement of the colony,
+placed, in some degree, under my care and superintendence.&nbsp; I have but
+lately been called to the ministerial office, and appointed to the pastoral
+care of this parish; and previous to the period of my appointment, I had no
+opportunity of being acquainted with the character and habits of the
+Gipsies.&nbsp; Your longer acquaintance with this people, and experience,
+may suggest to me some useful hints on the subject, should you take the
+trouble to notice this letter.&nbsp; The number of Gipsies in the parish of
+Yetholm is about 100.&nbsp; You are no doubt already in some degree
+acquainted with the Gipsies of Kirk Yetholm, from the interesting notices
+furnished by Mr Smith, of Kelso, and published in <span
+class="smcap">Hoyland&rsquo;s Survey</span>, and in one of the earliest
+numbers of Blackwood&rsquo;s Magazine.&nbsp; And his account of them is
+substantially correct to this day.&nbsp; It would appear that the Gipsy
+population of this place is fluctuating.&nbsp; In 1798, there were only
+59.&nbsp; In 1818, when Mr Smith wrote, there were 109.&nbsp; In 1830,
+there are 100.&nbsp; And in a few years more, this number may be
+considerably diminished or increased.&nbsp; The greater part of them are
+&ldquo;muggers,&rdquo; or &ldquo;potters,&rdquo; who carry earthen-ware
+about the country for sale.&nbsp; There are two horn spoon makers; all the
+others are abroad from their head <!-- page 101--><a
+name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 101</span>quarters, of Kirk
+Yetholm, from eight to nine months in the year.&nbsp; The history of some
+of the individuals and families of the clan, would furnish something very
+interesting.&nbsp; One of the family of the Taa&rsquo;s is still
+denominated the &ldquo;King.&rdquo;&nbsp; The number of children belonging
+to each family is generally large.&nbsp; There may be thirty children under
+twelve years of age.&nbsp; The parents express themselves very anxious that
+their children should be educated, and are willing, for this purpose, to
+leave them at home all the summer; and farther, that they should be trained
+to some occupation different from their own.&nbsp; Many of the parents
+declare, that they would willingly remain at home, could they be supplied
+with constant employment.&nbsp; Of late, the greater number of them have
+occasionally attended church, and some of them continue to attend most
+regularly when at home.&nbsp; A considerable number of the younger children
+also, when at home, attend our Sabbath School.&nbsp; I have likewise
+assisted the parents to send most of their children to the Day School:
+still, however, these children are at home scarcely three months in the
+depth of winter.&nbsp; Several families have not returned yet.&nbsp; Their
+education, therefore, even were they sent regularly to school, during this
+time, would be very limited.&nbsp; And besides, by attending the parents to
+the country, they contract an attachment to their loose, wandering life,
+which must tend to perpetuate the peculiarities of the tribe.&nbsp; A few
+weeks ago I was requested by Dr Baird, the Principal of the University, and
+one of the ministers of Edinburgh, to write <!-- page 102--><a
+name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 102</span>out a pretty full
+account of these my parishioners.&nbsp; This I have done.&nbsp; The
+account, however, was written so hastily, that I had not time even to
+correspond with you on the subject, before doing so, as my object in
+writing to you was chiefly to propose some plan which might be adopted for
+their improvement, on which you might give me some useful
+information.&nbsp; In this account, I have proposed that a fund or
+subscription should be raised for the purpose of keeping the children at
+home during those months their parents are traversing the country, for
+paying their school wages, and, if possible, for giving a salary to a
+teacher to superintend their education, and that a small additional sum be
+occasionally in readiness for paying an apprentice-fee with the boys.&nbsp;
+This account may probably be published.&nbsp; I am in hopes, also, that the
+Principal will interest himself in the cause.&nbsp; Should the account be
+published, the proof-sheet may be sent down to me, ere long, in which case
+I should wish to hear from you before that time, as I may have then an
+opportunity of supplying any hint, or otherwise altering the plan proposed,
+from your kind communication.&nbsp; The sum which I conceived would be
+required for the purpose was about a hundred pounds per annum.&nbsp; Mr
+B---, of Killau, with whom, I believe, we both have the pleasure of being
+acquainted, has more than once wished me to open a correspondence with you
+on this subject.&nbsp; He also is interested in the cause, and promises to
+use his influence with others.&nbsp; I think he told me that some more
+detailed account of your plan was <!-- page 103--><a
+name="page103"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 103</span>published, or
+preparing for the press, in which various alterations and improvements had
+been made.&nbsp; This was an additional reason for my wishing to hear from
+you, before submitting to the people of Scotland any plan on the
+subject.&nbsp; I should wish to know how the cause prospers with you, and
+what number you have at present under your care.&nbsp; I am extremely
+interested for this unfortunate people, and any information therefore with
+regard to what is doing elsewhere, would be acceptable.&nbsp; May He
+prosper the cause, whose blessing alone can render our labours
+effectual!</p>
+<p>I remain, my dear Sir,</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">With much respect and esteem,<br />
+Yours truly,<br />
+<span class="smcap">John Baird</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;P. S.&mdash;I have just received a letter from Principal Baird,
+informing me that my account of the Gipsies of Kirk Yetholm, will be
+published, and a proof for correction be sent to me shortly.&nbsp; It will
+be published in a new statistical account of Scotland, which will ensure
+for it a very extensive circulation, especially among the ministers of the
+established church of Scotland.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Another letter relating to the Gipsies of Yetholm, has been received
+from the same clergyman, extracts of which may be seen in the Appendix.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 104--><a name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+104</span>CHAP. XII.&nbsp; Plans suggested to the pious and benevolent, for
+promoting a Reformation among the Gipsies, continued.</h2>
+<p>It is usual, in Southampton, for a few pence to be given to a child who
+informs any of the members of the Committee when a family of Gipsies begin
+to erect their tents on the common, that they may immediately be visited by
+our Reader.&nbsp; This may be done elsewhere.&nbsp; It may be well, too, to
+buy a basket, or any other article they may honestly have to dispose of,
+when opportunity offers; but it is not well to bestow money on them, unless
+in sickness or want.&nbsp; When their wives are confined, a favourable
+opportunity offers to bring into action the sympathies of compassion in
+other females; and what gratitude would such an instance of tenderness
+beget!&nbsp; These poor women have frequently been heard to exclaim, while
+tears filled their eyes, <i>How kind</i>, <i>how good to us</i>! for
+favours very much less!</p>
+<p>The author has seldom met with instances of ingratitude, though he is
+obliged to record one.&nbsp; He was interested in the reformation of a
+Gipsy family that encamped, a short time since, about five miles from
+Southampton, whom he visited early on a Monday morning.&nbsp; Reaching the
+camp, accompanied by the <!-- page 105--><a name="page105"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 105</span>old Gipsy he has often mentioned in the course
+of this work, he said to them, &ldquo;Since you would not come to see me, I
+am come to see you.&rdquo;&nbsp; The camp, consisting of eight persons,
+gave him a cordial reception, the husband excepted, who said, he did not
+want his company.&nbsp; &ldquo;You certainly do not mean what you
+say,&rdquo; said his friend; to which he ungratefully replied, &ldquo;I
+never speak words without meaning.&rdquo;&nbsp; In a good-natured way he
+was questioned as to the truth of his being a Gipsy, accompanied with the
+remark, that Gipsies were seldom ungrateful for the favours which were
+shown them.&nbsp; In half an hour after, he left the camp very
+angrily.&nbsp; This man had been released from many years&rsquo;
+imprisonment, through the author&rsquo;s intercession; but having
+associated with thieves so long, the worst principles of his heart were
+drawn forth.&nbsp; Before he left the camp, he said he had no care about
+his children, but to feed and clothe them.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then you only treat
+your children as a man does his dogs and pigs.&rdquo;&nbsp; He replied,
+that &ldquo;such treatment was good enough.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is a common
+sentiment; for the generality of parents have no further care about their
+children than to feed and clothe them.&nbsp; Such persons are not perhaps
+aware how nearly they come to that dreadful state of mind and heart, of
+which this ungrateful Gipsy so wickedly boasted.</p>
+<p>After he had left the party, those who remained attended to conversation
+and prayer, when one of the women wept bitterly on account of her sin of
+fortune-telling.&nbsp; The author has since been informed that this <!--
+page 106--><a name="page106"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 106</span>poor
+man expresses his sorrow for his uncalled-for behaviour.</p>
+<p>The plans adopted in Southampton, for the conversion of the Gipsies in
+Hampshire, are now generally known among their people.&nbsp; Not long ago,
+an old woman brought four orphans of a deceased relative from a great
+distance, in order to place them under the care of the Committee.&nbsp; On
+this occasion the old woman thus addressed the author.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are you
+Mr Crabb?&rdquo;&nbsp; Being told, yes, she continued&mdash;&ldquo;Mr Chas.
+Stanley, a Gipsey, desired me to bring you these poor orphans.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The author being assured that they were orphans, promised, after some
+conversation, to visit their tent the following day.&nbsp; He did so, and
+never can he forget the distressing scene he then witnessed.&nbsp; It was
+winter, and the weather was unusually cold, there being much snow on the
+ground.&nbsp; The tent, which was only covered with a <i>ragged</i>
+blanket, was pitched on the lee side of a <i>small</i> hawthorn bush.&nbsp;
+The children had stolen a few <i>green</i> sticks from the hedges, but they
+would not burn.&nbsp; <i>There was no straw</i> in the tent, and only one
+blanket to lay betwixt six children and the frozen ground, with nothing to
+cover them.&nbsp; The youngest of these children was three, and the eldest,
+seventeen years old.&nbsp; In addition to this wretchedness, the smaller
+children were nearly naked.&nbsp; The youngest was squatted on the ground,
+her little feet and legs bare, and gnawing a frozen turnip, which had been
+stolen from an adjoining field.&nbsp; None of them had tasted bread for
+more than a day.&nbsp; The moment they <!-- page 107--><a
+name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 107</span>saw their visitor,
+the little ones repeatedly shouted, &ldquo;Here is the <i>gemman come for
+us</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; Some money was given to the oldest sister to buy bread
+with, at which their joy was greatly increased.&nbsp; Straw was also
+provided for them to sleep on, four were measured for clothes, and, after a
+few days, they were placed under the care of one of our reformed
+Gipsies.&nbsp; The youngest child died, however, a short time after, in
+consequence of having been so neglected in infancy.</p>
+<p>The children were cleanly washed and newly clothed, before they were
+removed from the common.&nbsp; Perhaps they had never been thoroughly
+washed before.&nbsp; The oldest sister would not give up her wandering
+habits; and the oldest boy chose to go back to the camp again; so that the
+Committee had soon only three of them in charge.&nbsp; And these were so
+filthy in their habits for a long time, that it was very disagreeable to be
+near them.&nbsp; It is hoped that, though they have lost their earthly
+parents, they may be led, through this event, to God their heavenly
+Father.&nbsp; These children were soon baptized, and two of them are
+improving at one of the Infants&rsquo; Schools.</p>
+<p>A short account of their parents may not be out of place here.&nbsp; The
+mother was a great fortune-teller and swindler.&nbsp; She once robbed a
+poor shepherd in Dorsetshire of twenty pounds, by promising to fill his box
+with money.&nbsp; Their father was a most depraved character.&nbsp; Their
+life and practices are well described in the language of the Apostle,
+<i>Let us eat and drink</i>, <i>for to morrow we die</i>.&nbsp; 1 Cor. xv.
+32.&nbsp; The man was the <!-- page 108--><a name="page108"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 108</span>buffoon of their company, and became more
+depraved every year.&nbsp; They often had a great deal of money, which was,
+no doubt, obtained through dishonest means.&nbsp; On one occasion, he and
+many other Gipsies, entered the parlour of a small public house on the
+borders of Hants, when emptying the contents of a dirty purse into an
+half-pint cup, he nearly filled it with sovereigns; and declared, they
+would not leave the house, till they had spent it all.&nbsp; His wife, at
+this time, who was intoxicated, was robbed of all the money she had got
+from the poor credulous shepherd, excepting one pound.</p>
+<p>The same man once put 150 sovereigns into his kettle, to treat himself
+with what he called, <i>gold water</i>, for his tea; a piece of folly and
+wickedness only equalled by a fact with which the author is well
+acquainted, when an old man had his gold put under his pillow, and often
+shown to him, when he was dying.&nbsp; We need not wonder, therefore, that
+the children of this Gipsy couple should be so ignorant, depraved, and
+destitute.&nbsp; For money that is ill-gotten, and squandered in
+extravagance, entails a double curse on the parties concerned.&nbsp; But to
+return to the subject of this chapter.</p>
+<p>To visit the Gipsies in their tents is of great importance.&nbsp;
+Clergymen of the Establishment, dissenting ministers, and home
+missionaries, have at various times done this, and conversed freely with
+them on the Christian religion; and it has <i>not been in vain</i>.&nbsp;
+Indeed, nothing that is done, through Jesus Christ, purposely <!-- page
+109--><a name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 109</span>to please
+God, and benefit the wretched, can fail to produce a good effect.&nbsp; The
+Rev. Messrs Hyatt and Cobbin, who were deputed by the Home Missionary
+Society, to visit many parts of England, to enquire into the condition of
+this people, had no doubt, but that much good may be done among them, if
+proper means are pursued.&nbsp; It has many times been proved, that to
+attempt to raise them in society, without the influence of religious
+instruction, would be improper.&nbsp; They have not sufficient principles
+of honesty, nor purity of conduct, till they are taught those principles,
+and changed, by religion.&nbsp; One, among several instances, may be
+named.</p>
+<p>A young female Gipsy, remarkable for the beauty of her person, was much
+noticed by a lady of rank.&nbsp; She was made to sit many times for her
+portrait, was introduced into the drawing-room, and became of consequence
+as one of the family.&nbsp; She might have done well, had she not given up
+all her prospects by running away with a Gipsy youth, for whom she had an
+attachment, and with whom she has ever since lived in great misery.&nbsp;
+If less attention had been paid to her beauty, and more to the cultivation
+of right principles, she might now have been reformed, religious, and
+happy.</p>
+<p>To those who wish to forward the instruction of the children of these
+wanderers, which is of vast importance, the use of tins with letters and
+monosyllables stamped upon them, is recommended.&nbsp; A little ink or
+paint will be necessary to make the letters visible.&nbsp; <!-- page
+110--><a name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 110</span>This plan
+would save much expense, and render elementary books unnecessary.&nbsp;
+They could not be torn, as books generally are.&nbsp; The pieces thrown
+away by the tinman, if the corners were taken off, would answer every
+purpose.&nbsp; To induce those children, who cannot be got from the tent,
+to learn from these tins, the visitor might promise them an old garment, or
+some other trifle.&nbsp; Should the Gipsies conduct themselves properly,
+when thus visited, a little willow-wood may be given them to encourage them
+in industry, and forward the manufactory of baskets.&nbsp; And it might be
+well were a small piece of ground devoted to the growth of willows, in
+neighbourhoods frequented by them, on purpose to encourage them
+thereby.&nbsp; It might be adviseable, too, to give them testimonials on a
+card, of good conduct, when about to remove to another district, which
+might serve as an introduction to benevolent persons, and those interested
+in their welfare in other places; and this means would effectually prevent
+all imposition, keep up the attention of the good among them, and would
+constantly bring them before the notice of christian society.&nbsp; Such
+kindness would be felt by the Gipsies, and, in time, might produce a good
+effect.&nbsp; This method has been attended to by the Southampton
+Committee.</p>
+<p>The great object that Christians should have in view, should be to
+instruct them in the blessed truths of the Christian religion, imbue them
+with a happy sense of honesty and morality, and then reclaim them wholly
+from their unsettled and wandering habits; for <!-- page 111--><a
+name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 111</span>until they have some
+knowledge of religion, and some anxiety to reform, they would only be worse
+by being brought constantly before the bad examples that would be set them
+in towns.&nbsp; Of course, such a change <i>cannot be fully accomplished in
+the present generation</i>; it cannot be expected.&nbsp; But their
+conversion to God will wholly be accomplished in time, if all Christians do
+their duty, depending on the influence of the Holy Spirit.</p>
+<p>From what has been said in this chapter, it will appear, that, visiting
+their tents to pray for, and instruct them, teaching such children to read
+as cannot get to public schools, and prevailing on all who are able to do
+so, to attend public worship; are the principal things to be attempted, in
+this great and good undertaking.&nbsp; Those Christians who wish for
+opportunities of doing good to the Gipsies in and about London, will find
+many of them in the suburbs in the months of April, May, and June, when
+they generally find work in the market gardens.&nbsp; In the months of July
+and August they move into Sussex and Kent, and are engaged in the
+harvest.&nbsp; And in the month of September, <i>great numbers</i> of them
+are to be found in the hop-districts of Kent, Sussex and Surry, where they
+find employment.&nbsp; During the winter, many of them settle in London,
+Westminster, Bristol, and other large towns, when a good opportunity is
+presented for teaching, both to the children and adults of this class, the
+elements of reading, and the principles of true religion.&nbsp; For the
+information of those who may wish to visit the Gipsies <!-- page 112--><a
+name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 112</span>in London and
+Bristol, during the winter, the author thinks it his duty to name the
+streets where they generally reside.</p>
+<p>Tottenham-court Road; Battle Bridge; Paddington; Bolton Street; Church
+Lane; Church Street; Kent Street, Borough; New Street; White Street;
+Banbridge Street; Shore-ditch; Tothill-fields; and Tunbridge Street.&nbsp;
+In Bristol they are principally found in Saint Phillip&rsquo;s,
+Newfoundland Street, Bedminster, and at the March and September fairs.</p>
+<p>At the Ascot and Epsom races, they may be met in large numbers; and if a
+benevolent, kind, and zealous minister of Christ were to visit them at
+their encampments at these seasons, and explain to them the facts,
+doctrines, and blessings of the Gospel, much good might be done.&nbsp; The
+morning would be the happiest time to visit these Gipsies, as they are too
+often at races, inebriated before night.&nbsp; It is presumed little could
+be said to profit them in a state of intoxication, and many of the women
+are then employed either in swindling or fortune-telling.</p>
+<p>Should the sympathies of the British public be efficiently directed to
+the Gipsies of this country, it may call forth the zeal of other nations to
+improve their still more degraded condition on the Continent, where more
+than half a million of them wander, ignorant as the heathens of all that is
+necessary to salvation.&nbsp; Those of this country loudly call upon us for
+instruction, which may easily be given them.&nbsp; Let all who have either
+time, money, or ability, give a helping hand; <!-- page 113--><a
+name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 113</span>and, above all,
+assist by their unfeigned and earnest prayers.&nbsp; It may be very
+advisable to pray publicly for them in places of worship, and at the family
+altar, after visiting them in the highways and hedges.&nbsp; It might
+impress those of them who attend, with a grateful sense of the gracious
+care of God, and lead Christian congregations to think more of them, and to
+do more for them.&nbsp; May the merciful God of heaven and of earth, hasten
+the happy period, when the Gipsies of this, and of all other countries,
+shall embrace, and love, and be obedient to the Gospel of the gracious
+Redeemer!</p>
+<h2><!-- page 114--><a name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+114</span>CHAP. XIII.&nbsp; Further Account of encouraging interviews with
+Gipsies, and interesting Correspondence.</h2>
+<p>The author laments that he has passed so many years of his life wholly
+careless of the Gipsies of this country.&nbsp; Having travelled many times
+through England, he has had frequent opportunities of seeing them.&nbsp;
+But, till now, he looked on their conversion as a hopeless case, and nearly
+wholly neglected them.&nbsp; He has already stated the manner his attention
+was first roused to consider their condition and necessities more
+particularly, and he reflects with pleasure on the kindness of Providence
+in leading him to witness those events which called for sympathy towards
+them; and on the mercy of God so apparent in blessing the labours of
+himself and others in their behalf.</p>
+<p>The late Rev. Legh Richmond felt a deep interest in the conversion of
+this people.&nbsp; To awaken the sympathies and energies of his countrymen
+to that subject, he composed the following hymn on their behalf.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>THE GIPSIES&rsquo; PETITION.</p>
+<p>Oh! ye who have tasted of mercy and love,<br />
+&nbsp; And shared in the blessings of pardoning grace;<br />
+Let us the kind fruits of your tenderness prove,<br />
+&nbsp; And pity, oh! pity the poor Gipsy race</p>
+<p><!-- page 115--><a name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+115</span>For long have we wandered, neglected and wild,<br />
+&nbsp; Esteemed by all people as wretched and base;<br />
+Nor once on our darkness has light ever smiled;<br />
+&nbsp; Then pity, oh! pity the poor Gipsy race.</p>
+<p>Like you, we have lost that pure gem, which, when lost,<br />
+&nbsp; Not the mines of Golconda <a name="citation115"></a><a
+href="#footnote115" class="citation">[115]</a> can ever replace;<br />
+To redeem it the blood of a Saviour it cost:<br />
+&nbsp; Then pity, oh! pity the poor Gipsy race.</p>
+<p>Like us, you were wild in the sight of your God;<br />
+&nbsp; But he looked, and he loved, and he pitied your case;<br />
+The Redeemer has cleansed you in streams of his blood;<br />
+&nbsp; Then pity, oh! pity the poor Gipsy race.</p>
+<p>Ye, who have found mercy, that mercy display;<br />
+&nbsp; Ye sons of adoption, your origin trace;<br />
+And then sure you cannot your face turn away,<br />
+&nbsp; But will pity and pray for the poor Gipsy race;</p>
+<p>That we may form part of that numerous throng,<br />
+&nbsp; Redeemed from destruction by infinite grace;<br />
+And mingle with you in the heavenly song;<br />
+&nbsp; Then pity, oh! pity the poor Gipsy race.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It has been the custom of the author to have a yearly meeting of the
+Gipsies at his own house, which is then open to all their families.&nbsp;
+Here, early in the year 1830, those who were in the lanes and on the common
+near Southampton, met many of their kind and religious friends, who are
+interested in their happiness.&nbsp; The morning was agreeably spent in a
+religious service, conducted for their spiritual benefit; after which some
+attention was paid to their temporal wants.&nbsp; Forty-eight <!-- page
+116--><a name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 116</span>of them, all
+nearly related to each other, who were at that time assembled in the
+neighbourhood to renew their family friendships, attended on this occasion,
+and were much pleased with the services in which they engaged.&nbsp;
+Different portions of the Scriptures were read and expounded to them, after
+which they had a plain and familiar address.&nbsp; It was a pleasure to
+meet these people at a throne of grace.&nbsp; After partaking of bread and
+cheese and ale, during which they conducted themselves very properly, a
+blanket was presented to the proprietor of each tent, a pair of stockings
+to every individual, and a quantity of calico for changes for the
+children.&nbsp; There were thirteen reformed Gipsies among them, who spent
+the rest of the day in reading the Scriptures to their brethren at their
+own houses.</p>
+<p>These people expressed themselves very gratefully.&nbsp; One of the
+families, of whom the mother could read, begged a bible.&nbsp; Some weeks
+after this bible had been given, the family was visited in its tent, when
+this copy of the Holy Scriptures was shewn to him, who observed many of the
+pages doubled down to mark the passages with which the reader had been
+impressed.&nbsp; The father of the family said&mdash;&ldquo;I will never
+rest till I can read that book through.&rdquo;&nbsp; This poor man now
+attends divine service whenever he has an opportunity, although he strongly
+opposed, at one time, the reading of the Scriptures in his tent.</p>
+<p>A lady, who was present at this meeting, asked one of the reformed
+Gipsies, how she had felt herself <!-- page 117--><a
+name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 117</span>on that
+morning?&nbsp; She replied&mdash;&ldquo;I never was so happy;&rdquo; and,
+after a short silence, continued&mdash;&ldquo;The dinner we had last year,
+was much better than that we had to-day, as it was roast beef and
+plum-pudding; but what I heard then, of the minister&rsquo;s address, was
+only the word of man to me; but to-day, it has been the word of God; I am
+sure it has.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Although it may be feared, that to many Gipsies then present, the
+reading of the Scriptures, and the familiar address, were only as <i>the
+words of man</i>, yet is there reason to hope they understood it, and that
+they will benefit thereby.</p>
+<p>This woman had an only surviving brother who was killed in fighting, and
+whose death was instantaneous.&nbsp; She was exceedingly distressed, and
+observed, in reference to this awful circumstance, &ldquo;I should not have
+thought of his soul after death, at one time; but now I can read my
+Testament, I am sure that none can go to heaven but those who are born
+again.&rdquo;&nbsp; And she made an observation, too, of the utmost
+importance, shewing the great necessity there is for the Gipsies to be
+taught to read.&nbsp; <i>My being able to read myself</i>, said she, <i>has
+a great deal more effect upon me</i>, <i>than it would if another read it
+to me</i>, <i>and I could not read</i>; <i>for now</i> <span
+class="smcap">I am sure it is in the book</span>.&nbsp; She carries her
+Testament in her pocket when she goes a journey, and reads it to her former
+companions, when she meets them on the road; and if they express any wonder
+at the change that has taken place, she refers them to the <!-- page
+118--><a name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 118</span>Scriptures
+as the cause, and her kind friends at Southampton, as the instruments.</p>
+<p>The following circumstance lately occurred, and will shew the
+improvement that has taken place in her daughters.&nbsp; One of them had
+been sent by her mother to receive the weekly sum allowed her.&nbsp; On
+receiving the money, she said, &ldquo;This is twopence too much,
+sir.&rdquo;&nbsp; Being accustomed now and then to give her a few pence
+towards buying a Testament, she was told to keep it for that purpose.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I thank you,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;I have got a Testament, now,
+and mother has given her&rsquo;s to my next sister, since she has had a
+bible; and my youngest sister had a Testament given her at the Sunday
+School: but one of us is saving money to buy a hymn-book with; I will give
+<i>her</i> the twopence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This incident, trifling as it may seem to some, will not fail to gratify
+others, whose hearts are anxiously desirous of improving the Gipsies.</p>
+<p>In the autumn of 1830, the author felt a strong desire to visit Farnham,
+where were, at that time, thousands of poor people assembled to pick hops,
+among whom were many Gipsies.&nbsp; Stanley was sent a few days before to
+make known his intentions of preaching to them on the evening of a fixed
+day.&nbsp; While at Farnham, Stanley ate, drank, and slept in some of their
+camps, by which he gained their confidence and affection.</p>
+<p>During the author&rsquo;s stay he accompanied Stanley to various
+hop-plantations, where great numbers of the <!-- page 119--><a
+name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>most wretched part of
+the community are employed in the hopping season.&nbsp; Great numbers of
+tracts were distributed among them, while the author entered into many free
+and familiar conversations with them.&nbsp; Many were found very much
+depraved; but none were more depraved among the Gipsies, than many of the
+other class; for they were blasphemers of God and his religion.&nbsp; One
+man, like many of old, stirred up the people to reject and despise the
+truth.&nbsp; He said, &ldquo;No one would get any thing by praying to
+God;&rdquo; and, &ldquo;if people wanted bread on a Sunday, it would be
+better for them to steal a mess of potatoes, and wood to cook them with,
+than go to church.&rdquo;&nbsp; Some of the poor shuddered at his boldness,
+and contempt of God&rsquo;s law.&nbsp; With much impudence he declared,
+&ldquo;that he knew a man who put his dough into the oven on a Sunday
+without heating it, and then went to church to pray that God would bake it
+for him; but that the fool was disappointed.&rdquo;&nbsp; The minister said
+to him&mdash;&ldquo;You know that you have told a wilful lie.&nbsp; You
+never knew such a man.&nbsp; There is not one of these little children will
+believe you.&rdquo;&nbsp; He appeared confounded at this unexpected
+rebuke.&nbsp; May this sinner repent and be saved!</p>
+<p>Among the hop-pickers of Farnham were many Gipsies the visitors had long
+known; and their smiling faces spoke the gladness of their hearts and the
+warmth of their gratitude, when they were noticed by their friends
+affectionately and kindly; nor had they forgotten <!-- page 120--><a
+name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 120</span>the favours that had
+been shewn them at Southampton.</p>
+<p>Those of the Gipsies who were not acquainted with the object the author
+had in view, in paying them a visit, were much alarmed when enquiries were
+made for the Gipsies in the hop-grounds; supposing they were pursued by the
+magistrates.&nbsp; One youth told Stanley, that he knew not whether to run,
+or stay where he was; but recollecting to have been <i>in no spray
+lately</i>, he resolved on staying.&nbsp; When Stanley spoke to him in his
+own language, and introduced the minister, all his fears vanished.&nbsp;
+The Gipsies were astonished that any one should travel forty miles to see
+them.</p>
+<p>Their public meeting was after the labours of the day, near one of the
+hop-grounds, about half an hour after sun-set.&nbsp; A few small candles
+gave light to a small tenement, used as a lodging place for the
+hop-gatherers, where the congregation was accommodated.&nbsp; A few of the
+inhabitants of Farnham, and some of the female Gipsies, who were much
+delighted to mingle with them in the worship of God, were put inside, and
+the men, with such women and children as could not get in, stood outside,
+the place being very much too small for so great a number of people.&nbsp;
+The preacher stood on the threshold of the door and addressed the people,
+of whom those without could only be seen now and then, as an adjacent wood
+fire cast at intervals upon them an intermitting light.&nbsp; The Rev. Mr
+Johnson <!-- page 121--><a name="page121"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+121</span>kindly attended, and assisted in the devotional part of the
+service; and some of his congregation obligingly assisted in the
+singing.</p>
+<p>On this occasion the Gospel of Christ was addressed to many who had
+never before heard an exposition of the blessed word of God.&nbsp; The
+sermon was from Psalm lxxxvi. 5.&nbsp; After service the Gipsies were
+exhorted to seek for opportunities of attending the house of God; to beg of
+some minister a bible for every tent; and to ask every one who may come
+near them to read certain of its pages to them.</p>
+<p>During the address, many of <i>their crimes</i> were enlarged upon, and
+their dread of, and liability to punishment for them in this world; and
+they were urged to call on the God of all compassion and mercy, for help
+and for forgiveness, by that all-powerful motive, that he will never be
+inattentive to the prayers of the most helpless, wretched, and guilty
+sinner, when presented to God by faith in our only mediator, Jesus
+Christ.</p>
+<p>Stanley, who, after the service, accompanied the Gipsies to their tents,
+found that the sermon afforded conversation for the whole evening.&nbsp;
+One of them said, &ldquo;The minister has told us every thing, as though he
+had lived with us.&rdquo;&nbsp; Another observed, &ldquo;If it be all true
+what the gentleman has said, not a Gipsy can be saved.&rdquo;&nbsp; A third
+exhorted his children &ldquo;never to say bad words again.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+little creature replied&mdash;&ldquo;Then I hope my <i>grandfer</i>
+(grandfather) will never swear any more.&rdquo;&nbsp; Many of them talked
+of the evils <!-- page 122--><a name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+122</span>of fortune-telling, and some resolved on going to Southampton, to
+see the reformed Gipsies.</p>
+<p>During the stay of the minister in that neighbourhood, eighty of them
+were visited, among whom was a dying woman, who very gladly received
+instruction, and heard prayer.&nbsp; A minister, in the neighbourhood, had
+been asked to visit her, but had neglected to do so.</p>
+<p>The author must not forget to acknowledge the kindness of the farmers
+who assisted him in the distribution of tracts, &amp;c. &amp;c., and who
+solicited that some might be left them for that purpose.</p>
+<p>This visit afforded an opportunity to contradict many false reports of
+the treatment with which the Gipsy children had met in the Infants&rsquo;
+Schools at Southampton.&nbsp; It was said that they were all confined, and
+would at a future period be transported.&nbsp; This shews how easily people
+who deceive others, are imposed on themselves.</p>
+<p>The following letter was addressed to the author by a Gipsy woman when
+she was in great trouble of mind.&nbsp; It is presented to the reader just
+as it was received, and may be found interesting to the friends of their
+cause.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I Hope you will Excuse Me for Riun These few Lines too you, I did
+Not Now where To Cend to My Sister, I Have Been very Il and my
+Familee.&nbsp; My Children Ave Had The Measils, They are Got Well from
+That.&nbsp; I am Sorry to hinform you I Have Had <!-- page 123--><a
+name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 123</span>A Shockin Accedent To
+my Little Girl, She was Burnd to Death.&nbsp; I Give My Luv To My Son
+Job.&nbsp; Plese to Give My Luv to My Sister Paishince, and Hur
+Childern.&nbsp; Plese to Give My Luv To My Ant Pheny, and Plese to Lett Me
+Now How My Cuzin James doos Go on, Plese to Lett Me Now How My Unkil Charls
+and His Famly Is.&nbsp; Wm Duff Gives His Best Rispecs To All.&nbsp; Plese
+To Tel My Sister too Anser This Letter By Returne of Post.&nbsp; I Am So
+unappy in My Mind Till I Do Hear From Er.&nbsp; Dear Sister, I Have Mett
+With so Much Trubel Sinc I Saw you Last, That I Am Sorre To inform
+you.&nbsp; Plese to Tel my Child from Me To Bee A Good Boy, and Think
+Imself Wel off Wher He Is.&nbsp; My Distris and My Trubel Makes Me Think
+More of My Sister.&nbsp; Ples To Direct the Letter To Be Left At The Post
+Offis, for Haryett Duff, Till Caulld for, in Bristil.&nbsp; Plese To Give
+My Luv To My Son Job.&nbsp; So No More At Prezint from your Umble
+Sarvint.&nbsp; Plese God I Am Coming To See You Some time This Munth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Littel Girl Met The Accedent Wednesday, April 23,
+1828.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The following letter, too, refers to the writer of the above.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Bristol</i>, <i>August</i>, 1830.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Sir,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As I know that you are deeply interested in every circumstance
+relating to the Gipsies, I trouble you <!-- page 124--><a
+name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 124</span>with the following
+anecdote.&nbsp; In the month of January last, when walking in the city of
+Bristol, I met a Gipsy woman, who accosted me with the usual salutation of
+her race, &ldquo;Shall I tell you your fortune?&rdquo;&nbsp; I enquired her
+name, and then said, &ldquo;You well know that you are not able to tell me
+my fortune; and I am sorry to see you carrying on such
+deception.&rdquo;&nbsp; I then endeavoured to speak to her about the
+importance of considering her eternal welfare, and of seeking the salvation
+which is in Christ Jesus; at the same time pointing out the certain
+condemnation she was bringing upon herself, by willingly following the
+<i>multitude to do evil</i>, even carrying <i>a lie in her right
+hand</i>.&nbsp; She urged that her trade (which she acknowledged to be
+built on deceit and falsehood) was her only support; and that she must
+starve if she followed my advice.&nbsp; I reminded her that she would be
+like Dives, if she gained the whole world and lost her own soul; but that
+were she indeed to honour God, by giving up her wicked trade, because she
+knew that it was displeasing to him, he would never suffer her to want any
+good thing.&nbsp; After much more conversation, she assured me that she
+would never tell fortunes again, and would discontinue her evil habits of
+life.&nbsp; I told her that I could not allow her to make to me any promise
+of the kind; for she did not know her wickedness, nor the power which could
+alone prevent her from committing sin.&nbsp; I again besought her to avail
+herself of the means of instruction within her power.</p>
+<p>Before leaving the city, I commended her to the <!-- page 125--><a
+name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 125</span>care of some pious
+friends, who were interested in my account of her, and who kindly promised
+not to lose sight of her.&nbsp; Since that time I have received very
+pleasing accounts from them respecting her.&nbsp; They have purchased
+materials in order that she may be able to support herself by
+basket-making, which she has begun; and I trust she has relinquished her
+former trade.&nbsp; She is making progress in reading, and constantly
+attends the preaching of the Gospel.&nbsp; I hope also that she is really
+in earnest for the welfare of her soul.&nbsp; I earnestly wish that every
+one would take an interest in the same; and I should be much rejoiced if
+the circumstance which I have just mentioned, should be the means of
+encouraging any one to notice those Gipsies with whom they may occasionally
+meet, and to exert themselves in saving them from their present degraded
+condition.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am, my dear Sir,<br />
+&nbsp; &ldquo;Yours respectfully,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; * * * * *</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Wm. Stanley&rsquo;s Letter to the Author</i>.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Hon. Sir,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As you wish me to give you some account of the Gipsies, I gladly
+comply with your request.&nbsp; I am a poor individual of that wandering
+race, called Gipsies; yet, by the mercies of God, I was <i>rescued</i> from
+that wandering life.&nbsp; In my <i>youthful days</i> I entered into the
+<!-- page 126--><a name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+126</span>Wiltshire militia, when it pleased God to bring me under the
+preaching of the Gospel at Exeter; and it was the means of awakening my
+conscience.&nbsp; <i>From that time I have often been led to bepity the sad
+state of the people whereof I made a part</i>.&nbsp; I have given them the
+best instruction that lay in my power, and by reading the Scriptures to
+them; but with very little visible effect for many years.&nbsp; Neither did
+I think, till lately, that there were any of them in the world, that cared
+for their souls, till the year 1827; when I was quite <i>overcome with love
+to God</i>, <i>to find that the Lord had put it into the hearts of his dear
+people at Southampton</i>, <i>to pity them in their forlorn condition</i>;
+and now wonder not if I am at a loss for words to speak the feeling of my
+heart; for, since that time I have seen <i>seventeen or eighteen</i>;
+<i>nay</i>, <i>from twenty to thirty</i>; <i>nay</i>, <i>from forty to
+fifty attend divine worship</i>; and <i>add</i> to this the many happy
+hours I have spent with them in their tents near Southampton, in reading
+and praying with them; and some of them that six months ago would not stay
+in their camp on my approach to them, but would go away swearing, will now
+receive me gladly, and produce a Bible or a Testament, which <i>had</i>
+been given to them, and desire me to read it to them, saying, this book was
+given to me by our dear friends in Southampton.&nbsp; But, <i>dreadful to
+relate</i>, I find some children, <i>from three years old to fifteen</i>,
+who never <i>said a prayer to their God</i>; who never heard any one pray,
+and who <i>was</i> never in a church or chapel, nor have heard of the name
+of Christ, but in blaspheming; and <!-- page 127--><a
+name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 127</span>these are the
+inhabitants of England!&nbsp; Oh, England! England! they are living and
+dying without God: no wonder if they draw down the divine vengeance of
+Heaven on the land!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Many of these poor <i>ignorant mortals</i> do not know that they
+are doing wrong by fortune-telling; and being informed that it is
+displeasing to God, and ruinous to their own souls, they will say, it is
+<i>of no service for me to give attendance to religion</i>, for I am forced
+to ruin my soul for every morsel of bread I eat; but if God spares my life
+I will leave it off as soon as I can; while others who are both ignorant
+and hardened in their crimes, have told me it was the gift of God to them,
+by which they were to gain their living.&nbsp; Surely they call <i>darkness
+light</i>!&nbsp; Many of my people who join in talk with me, declare, that
+if the Bible which I read to them be true, there cannot be many
+saved.&nbsp; But they say that a reformation is needful, and this is
+promised by them; and I am in great hopes that the time is at hand.&nbsp;
+Oh, Lord! work for thine own glory, and stir up the minds of thy people in
+all parts of the land, that they may help forward this good work amongst
+these poor wanderers!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Their ignorance and their crimes seem to have increased of late
+years.&nbsp; When I was a boy, I well recollect their parting expressions,
+which <i>was</i> so common amongst them&mdash;<i>Artmee Devillesty</i>,
+which is&mdash;<i>God bless you</i>.&nbsp; But now it is <i>truly
+awful</i>; it is <i>darkness itself</i>, <i>for they now ask God to send
+them good luck</i> in their crimes.&nbsp; I <i>myself</i> thought for many
+years, <i>till </i><!-- page 128--><a name="page128"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 128</span><i>I heard the Gospel</i>, <i>that God was
+like some great gentleman</i>, <i>living at a great distance from us</i>;
+but I had not a thought that he was every where present to notice the
+conduct of his creatures, or to hear prayer.&nbsp; The ignorance of <i>my
+people</i> is a loud call to Christians to assist; and, blessed be God,
+they find that assistance in Southampton.&nbsp; The Bible has often been
+taken away from Southampton in the Gipsies&rsquo; pack, and I have seen it
+when they have returned, preserved with a great deal of care, and produced
+for me to read, with great delight on their part.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Surely this blessed book will not be idle, but will do
+<i>wonders</i> amongst them, <i>through God&rsquo;s grace</i>.&nbsp; I see
+the effects already; do you say, how?&nbsp; I answer, <i>Was it ever
+known</i>, <i>till now</i>, that Gipsies assembled on the sabbath day on
+the common and in the lanes for divine worship?&nbsp; Did you ever see them
+come to town on a sabbath day in such great numbers as they now do, when
+encamping near Southampton?&nbsp; Some of the most ignorant of them are now
+learning to read the Scriptures.&nbsp; This is the beginning of good
+days.&nbsp; Oh! the good this will do to <i>my people at large</i>!&nbsp;
+Nothing of importance took place in their camp all last summer, <i>and I
+almost fainted under the discouragement</i>; but of late <i>it shows
+another face</i>; and I make no doubt but it will spread, and I shall soon
+see greater things than these.</p>
+<p>I am, hon. Sir,<br />
+Your most obliged and humble Servant,<br />
+<span class="smcap">William Stanley</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 129--><a name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+129</span>&ldquo;P. S.&mdash;On examining the different <i>branches of my
+family</i>, I find upwards of 200 of us in different parts of
+England.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This poor man, when a soldier, and in the habit of attending divine
+service, as a part of his duty, often heard his comrades speak of the text,
+on their return to the barracks.&nbsp; He one day made up his mind to bring
+home the text also, the next time he went to church.&nbsp; He heard with
+attention, and when he returned to the barracks, he said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+got the text now.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;What is it, Stanley?&rdquo; he was
+asked by a comrade, when he answered, &ldquo;The 19th day of the month, and
+the 95th Psalm.&rdquo;&nbsp; When relating this to the author, he added,
+&ldquo;I had the mortification to be laughed at by all my comrades who
+witnessed my ignorance.&rdquo;&nbsp; Do not many professing Christians come
+away from the house of God as ignorant as this poor Gipsy?&nbsp; Or if they
+have been taught to know and remember the text, it is all they attend
+to.&nbsp; This man&rsquo;s mind did not long remain in this dark
+state.&nbsp; After the above event he learned to read, and one day, taking
+up a Testament from the barracks&rsquo; table, he read a portion of it,
+(for so he expressed himself)&nbsp; <i>The sublimity of the language struck
+his mind with astonishment</i>, and he said, <i>I will buy that book if I
+can</i>.&nbsp; His comrade asked him three halfpence for it; and he was
+glad of his purchase; although the Testament was very much torn.&nbsp; The
+Holy Scriptures were scarce in those days, a copy of which could seldom be
+bought by the poor; <!-- page 130--><a name="page130"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 130</span>nor, indeed, would the word of life have been
+useful to them, as not one in a hundred could read.</p>
+<p>Soon after this, he was invited to attend a Wesleyan chapel in Exeter,
+where a funeral sermon was to be preached by the Rev. Wm. Aver.&nbsp; The
+text was, <i>Let me die the death of the righteous</i>, <i>and let my last
+end be like his</i>.&nbsp; While the minister was describing the happiness
+of the righteous, divine light shone upon his soul, he felt that <i>he</i>
+was not that character, and that there was no prospect of his dying
+happily, unless he possessed it.&nbsp; This sermon was the means of his
+conversion.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 131--><a name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+131</span>CHAP. XIV.&nbsp; Interesting particulars of the Gipsies, related
+by a Clergyman.</h2>
+<p>The following account is selected from a tract published in York, in
+1822, detailing several interesting visits that a Yorkshire clergyman made
+to some of the camps of that wandering and neglected people.&nbsp; Were the
+author of the little book known, application would have been made to him,
+for permission to reprint these extracts.&nbsp; But it is hoped he will
+excuse the liberty taken, as the design is to <i>induce other clergymen and
+ministers to go and do likewise</i>.&nbsp; This clergyman, having fallen in
+with a gang of Gipsies on the road, who were travelling to their place of
+encampment, addressed a young female among them, and found her not ignorant
+of religion.&nbsp; &ldquo;How,&rdquo; said the clergyman, &ldquo;did you
+obtain the knowledge of religion?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; answered
+she, &ldquo;in the depth of winter, the men folks only travel; the women
+and children belonging to my family and party, always live in the
+town.&nbsp; In those seasons I have gone with some of our relatives, who
+live there, and are religious people, to the worship of God: in that way I
+have learned these things.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This was a practical comment on the text which says, <i>The
+entrance of the word giveth light</i>; <i>it giveth </i><!-- page 132--><a
+name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 132</span><i>understanding to
+the simple</i>.&nbsp; After giving her some suitable advice, and with it
+his benediction, he left her; but not without hopeful expectations that the
+seeds of grace were sown in her heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He next overtook the grandmother and several of her
+grandchildren.&nbsp; She was pleased at his noticing her, and answered his
+enquiries with modesty and propriety.&nbsp; She corroborated what her
+daughter had said, and in her answers discovered not only an acquaintance
+with the general truths of the Gospel, but a feeling sense of their
+importance.&nbsp; She said, &lsquo;I love to go to church, and do go
+<i>now</i>, sir, when I can; but do not always meet with the right
+doctrines: my prayers I offer up night and morning, under the hedge.&nbsp;
+I hope God Almighty hears my prayers.&rsquo;&nbsp; The clergyman observed,
+that sincere prayer was acceptable to God any where, equally under the
+hedge, as in the parlour, or in the church.&nbsp; When arrived at their
+camp, he promised them a Bible, as they had none, and directed some of the
+party to call at the friend&rsquo;s house in the neighbourhood where he was
+staying.&nbsp; Soon after his return thither, a knock was heard at the
+door, when it was announced, &lsquo;Two Gipsies, sir, are come for a
+Bible.&rsquo;&nbsp; On going out, he found in the hall the young man who
+could read, and a younger brother, a fine boy of about fourteen years of
+age.&rdquo;&nbsp; The gentleman who wrote the account, adds as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Their countenances were very animated and expressive; there
+seemed to be a ray of heavenly brightness resting upon them; and while I
+gave them a <!-- page 133--><a name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+133</span>charge how to read the sacred gift, they were much affected: the
+boy, in particular, listened with eager attention, fixing his eyes first on
+me, then on the Bible.&nbsp; After I had inscribed their names in the
+title-page, they departed with my blessing; and what is better&mdash;with
+the blessing of God.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At another part of the year, this clergyman returned to the same spot
+where he had before been so delightfully engaged in attempting to benefit
+the poor Gipsies.&nbsp; He found out another camp, and thus writes of
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On my approach to the camp (where was a group of nearly naked
+children,) the Gipsy girls rose up, and, in a modest and respectful manner,
+answered my questions; while the little swarthy group of children gathered
+around me.&nbsp; To one of these girls I said, &lsquo;How is it that you
+bear such a wandering and exposed life?&rsquo;&nbsp; In reply, she said,
+&lsquo;Sir, it is <i>use</i>; <i>use</i> is second nature.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;But have you any religion?&nbsp; Do you think about God, about
+judgment, and eternity?&nbsp; Do you know how to pray?&rsquo;&nbsp; She
+answered, &lsquo;I say my prayers, sir, night and morning.&rsquo;&nbsp; I
+then said, &lsquo;can any of your people read?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Yes,
+sir,&rsquo; she replied, &lsquo;one of our men that is not here, can read
+very well.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Have you a Bible among you?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;No, sir; we should be thankful for one, sir.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On leaving the camp, the clergyman promised to call on them again, when
+the other part of the family should be returned from the town, where they
+were gone to vend their wares.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On my return to the encampment,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;I <!--
+page 134--><a name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 134</span>was met
+by two men who came out to greet me.&nbsp; I asked them kindly of their
+names.&nbsp; They informed me it was Bosvill.&nbsp; The women and children
+were now collected around me.&nbsp; I inquired who among them could
+read.&nbsp; Captain Bosvill, for so I called him, answered me, &lsquo;My
+wife, sir, can read any thing in English.&rsquo;&nbsp; I was glad to hear
+this, and asked them if they had any books.&nbsp; Bosvill went to a package
+and brought forth his stock, fragments of an old Testament, and an old
+spelling-book.&nbsp; &lsquo;And what use do you make of your spelling
+book?&rsquo; asked I.&nbsp; &lsquo;My wife,&rsquo; replied Bosvill,
+&lsquo;when she has time, teaches the children their letters.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+I now shewed them the Bible I had in my pocket, saying, that as it was so
+holy and blessed a book, it ought not to be given in an indifferent and
+common manner; and asked, if I were to ride over in the evening to give it
+them, and to explain to them its use, whether they would be all together to
+hear me.&nbsp; &lsquo;Yes, yes;&rsquo; was the reply, from many
+voices.&nbsp; I appointed seven o&rsquo;clock for the purpose.&nbsp; I then
+distributed amongst them some tracts, containing passages for every day in
+the week, and also the tract of Short Sermons; for which they were very
+thankful.&nbsp; I told them that I intended to give them a Bible in the
+evening, a book which few of them had ever seen, and which fewer
+understood.&nbsp; I was pleased with the modesty of their deportment, and
+with their eagerness for instruction.&nbsp; Surely they are a people whose
+hearts the Lord has prepared for the reception of his word.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At the hour appointed, I put the Bible in my <!-- page 135--><a
+name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 135</span>pocket, and rode
+again to the camp.&nbsp; The evening was particularly fine: the sun, hidden
+behind some thick fleecy clouds, had thrown around a mild and pleasing
+tint; the birds were every where singing their evening song; the ploughman
+was &lsquo;whistling o&rsquo;er the lea;&rsquo; and nature, after the
+labours of the day, was preparing for her wonted rest.&nbsp; It was a fit
+time for meditation, prayer, and praise.&nbsp; Such an evening, perhaps, as
+that which led the patriarch of old to meditation, when he lifted up his
+eyes and saw the returning servants of his father bringing home his future
+wife.&nbsp; As I drew near to the camp, I began to revolve in my mind the
+best way of making them acquainted with the importance of the most
+essential doctrines contained in the holy book I was about to give
+them.&nbsp; On my arrival, I found that I had been long expected.&nbsp; The
+men, however, were not there; they were gone to water a horse, which they
+had lent all the day to a farmer; but a tawny girl ran with great speed,
+barefooted, and brought them to the camp.&nbsp; I now dismounted, and gave
+my horse, with my stick, to the care of one of the men.&nbsp; The family
+circle was formed into an irregular circle round some pale embers, some of
+them sitting cross-legged on the grass, and others standing.&nbsp; I placed
+myself so as to have the women and children chiefly before me.&nbsp; The
+woman who could read, was seated opposite me: the men, the tents, and the
+package to the right; while the horses and asses belonging to the tribe,
+were quietly grazing at a short distance in the lane.&nbsp; All was solemn
+stillness; all was attentive expectation.&nbsp; <!-- page 136--><a
+name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 136</span>As I took from my
+pocket the Bible, the eyes of the whole company were instantly fixed upon
+it.&nbsp; This book, said I, which I bring you, is the book of God; it is
+sent from heaven to make poor miserable and dying man happy.&nbsp; I then
+spoke a short time on God; on creation; how God created man upright; how he
+was once happy in paradise; the way in which he sinned, and broke the law
+of his Maker, and became guilty, polluted, and exposed to death and hell;
+that to save men from this dreadful state, God devised a plan of mercy;
+that he sent his Son, and the Scriptures of truth, which shew unto us the
+way of salvation.&nbsp; This was something of the outline of my lecture;
+but I added the responsibility of men to read the book, and to seek to
+understand it.&nbsp; I solemnly charged them, by the sacred book itself,
+and by the account which they, at the day of judgment, must give to God for
+it, to make the most sacred and constant use of it, by reading it together
+daily in their camp.&nbsp; In the course of my discourse, I stopped, and
+said,&mdash;&lsquo;Now do you understand what I say?&rsquo;&nbsp; Captain
+Bosvill&rsquo;s wife replied, &lsquo;We understand you, sir; but we have
+not the same words which you have.&rsquo;&nbsp; In conclusion, I spoke of
+the coming judgment, when they and all men must stand and be judged at the
+righteous bar of God.&nbsp; The Bible was then delivered to the care of the
+captain of the gang, and of his wife, the woman who could read.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, I said, let us all kneel down on the grass, and pray for
+God&rsquo;s blessing with this holy book.&nbsp; Instantly a female brought
+from her tent a small piece of <!-- page 137--><a name="page137"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 137</span>carpet, and spread it before me on the grass,
+for me to kneel upon; and then all kneeling down, I prayed that the minds
+of these miserable outcasts of society might be enlightened, to discover
+the exceeding sinfulness of sin, and the blessedness and efficiency of the
+Saviour; that the sacred book given them through the influence of the Holy
+Ghost, might lead them into the way of righteousness, and finally guide
+them to everlasting life.&nbsp; When we rose from our knees, gratitude was
+seen in every countenance, and expressed by every tongue.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>God bless you</i>, <i>sir</i>; <i>thank you</i>,
+<i>sir</i>;&rsquo; echoed throughout the camp.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The next evening this clergyman went again to the camp, when one of the
+Gipsies came to meet him, and informed him of the arrival of some of their
+relatives.&nbsp; &ldquo;I shook hands with them,&rdquo; says the clergyman,
+&ldquo;and asked of their welfare.&nbsp; Never was a king received with a
+more hearty welcome, or with greater attention and respect.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As I was expected, the utmost order, cleanliness, and quiet,
+prevailed throughout the camp; and all were dressed in their best clothes
+to receive me.&nbsp; The arrangement of my congregation was much the same
+as the preceding evening.&nbsp; I spoke to them of the blessed Jesus; his
+birth, his ministry, his death, passion, and grace; and his glory at his
+second coming <i>in the clouds of heaven</i>, <i>to judge the world in
+righteousness</i>.&nbsp; I spoke also of death, and of the immortality of
+the soul.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had not proceeded far in my lecture, before <!-- page 138--><a
+name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 138</span>several farmers and
+passengers, some on horse back, and others on foot, joined my
+congregation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Before concluding my address, I said, &lsquo;It may seem singular
+to some of you that a stranger should interest himself on your behalf in
+the way I have done; and it might be expected that I should give some
+reasons for doing as I have.&nbsp; My chief reason is a sense of
+duty.&nbsp; Gipsies have long been neglected, and left to perish in their
+sins; but Gipsies have souls equally precious as others, and of equal price
+in the sight of God.&nbsp; Who, I asked, cares for the souls of Gipsies?
+who uses means for their instruction in righteousness?&nbsp; Yet must it be
+equally our duty to care for them, and to endeavour their conversion and
+happiness, as to plan societies, obtain subscriptions, and send out
+missionaries to the heathen.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I said, moreover, that, &lsquo;supposing, when I first saw your
+camp, I had rode by you on the other side, and taken no notice of you, nor
+felt an interest in your welfare; and after that, had met you at the bar of
+judgment; what would have been the language with which you might have
+addressed me at that awful period?&nbsp; Might you not have charged the
+misery of your eternal condemnation upon me, and said, The curse we are
+doomed to bear, thoughtless man, might, perchance, have been prevented by
+you?&nbsp; You saw us when riding by our camp lying in ignorance, and
+unbelief: you might have rode up to us, and imparted instruction to our
+perishing souls; because to you were committed the oracles of God, and you
+knew the way <!-- page 139--><a name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+139</span>to heaven.&nbsp; But, no, <i>cruel man</i>, our state excited in
+you no compassion, or desire for our salvation.&nbsp; In your conduct there
+was no imitation of your Lord and Master.&nbsp; Go, cruel man, and if
+heaven you enter, let your felicity be embittered by the recollection of
+neglect to the Gipsy wanderers, whom Providence had placed in your way,
+that you might direct them to God, but which you neglected.&rsquo;&nbsp; In
+conclusion, I again referred to the holy Bible, which I had given them; and
+again repeated the way to use it.&nbsp; After which I said, Now we will
+conclude with prayer, as we did last evening.&nbsp; Immediately the same
+female who before brought the carpet, again spread it, with great civility,
+for me to kneel upon; and again I offered up a solemn prayer for the
+salvation of these lost and perishing mortals.&nbsp; The greatest
+seriousness and awe rested upon the assembly.&nbsp; Surely the prayer was
+registered in heaven, and shall, in time not far distant, be
+answered.&mdash;Come, and take these heathens for thine inheritance, and
+the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession.&mdash;When I proposed
+to take leave of my swarthy flock, it was not without feelings of
+attachment on both sides.&nbsp; I had observed several of them much
+affected under my discourse, and now they manifested it more openly.&nbsp;
+As I shook hands with them, I said, &lsquo;You see, I did not come among
+you to give you money.&nbsp; I considered religious instruction of the most
+value; therefore I have endeavoured to impart it.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Sir,&rsquo; replied several, &lsquo;we did not want your money; your
+instruction is better to us than money; and we thank you for
+coming.&rsquo;&nbsp; <!-- page 140--><a name="page140"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 140</span>The camp now resounded with voices, saying,
+&lsquo;Thank you, sir; God bless you, sir;&rsquo; and every countenance
+seemed to glow with gratitude.&nbsp; The young branches of the family
+seemed to think a great honour and blessing had been conferred upon
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As I mounted my pony to come away, I observed one of the females,
+a fine young woman about twenty-five years of age, the same that brought
+the carpet from the package, and spread on the grass for me to kneel upon,
+to retire from the rest.&nbsp; She walked slowly near to the hedge, and
+appeared evidently much distressed.&nbsp; Her expressive eyes were lifted
+up to heaven, while the big tears rolling down her cheeks, were wiped away
+with her long black tresses.&nbsp; I thought&mdash;Here, surely, are some
+of the first fruits!&mdash;Thus did the woman, who was a sinner, weep, and
+with her hair wipe away the tears from the feet of her Saviour.&nbsp; May
+those tears be as acceptable to God: may the same Redeemer bid her go in
+peace!&nbsp; Her conduct attracted the notice of her family, and she was
+asked the reason of her sorrow.&nbsp; At first she could scarcely speak;
+but at length exclaimed, &lsquo;Oh!&nbsp; I am a sinner!&rsquo;&nbsp; Then
+lifting up her eyes to heaven, she wept aloud, and again wiped away the
+falling tears with her hair.&nbsp; &lsquo;But did you not know that before?
+we are all sinners.&nbsp; What have you done to cause you so much
+distress?&rsquo;&nbsp; She made no reply, but shook her head and
+wept.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The author of the <span class="smcap">Gipsies&rsquo; Advocate</span>,
+who, for the encouragement of his readers, has embodied the <!-- page
+141--><a name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 141</span>above
+interesting paragraphs in his work, sincerely hopes and prays that all
+ministers of Christ will, ere long, be led to imitate this clergyman in his
+benevolent and Christian attempts to benefit by the influence of religion
+and the word of God, the lost, and ignorant, and miserable, and perishing
+among mankind.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 142--><a name="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+142</span>CHAP. XV.&nbsp; Interesting visits to Gipsy camps, including an
+Anecdote of his late beloved <span class="smcap">majesty</span>, <span
+class="smcap">george the third</span>.</h2>
+<p>The following account is extracted from the Home Missionary Magazine for
+June, 1823.</p>
+<p><i>March</i>, 1823.&nbsp; &ldquo;Sir,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If the following facts should afford any encouragement to the
+benevolent intentions of the Home Missionary Society, which has, for one of
+its objects, the improvement of the state of the <i>poor Gipsies</i>, my
+end in relating them will be amply answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On Saturday evening, in the month of October, the narrator
+followed several Gipsy families.&nbsp; Being arrived at the place of their
+encampment, his first object was to gain their confidence.&nbsp; This was
+accomplished; after which, to amuse their unexpected visitant, they shewed
+forth their night diversions in music and dancing; likewise the means by
+which they obtained their livelihood, such as tinkering, fortune-telling,
+and conjuring.&nbsp; That the narrator might be satisfied whether he had
+obtained their confidence or not, he represented his dangerous situation,
+in the midst of which, they all with one voice cried, &lsquo;Sir, <!-- page
+143--><a name="page143"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 143</span>we would
+kiss your feet, rather than hurt you!&rsquo;&nbsp; After manifesting a
+confidence in return, the master of this formidable gang, about forty in
+number, was challenged by the narrator for a conjuring match.&nbsp; The
+challenge was instantly accepted.&nbsp; The Gipsies placed themselves in
+the circular form, and both being in the middle, commenced with their
+conjuring powers to the best advantage.&nbsp; At last the narrator proposed
+the making of something out of nothing.&nbsp; This proposal was
+accepted.&nbsp; A stone which never existed, was to be created, and appear
+in a certain form in the middle of a circle made on the turf.&nbsp; The
+master of the gang commenced, and after much stamping with his foot, and
+the narrator warmly exhorting him to cry aloud; like the roaring of a lion,
+he endeavoured to call forth nonentity into existence.&nbsp; Asking him if
+he could do it? he answered, &lsquo;I am not strong enough.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+They were all asked the same question, which received the same
+answer.&nbsp; The narrator commenced.&nbsp; Every eye was fixed upon him,
+eager to behold this unheard-of exploit; but (and not to be wondered at,)
+he failed!&mdash;telling them, he possessed no more power to <i>create</i>
+than themselves.&nbsp; Perceiving the thought of insufficiency pervading
+their minds, he thus spoke:&mdash;&ldquo;Now, if you have not power to
+create a poor little stone, and if I have not power either; what must that
+power be, which made the whole world out of nothing?&mdash;men, women, and
+children! that power I call God Almighty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The night&rsquo;s diversion having received a change, <!-- page 144--><a
+name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 144</span>the golden moment was
+eagerly seized to impress on their minds the infinite power, holiness, and
+justice of their Creator.&nbsp; This being done, the origin of sin, and the
+immortality of the soul, were, in the second place, impressed on their
+minds.&nbsp; Then followed the awful effects of sin, and the soul&rsquo;s
+eternal punishment in hell, because of offending this great God, whose
+holiness could not look on sin, and whose justice would punish it.&nbsp;
+Representing the soul&rsquo;s eternal punishment by the wrath of an
+incensed God, never did the preacher before witness such an effect; the
+poor Gipsies, with tremulous voice, crying, &lsquo;<i>Did you ever hear the
+like</i>! <i> What ever shall we do</i>?&rsquo;&nbsp; These expressions
+gave new energies to the preacher, and still brighter hopes of a good
+effect.&nbsp; Going on with the awful representation, and in the act of
+turning, as if to leave them, he bade them the long farewell.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Never, never more to meet till we meet in hell!&nbsp; Oh! what a
+dreadful thing it is, my fellow-sinners, that we have to part in this world
+with the thought of meeting in an eternal world of pains, never to see God!
+never to see heaven! never to see any thing to comfort our poor
+souls!&nbsp; Oh! we are lost, lost, poor souls, we are lost for
+ever!&mdash;farewell!&rsquo;&nbsp; In the act of leaving them, these poor
+creatures cried, &lsquo;Not yet, Sir, not yet.&rsquo;&nbsp; Now was the
+glorious moment come, which the preacher eagerly anticipated of proclaiming
+the glad tidings of salvation through a crucified Saviour.&nbsp; Asking how
+long they would stand to hear the way of escape from the wrath to come,
+they instantly lifted up their voices, answering, <!-- page 145--><a
+name="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 145</span>&lsquo;All night,
+Sir, all night.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then the preacher, without much persuasion,
+exhibited a Saviour, in all his sufferings, merits, death, and glory.&nbsp;
+They were sorry that such a good being should suffer so much; but the
+preacher took care to show the absolute necessity of his sufferings.&nbsp;
+Their manner bespoke an imperfect idea of a substitute.&nbsp; This was soon
+made clear to their understandings by comparisons, when the master of the
+gang cried, &lsquo;I see it, I see it!&rsquo;&nbsp; He was asked what he
+saw?&nbsp; &lsquo;I see Jesus Christ getting between us and God, and
+satisfying our great God&rsquo;s justice by dying instead of
+us.&rsquo;&nbsp; This truly made the preacher&rsquo;s heart glad, seeing
+the great plan of salvation was so clearly understood by those who declared
+(although in a land of light,) they never heard of Jesus Christ before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The preacher sang the hymn:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;How condescending, and how kind<br />
+Was God&rsquo;s eternal Son, &amp;c,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and then ended with prayer.&nbsp; They solicited him to return on the
+sabbath morning; he did so, and, as he hopes, under the influence of the
+Holy Spirit.&nbsp; The master gratefully accepted of a bible; for though
+the Gipsies could not read, a little boy was among them, who was not a
+Gipsy, that could read remarkably well, having been taught at a Sunday
+school at Hastings, in Sussex.&nbsp; They all joyfully anticipated the
+pleasure of going to the Rev. J. Carter&rsquo;s Chapel, of Braintree, in
+the afternoon, but met with a disappointment, arising <!-- page 146--><a
+name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 146</span>from an unexpected
+decampment.&nbsp; About one month after, in the latter end of November, two
+Gipsy women called on the narrator, earnestly entreating him to go and
+preach to them, which they called conversation.&nbsp; Asking the reason,
+why they entreated this favour? their answer was, &lsquo;We have heard much
+about your conversation, sir, and we should like to hear it.&nbsp; Come, do
+come, and we will be all ready to receive you.&rsquo;&nbsp; Asking who they
+were that told them of the conversation just mentioned, they said,
+&lsquo;some of our people, Sir, that you were with about a month
+since.&nbsp; They told us a great deal about your conversation, and we
+should so much like to hear it.&nbsp; Oh! sir, do come to us poor
+creatures, for we have an invitation for you, if you would condescend to
+take it, to meet with the Gipsies on Christmas day.&rsquo;&nbsp; That
+night, the narrator walked a few miles to their camp, and in their smoky
+tent preached Jesus Christ the only way of salvation, to these poor,
+despised, neglected creatures.&nbsp; After being with them two hours and a
+half, he bade them farewell, and going behind a hedge, anxious to know what
+effect the new unheard of doctrines would produce on their minds, he
+listened for a short time.&nbsp; In the midst of conversation with each
+other, one of them said, &lsquo;Well, I know this, if I could get a house
+near where that gentleman lives, and could live by my business, I would
+send all my children to that school there, and hear him as long as ever I
+could live.&rsquo;&nbsp; While they were conversing about Adam and Eve, and
+the evil effects of sinning against God; one of the women said,
+&lsquo;However, <!-- page 147--><a name="page147"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 147</span>you see, all the punishment that us women get,
+is sorrow and pains in child-bearing.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Stop,
+stop,&rsquo; says one of the men, &lsquo;that won&rsquo;t do, Ann, that
+won&rsquo;t do.&nbsp; If sorrow and pains in child-bearing be all the
+punishment that women are to have, what punishment must those women have
+that do not bear children?&nbsp; You are quite wrong, Ann; you women are as
+bad as <i>us</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; This led on to a further discovery, and the
+conversation among themselves was truly interesting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One of the children telling a lie, the mother touched it on the
+head, saying, &lsquo;What are you telling lies about?&nbsp; Have you
+forgotten what the gentleman said to night?&nbsp; You will go to hell, if
+you tell any more lies.&nbsp; Let me never hear you tell another, you bad
+lad, for God will not take you to heaven.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;These, and several remarks about Jesus Christ, afforded no small
+pleasure to the preacher, and he hopes that these facts will afford no
+small encouragement to the Home Missionary Society.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">&ldquo;Your very humble<br />
+Servant,<br />
+&ldquo;J. H. C.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before the author relates one of the most extraordinary anecdotes with
+which he is acquainted, one, of which a King and a dying Gipsy are the
+characters, he will relate another interesting account of a visit to a
+Gipsy camp, which will, it is hoped, prove that such visits are not in
+vain, when made in dependence on the Divine blessing.&nbsp; A Gipsy, in
+great distress of mind, and with weeping eyes, came to inform him of one of
+<!-- page 148--><a name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+148</span>their people, who was in great anguish of mind, and entreated him
+to visit them at the camp, which was several miles distant.&nbsp; The
+request was gladly complied with.&nbsp; On arriving at the tent, he found a
+woman sitting in a melancholy attitude on the ground; and distress and
+anguish were strongly marked in her countenance.&nbsp; She appeared quite
+indifferent to any thing that was said; and kept herself apparently engaged
+with the sticks and brands around the fire near the mouth of the
+tent.&nbsp; The man also appeared very melancholy.&nbsp; We learned that
+the cause of their distress was jealousy on the part of the man, who was
+called her husband.&nbsp; The circumstance which gave rise to those unhappy
+feelings had taken place several years before; yet the poor man has been so
+unhappy, that he has often intended to destroy both himself and his wife;
+and not many days before this visit to the camp, he had threatened to
+execute his purpose.&nbsp; The author talked and prayed with him, and
+exhorted him to look to God for strength and grace.&nbsp; Their repeated
+conversations were made useful to him, and those miserable feelings were
+subdued, and he now lives happily with the woman he had before hated, even
+to an intention of murder.&nbsp; This is another evidence, although a
+distressing one, that a want of chastity is evil in their sight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A king of England, of happy memory, who loved his people and his
+God, better than kings in general are wont to do, occasionally took the
+exercise of hunting.&nbsp; Being out one day for this purpose, <!-- page
+149--><a name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 149</span>the chase
+lay through the shrubs of the forest.&nbsp; The stag had been hard run;
+and, to escape the dogs, had crossed the river in a deep part.&nbsp; As the
+dogs could not be brought to follow, it became necessary, in order to come
+up with it, to make a circuitous route along the banks of the river,
+through some thick and troublesome underwood.&nbsp; The roughness of the
+ground, the long grass and frequent thickets, gave opportunity for the
+sportsmen to separate from each other; each one endeavouring to make the
+best and speediest route he could.&nbsp; Before they had reached the end of
+the forest, the king&rsquo;s horse manifested signs of fatigue and
+uneasiness; so much so, that his Majesty resolved upon yielding the
+pleasures of the chase to those of compassion for his horse.&nbsp; With
+this view, he turned down the first avenue in the forest, and determined on
+riding gently to the oaks, there to wait for some of his attendants.&nbsp;
+His Majesty had only proceeded a few yards, when, instead of the cry of the
+hounds, he fancied he heard the cry of human distress.&nbsp; As he rode
+forward, he heard it more distinctly.&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh, my mother! my
+mother!&nbsp; God pity and bless my poor mother!&rsquo;&nbsp; The curiosity
+and kindness of the king led him instantly to the spot.&nbsp; It was a
+little green plot on one side of the forest, where was spread on the grass,
+under a branching oak, a little pallet, half covered with a kind of tent;
+and a basket or two, with some packs, lay on the ground at a few paces
+distant from the tent.&nbsp; Near to the root of the tree he observed a
+little swarthy girl, about eight years of age, on her knees, praying, <!--
+page 150--><a name="page150"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 150</span>while
+her little black eyes ran down with tears.&nbsp; Distress of any kind was
+always relieved by his Majesty, for he had a heart which melted at
+&lsquo;human woe;&rsquo; nor was it unaffected on this occasion.&nbsp; And
+now he inquired, &lsquo;What, my child, is the cause of your weeping?&nbsp;
+For what do you pray?&rsquo;&nbsp; The little creature at first started,
+then rose from her knees, and pointing to the tent, said, &lsquo;Oh, sir!
+my dying mother!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;What?&rsquo; said his Majesty,
+dismounting, and fastening his horse up to the branches of the oak,
+&lsquo;what, my child? tell me all about it.&rsquo;&nbsp; The little
+creature now led the King to the tent:&mdash;there lay, partly covered, a
+middle-aged female Gipsy, in the last stages of a decline, and in the last
+moments of life.&nbsp; She turned her dying eyes expressively to the royal
+visitor, then looked up to heaven; but not a word did she utter; the organs
+of speech had ceased their office; <i>the silver cord was loosed</i>,
+<i>and the wheel broken at the cistern</i>.&nbsp; The little girl then wept
+aloud, and, stooping down, wiped the dying sweat from her mother&rsquo;s
+face.&nbsp; The King, much affected, asked the child her name, and of her
+family; and how long her mother had been ill.&nbsp; Just at that moment
+another Gipsy girl, much older, came, out of breath, to the spot.&nbsp; She
+had been at the town of W---, and had brought some medicine for her dying
+mother.&nbsp; Observing a stranger, she modestly courtsied, and, hastening
+to her mother, knelt down by her side, kissed her pallid lips, and burst
+into tears.&nbsp; &lsquo;What, my dear child,&rsquo; said his Majesty,
+&lsquo;can be done for you?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh, sir!&rsquo; she
+replied, &lsquo;my dying mother <!-- page 151--><a name="page151"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 151</span>wanted a religious person to teach her, and to
+pray with her, before she died.&nbsp; I ran all the way before it was light
+this morning to W---, and asked for a minister, <i>but no one could I get
+to come with me to pray with my dear mother</i>!&rsquo;&nbsp; The dying
+woman seemed sensible of what her daughter was saying, and her countenance
+was much agitated.&nbsp; The air was again rent with the cries of the
+distressed daughters.&nbsp; The King, full of kindness, instantly
+endeavoured to comfort them: he said, &lsquo;I am a minister, and God has
+sent me to instruct and comfort your mother.&rsquo;&nbsp; He then sat down
+on a pack, by the side of the pallet, and taking the hand of the dying
+Gipsy, discoursed on the demerit of sin, and the nature of
+redemption.&nbsp; He then pointed her to Christ, the all sufficient
+Saviour.&nbsp; While the King was doing this, the poor creature seemed to
+gather consolation and hope: her eyes sparkled with brightness, and her
+countenance became animated.&nbsp; She looked up; she smiled; but it was
+the last smile; it was the glimmering of expiring nature.&nbsp; As the
+expression of peace, however, remained strong in her countenance, it was
+not till some little time had elapsed, that they perceived the struggling
+spirit had left mortality.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was at this moment that some of his Majesty&rsquo;s
+attendants, who had missed him at the chase, and who had been riding
+through the forest in search of him, rode up, and found the King comforting
+the afflicted Gipsies.&nbsp; It was an affecting sight, and worthy of
+everlasting record in the annals of kings.</p>
+<p><!-- page 152--><a name="page152"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+152</span>&ldquo;His Majesty now rose up, put some gold into the hands of
+the afflicted girls, promised them his protection, and bade them look to
+heaven.&nbsp; He then wiped the tears from his eyes, and mounted his
+horse.&nbsp; His attendants, greatly affected, stood in silent
+admiration.&nbsp; Lord L--- was now going to speak, when his Majesty,
+turning to the Gipsies, and pointing to the breathless corpse, and to the
+weeping girls, said, with strong emotion, &lsquo;Who, my lord, who,
+thinkest thou, was neighbour unto these?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 153--><a name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+153</span>CHAP. XVI.&nbsp; Further interesting Correspondence.</h2>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear Sir,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In answer to your inquiries, I have to say, that within my
+knowledge, little or nothing has as yet been accomplished for the
+Gipsies.&nbsp; The Home Missionaries have frequently paid flying visits to
+their camps, and prayed, read, preached and distributed tracts.&nbsp; In
+all cases they have been treated with much respect, and their labour has
+been repaid with the most sincere marks of gratitude.&nbsp; But I never met
+with very warm support in carrying on this object, but was often exposed to
+some sarcastical insinuations or sardonic smiles from those who thought the
+attempt to ameliorate the condition of the Gipsies, only Quixotic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think their wandering life is one very great impediment in the
+way of improving the Gipsy tribes, and yet they are so attached to it,
+that, when taken into families, as servants, they will not stay.&nbsp; Nor
+can any good be done to their children; for, like all wild people, the
+parents are attached to them to a fault; so that they cannot allow them to
+be absent from them even to enjoy the instruction of a school, suspecting
+that such a separation might end in their final disunion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were a distinct society formed to effect a reformation <!-- page
+154--><a name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 154</span>among the
+Gipsies, many of the nobility, and other classes of the higher orders,
+would no doubt subscribe.&nbsp; There is a feeling among them on the
+subject, and many times the formation of a society has been on the
+tapis.&nbsp; The Gipsies are singularly attached to the Establishment, and
+many of them are married at the parish churches; and it is a pity the
+episcopalian body have not taken them up.&nbsp; There is a prejudice
+against them which I think is unfounded; but I cannot enter into details in
+a mere letter.&nbsp; People look on them as vagabonds, and <i>they</i> seem
+shy in return; and hence they continue a kind of outcast body in a
+civilized country.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If any further steps are taken, and if I can in any way assist in
+promoting your good object, you may command my services.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am, dear sir, respectfully yours,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">I. Cobbin</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Extracts from the Letter of a Clergyman&rsquo;s Lady</i>.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My best thanks are due to you for your compliance with my
+request; and, in return, I beg to assure you, that I consider your answer
+to my friend&rsquo;s objection, as quite satisfactory and efficient.&nbsp;
+I rejoice to hear that God has been pleased to bless the endeavours and
+earnest exertion of the Scripture-readers (to the Gipsies) with
+success.&nbsp; To behold sixteen, and afterwards twenty-one Gipsies
+voluntarily attending Divine <!-- page 155--><a name="page155"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 155</span>worship, must have conveyed feelings of
+heartfelt gratitude to the heart of every Christian, and at the same time
+encourage him to persevere in earnest prayer to the Father of mercies, to
+pour his holy Spirit into their souls, that they might become the true and
+faithful followers of the Redeemer.&nbsp; You say you would be glad to
+receive any intelligence respecting this interesting people; by which I am
+led to suppose that an account of an interview which I had with some of
+them, may not be unacceptable; an interview that was highly pleasing and
+satisfactory, as I found them less ignorant of spiritual concerns, and to
+possess better qualities, than I had imagined.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Having sent for two women, (the heads of the camps) I received
+them in a cottage in the town of ---, and after allowing them some
+refreshment, proceeded to put the different questions to them that are
+inserted in the Observer.&nbsp; They told me that their family, altogether,
+consisted of eighteen persons, who travelled about the country in three
+camps; that the men found it difficult to obtain regular employment; that
+sometimes, during the winter, they made cabbage-nets, and mended culinary
+utensils; that in the summer, men and women were occasionally employed in
+making hay, &amp;c.&nbsp; These women appeared very destitute of necessary
+clothing, which they said they found great difficulty in obtaining.&nbsp;
+They appeared careful to speak the truth, alleging that it hurt their
+consciences to speak otherwise.&nbsp; On the question being put to them,
+whether they appropriated to themselves the property <!-- page 156--><a
+name="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 156</span>of those near whom
+they encamped? they candidly confessed that they sometimes took a little
+straw, hay, and sticks; but no fowls or any other live-stock.&nbsp; They
+shewed a very affectionate disposition and warm feelings towards their
+children.&nbsp; The eldest of them assured me, that if any in their camp
+became orphans, she considered herself more bound to provide for them than
+her own, as the former needed it the more, being destitute.&nbsp; She did
+not object to their gaining instruction, if it came in the way, and she
+wished to be read to herself, and appeared to take much pleasure in
+listening to my explanations of the important doctrines of religion.&nbsp;
+They said that none of their party could read, but that they were sometimes
+visited by a relative who was a good scholar.&nbsp; She said, too, that she
+always kept in her possession a <i>godly book</i>, for the purpose of
+asking, as opportunity offered, a traveller to read to them.&nbsp; She
+assured me, too, (which I rather doubted,) that they constantly attended
+Divine worship, when encamped near enough to churches; that they send for
+the nearest clergyman <i>to preach</i> to the dying, and that they never
+omit having their babes <i>full christened</i>, excepting in cases of
+sickness, when the child is only baptized: and should such child die, they
+obtain the services of a parochial clergyman to inter it.&nbsp; They said,
+thinking, no doubt, to please me, that they did not like the Ranters, but
+that they thought well of the <i>church folks</i>.&nbsp; I fear that,
+though they had a general knowledge of the Supreme Being, they were sadly
+ignorant of the most important point of Christianity, <!-- page 157--><a
+name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 157</span>namely, the
+all-sufficient sacrifice that was made for the whole world.&nbsp; While I
+expatiated to them on the day of judgment and the final doom of man,
+displaying the extreme and exquisite happiness of the righteous part of the
+human family, and the dreadful misery of the wicked, the younger of them,
+who appeared indisposed, was considerably agitated.&nbsp; They then said,
+that they were not in the habit of swearing, but occasionally did so,
+though they were aware it was very wicked.&nbsp; When travelling, they told
+me that they avoid breaking the sabbath; and that they visit all places
+included in the district through which they wander, three times per year,
+from which plan they seldom deviate.&nbsp; I inquired if they would like to
+settle in cottages, and gain their livelihood by industry.&nbsp; They
+replied, that <i>if house-rent</i>, <i>clothes</i>, <i>food</i>, <i>and all
+other necessaries were found them</i>, they would; but that they would not
+settle on any other condition.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am desirous of obtaining your opinion respecting the plan I
+have lately formed to benefit this people; for, should you approve of it,
+it will be carried into immediate execution.&nbsp; I thought it would be
+very advantageous to offer an adequate remuneration to a pious person who
+would devote every half-day to reading and explaining the Scriptures to the
+old, and teaching the young to read.&nbsp; I was aware that it would be
+difficult to obtain one, who, while he would teach the young to read, and
+explain the Scriptures to the aged, would be wise enough to give wholesome
+advice to every case of mental distress, and be gifted to guide the first
+steps of <!-- page 158--><a name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+158</span>those who are disposed to be good, in the way of Christian
+godliness.&nbsp; After much anxiety and many attempts, I at length
+succeeded in meeting with a person most disinterestedly pious; one who was
+willing to accede to any proposal to benefit his fellow-creatures.&nbsp; He
+appears to attach little importance to himself, but to have much confidence
+in God, in reference to his exertions.&nbsp; He is really desirous to
+promote the immortal interests of the poor people to whom his attention has
+been directed, and is pious, zealous and intelligent.&nbsp; He, however,
+cannot devote himself to this work more than three days per week.&nbsp; He
+will visit all Gipsy camps for seven or eight miles round.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some clear, forcible, simple, religious tracts, such as are
+likely to instruct and awaken, with the Scriptures, would, perhaps, be of
+service.&nbsp; I shall hold out rewards of clothes and books to those of
+whom I hear the best accounts, and shall endeavour to meet them, a few at a
+time, in a cottage, at least once per year.&nbsp; Will you let me know
+whether you think I am doing right?&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Extracts of a Letter from a man of plain</i>, <i>but pious
+character</i>, <i>addressed to the Southampton Committee</i>.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Gentlemen,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is natural for me to suppose that you expect, by this period,
+to hear something of the success that has attended my labours on the common
+among the people called Gipsies.&nbsp; I visit them three or four times
+<!-- page 159--><a name="page159"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+159</span>a-week, besides going among them on sabbath days.&nbsp; I go from
+tent to tent, and talk to them on religious subjects, read and explain the
+word of God to them, so far as I am able, and pray with them.&nbsp; At such
+times they thankfully receive what I humbly communicate to them, and often,
+with tears and gratitude, wonder that I should think of them in their poor
+degraded state.&nbsp; I hope some of them may be brought to the knowledge
+of God.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>After some other pleasing details, this humble person concludes his
+letter thus:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;With regard to the children, I meet with here and there
+<i>one</i> among them that can read, but it is very little.&nbsp; These
+children, however, are desirous, I may say very desirous to have some
+little books.&nbsp; To such I have given books, till I have none
+left.&nbsp; I could have given away, where desired, and with the prospect
+of knowing they might be useful, many more, had I possessed them.&nbsp;
+Upon the whole I think there is cause for much encouragement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am, gentlemen, your humble servant,<br />
+&nbsp; &ldquo;* * * * *&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>A clergyman, a most valuable correspondent, observes, while addressing
+the Committee, through the author:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;In speaking to the Gipsies on the road side, and offering a
+tract, I have never but once met with impertinence.&nbsp; <!-- page
+160--><a name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 160</span>It is
+probable that the individual had been impertinently treated, first, by
+people called Christians.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dr More has well said, with respect to the Jews, &lsquo;If
+Christians had believed and acted like Christians, it would have been a
+miracle if the Jews had not been converted.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This observation is equally applicable to the Gipsies of England;
+for, if Christian denominations did their duty, they would cease to be
+Gipsies.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2><!-- page 161--><a name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+161</span>CHAP. XVII.&nbsp; Concluding Remarks.</h2>
+<p>Had the author availed himself of all the facts relating to the
+addresses which have been given in different places by clergymen, home
+missionaries, and other ministers, and published all the letters of an
+interesting nature addressed to himself and the Southampton Committee, in
+reference to the Gipsies, together with the gratitude they have shown for
+such Christian attentions, it might have gratified many readers; but these
+pages would thereby have been increased to too great a number.</p>
+<p>But, before concluding this little work, he desires to impress upon the
+reader, the necessity there is of engaging in the great work of the
+conversion of the poor Gipsies.</p>
+<p>Why do not all ministers, and all good people unite in it?&nbsp; May we
+not conclude that they do not feel the value of their souls as they ought,
+if they do not perform all that is in their power for this end?&nbsp; Both
+ministers and their congregations are too lukewarm.&nbsp; We are
+discouraged by difficulties under the influence of unbelief, and we often
+say, How can these things be accomplished?&nbsp; Every Christian is called
+by his Saviour to attempt the instruction of his fellow-creatures; <!--
+page 162--><a name="page162"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 162</span>and no
+common excuse, such as business, poverty, a want of time, acknowledged
+ignorance, and a want of talent, can justify us in neglecting the attempt
+to speak a word of advice, or reproof, or promise, to our
+fellow-creatures.&nbsp; This is the duty of every Christian, and if done in
+faith, Almighty God will bless the effort.</p>
+<p>To the magistrates the author would make a most ardent appeal on behalf
+of the despised members of the Gipsy family.&nbsp; Most respectfully and
+most earnestly does he entreat them to pity their destitute condition, when
+brought before them as vagrants, and from which they have been so often
+made to suffer; for, sooner would the wild creatures of the forest be
+tamed, than those branches of the human family be brought, through
+coercion, to dwell in houses and follow trades, who were born under the
+hedges, and have, through life, made unfrequented solitudes their
+homes.&nbsp; Much better would it be for the magistrates to encourage the
+education of their children, with the view to improve and reform the rising
+generation.&nbsp; The author hopes and prays that they may.&nbsp;
+<i>Blessed are the merciful</i>, <i>for they shall obtain mercy</i>.</p>
+<p>If we all felt the importance and necessity of discharging our Christian
+duties as the sailor and the soldier do in their different stations, no
+difficulties would deter us; but God expects every <i>Christian</i> to do
+his duty.&nbsp; A celebrated commander once called his officers together,
+and said, &ldquo;We must carry such a garrison.&rdquo;&nbsp; The officers
+said, &ldquo;It is impossible; the attempt would be vain.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+general replied, &ldquo;It can, and must be <!-- page 163--><a
+name="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 163</span>done, for I have the
+order in my pocket.&rdquo;&nbsp; Oh! ye ministers of Christ! you have the
+order lying on your table, and in your desks, at this moment; read it in
+the Bible:&mdash;<i>Go ye into the highways and hedges</i>, <i>and compel
+them to come in</i>, <i>that my house may be filled</i>.&nbsp; Luke xiv.
+23.&nbsp; The duty is ours: have we done it?&nbsp; Have we done it as
+opportunities have presented themselves?&nbsp; Have we done it as we
+ought?&nbsp; Yea, more; have we sought for opportunities to instruct
+souls?&nbsp; Our adorable Master did so.&nbsp; He came from heaven to
+earth, to seek and to save them who were lost.&nbsp; Private Christians!
+you also have your order from the high throne of heaven, in your houses,
+perhaps unnoticed; or, it may be, you have not rightly interpreted these
+orders to their full extent.&nbsp; Others may have acted the coward&rsquo;s
+part, and thrown these orders aside.&nbsp; Would a soldier or a sailor thus
+serve his king and country?&nbsp; If you saw your countrymen perishing on
+your shores by shipwreck, or likely to be destroyed by fire, would you not
+be anxious to assist both the virtuous and the wicked?&nbsp; Gipsies are
+perishing around you; hear their cries, ere they are plunged into eternity;
+and attend to these orders from the King of Kings:&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>Thou shalt not avenge</i>, <i>nor bear any grudge against the
+children of thy people</i>; <i>but thou shalt love thy neighbour as
+thyself</i>.&nbsp; Leviticus, xix. 18.&nbsp; <i>The stranger that dwelleth
+with you shall be as one born amongst you</i>, <i>and thou shalt love him
+as thyself</i>; xxxiv. 5.&nbsp; <i>Beware of hardness of heart toward thy
+poor brother</i>.&nbsp; Deut. vii. 15, 9.&nbsp; <i>Be ye therefore </i><!--
+page 164--><a name="page164"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+164</span><i>merciful</i>, <i>as your Father who is in heaven is
+merciful</i>.&nbsp; Luke vi. 36.&nbsp; <i>For he raiseth up the poor out of
+the dust and lifteth the needy out of the dunghill</i>.&nbsp; Psalm cxiii.
+7.&nbsp; <i>Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to
+you</i>, <i>do ye even so to them</i>; <i>for this is the law and the
+prophets</i>.&nbsp; Matt. vii. 12.&nbsp; <i>Thou shalt love thy neighbour
+as thyself</i>.&nbsp; Matt. xix. 19.&nbsp; And who is thy neighbour?&nbsp;
+Read the parable of the Good Samaritan, and <i>Go and do
+likewise</i>.&nbsp; Luke x. 15.</p>
+<p>The author will finally conclude by observing, that England will have a
+great deal to answer for in reference to the Gipsies of past
+generations.&nbsp; For, from a very moderate calculation that he has made,
+150,000 of these outcasts have passed into the eternal world, uninformed,
+unacquainted with God, since they came to this country.&nbsp; May the
+present, and succeeding generations, be wiser than the past!</p>
+<h2><!-- page 165--><a name="page165"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+165</span>APPENDIX.</h2>
+<p>Since the <span class="smcap">Gipsies&rsquo; Advocate</span> was put to
+press, the author, as might naturally be expected on a subject so
+interesting as the conversion of the Gipsies, has had many other pleasing
+communications.&nbsp; From his Bristol correspondents he has been favoured
+with several of delightful interest, in reference to a small colony in that
+neighbourhood; and these state that several of the Gipsies not only begin
+to evidence an aversion to their former life, but increase in seriousness,
+and in habits of industry.&nbsp; And happy is he to say, that several
+influential Christians of that city are growing in the interest they
+manifest to these outcasts of society; for they are endeavouring to improve
+every opportunity of affording them instruction.&nbsp; It is with peculiar
+pleasure too, the author learns, that the students of the Baptist Academy
+of the above-named city, are not dead to the affecting necessities of this
+poor people.&nbsp; Some of the students of that academy spent the whole of
+one day in endeavouring to find one of their large encampments, of which
+they had had some previous information, and spent the evening in giving
+such instruction as appeared to them to be the best calculated to enlighten
+and reform the people to whom they were so anxious to do good; some of them
+occupying <!-- page 166--><a name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+166</span>themselves with the children, and others with the adults.&nbsp;
+May their example have its due influence on surrounding Christians!</p>
+<p>The author must not forget to mention here, that he has been apprised by
+the clergyman in Scotland, whose letter forms so interesting a part of the
+ninth chapter, that the account he mentioned to him, as gaining insertion
+in a statistical publication, has not been published, he believes, in
+consequence of the death of the gentleman who had interested himself for
+its insertion in the work referred to; but that he hopes it may meet the
+public eye in a short time.</p>
+<p>And now, having redeemed the pledge which he gave his friends about
+twelve months since; having furnished them with a history of the Gipsies,
+such a one as he hopes will be beneficial to the race, whose conduct,
+condition, and necessities it narrates; he will conclude by thanking those
+kind friends who have unintentionally contributed to the interest of these
+pages, and by asking the continuation of their favours, with a view to give
+increasing interest to an intended second edition.&nbsp; He would not
+forget publicly to solicit, likewise, the correspondence of ladies and
+gentlemen who may be in possession of facts or plans likely to interest the
+public towards the Gipsies.</p>
+<p>The author now commits these pages to the all-influential blessing of
+God, earnestly praying that these poor, hard-faring wanderers, whose
+character he has endeavoured to delineate, may be speedily rescued from
+their present forlorn condition, and, that they may eventually <!-- page
+167--><a name="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 167</span>be conducted
+to the mansions of eternal bliss, where neither storm nor tempest shall any
+longer afflict them, but where they shall join with the ransomed of the
+Lord, in ascribing <i>blessing</i>, <i>and honour</i>, <i>and glory</i>,
+<i>and power</i>, <i>unto him that sitteth upon the throne</i>, <i>and unto
+the Lamb for ever and ever</i>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">THE END.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 168--><a name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+168</span>LIST OF AUTHORS<br />
+WHO HAVE WRITTEN ON THE GIPSIES.</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">H. M. G. Grellman&rsquo;s Dissertation on the
+Gipsies</span>.&nbsp; Translated by M. Rapier.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Hoyland&rsquo;s Survey of the Gipsies</span>.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Twiss&rsquo;s Travels in Spain</span>.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Swinburne&rsquo;s Travels in Italy</span>.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Dr C. D. Clark&rsquo;s Travels in Russia</span>.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Capt. David Richardson</span>.&nbsp; Referred to in
+the seventh volume of <i>Asiatic Researches</i>.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Sir Thomas Brown&rsquo;s Vulgar Errors</span>.</p>
+<p>While these are the leading authors, whose works are either composed in,
+or translated into English, it may impress us with the importance by which
+the Gipsies have been viewed, to know, that nearly 200 have written about
+them in other languages.</p>
+<h2>ERRATA.</h2>
+<p>Page Line</p>
+<p>31, 24, <i>For</i> &lsquo;would be in a town,&rsquo; <i>read</i>,
+&lsquo;would be in, in a town.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>55, 30, <i>For</i> &lsquo;dispatching,&rsquo; <i>read</i>,
+&lsquo;despatching.&rsquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">baker and son</span>,
+<span class="smcap">printers</span>, <span
+class="smcap">southampton</span>.</p>
+<h2>Footnotes:</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote10"></a><a href="#citation10"
+class="footnote">[10]</a>&nbsp; See a late account of this Colony in a
+subsequent page.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote11a"></a><a href="#citation11a"
+class="footnote">[11a]</a>&nbsp; See Hoyland, pages 78, 79, and 80.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote11b"></a><a href="#citation11b"
+class="footnote">[11b]</a>&nbsp; We should not forget that the grace of God
+can change their hearts and morals.&nbsp; The facts contained in this book
+are very encouraging examples of the power of divine grace upon the heart
+and character of the Gipsy people.&nbsp; The reader would do well to turn
+to the following scriptures&mdash;Isaiah, <span class="smcap">xi</span>. 6,
+7, 8, 9.&nbsp; 1 Cor. <span class="smcap">vi</span>. 9, 10, 11.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote12"></a><a href="#citation12"
+class="footnote">[12]</a>&nbsp; Children, after grown up to men and women,
+have an affection for their parents somewhat childish.&nbsp; A young Gipsey
+man known to the author, when his mother stays longer from the camp than
+usual, expresses his anxiety for her return, by saying&mdash;<i>Where is my
+mum</i>?&nbsp; <i>I wish my mum would come home</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote14"></a><a href="#citation14"
+class="footnote">[14]</a>&nbsp; Some of those Gipsies who have families,
+and a little property, provide themselves with a cart, or waggon, as most
+convenient for a warehouse for their goods, and more comfortable than a
+tent to dwell in during winter.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote16"></a><a href="#citation16"
+class="footnote">[16]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Should any be inclined to doubt,
+which I scarcely suppose possible, the identity of the Gipsy or Cingari,
+and Hindostanee languages, still it will be acknowledged as no
+uninteresting subject, that tribes wandering through the mountains of
+Nubia, or the plains of Romania, have conversed for centuries in a dialect
+precisely similar to that spoken at this day, by the obscure, despised, and
+wretched people in England, whose language has been considered as a
+fabricated gibberish, and confounded with a cant in use among thieves and
+beggars; and whose persons have been, till within the period of the last
+year, an object of the persecution, instead of the protection of our
+laws.&rdquo;&mdash;Extract from a letter of William Marsden, Esq. addressed
+to Sir Joseph Banks, F. R. S., and read to the Society of Antiquaries in
+London, 1785.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote18"></a><a href="#citation18"
+class="footnote">[18]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;The gentleman spoke dixen to
+me,&rdquo; said a Gipsy to the Author; that is, long hard words.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote28"></a><a href="#citation28"
+class="footnote">[28]</a>&nbsp; May not this be a proof of their
+Hindostanee origin?&nbsp; There is this difference, however&mdash;the
+clothes, &amp;c. of the deceased Gipsy, are burnt instead of his body!</p>
+<p><a name="footnote45"></a><a href="#citation45"
+class="footnote">[45]</a>&nbsp; One Gipsy, I believe, has been convicted of
+having some stolen poultry in his tent; but he had received it from the
+thief.&nbsp; No other fact of the sort has come to my knowledge.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote72"></a><a href="#citation72"
+class="footnote">[72]</a>&nbsp; Sold by Seeley, and by Westley and Co,
+London; Clark, Bristol; Binns, Bath; and Lindsay and Co, Edinburgh.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote75"></a><a href="#citation75"
+class="footnote">[75]</a>&nbsp; I ought to say perhaps, that though this
+young and ignorant woman ran away, she did not go with any thing that was
+not her own; for she left behind her a bonnet that had been lent her, while
+she had nothing more on her head than a piece of cloth.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote76"></a><a href="#citation76"
+class="footnote">[76]</a>&nbsp; The latter was the daughter of the dying
+Gipsy, an account of whom may be seen in the tract numbered 803, and
+published by the Tract Society.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote97"></a><a href="#citation97"
+class="footnote">[97]</a>&nbsp; The friends of this good cause at Bristol,
+now think that manual labour is far more conducive to their conversion than
+hawking any article whatever: the above plan is therefore totally abandoned
+for labour.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote115"></a><a href="#citation115"
+class="footnote">[115]</a>&nbsp; A district in East India celebrated for
+diamonds.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIPSIES' ADVOCATE***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
+***** This file should be named 19852-h.htm or 19852-h.zip******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/8/5/19852
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://www.gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+</pre></body>
+</html>
diff --git a/19852.txt b/19852.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c158787
--- /dev/null
+++ b/19852.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,4275 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Gipsies' Advocate, by James Crabb
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Gipsies' Advocate
+ or, Observations on the Origin, Character, Manners, and Habits of
+ The English Gipsies
+
+
+Author: James Crabb
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2006 [eBook #19852]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIPSIES' ADVOCATE***
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1831 edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GIPSIES' ADVOCATE;
+ OR,
+ OBSERVATIONS
+ ON THE
+ ORIGIN, CHARACTER, MANNERS, AND HABITS
+ OF
+ The English Gipsies:
+
+
+ TO WHICH ARE ADDED,
+ MANY INTERESTING ANECDOTES,
+ ON THE
+ SUCCESS THAT HAS ATTENDED THE PLANS OF SEVERAL
+ BENEVOLENT INDIVIDUALS, WHO ANXIOUSLY
+ DESIRE THEIR CONVERSION TO GOD.
+
+ BY JAMES CRABB,
+
+ AUTHOR OF "THE PENITENT MAGDALEN."
+
+ "The Son of Man is come to seek and to save that which is lost."
+ "Let that mind be in you which was in Christ Jesus."
+
+ LONDON:
+
+ SEELEY, FLEET STREET; WESTLEY AND DAVIS, AVE-MARIA-LANE; HATCHARD,
+ PICCADILLY; LINDSAY AND CO., SOUTH STREET, ANDREW STREET, EDINBURGH;
+ COLLINS, GLASGOW; WAKEMAN, DUBLIN, WILSON AND SON, YORK.
+
+ 1831.
+
+ BAKER AND SON, PRINTERS, SOUTHAMPTON.
+
+ TO
+ THE JUDGES, MAGISTRATES,
+ AND
+ Ministers of Christ,
+ AS THE
+ ORGANS OF PUBLIC JUSTICE, AND REVEALED TRUTH,
+ THE GIPSIES' ADVOCATE
+ IS MOST
+ RESPECTFULLY AND SINCERELY DEDICATED
+ BY
+ THE AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The Author of the following pages has been urged by numerous friends, and
+more particularly by his own conscience, to present to the Christian
+Public a brief account of the people called Gipsies, now wandering in
+Britain. This, to many readers, may appear inexpedient; as Grellman and
+Hoyland have written largely on this neglected part of the human family.
+But it should be recollected, that there are thousands of respectable and
+intelligent christians, who never have read, and never may read either of
+the above authors. The writer of the present work is partly indebted for
+the sympathies he feels, and which he wishes to awaken in others toward
+these miserable wanderers, to various authors who have written on them,
+but more particularly to Grellman and Hoyland, who, in addition to the
+facts which came under their own immediate notice, have published the
+observations of travellers and others interested in the history of this
+people. A list of these authors may be seen in the Appendix.
+
+But his knowledge of this people does not entirely depend on the
+testimony of others, having had the opportunity of closely examining for
+himself their habits and character in familiar visits to their tents, and
+by allowing his door to be free of access to all those encamped near
+Southampton, when they have needed his help and advice. Thus has he
+gained a general knowledge of their vicious habits, their comparative
+virtues, and their unhappy modes of life, which he hopes the following
+pages will fully prove, and be the means of placing their character in
+the light of truth, and of correcting various mistakes respecting them,
+which have given rise to many unjust and injurious prejudices against
+them.
+
+The Author could have enlarged the present work very considerably, had he
+detailed all the facts with which he is well acquainted.
+
+His object, however, was to furnish a work which should be concise and
+cheap, that he might be the means of exciting among his countrymen an
+energetic benevolence toward this despised people; for it cannot be
+denied that many thousands of them have never given the condition of the
+Gipsies a single thought.
+
+Such a work is now presented to the public. Whether the author has
+succeeded, will be best known to those persons who have the most correct
+and extensive information relative to the unhappy race in question.
+Should he be the honoured instrument of exciting in any breasts the same
+feelings of pity, mercy, love and zeal for these poor English heathens,
+as is felt and carried into useful plans for the heathens abroad, by
+christians of all denominations; he will then be certain that, by the
+blessing of the Redeemer, the confidence of the Gipsies will be gained,
+and, that they will be led to that Saviour, who has said, _Whosoever
+cometh unto me_, _I will in no wise cast him out_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. I. On the Origin of the Gipsies.
+
+
+Of the Origin of these wanderers of the human race, the learned are not
+agreed; for we have no authentic records of their first emigrations.
+Some suppose them to be the descendants of Israel, and many others, that
+they are of Egyptian origin. But the evidence adduced in confirmation of
+these opinions appears very inconclusive. We cannot discover more than
+fifty Hebrew words in the language they speak, and they have not a
+ceremony peculiar to the Hebrew nation. They have not a word of Coptic,
+and but few of Persian derivation. And they are deemed as strangers in
+Egypt at the present time. They are now found in many countries of
+Europe, Asia, and Africa, in all of which they speak a language _peculiar
+to themselves_. On the continent of America alone are there none of them
+found. Grellman informs us that there were great numbers in Lorraine,
+and that they dwelt in its forests, before the French Revolution of 1790.
+He supposes that there are no less than 700,000 in the world, and that
+the greatest numbers are found in Europe. Throughout the countries they
+inhabit, they have kept themselves a distinct race of people in every
+possible way.
+
+They never visit the Norman Isles; and it is said by the natives of
+Ireland, that their numbers are small in that country. Hoyland informs
+us, that many counties in Scotland are free of them, while they wander
+about in other districts of that country, as in England. He has also
+informed us, sec. 6, of a colony which resides during the winter months
+at Kirk Yetholm in the county of Roxburgh. {10}
+
+Sir Thomas Brown, in his work entitled "VULGAR ERRORS," says, that they
+were seen first in Germany, in the year 1409. In 1418, they were found
+in Switzerland; and in 1422, in Italy. They appeared in France, on the
+17th August, 1427. It is remarkable that, when they first came into
+Europe, they were black, and that the women were still blacker than the
+men. From Grellman we learn, that "in Hungary, there are 50,000; in
+Spain, 60,000; and that they are innumerable in Constantinople."
+
+It appears from the statute of the 22nd of Henry VIII, made against this
+people, that they must at that time have been in England some years, and
+must have increased much in number, and in crime. In the 27th of that
+reign, a law was made against the importation of such persons, subjecting
+the importer to 40_l_ penalty. In that reign also they were considered
+so dangerous to the morals and comfort of the country, that many of them
+were sent back to Calais. Yet in the reign of Elizabeth, they were
+estimated at 10,000. {11a}
+
+Dr Walsh says, that the Gipsies in Turkey, like the Jews, are
+distinguishable by indelible personal marks, dark eyes, brown complexion,
+and black hair; and by unalterable moral qualities, an aversion to
+labour, and a propensity to petty thefts. {11b}
+
+The celebrated traveller, Dr Daniel Clarke, speaks of great numbers of
+Gipsies in Persia, who are much encouraged by the Tartars. Formerly, and
+particularly on the Continent, they had their counts, lords, and dukes;
+but these were titles without either power or riches.
+
+The English Gipsies were formerly accustomed to denominate an aged man
+and woman among them, as their king and queen; but this is a political
+distinction which has not been recognized by them for many years.
+
+If we suppose the Gipsies to have been heathens before they came into
+this country, their separation from pagan degradation and cruelty, has
+been attended with many advantages to themselves. They have seen neither
+the superstitions of idolatry, nor the unnatural cruelties of heathenism.
+They are not destitute of those sympathies and attachments which would
+adorn the most polished circles. In demonstration of this, we have only
+to make ourselves acquainted with the fervour and tenderness of their
+conjugal, parental, and filial sensibilities,--and the great care they
+take of all who are aged, infirm, and blind, among them. Were these
+highly interesting qualities sanctified by pure religion, they would
+exhibit much of the beauty and loveliness of the christian character. I
+am aware that an opinion is general, that they are cruel to their
+children; but it may be questioned if ebullitions of passion are more
+frequent among them, in reference to their children, than among other
+classes of society; and when these ebullitions, which are not lasting,
+are over--their conduct toward their children is most affectionate. The
+attachment of Gipsy children to their parents is equally vivid and
+admirable; it grows with their years, and strengthens even as their
+connections increase. {12} And indeed the affection that sisters and
+brothers have one for the other is very great. A short time since, the
+little sister of a Gipsy youth seventeen years of age, was taken ill with
+a fever, when his mind became exceedingly distressed, and he gave way to
+excessive grief and weeping.
+
+Those who suppose these wanderers of mankind to be of Hindostanee or
+Suder origin, have much the best proof on their side. A real Gipsy has a
+countenance, eye, mouth, hands, ancle, and quickness of manners, strongly
+indicative of Hindoo origin. This is more particularly the case with the
+females. Nor is the above mere assertion. The testimony of the most
+intelligent travellers, many of whom have long resided in India, fully
+supports this opinion. And, indeed, persons who have not travelled on
+the Asiatic Continent, but who have seen natives of Hindostan, have been
+surprised at the similarity of manners and features existing between them
+and the Gipsies. The Author of this work once met with a Hindoo woman,
+and was astonished at the great resemblance she bore in countenance and
+manners to the female Gipsy of his own country.
+
+The Hindoo Suder delights in horses, tinkering, music, and fortune
+telling; so does the Gipsy. The Suder tribes of the same part of the
+Asiatic Continent, are wanderers, dwelling chiefly in wretched mud-huts.
+When they remove from one place to another, they carry with them their
+scanty property. The English Gipsies imitate these erratic tribes in
+this particular. They wander from place to place, and carry their small
+tents with them, which consist of a few bent sticks, and a blanket. {14}
+The Suders in the East eat the flesh of nearly every unclean creature;
+nor are they careful that the flesh of such creatures should not be
+putrid. How exactly do the Gipsies imitate them in this abhorrent choice
+of food! They have been in the habit of eating many kinds of brutes, not
+even excepting dogs and cats; and when pressed by hunger, have sought
+after the most putrid carrion. It has been a common saying among
+them--_that which God kills_, _is better than that killed by man_. But
+of late years, with a few exceptions, they have much improved in this
+respect; for they now eat neither dogs nor cats, and but seldom seek
+after carrion. But in winter they will dress and eat snails, hedge-hogs,
+and other creatures not generally dressed for food.
+
+But the strongest evidence of their Hindoo origin is the great
+resemblance their own language bears to the Hindostanee. The following
+Vocabulary is taken from Grellman, Hoyland, and Captain Richardson. The
+first of these respectable authors declares, that twelve out of thirty
+words of the Gipsies' language, are either purely Hindostanee, or nearly
+related to it.
+
+The following list of words are among those which bear the greatest
+resemblance to that language.
+
+_Gipsy_. _Hindostanee_. _English_.
+Ick, Ek, Ek, One.
+Duj, Doj, Du, Two.
+Trin, Tri, Tin, Three.
+Schtar, Star, Tschar, Four.
+Pantsch, Pansch, Pansch, Five.
+Tschowe, Sshow, Tscho, Six.
+Efta, Hefta, Sat, Seven.
+Ochto, Aute, Eight.
+Desch, Des, Des, Ten.
+Bisch, Bis, Bis Twenty.
+Diwes, Diw, Day.
+Ratti, Ratch, Night.
+Cham, Cam, Tschanct The sun.
+Panj, Panj, Water.
+Sonnikey, Suna, Gold.
+Rup, Ruppa, Silver.
+Bal, Bal, The hair.
+Aok, Awk, The eye.
+Kan, Kawn, The ear.
+Mui, Mu, The mouth.
+Dant, Dant, A tooth.
+Sunjo, Sunnj, The hearing.
+Sunj, Sunkh, The smell.
+Sik, Tschik, The taste.
+Tschater, Tschater, A tent.
+Rajah, Raja, The prince.
+Baro, Bura, Great.
+Kalo, Kala, Black.
+Grea, Gorra, Horse.
+Ker, Gurr, House.
+Pawnee, Paniee, Brook, drink, water.
+Bebee, Beebe, Aunt.
+Bouropanee, Bura-panee, Ocean, wave.
+Rattie, Rat, Dark night,
+Dad, Dada, Father.
+Mutchee, Muchee, Fish.
+
+This language, called by themselves Slang, or Gibberish, invented, as
+they think, by their forefathers for secret purposes, is not merely the
+language of _one_, or a _few _of these wandering tribes, which are found
+in the European Nations; but is adopted by the vast numbers who inhabit
+the earth.
+
+One of our reformed Gipsies, while in the army, was with his regiment at
+Portsmouth, and being on garrison duty with an invalid soldier, he was
+surprised to hear some words of the Gipsy language unintentionally
+uttered by him, who was a German. On enquiring how he understood this
+language, the German replied, that he was of Gipsy origin, and that it
+was spoken by this race in every part of his native land, for purposes of
+secrecy. {16}
+
+A well known nobleman, who had resided many years in India, taking
+shelter under a tree during a storm in this country, near a camp of
+Gipsies, was astonished to hear them use several words he well knew were
+Hindostanee; and going up to them, he found them able to converse with
+him in that language.
+
+Not long ago, a Missionary from India, who was well acquainted with the
+language of Hindostan, was at the Author's house when a Gipsy was
+present; and, after a conversation which he had with her, he declared,
+that, her people must once have known the Hindostanee language _well_.
+Indeed Gipsies have often expressed surprise when words have been read to
+them out of the Hindostanee vocabulary.
+
+Lord Teignmouth once said to a young Gipsy woman in Hindostanee, _Tue
+burra tschur_, that is, _Thou a great thief_. She immediately replied;
+No--_I am not a thief_--_I live by fortune telling_.
+
+It can be no matter of surprise that this language, as spoken among this
+people, is generally corrupted, when we consider, that, for many
+centuries, they have known nothing of elementary science, and have been
+strangers to books and letters. Perhaps the secrecy necessary to effect
+many of their designs, has been the greatest means of preserving its
+scanty remains among them. But an attempt to prove that they are _not_
+of Hindoo origin, because they do not speak the Hindostanee with perfect
+correctness, would be as absurd as to declare, that, our Gipsies are not
+natives of England, because they speak very incorrect English. The few
+words that follow, and which occurred in some conversations the Author
+had with the most intelligent of the Gipsies he has met, prove how
+incorrectly they speak _our_ language; and yet it would be worse than
+folly to attempt to prove that they are not natives of England.
+
+Expencival _for_ expensive.
+
+Cide _for_ decide.
+
+Device _for_ advice.
+
+Dixen _for_ dictionary. {18}
+
+Ealfully _for_ equally.
+
+Indistructed _for_ instructed.
+
+Gemmem _for_ gentleman.
+
+Dauntment _for_ daunted.
+
+Spiteliness _for_ spitefulness.
+
+Hawcus Paccus _for_ Habeas Corpus.
+
+Increach _for_ increase.
+
+Commist _for_ submit.
+
+Brand, in his observations on POPULAR ANTIQUITIES, is of opinion that the
+first Gipsies fled from Asia, when the cruel Timur Beg ravaged India,
+with a view to proselyte the heathen to the Mohammedan religion; at which
+time about 500,000 human beings were butchered by him. Some suppose,
+that, soon after this time, many who escaped the sword of this human
+fury, came into Europe through Egypt; and on this account were called, in
+English, GIPSIES.
+
+Although there is not the least reason whatever to suppose the Gipsies to
+have had an Egyptian origin, and although, as we have asserted in a
+former page, they are strangers in that land of wonders to the present
+day; yet it appears possible to me, that Egypt may have had something to
+do with their present appellation. And allowing that the supposition is
+well founded, which ascribes to them a passage through Egypt into
+European nations, it is very likely they found their way to that place
+under the following circumstances.
+
+In the years 1408 and 1409, Timur Beg ravaged India, to make, as has
+already been observed, proselytes to the Mohammedan delusion, when he put
+hundreds of thousands of its inhabitants to the sword. It is very
+rational to suppose, that numbers of those who had the happiness not to
+be overtaken by an army so dreadful, on account of the cruelties it
+perpetrated, should save their lives by flying from their native land, to
+become wandering strangers in another. Now if we assert that the Gipsies
+were of the Suder cast of Asiatic Indians, and that they found their way
+from Hindostan into other and remote countries when Timur Beg spread
+around him terrors so dreadful, it is natural to ask, why did not some of
+the other casts of India accompany them? This objection has no weight at
+all when we consider the hatred and contempt poured upon the Suder by all
+the other casts of India. The Bramins, Tschechteries, and Beis, were as
+safe, though menaced with destruction by Timur Beg, as they would have
+been along with the Suder tribes, seeking a retreat from their enemy in
+lands where he would not be likely to follow them. Besides, the other
+casts, from time immemorial, have looked on their country as especially
+given them of God; and they would as soon have suffered death, as leave
+it. The Suders had not these prepossessions for their native soil. They
+were a degraded people--a people looked on as the lowest of the human
+race; and, with an army seeking their destruction, they had every motive
+to leave, and none to stay in Hindostan.
+
+It cannot be determined by what track the forefathers of the Gipsies
+found their way from Hindostan to the countries of Europe. But it may be
+presumed that they passed over the southern Persian deserts of Sigiston,
+Makran and Kirman, along the Persian Gulph to the mouth of the Euphrates,
+thence to Bassora into the deserts of Arabia, and thence into Egypt by
+the Isthmus of Suez.
+
+It is a fact not unworthy a place in these remarks on the origin of this
+people, that they do not like to be called Gipsies, unless by those
+persons whom they have reason to consider their real friends. This
+probably arises from two causes of great distress to them--_Gipsies are
+suspected and hated as the perpetrators of all crime_--_and they are
+almost universally prosecuted as vagrants_. Is it to be wondered at,
+that to strangers, they do not like to acknowledge themselves as Gipsies?
+I think not.
+
+We will conclude our remarks on the origin of these erratic sons of Adam,
+by adding the testimony of Col. Herriot, read before the Royal Asiatic
+Society, Sir George Staunton in the chair. That gentleman, giving an
+account of the Zingaree of India, says, that this class of people are
+frequently met with in that part of Hindostan which is watered by the
+Ganges, as well as the Malwa, Guzerat, and the Decan: they are called
+Nath, or Benia; the first term signifying a _rogue_--and the second a
+_dancer_, or _tumbler_. And the same gentleman cites various authorities
+in demonstration of the resemblance between these Gipsies and their
+neglected brethren in Europe. Nor does he think that the English Gipsies
+are so degraded as is generally supposed; in support of which he mentions
+some instances of good feeling displayed by them under his own
+observation, while in Hampshire.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. II. Observations on the Character, Manners, and Habits of the
+English Gipsies.
+
+
+The origin of this people is by no means of so much importance as the
+knowledge of their present character, manners and habits, with the view
+to the devising of proper plans for the improvement of their condition,
+and their conversion to christianity: for to any one who desires to love
+his neigbour as himself, their origin will be but a secondary
+consideration.
+
+Fifty years ago the Gipsies had their regular journeys, and often
+remained one or two months in a place, when they worked at their trades.
+And as access to different towns was more difficult than at the present
+day, partly from the badness of the roads and partly from the paucity of
+carriers, they were considered by the peasantry, and by small farmers, of
+whom there were great numbers in those days, as very useful branches of
+the human family; I mean the industrious and better part of them. At
+that period they usually encamped in the farmers' fields, or slept in
+their barns; and not being subject to the _driving system_, as they now
+are, they seldom robbed hedges; for their fires were replenished with
+dead-wood procured, without any risk of fines or imprisonments, from
+decayed trees and wooded banks. And it is proper to suppose, that, at
+such a time, their outrages and depredations were very few.
+
+It has already been stated that the Gipsies are very numerous, amounting
+to about 700,000. It is supposed that there are about 18,000 in this
+kingdom. But be they less or more, we ought never to forget--that they
+are branches of the same family with ourselves--that they are capable of
+being fitted for all the duties and enjoyments of life--and, what is
+better than all, that they are redeemed by the same Saviour, may partake
+of the same salvation, and be prepared for the same state of immortal
+bliss, from whence flows to the universal church of Christ, that peace
+which the world cannot take from her. Their condition, therefore, at
+once commands our sympathies, energies, prayers, and benevolence.
+
+Gipsies in general are of a tawny or brown colour; but this is not wholly
+hereditary. The chief cause is probably the lowness of their habits; for
+they very seldom wash their persons, or the clothes they wear, their
+linen excepted. Their alternate exposures to cold and heat, and the
+smoke surrounding their small camps, perpetually tend to increase those
+characteristics of complexion and feature by which they are at present
+distinguishable.
+
+It is not often that a Gipsy is seen well-dressed, even when they possess
+costly apparel; but their women are fond of finery. They are much
+delighted with broad lace, large ear-drops, a variety of rings, and
+glaring colours; and, when they possess the means, shew how great a share
+they have of that foolish vanity, which is said to be inherent in
+females, and which leads many, destitute of the faith, and hope, and
+love, and humility of the gospel, into utter ruin.
+
+A remarkable instance of the love of costly attire in a female Gipsy, is
+well known to the writer. The woman alluded to, obtained _a very large
+sum of money_ from three maiden ladies, pledging that it should be
+doubled by her art in conjuration. She then decamped to another
+district, where she bought a blood-horse, a black beaver hat, a new
+side-saddle and bridle, a silver-mounted whip, and figured away in her
+ill-obtained finery at the fairs. It is not easy to imagine the
+disappointment and resentment of the covetous and credulous ladies, whom
+she had so easily duped.
+
+Nor indeed are the males of this people less addicted to the love of gay
+clothing, if it suited their interests to exhibit it. An orphan, only
+ten years of age, taken from actual starvation last winter, and who was
+fed and clothed, and had every care taken of him, would not remain with
+those who wished him well, and who had been his friends; but returned to
+the camp from which he had been taken, saying, that he _would be a
+Gipsy_, _and would wear silver buttons on his coat_, _and have topped
+boots_; and when asked how he would get them, he replied--_by catching
+rats_.
+
+Some Gipsies try to excel others in the possession of silver buttons.
+They will sometimes give as much as fifteen pounds for a set. The
+females too spend many pounds on weighty gold rings for their fingers.
+The Author has by him, belonging to a Gipsy, three massy rings soldered
+together, and with a half sovereign on the top, which serves instead of a
+brilliant stone. We pity a vain Gipsy whose eyes are taken, and whose
+heart delights in such vulgar pomp. Are not those equally pitiable, who
+estimate themselves only by the gaiety, singularity, or costliness of
+their apparel? The Saviour has given us a rule by which we may judge
+persons in reference to their dress, as well as in other ostensibilities
+of character--_by their fruits ye shall know them_.
+
+The Gipsies are not strangers to pawn-brokers shops; but they do not
+visit these places for the same purposes as the vitiated poor of our
+trading towns. A pawnshop is their bank. When they acquire property
+illegally, as by stealing, swindling, or fortune-telling, they purchase
+valuable plate, and sometimes in the same hour pledge it for safety.
+Such property they have in store against days of adversity and trouble,
+which on account of their dishonest habits, often overtake them. Should
+one of their families stand before a Judge of his country, charged with a
+crime which is likely to cost him his life, or to transport him, every
+article of value is sacrificed to save him from death, or apprehended
+banishment. In such cases they generally retain a Counsellor to plead
+for the brother in adversity.
+
+At other times they carry their plate about with them, and when visited
+by friends, they bring out from dirty bags, a silver tea-pot, and a
+cream-jug and spoons of the same metal. Their plate is by no means
+paltry. Of course considerable property in plate is not very generally
+possessed by them.
+
+The Gipsies of this country are very punctual in paying their debts. All
+the Shop-keepers, with whom they deal in these parts, have declared, that
+they are some of their best and most honest customers. For the payment
+of a debt which is owing to one of their own people, the time and place
+are appointed by them, and should the debtor disappoint the creditor, he
+is liable by their law of honour to pay double the amount he owes; and he
+must pay it by personal servitude, if he cannot with money, if he wish to
+be considered by his friends honest and respectable. They call this law
+_pizharris_.
+
+There are few of these unhappy people that can either read or write. Yet
+a regular and frequent correspondence is kept up between the members of
+families who have had the least advantage of the sort; and those who have
+had no advantages whatever, correspond through the kindness of friends
+who write for them. Numerous are the letters which they receive from
+their relatives in New South Wales, to which Colony so many hundreds of
+this unsettled race have been transported. Their letters are usually
+left at one particular post-office, in the districts where they travel;
+and should such letters not be called for during a long period, they are
+usually kept by the post-master, who is sure they will be claimed, sooner
+or later. A long journey will be no impediment, when a letter is
+expected; for a Gipsy will travel any distance to obtain an expected
+favour of the kind. They are never heard to complain of the heavy
+expense of postage.
+
+We have already observed that there are many genuine features of humanity
+in the character of this degraded and despised people. Their constantly
+retaining an affectionate remembrance of their deceased relatives,
+affords a striking proof of this statement. And their attachment to the
+horse, donkey, rings, snuffbox, silver-spoons, and all things, except the
+clothes, of the deceased relatives, is very strong. With such articles
+they will never part, except in the greatest distress; and then they only
+pledge some of them, which are redeemed as soon as they possess the
+means.
+
+Most families visit the graves of their near relatives, once in the year;
+generally about the time of Christmas. Then the depository of the dead
+becomes a rallying spot for the living; for there they renew their
+attachments and sympathies, and give and receive assurances of continued
+good will. At such periods however they are too often addicted to
+feasting and intemperance.
+
+The graves of the deceased of this people, are usually kept in very good
+order in the various Church yards where they lie interred. This is done
+by the Sextons, for which they are annually remunerated. Sometimes large
+sums of money are expended on the erection of head-stones; and in one
+instance a monument was erected in the County of Wilts at considerable
+cost. It is not very long since, that the parents of a deceased Gipsy
+child, whom they loved very much, paid a great sum to have it buried in
+the Church.
+
+The Gipsies have a singular custom of burning all the clothes belonging
+to any one among them deceased, with the straw, litter, &c, of his tent.
+Whether this be from fear of infection, or from superstition, the Author
+has not been able to learn. Perhaps both unite in the continuation of a
+custom which must be attended with some loss to them. {28}
+
+Seldom do these mysterious sons and daughters of Adam unite themselves in
+the holy obligations of marriage, after the form of the Established
+Church of our land. Nor, indeed, for so sacred a union, have they _any
+ceremony at all_. The parents on each side are consulted on such
+occasions, and if their consent be obtained, the parties become, after
+their custom, _husband and wife_. Should the parents object, like the
+thoughtless and imprudent persons in higher life, who flee to Gretna
+Green, the Gipsy lovers also escape from their parents to another
+district. When the couple are again met by the friends of the female,
+they take her from her protector; but if it appear that he has treated
+her kindly, and is likely to continue to do so, they restore her to him,
+and all objections and animosities are forgotten.
+
+As it seldom happens that they now stay more than a few days in one
+place, the Gipsy, his wife, and each of their children, may severally
+belong to different parishes. This is an objection to their ultimate
+settlement in any one place. It will be some time before this objection
+can be removed: not till the present generation of Gipsies has passed
+away, and their posterity cease to make the wilderness their homes,
+choosing a parish for a permanent place of settlement.
+
+It may naturally be expected that these inhabitants of the field and
+forest, the lane and the moor, are not without a knowledge of the
+medicinal qualities of certain herbs. In all slight disorders they have
+recourse to these remedies, and frequently use the inner bark of the elm,
+star-in-the-earth, parsley, pellitory-in-the-wall, and wormwood. They
+are not subject to the numerous disorders and fevers common in large
+towns; but in some instances they are visited with that dreadful scourge
+of the British nation, the Typhus fever, which spreads through their
+little camp, and becomes fatal to some of its families. The small-pox
+and measles are disorders they very much dread; but they are not more
+disposed to rheumatic affections than those who live in houses. It is a
+fact, however, that ought not to be passed over here, that when they
+leave their tents to settle in towns, they are generally ill for a time.
+The children of one family that wintered with us in 1831, were nearly all
+attacked with fever that threatened their lives. This may be occasioned
+by their taking all at once to regular habits, and the renunciation of
+that exercise to which they have been so long accustomed, with some
+disposing qualities in their change of diet and the atmosphere of a
+thickly populated town.
+
+This people often live to a considerable age, many instances of which are
+well known. In his tent at Launton, Oxfordshire, died in the year 1830,
+more than a hundred years of age, James Smith, called by some, the King
+of the Gipsies. By his tribe he was looked up to with the greatest
+respect and veneration. His remains were followed to the grave by his
+widow, who is herself more than a hundred years old, and by many of his
+children, grand-children, great grand-children, and other relatives; and
+by several individuals of other tribes. At the funeral his widow tore
+her hair, uttered the most frantic exclamations, and begged to be allowed
+to throw herself on the coffin, that she might be buried with her
+husband. The religion of the Redeemer would have taught her to say, _The
+Lord gave_, _and the Lord hath taken away_; _blessed be the name of the
+Lord_.
+
+A woman of the name of B--- lived to the reputed age of a hundred and
+twenty years, and up to that age was accustomed to sing her song very
+gaily. Many events in the life of this woman were very remarkable. In
+her youth she was a noted swindler. At one time she got a large sum of
+money, and other valuable effects, from a lady; for which and other
+offences, she was condemned to die. A petition was presented to George
+the Third, to use the Gipsy's own expression, who told the author, _just
+after he had set __up business_, that is, begun to reign, and he attended
+to its prayer. The sentence was reversed, and her life was consequently
+spared. But, poor woman, she repented not of her sins; for she taught
+her daughter to commit the same crimes for which she had been condemned;
+so that her delivery from condemnation led to no salutary reformation.
+
+The mutual attachment which subsists between the nominal husband and
+wife, is so truly sincere, that instances of infidelity, on either side,
+occur but seldom. They are known strictly to avoid all conversation of
+an unchaste kind in their camps, except among the most degraded of them;
+and instances of young females having children, before they pledge
+themselves to those they love, are rare. This purity of morals, among a
+people living as they do, speaks much in their favour.
+
+The anxiety of a Gipsy parent to preserve the purity of the morals of a
+daughter, is strongly portrayed in the following fact. The author wished
+to engage as a servant the daughter of a Gipsy who was desirous of
+quitting her vagrant life; but her mother strongly objected for some
+time; and when pressed for the reason of such objection, she named the
+danger she would be in a town, far from a mother's eye. It would be well
+if all others felt for their children as did this unlettered Gipsy.
+After having promised that the morals of the child should be watched
+over, she was confided to his care. And the author has known a Gipsy
+parent correct with stripes a grown daughter, for mentioning what a
+profligate person had talked about.
+
+The following is an instance of conjugal attachment. A poor woman, whose
+eldest child is now under the care of the Society for the improvement of
+the Gipsies, being near her confinement, came into the neighbourhood of
+Southampton, to be with her friends, who are reformed, during the time.
+This not taking place so soon as she expected, and having promised to
+meet her husband at a distance on a certain day, he not daring to shew
+himself in Hampshire, she determined on going to him; and having mounted
+her donkey, set off with her little family. She had a distance of nearly
+fifty miles to travel, and happily reached the desired spot, where she
+met her husband before her confinement took place. The good people at
+Warminster, near which place she was, afforded her kind and needful
+assistance; and one well-disposed lady became God-mother to the babe, who
+was a fine little girl; the grateful mother pledging that, at a proper
+age, she should be given up to Christians to be educated.
+
+Before this woman left Southampton, referring to many kind attentions
+shewn her by the charitable of that place, she was heard to say,
+_Well_--_I did not think any one would take such trouble for me_!
+
+Professing to be church people whenever they speak of religion, the
+Gipsies generally have their children baptized at the church near which
+they are born, partly because they think it right, and partly, perhaps
+chiefly, to secure the knowledge of the parish to which the child
+belongs; for every illegitimate child is parishioner in the parish in
+which it happens to be born. They will sometimes apply to the parish
+officers for something toward the support of a child, which they call
+_settling the baby_.
+
+The sponsors at baptism are generally branches of the same family, and
+they speak of their God-children with pleasure, who in return manifest a
+high feeling of respect for them, and superstitiously ask their blessing
+on old Christmas-days, when in company with them. It is worthy of remark
+that all the better sort of Gipsies teach their children the LORD'S
+PRAYER.
+
+The anxiety evidenced by some parish officers to prevent these families
+from settling in their districts, has occasionally led the Gipsies to act
+unjustifiably by menacing them with the settlement of a number of their
+families; but this, from their perpetual wandering, need never be feared.
+Happy would it be for the Gipsies as a people, if these civil officers
+did encourage them to stay longer in their neighbourhood; for they then
+might be induced to commence and persevere in honest, industrious and
+regular habits. Not long ago thirty-five Gipsies came to a parish in
+Hampshire, to which they belonged, and demanded of the overseers ten
+pounds, declaring that, if that sum were not given them, they would
+remain there. Seven pounds were advanced, and they soon left the place.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. III. The Character, Manners and Habits of the English Gipsies,
+continued.
+
+
+From the mode of living among the Gipsies, the parents are often
+necessitated to leave their tents in the morning, and seldom return to
+them before night. Their children are then left in or about their
+solitary camps, having many times no adult with them; the elder children
+then have the care of the younger. Those who are old enough gather wood
+for fuel; nor is stealing it thought a crime. By the culpable neglect of
+the parents in this respect, the children are often exposed to accidents
+by fire; and melancholy instances of children being burnt and scalded to
+death, are not unfrequent. The author knows one poor woman, two of whose
+children have thus lost their lives, during her absence from her tent, at
+different periods: and very lately a child was scalded to death in the
+parish where the author writes.
+
+The Gipsies are not very regular in attending to the calls of appetite
+and hunger. Their principal meal is supper, and their food is supplied
+in proportion to the success they have had through the day; or, to use
+their own words, _the luck they have met with_.
+
+Like the poor of the land through which they wander, they are fond of
+tea, drinking it at every meal. When times are hard with them, they use
+English herbs, of which they generally carry a stock, such as agrimony,
+ground-ivy, wild mint, and the root of a herb called spice-herb.
+
+The trades they follow are generally chair-mending, knife-grinding,
+tinkering, and basket-making, the wood for which they mostly steal. Some
+of them sell hardware, brushes, corks, &c.; but in general, neither old
+nor young among them, do much that can be called labour. And it is
+lamentable that the greatest part of the little they do earn, is laid by
+to spend at their festivals; for like many tribes of uncivilized Indians,
+they mostly make their women support their families, who generally do it
+by swindling and fortune-telling. Their baskets introduce them to the
+servants of families, of whom they beg victuals, to whom they sell
+trifling wares, and tell their fortunes, which indeed is their principal
+aim, as it is their greatest source of gain. They have been awkwardly
+fixed, both servants and the Gipsy fortune-teller, when the lady of the
+house has unexpectedly gone into the kitchen and surprised them while
+thus employed; and sometimes, to avoid detection, the obnoxious party has
+been hurried into a closet, or butler's pantry, where there has been much
+plate. Few are aware of the losses that have attended the conduct of
+unprincipled servants in this, as in other respects. It may be hoped
+that few families would knowingly look over conduct so improper, so
+dangerous.
+
+Many of these idle soothsayers endeavour to persuade the people whom they
+delude, that the power to foretell future events, is granted to them from
+heaven, to enable them to get bread for their families. It would be well
+were the prognostications of these women encouraged only among servants;
+but this is not the case. They are often invited into gay and
+fashionable circles, whom they amuse, if, by the information possessed by
+the parties, they are not cunning enough to deceive. They are well paid,
+and are thus encouraged in their iniquity by those who ought to know, and
+_teach them_ better. But it is astonishing how many _respectable_ people
+are led away with the artful flattery of such visitors. They forget that
+the Gipsy fortune-teller has often made herself acquainted with their
+connexions, business, and future prospects, and consider not that God
+commits not his secrets to the wicked and profane. They use not the
+reason heaven has given them, and are therefore more easily led astray by
+these crafty deceivers.
+
+They generally prophesy good. Knowing the readiest way to deceive, to a
+young lady they describe a handsome gentleman, as one she may be assured
+will be her "husband." To a youth they promise a pretty lady, with a
+large fortune. And thus suiting their deluding speeches to the age,
+circumstances, anticipations and prospects of those who employ them, they
+seldom fail to please their vanity, and often gain a rich reward for
+their fraud.
+
+They suit their incantations, or their pretended means of gaining
+knowledge, to their employers. Two female servants went into the camp of
+some Gipsies near Southampton, to have their fortunes told by one well
+known to the author, and a great professor of the art. On observing them
+to appear like persons in service, she said to a companion, _I shall not
+get my books or cards for them_; _they are but tenants_. And calling for
+a frying-pan, she ordered them to fill it with water, and hold their
+faces over it. This being done, she proceeded to flatter and to promise
+them great things, for which she was paid 1_s_ 6_d_ each. This is called
+the frying-pan fortune. But it ought to be remembered that all
+fortune-telling is quite as contemptible.
+
+These artful pretenders to a knowledge of future events, generally
+discover who are in possession of property; and if they be superstitious
+and covetous, they contrive to persuade them there is a lucky stone in
+their house, and that, if they will entrust to them, _all_, or a _part of
+their money_, they will double and treble it. Sorry is the author to say
+that they often gain their point. Tradesmen have been known to sell
+their goods at a considerable loss, hoping to have the money doubled to
+them by the supposed power of these wicked females, who daringly promise
+to multiply the blessings of Providence.
+
+If the fortune-teller cannot succeed in obtaining a large sum at first,
+from such credulous dupes, she commences with a small one; and then
+pretending it to be too insignificant for the planets to work upon, she
+soon gets it doubled, and when she has succeeded in getting all she can,
+she decamps with her booty, leaving her mortified victims to the just
+punishment of disappointment and shame, who are afraid of making their
+losses known, lest they should be exposed to the ridicule they deserve.
+Parties in Gloucestershire, Dorsetshire, and Hampshire, have been robbed
+in this manner of considerable sums, even as much as three and four
+hundred pounds, the greatest part of which has been spent in Hampshire.
+
+A young lady in Gloucestershire allowed herself to be deluded by a Gipsy
+woman of artful and insinuating address, to a very great extent. This
+lady admired a young gentleman, and the Gipsy promised that he would
+return her love. The lady gave her all the plate in the house, and a
+gold chain and locket, with no other security than a vain promise that
+they should be restored at a given period. As might be expected, the
+wicked woman was soon off with her booty, and the lady was obliged to
+expose her folly. The property being too much to lose, the woman was
+pursued, and overtaken. She was found washing her clothes in a Gipsy
+camp, with the gold chain about her neck. She was taken up; but on
+restoring the articles, was allowed to escape.
+
+The same woman afterwards persuaded a gentleman's groom, that she could
+put him in possession of a great sum of money, if he would first deposit
+with her, all he then had. He gave her five pounds and his watch, and
+borrowed for her ten more of two of his friends. She engaged to meet him
+at midnight in a certain place a mile from the town where he lived, and
+that he there should dig up out of the ground a silver pot full of gold,
+covered with a clean napkin. He went with his pick-axe and shovel at the
+appointed time to the supposed lucky spot, having his confidence
+strengthened by a dream he happened to have about money, which he
+considered a favourable omen of the wealth he was soon to receive. Of
+course he met no Gipsy; she had fled another way with the property she
+had so wickedly obtained. While waiting her arrival, a hare started
+suddenly from its resting place, and so alarmed him, that he as suddenly
+took to his heels and made no stop till he reached his master's house,
+where he awoke his fellow servants and told to them his disaster.
+
+This woman, who made so many dupes, rode a good horse, and dressed both
+gaily and expensively. One of her saddles cost 30 pounds. It was
+literally studded with silver; for she carried on it the emblems of her
+profession wrought in that metal; namely, a half-moon, seven stars, and
+the rising sun. Poor woman! _her_ sun is now nearly set. Her sins have
+found her out. She has been in great distress on account of a son, who
+was transported for robbery; but has never thought of seeking, as a
+penitent, refuge in the God of mercy; for seeing one of her reformed
+companions reading the New Testament, she exclaimed, _That book will make
+you crazy_, at the same time calling her a fool for burning her
+fortune-telling book. Her condition is now truly wretched; for her
+ill-gotten gains are all fled, and she is dragging out a miserable
+existence, refusing still to seek the mercy of God, and despising those
+who have made him their refuge.
+
+Another woman, whom the author would also call a _bad_ Gipsy, who
+likewise practised similar deceptions, having persuaded a person to put
+his notes and money in a wrapper and lock it up in a box, she obtained
+the liberty of seeing it in his presence, that she might pronounce
+certain words over it; and although narrowly watched, she contrived to
+steal it, and to convey into the box a parcel similar in appearance, but
+which on examination, contained only a bundle of rubbish. This money
+amounted to several hundred pounds. She was immediately pursued and
+taken with the whole amount about her person. She was also allowed to
+escape justice, because the covetous old man neither wished to expose
+himself, nor waste his money in a prosecution.
+
+The daughter of this woman has followed the same evil and infamous
+practices; and the crime has descended to her through several
+generations. Many circumstances like the above are hid to prevent the
+shame that would assuredly follow their exposure. But the day of Christ
+will exhibit both these deceivers and their dupes, who are equally
+heinous in the sight of God. It were well if such characters had paid
+more attention to the words of the apostle Paul--_And having food and
+raiment_, _let us therewith be content_. _They that will be rich_, _fall
+into temptation_, _and a snare_, _and into many foolish and hurtful
+lusts_, _which drown men in destruction_. _The love of money is the root
+of all __evil_; _which_, _while some have coveted after_, _they have
+erred from the faith_, _and pierced themselves through with many
+sorrows_.
+
+Not to mention many other facts with which the author is acquainted, and
+which he would relate, were he not likely thereby too much to enlarge his
+work, he will conclude this chapter with observing, that, thankfulness to
+Almighty God, for the blessings we enjoy, less anxiety about future
+events, and more confidence in what God has revealed in his word and
+providence, would leave no room for the encouragement of Gipsy
+fortune-tellers, and their craft would soon be discontinued.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. IV. The Character, Manners, and Habits of the English Gipsies,
+continued.
+
+
+Among this poor and destitute people, instances of great guilt, depravity
+and misery are too common; nor can it be otherwise expected, while they
+are destitute of the knowledge of salvation in a crucified and ascended
+Saviour. One poor Gipsy, who had wandered in a state of wretchedness,
+bordering on despair, for nearly forty years, had not in all that time,
+_heard of the Name which is above every name_; _for there is salvation in
+no other_; till in his last days some Christian directed him to the
+Bible, as a book that tells poor sinners the way to God. He gave a woman
+a guinea to read its pages to him; and he remunerated another woman, who
+read to him the book of Common Prayer. The last few years of his life
+were marked by strong conviction of sin. His children thought he must
+have been a murderer. They often saw him under the hedges at prayer. In
+his last moments he received comfort through a pious minister, who
+visited him in his tent, and made him acquainted with the promises of the
+gospel.
+
+A similar instance has been related by a clergyman known to the author;
+nor should the interview of GEORGE THE THIRD with a poor Gipsy woman, be
+forgotten; for a brighter example of condescending kindness is not
+furnished in the history of kings. This gracious monarch became the
+minister of instruction and comfort to a dying Gipsy, to whom he was
+drawn by the cries of her children, and saw her expire cheered by the
+view of that redemption he had set before her.
+
+But how few are there of the tens of thousands of Gipsies, who have died
+in Britain, that, whether living or dying, have been visited by the
+minister or his people! The father of three orphan children lately taken
+under the Care of the Southampton Committee for the improvement of the
+Gipsies, had lived an atheist, but such he could not die. He had often
+declared there was no God; but before his death, he called one of his
+sons to him and said--_I have always said there was no God_, _but now I
+know there is_; _I see him now_. He attempted to pray, but knew not how!
+And many other Gipsies have been so afraid of God, that they dreaded to
+be alone.
+
+It is a fact not generally known, that the Gipsies of this country have
+not much knowledge of one another's tribes, or clans, and are very
+particular to keep to their own. Nor will those who style themselves
+respectable, allow their children to marry into the more depraved clans.
+
+The following are a few of the family names of the Gipsies of this
+country:--Williams, Jones, Plunkett, Cooper, Glover, Carew (descendants
+of the famous Bamfield Moore Carew), Loversedge, Mansfield, Martin,
+Light, Lee, Barnett, Boswell, Carter, Buckland, Lovell, Corrie, Bosvill,
+Eyres, Smalls, Draper, Fletcher, Taylor, Broadway, Baker, Smith, Buckly,
+Blewett, Scamp, and Stanley. Of the last-named family there are more
+than two hundred, most of whom are known to the author, and are the most
+ancient clans in this part of England.
+
+It is a well-authenticated fact, that many persons pass for Gipsies who
+are not. Such persons having done something to exclude them from
+society, join themselves to this people, and marrying into their clans,
+become the means of leading them to crimes they would not have thought
+of, but for their connection with such wicked people. Coining money and
+forging notes are, however, crimes which cannot be justly attributed to
+them. Indeed it has been too much the custom to impute to them a great
+number of crimes of which they either never were guilty, or which could
+only be committed by an inconsiderable portion of their race; and they
+have often suffered the penalty of the law, when they have not in the
+least deserved it. They have been talked of by the public, and
+prosecuted by the authorities, as the perpetrators of every vice and
+wickedness alike shocking to civil and savage life. Nor is this to be
+wondered at, living as they do, so remote from observation and the walks
+of common life.
+
+Whoever has read Grellman's Dissertation on the Continental Gipsies, and
+supposes that those of England are equally immoral and vicious, will be
+found greatly mistaken. The former are a banditti of robbers, without
+natural affection, living with each other almost like brutes, and
+scarcely knowing, and assuredly never caring about the existence of God;
+some of them are even counted cannibals. The Gipsies of this country are
+altogether different; for monstrous crimes are seldom heard of among
+them.
+
+The author is not aware of any of them being convicted of house-breaking,
+or high-way robbery. Seldom are they guilty of sheep-stealing, or
+robbing henroosts. {45} Nor can they be justly charged with stealing
+children; this is the work of worthless beggars who often commit far
+greater crimes than the Gipsies.
+
+They avoid poaching, knowing that the sporting gentlemen would be severe
+against them, and that they would not be permitted to remain in the lanes
+and commons near villages. They sometimes take osiers from the banks and
+coppices of the farmer, of which they make their baskets; and
+occasionally have been known to steal a sheep, but never when they have
+had any thing to eat, or money to buy it with; for according to a proverb
+they have among themselves, _they despise those who risk their necks for
+their bellies_.
+
+The author however recollects a transgression of the sort in the county
+of Hants. Eight Gipsy men united in stealing four sheep: four were
+chosen by lot for the purpose. They sharpened their knives, rode to the
+field, perpetrated the act, and before day-break brought to their camp
+the sheep they had engaged to steal; and, before the evening of the same
+day, they were thirty miles distant. But when pressed by hunger, they
+have been known to take a worse method than this. For as the farmers
+seldom deny them a sheep that has died in the field, if they apply for
+it, _so many_ were found dead in this way, that a certain farmer
+suspected the Gipsies of occasioning their deaths. He therefore caused
+one of these animals to be opened, and discovered a piece of wool in its
+throat, with which it had been suffocated. The Gipsies, who had no
+objection to creatures that die in their blood, had killed all these
+sheep in the above manner.
+
+Horse-stealing is one of their principal crimes, and at this they are
+very dextrous. When disposed to steal a horse, they select one a few
+miles from their tent, and make arrangements for disposing of it at a
+considerable distance, to which place they will convey it in a night. An
+old and infirm man has been known to ride a stolen horse nearly fifty
+miles in that time. They pass through bye-lanes, well known to them, and
+thus avoid turnpikes and escape detection.
+
+Unless they are taught better principles than at present they possess,
+and unless those on whom they impose, use their understandings, it is to
+be feared that swindling also will long continue among them; for they are
+so ingenious in avoiding detection. When likely to be discovered, a
+change of dress enables them to remove with safety to any distance.
+Instances of this kind have been innumerable. But as it is the aim of
+this book to solicit a better feeling towards them, rather than expose
+them to the continuation of censure, the writer will not enter into
+further detail in reference to their crimes, than barely to shew the
+great evils into which they have been led by many of those in high life,
+who have long encouraged them in the savage practice of prize-fighting.
+Pugilism has been the disgrace of our land, and our nobility and gentry
+have not been ashamed to patronize it.
+
+Not long ago a fight took place in this county which will be a lasting
+disgrace to the neighbourhood. One of the pugilists, a Gipsy, in the
+pride of his heart, said during the fight, that he _never would be beaten
+so long as he had life_. The poor wretch fought till not a feature of
+his countenance could be seen, his head and face being swollen to a
+frightful size, and his eyes quite closed. He attempted to tear them
+open that he might see his antagonist; and was at last taken off the
+stage. Not satisfied with this brutal scene, the spectators offered a
+purse of ten guineas for another battle. This golden bait caught the eye
+of another Gipsy, who, but a few months before, had ruptured a
+blood-vessel in fighting. Throwing up his hat on the stage, the sign of
+challenge, he was soon met with a fellow as degraded as himself, but with
+much more strength and activity. He was three times laid prostrate at
+the feet of his antagonist, and was taken away almost lifeless. His
+conqueror put a half-crown into his hand as he was carried off, saying,
+it was a little something for him to drink. About three months after
+this, the author saw this poor Gipsy in his tent, in the last stage of a
+consumption; but he was without any marks of true penitence. Surely the
+way of wickedness is full of misery!
+
+What a disgrace is this demoralizing mode of amusement to our country!
+Degrading to the greatest degree, it is nevertheless pursued with avidity
+by all classes of people; and large bets are often depending on these
+brutal exercises. Gentlemen, noblemen, and even ladies, are, on such
+occasions, mixed with the most degraded part of the community. In the
+instance referred to it is said, that fifty pounds were taken by
+admitting carriages into the field in which the fight took place. Where
+were the peace-officers at this time? Perhaps some of them spectators of
+the horrid scene!
+
+Verily our men of rank and fortune are guilty in encouraging these
+shocking practices; and they are little better than murderers, who goad
+their fellow-men on to fight by the offer of money. Such persons are
+frequently instruments of sending sinners, the most unprepared, into the
+presence of a righteous God. What an account will they have to give when
+they meet the victims of their amusement at the bar of Christ!
+
+The Gipsies often fight with each other at fairs, and other places where
+they meet in great numbers. This is their way of settling old grudges;
+but so soon as one yields, the quarrel is made up, and they repair to a
+public house to renew their friendship. This forgiving spirit is a
+pleasing trait in their character.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. V. Further Account of the English Gipsies.
+
+
+It has been the lot of Gipsies in all countries to be despised,
+persecuted, hated, and have the vilest things said about them. In many
+cases they have too much merited the odium which they have experienced in
+continental Europe; but certainly they are not deserving of universal and
+unqualified contempt and hatred in this nation. The dislike they have to
+rule and order has led many of them to maim themselves by cutting off a
+finger, that they might not serve in either the army or the navy: and I
+believe there is one instance known, of some Gipsies murdering a witness
+who was to appear against some of their people for horse-stealing: the
+persons who were guilty of the deed have been summoned to the bar of
+Christ, and in their last moments exclaimed with horror and despair,
+"Murder, murder." But these circumstances do not stamp their race
+without exception as infamous monsters in wickedness. Not many years
+since several of their men were hung in different places for stealing
+fourteen horses near Bristol, who experienced the truth of that
+scripture, _be sure your sins will find you out_. Indeed there is not a
+family among them that has not to mourn over the loss of some relative
+for the commission of this crime. But even in this respect their guilt
+has been much over-rated; for in many cases it is to be feared they have
+suffered innocently. There was formerly a reward of 40_l_ to those who
+gave information of offenders, on their being capitally convicted. Those
+of the lower orders, therefore, who were destitute of principle, had a
+great temptation before them to swear falsely in reference to Gipsies;
+and of which it is known they sometimes availed themselves, knowing that
+few would befriend them. For the sake of the above sum, vulgarly, but
+too justly called _blood-money_, they perjured themselves, and were much
+more wicked than the people they accused. But the Gipsies were thought
+to be universally depraved, and no one thought it worth his while to
+investigate their innocence. Let us be thankful that many at the present
+day look upon them with better feelings.
+
+Very lately one of these vile informers swore to having seen a Gipsy man
+on a horse that had been stolen; and although it came out on the trial,
+that it was night when he observed him, and that he had never seen him
+before, which ought to have rendered his evidence invalid, the prisoner
+was convicted and condemned to die. His life was afterwards spared by
+other facts having been discovered and made known to the judge, after he
+had left the city.
+
+The Gipsies in this country have for centuries been accused of
+child-stealing; and therefore it is not to be wondered at, that, when
+children have been missing, the Gipsies should be taxed with having
+stolen them. About thirty years since, some parents who had lost a
+child, applied to a man at Portsmouth, well known in those days, by the
+name of Payne, or Pine, as an astrologer, wishing to know from him what
+was become of it. He told them _to search the Gipsy tents for twenty
+miles round_. The distressed parents employed constables, who made
+diligent search in every direction to that distance, but to no purpose;
+the child was not to be found in their camps. It was however soon
+afterwards discovered, drowned in one of its father's pits, who was a
+tanner. Thus was this pretended astrologer exposed to the ridicule of
+those who but a short time before foolishly looked on him as an oracle.
+
+On another occasion the same accusation was brought against the Gipsies,
+and proved to be false. The child of a widow at Portsmouth was lost, and
+after every search was made on board the ships in the harbour, and at
+Spithead, and the ponds dragged in the neighbourhood, to no effect, it
+was concluded that the Gipsies had stolen him. The boy was found a few
+years afterwards, at Kingston-upon-Thames, apprenticed to a chimney
+sweeper. He had been enticed away by a person who had given him
+sweet-meats; but not by a Gipsy.
+
+I may be allowed here to say a word about this boy's mother. She was a
+good and pious woman, and had known great trials. Her husband was
+drowned in her presence but a short time before she lost her son in the
+mysterious way mentioned; and before he was heard of, she was removed to
+the enjoyment of a better world. Her death was a very happy one, for it
+took place while she was engaged in public worship. _Many are the
+afflictions of the righteous_, _but the Lord delivereth them out of them
+all_.
+
+Instances have been known of house-breakers leaving some of their stolen
+goods near the tents of the Gipsies; and these being picked up by the
+children, and found upon them, have been the cause of much unjust
+suffering among them. The grandfather of three little orphans now under
+the care of the Southampton Committee, was charged with stealing a horse,
+and was condemned and executed; although the farmer of whom he bought it,
+came forward and swore to the horse being the same which he had sold him.
+His evidence was rejected on account of some slight mistake in the
+description he gave of it. When under the gallows, the frantic Gipsy
+exclaimed--_Oh God_, _if thou dost not deliver me_, _I will not believe
+there is a God_!
+
+The following anecdote will prove the frequent oppression of this people.
+Not many years since, a collector of taxes in a country town, said he had
+been robbed of fifty pounds by a Gipsy; and being soon after at Blandford
+in Dorsetshire, he fixed on a female Gipsy, as the person who robbed him
+in company with two others, and said she was in man's clothes at the
+time. They were taken up and kept in custody for some days; and had not
+a farmer voluntarily come forward, and proved that they were many miles
+distant when the robbery was said to be perpetrated, they would have been
+tried for their lives, and probably hanged. The woman was the wife of
+Wm. Stanley, (who was in custody with her,) who now reads the Scriptures
+in the Gipsy tents near Southampton. Their wicked accuser was afterwards
+convicted of a crime for which he was condemned to die, when he confessed
+that he had not been robbed at the time referred to, but had himself
+spent the whole of the sum in question.
+
+Another Gipsy of the name of Stanley was lately indicted at Winchester,
+for house-breaking, and had not his friends at great expense proved an
+_alibi_, it is likely he might have been executed. And in this way have
+they been suspected and persecuted ever since the days of Henry the
+Eighth. They have been hunted like wild beasts; their property has been
+taken from them; themselves have been frequently imprisoned, and in many
+cases their lives taken, or what to many of them would be much worse,
+they have been transported to another part of the world, for ever divided
+from their families and friends.
+
+In the days of Judge Hale, thirteen of these unhappy beings were hanged
+at Bury St Edmonds, for no other cause than that they were Gipsies; and
+at that time it was death without benefit of clergy, for any one to live
+among them for a month. Even in later days two of the most industrious
+of this people have had a small pony and two donkeys taken away merely on
+suspicion that they were stolen. They were apprehended and carried
+before a magistrate, to whom they proved that the animals were their own,
+and that they had legally obtained them. The cattle were then pounded
+for trespassing on the common, and if their oppressed owners had not had
+money to defray the expenses, one of the animals must have been sold for
+that purpose.
+
+Not long ago, one of the Gipsies was suspected of having stolen lead from
+a gentleman's house. His cart was searched, but no lead being found in
+his possession, he was imprisoned for three months, for living under the
+hedges as a vagrant; and his horse, which was worth thirteen pounds, was
+sold to meet the demands of the constables. And another Gipsy, who had
+two horses in his possession, was suspected of having stolen them, but he
+proved that they were legally his property. He was committed for three
+months as a vagrant, and one of his horses was sold to defray the
+expenses of his apprehension, examination, &c.
+
+While writing this part of the GIPSIES' ADVOCATE, the author knows that a
+poor, aged, industrious woman, with whom he has been long acquainted, had
+her donkey taken from her, and that a man with four witnesses swore that
+it was his property. The poor woman told a simple, artless tale to the
+magistrates, and was not fully committed. She was allowed two days to
+bring forward the person of whom she bought it. Conscious of her
+innocence, she was willing to risk a prison if she could recover her
+donkey, and establish her character. After a great deal of trouble and
+expense in dispatching messengers to bring forward her witnesses, she
+succeeded in obtaining them. They had no sooner made their appearance
+than the accuser and his witnesses fled, and left the donkey to the right
+owner, the poor, accused and injured woman.
+
+It cannot be expected that oppression will ever reform this people, or
+cure them of their wandering habits. Far more likely is it to confirm
+them in their vagrant propensities. And as their numbers do not
+decrease, oppression will only render them the dread of one part of their
+fellow-creatures, while it will make them the objects of scorn and
+obloquy to others.
+
+It is the earnest wish of the author that milder measures may be pursued
+in reference to the Gipsies. To endeavour to improve their morals, and
+instruct them in the principles of religion, will, under the divine
+blessing, turn to better account than the hateful and oppressive policy
+so long adopted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. VI. Further Account of the English Gipsies.
+
+
+Many persons are of opinion in reference to the Gipsies, that, if all the
+parishes were alike severe in forcing them from their retreats, they
+would soon find their way into towns. But if this were the case, what
+advantage would they derive from it? In large towns, in their present
+ignorant and depraved state, would they not be still more wicked? They
+would change their condition only from bad to worse, unless they were
+treated better than they now are, and could be properly employed; but
+from the prejudice that exists among all classes of men against them,
+this is not likely to be the case: they would not be employed by any,
+while other persons could be got. At a hop plantation, so lately as
+1830, Gipsies were not allowed to pick hops in some grounds, while
+persons as unsettled and undeserving, were engaged for that purpose. Had
+this been a parochial arrangement to benefit the poor of their own
+neighbourhood, who were out of employ, it were not blameable.
+
+If they were driven to settle in towns, and could not, generally
+speaking, obtain employment, it might soon become necessary to remove all
+their children to their own parishes; a measure not only very unhappy in
+itself, but one to which the Gipsies would never submit. Sooner would
+they die than suffer their children to go to the parish workhouses.
+
+The severe and unchristian-like treatment they meet with from many, only
+obliges them to travel further, and often drives them to commit greater
+depredations. When driven by the constables from their station, they
+retire to a more solitary place in another parish, and there remain till
+they are again detected, and again mercilessly driven away. But this
+severity does not accomplish the end it has in view; their numbers remain
+the same, and they retain the same dislike to the crowded haunts of man.
+For they only visit towns in small parties, offering trifling wares for
+sale, or telling fortunes; and this is done to gain a present support.
+
+In this neighbourhood there was lately a sweeping of the commons and
+lanes of the Gipsy families. Their horses and donkeys were driven off,
+and the sum of 3 pounds 5_s_ levied on them as a fine to pay the
+constables for thus afflicting them. In one tent during this distressing
+affair, there was found an unburied child, that had been scalded to
+death, its parents not having money to defray the expenses of its
+interment. The constables declared that it would make any heart ache to
+see the anguish the poor people were in, when thus inhumanly driven from
+their resting places; but, said they, _We were obliged to do our duty_.
+To the credit of these men, thirteen in number, it should be mentioned,
+that, with only one exception, they returned the fines to the people; and
+one of them, who is a carpenter, offered a coffin for the unburied child,
+should the parish be unwilling to bury it.
+
+In this instance of their affliction and grief, the propensity to accuse
+these poor creatures was strongly marked by a report charging them with
+having dug a grave on the common in which to bury it; a circumstance very
+far from their feelings and general habits. The fact was, some person
+had been digging holes in search of gravel, and these poor creatures
+pitched their tent just by one of them.
+
+It was supposed by many in this neighbourhood, that the poor wretches
+thus driven away, were gone out of the country; but this was not the
+case. They had only retired to more lonely places in smaller parties,
+and were all seen again a few days after at a neighbouring fair. This
+circumstance is sufficient to prove that they are not to be reclaimed by
+prosecutions and fines. It is therefore high time the people of England
+should adopt more merciful measures towards them in endeavouring to bring
+them into a more civilized state. The money spent in sustaining
+prosecutions against them, if properly applied, would accomplish this
+great and benevolent work. And without flattering any of its members,
+the author thinks the Committee at Southampton have discovered plans,
+wholly different to those usually adopted, which may prove much more
+effectual in accomplishing their reformation; for by these plans being
+put in prudent operation, many have already ceased to make the lanes and
+commons their home; and their minds are becoming enlightened and their
+characters religious.
+
+In concluding this chapter it may not be improper to remark, that, bad as
+may be the character of any of our fellow-creatures, it is very
+lamentable that they should suffer for crimes of which individually they
+are not guilty. Let us hope that, in reference to this people, unjust
+executions have ceased; that people will be careful in giving evidence
+which involves the rights, liberties, and lives of their
+fellow-creatures, though belonging to the unhappy tribes of Gipsies; and
+above all, let us hope, that such measures will be pursued by the good
+and benevolent of this highly favoured land, as will place them in
+situations where they will learn to fear God, and support themselves
+honestly in the sight of all men.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. VII. Of the formation of the Southampton Committee, and the
+success that has attended its endeavours.
+
+
+Although the Gipsies, on account of their unsettled habits, their
+disposition to evil practices, and that ignorance of true religion, which
+is inseparably connected with a life remote from all the forms of
+external worship, and from the influence of religious society, may be
+said to be in a most lamentably wretched state; yet is their condition
+not desperate. They are rational beings, and have many feelings
+honourable to human nature. They are not as the heathens of other
+countries, addicted to any system of idolatry; and what is of infinite
+encouragement, they inhabit a land of Bibles and of Christian ministers;
+and, although at present, they derive so little benefit from these
+advantages, there are many of them willing to receive instruction. The
+following details, to which I gladly turn, will shew that, when _patient_
+and _persevering_ means are used, Gipsies may be brought to know God; and
+no body of people were ever yet converted to Christianity without means.
+The following circumstances gave rise to the idea of forming a society
+for the improvement of this people.
+
+In March, 1827, during the Lent Assizes, the author was in Winchester,
+and wishing to speak with the sheriff's chaplain, he went to the court
+for that purpose. He happened to enter just as the judge was passing
+sentence of death on two unhappy men. To one he held out the hope of
+mercy; but to the other, _a poor Gipsy_, who was convicted of
+horse-stealing, he said, _no hope could be given_. The young man, for he
+was but a youth, immediately fell on his knees, and with uplifted hands
+and eyes, apparently unconscious of any persons being present but the
+judge and himself, addressed him as follows: "_Oh_! _my Lord_, _save my
+life_!" The judge replied, "_No_; _you can have no mercy in this world_:
+_I and my brother judges have come to the determination to execute
+horse-stealers_, _especially Gipsies_, _because of the increase of the
+crime_." The suppliant, still on his knees, entreated--"_Do_, _my Lord
+Judge_, _save my life_! _do_, _for God's sake_, _for my wife's sake_,
+_for my baby's sake_!" "_No_," replied the judge, "_I cannot_: _you
+should have thought of your wife and children before_." He then ordered
+him to be taken away, and the poor fellow was _rudely dragged_ from his
+earthly judge. It is hoped, as a penitent sinner, he obtained the more
+needful mercy of God, through the abounding grace of Christ. After this
+scene, the author could not remain in court. As he returned, he found
+the mournful intelligence had been communicated to some Gipsies who had
+been waiting without, anxious to learn the fate of their companion. They
+seemed distracted.
+
+On the outside of the court, seated on the ground, appeared an old woman,
+and a very young one, and with them two children, the eldest three years,
+and the other an infant but fourteen days old. The former sat by its
+mother's side, alike unconscious of her bitter agonies, and of her
+father's despair. The old woman held the infant tenderly in her arms,
+and endeavoured to comfort its weeping mother, soon to be a widow under
+circumstances the most melancholy. _My dear_, _don't cry_, said she,
+_remember you have this dear little baby_. Impelled by the sympathies of
+pity and a sense of duty, the author spoke to them on the evil of sin,
+and expressed his hope that the melancholy event would prove a warning to
+them, and to all their people. The poor man was executed about a
+fortnight after his condemnation.
+
+This sad scene, together with Hoyland's Survey of the Gipsies, which the
+author read about this time, combined to make a deep impression on his
+mind, and awaken an earnest desire which has never since decreased, to
+assist and improve this greatly neglected people. The more he
+contemplated their condition and necessities, the difficulties in the way
+of their reformation continued to lessen, and his hope of success, in
+case any thing could be done for them, became more and more confirmed.
+He could not forget the poor young widow whom he had seen in such deep
+distress at Winchester, and was led to resolve, if he should meet her
+again, to offer to provide for her children.
+
+Some weeks elapsed before he could hear any thing of her, till one day he
+saw the old woman sitting on the ground at the entrance of Southampton,
+with the widow's infant on her knee. "Where is your daughter?" he
+inquired. "Sir," she replied, "She is my niece; she is gone into the
+town." "Will you desire her to call at my house?" "I will, sir," said
+the poor old woman, to whom the author gave his address.
+
+In about an hour after this conversation, the widow and her aunt
+appeared. After inviting them to sit down, he addressed the young woman
+thus:--"My good woman, you are now a poor widow, and I wished to see you,
+to tell you that I would be your friend. I will take your children, if
+you will let me have them, and be a father to them, and educate them;
+and, when old enough to work, will have them taught some honest trade."
+"Thank you, sir," said she; "but I don't like to part with my children.
+The chaplain at the prison offered to take my oldest, and to send her to
+London to be taken care of; but I could not often see her there." I
+replied, "I commend you for not parting with her, unless you could
+occasionally see her; for I suppose you love your children dearly." "Oh!
+yes, sir," said the widow. The old aunt also added, "Our people set
+great store by their children." "Well," I replied, "I do not wish you to
+determine on this business hastily; it is a weighty one. You had better
+take a fortnight for consideration, and then give me a second call."
+
+How improbable did it then appear that this interview would ultimately
+lead to so much good to many of her people! When the fortnight expired,
+the widow and her aunt again appeared, when the following conversation
+took place. "I am glad you are come again," said their friend. "Yes,"
+replied the widow, "and I will now let you have my Betsy;" and the aunt
+immediately added, pointing to one of her grand-children, "I will let you
+have my little _deary_, if you will take care of her. Her father,"
+continued she, "was condemned to die, but is transported for life, and
+her mother now lives with another man." The proposal was readily
+accepted; and three days after, these two children were brought washed
+very clean, and dressed in their best clothes. It was promised the
+women, that they should see their children whenever they chose, and all
+parties were pleased. The eldest of these children was six years of age;
+the widow's little daughter, only three. The first day they amused
+themselves with running up and down stairs, and through the rooms of the
+house. But when put to bed at night, they cried for two hours, saying
+that the house would fall upon them. They had never spent a day in a
+house before, and were at night like birds that had been decoyed, and
+then robbed of their liberty. A few kisses and some promises at length
+quieted them, and they went to sleep.
+
+After remaining with the author three days, they were removed to one of
+the Infants' Schools, where they were often visited by the widow and her
+aunt. Soon after this the eldest girl was taken ill. A medical
+gentleman attended her at the tent, a little way from the town, whither
+her grandmother had begged to remove her for change of air. But the
+sickness of this child _was unto death_. She was a lovely and
+affectionate girl, notwithstanding the disadvantages under which she had
+necessarily laboured. When on her bed, in the tent, suffering much pain,
+she was asked by a gentleman, "Although you love Mr Crabb so much, would
+you rather live with him, or die, and go to Jesus?" She answered, "I
+would rather die and go to Jesus." Her death very much affected her
+grandmother. She would not leave the corpse, which she often
+affectionately embraced, till persuaded she would endanger her own life.
+This appeared a melancholy event to all who wished well to the Gipsies in
+the neighbourhood of Southampton. For the widow, fearing her child would
+become ill and die too, immediately removed her from the school. And
+many of the Gipsy people treated the women with great contempt, for
+giving up their children; and the prospects of doing them lasting good,
+became very much beclouded. It was however represented to them, that God
+was doing all things for the best, and their spirits were soothed; and in
+consequence, the little fatherless girl was again brought to the school.
+
+After this event, the women remained a considerable time in the
+neighbourhood, waiting to see if the little one, again given up to the
+author, would be kindly treated. By this detention they were often
+brought into the company of good people, whose kindness gained their
+confidence. They began to listen to invitations to settle in the town,
+and finally determined on doing so. Even the _old_ woman, who had lived
+under hedges for fifty years, and who had declared but a short time
+before, that she would not leave her tent for a palace, now gladly
+occupied a house; this greatly encouraged their friends, who well knew
+that it was not a small sacrifice, for a Gipsy to give up what is thought
+by them to be their liberty.
+
+A short time before these women removed from under the hedges, the sister
+of the unhappy man who had been executed, came out of Dorsetshire with
+her three children, on her way to Surry, where she had been accustomed to
+go to hop-picking. Encamping under the same hedge with the widow and her
+aunt, she was seen by the author in one of his visits to them. He found
+them one evening about six o'clock at dinner, and took his seat near
+them; and while they were regaling themselves with broiled meat,
+potatoes, and tea, the following interesting conversation took place.
+
+"Sir," said the widow, "this is my sister and her children." No one
+could have introduced this woman and her little ones with more easy
+simplicity than she did, while, by the smile on her swarthy countenance,
+she exhibited real heartfelt pleasure. "I am glad to see you, my good
+woman;" said the author, "are these your children?" "Yes, sir," replied
+she, very cheerfully. "And where are you going?" "I am going into
+Surry, sir." "Have you not many difficulties to trouble you in your way
+of life?" "Yes, sir," answered she. The author continued, "I wish you
+would let me have your children to provide for and educate." "Not I,
+indeed," she replied sharply; "others may part with their children, if
+they like, but I will never part with mine." "Well, my good woman, the
+offer to educate them has done no harm: let me hope it will do good. I
+would have you recollect that you have now a proposal made you of
+bettering their present and future condition. You and I must soon meet
+at the judgment-seat of Christ, to give an account of this meeting; and
+you know that I can do better for your little ones than you can." She
+was silent. The author then addressed these people and left the tents.
+
+The next day he visited the camp again, when the widow woman said, "Sir,
+my sister was so _cut up_ (putting her hand to her heart), with what you
+said last night, that she could not eat any more, and declared she felt
+as she never had done before; and she has determined to come and live
+with us at Michaelmas." What was still better, in consequence of what
+was said to this poor stranger, she did not go to the races, although she
+had stopped near Southampton for that purpose.
+
+From this time endeavours were made to confirm the woman's intentions to
+stay at Southampton, and to place her children with the other. She was
+asked, why she would not stay at Southampton then? "Why, to tell you the
+truth," said she, "for it's no use to tell a lie about that, I don't want
+to bring my children to you, like vagabonds; and as we shall earn a good
+_bit_ of money at hopping, I shall buy them some clothes; and then, if
+you will take me a room at Michaelmas, I will surely return and live in
+Southampton, and my children shall go to school; but I will never give
+them up entirely." She continued with her sister till the house which
+had been taken for the latter was ready; during which time a gentleman
+from Ireland, then living near the encampment, had her children every day
+to his house, and taught them to read. The remembrance of him will be
+precious to them for ever. She came on the day appointed, and her
+children were put to the Infants' School, where they have continued ever
+since, clean and respectable, and very diligent in their learning. They
+often explain the Scriptures to their mother. One of them has long been
+a monitor in the school. May she continue a credit to the institution in
+which she has been so far educated.
+
+Although the mother of these children is not yet decidedly pious, she is
+very much improved. She is now able to read her Testament with tolerable
+ease, takes great pleasure in receiving instruction, and we hope is
+deeply impressed with the importance of personal religion. She attends
+public worship diligently, and loves Christians, whom she once hated.
+She weeps with abhorrence over past crimes, and says she would rather
+have her hands cut off, than do as she has done. For more than twelve
+months after living at Southampton, she continued occasionally to tell
+fortunes for the gain it brought her. But a remarkable dream led her to
+see the wickedness of this practice; for it so terrified her that she
+rose from her bed, lighted a fire, and burnt the book in which she had
+pretended to see the fortune of others. Large sums of money had been
+offered her for this volume; but, though in extreme poverty, she
+determined to make any sacrifice, rather than enrich herself by its sale.
+She dreamed that she was at the adult school, where she regularly
+attended, and, that while she was reading her Testament, it changed into
+a book of divination, and she began to tell the fortune of the lady who
+was teaching her; and while thus employed, she thought she heard awful
+thunderings, and the sound of trumpets; after which a tremendous tempest
+ensued, during which she fancied herself in an extensive plain, exposed
+to all the fury of the storm. She then thought the day of judgment was
+come, and that she was summoned to render up her account. She awoke in
+great terror, and as soon as she had a little recovered herself, arose
+and followed the example of those we read of in the Acts of the
+Apostles:--_And many of them which also used curious arts_, _brought
+their books together_, _and burned them before all men_; _and they
+counted the price of them_, _and found fifty thousand pieces silver_.
+Acts xix. 19.
+
+When relating this dream to a lady, she was asked whether she had
+formerly been in the habit of seeking by any means, the aid of the devil,
+in order to know future events; it having been asserted that many of the
+Gipsies had done so. She informed the lady that she never had done so,
+and that she thought none of her people had any thing to do with him,
+otherwise than by giving themselves up to do wickedly. The devil tempted
+them to do still worse; as those who neglect to seek to God for help,
+must of course be under the power of the wicked one.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. VIII. Of the plans pursued by the Southampton Committee, and the
+success which has attended them, continued.
+
+
+Sixteen reformed Gipsies are now living at Southampton, one of whom is
+the aged Gipsy whose history has been published by a lady. {72} There
+are also her brother and four of his children, her sister, who has been a
+wanderer for more than fifty years, and her daughter, three orphans, and
+a boy who has been given up to the Committee by his mother, a woman and
+her three children, and the young woman before mentioned, who has, since
+her reformation, lost her two children by the measles.
+
+In addition to those who have retired from a wandering life, and are
+pursuing habits of honest industry, three other families, whose united
+number is sixteen, begged the privilege of wintering with us in the
+beginning of 1831. These Gipsies regularly attended divine service twice
+on a Sunday, and on the work-day evenings the adults went to school to
+learn to read. The children were placed at one of the Infants' Schools.
+The prospects of doing one of the families lasting good, are rather dark,
+as they are grown old and hardened in crime; but the condition of the
+others is more encouraging. The children, who would gladly have stayed
+longer with us, were sickly; and it is apprehended, had not this been the
+case, the parents would have continued longer, that they might have gone
+to school. Two women, mother and daughter, in one family, are much
+interested in the worship of God, and already begin to feel the value of
+their souls; and both regret that they are under the necessity of
+submitting to the arbitrary will of the father. One of them declared
+that she could never more act as a Gipsy, and with weeping eyes she said,
+that, she feared she never should be pardoned, or saved. When directed
+to go to Jesus, she replied, she knew not how to go to him. In three
+days they will leave us, and it will be a painful separation. It was
+very gratifying to the author to see so many Gipsies attend the house of
+God, and he frequently recollected with pleasure, that promise of holy
+Scripture, _For as the rain cometh down_, _and the snow from heaven_,
+_and returneth not thither_, _but watereth the earth_, _and maketh it
+bring forth and bud_, _that it may give seed to the sower_, _and bread to
+the eater_: _so shall my word be that goeth forth of my mouth_: _it shall
+not return unto me void_, _but it shall accomplish that which I please_,
+_and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I send it_. _For ye shall go
+out with joy_, _and be led forth with peace_; _the mountains and the
+hills shall break forth before you into singing_, _and all the trees of
+the field shall clap their hands_. _Instead of the thorn shall come up
+the __fur tree_, _and instead of the brier shall come up the myrtle
+tree_: _and it stall be to the Lord for a name_, _for an everlasting sign
+that shall not be cut off_.
+
+Six of the children are at an Infants' School at Southampton, and three
+others attend a charity school; and another is learning to be a coach
+wheelwright. This youth has behaved so well in his situation, that he
+has been advanced by his master to a higher branch in the business. His
+fellow-workmen, who at first disliked him for being a Gipsy, have
+subscribed money to assist him in the purchase of additional tools, to
+which the foreman added five shillings, and the master _one pound_. This
+is a most encouraging circumstance.
+
+The aged man who has been so many years reformed, is a basket maker. He
+often visits his brethren in their tents, under the direction of the
+Committee, to give advice and instruction. His sister, lately reclaimed,
+takes care of the six Gipsy children, and is become very serious and
+industrious; and though in the decline of life, she receives but one
+shilling per week from the Committee. Two instances of the gratitude of
+this woman ought not to be omitted.
+
+The author's horse having strayed from the field, a sovereign was offered
+to any one who would bring it back to him. Several persons sought for it
+in vain. This old Gipsy woman was sent in quest of it, and in two days
+returned with the horse. Of course she was offered the sovereign that
+had been named as a reward; but she refused to take it, saying, she owed
+the author more than that; yea, all that she had, for the comfort she was
+then enjoying. This was the language of an honest and grateful heart.
+On being compelled to take it, she bought herself some garments for the
+winter.
+
+On another occasion, when she was coming from some place which she had
+visited, and was detained on the road longer than she had expected, she
+became penniless; yet would she not beg, lest it might be looked on as
+one step towards turning back to habits she had entirely abandoned. She
+assured the author that she would rather have starved than return to her
+old trade of begging; and besides, added she, "the people know that I am
+one of your reformed Gipsies, and I will never bring a reproach upon my
+best friends."
+
+The young widow was taught to make shoes; but becoming depressed in
+spirits after the death of her children, she has been placed in service.
+And another young Gipsy woman has also obtained a situation as a servant.
+
+But while the Committee has had to rejoice over the success that has
+attended its efforts, it has also experienced great and manifold
+disappointments. But its members are not discouraged, and it is hoped
+they never will be.
+
+One young woman stayed with the Committee a month, and then ran away.
+She was lamentably ignorant, and could never be brought to work. {75}
+Another very promising in temper and habits, stayed in a family three
+months, and then left them to live again with her parents, who encouraged
+her to believe that she would be married to one of her clan. It may be
+hoped the knowledge she gained while in service may be useful to her at
+some future time. She is not, cannot be happy, and is sorry that she
+left her service and her friends. The father and mother have promised to
+stay in Southampton through the next winter, which they will be
+encouraged to do, with the hope of gaining instruction in the truths of
+religion.
+
+A woman, her four sons, and their grandmother, {76} joined the family of
+reformed Gipsies for a short time, and we had considerable hopes of them
+all, the two eldest boys excepted, who refused to work, and who grew much
+more vicious than when under the hedges. Their father had formerly been
+sentenced to death, but by the interest of a friend, the sentence was
+changed to fourteen years' hard labour on board the hulks at Portsmouth,
+nearly nine of which had expired at the time his family came under the
+direction of the Committee. His wife intimating that if they were to
+apply for his release, it might be granted, and that then he might govern
+the boys, and make them work, his liberty was obtained. But within three
+days afterwards, he declared he would not constrain any of his children
+to labour; they might do it or not, as they pleased. And, in the course
+of the week, he took them all away and went to Brighton.
+
+A lady then staying at that place, and who had known this family at
+Southampton, sent to the place where the Gipsies usually encamp, hoping
+to recall some of them to a sense of their duty, but was informed that
+the whole of the party had set off a few days before. Early on the
+following morning, a Gipsy called at the house of this lady, and offered
+to tell the fortunes of the servants. She was asked if she knew the
+woman who was enquired for the preceding day? She replied, that _she was
+the very person_. On hearing by whose servant she was addressed, she
+became almost speechless with shame, and said, _I would rather have met
+the king_. On recovering, she expressed great delight and gratitude that
+she was not forgotten by the lady, and declared she had been very unhappy
+since she had left Southampton, and that the sin of fortune-telling
+greatly distressed her mind; but that she knew not how to support her
+family without it. They had undergone many hardships. The little boys,
+she said, had frequently amused themselves with trying to spell the
+different things about their tent, and were often wishing for their
+Southampton fire. The next morning she brought them to see their kind
+benefactress. The youngest of them, a fine promising boy, both as to
+talent and disposition, was overjoyed at the meeting; his little eyes
+were filled with tears, and he could scarcely speak. He and his brother
+were immediately provided with clothing, and sent to the School of
+Industry; where, in addition to the religious instruction given them,
+they were taught reading, writing, arithmetic, digging, &c. Their master
+has been much pleased with their progress. The mother was afterwards
+induced to stay at Brighton, being allowed a small sum weekly. She has
+been taught to read by some kind friends, and many hopes are entertained
+of her conversion to God. A letter has lately been received, which gives
+a very interesting account of her increase in knowledge and improvement
+in morals.
+
+A very promising Gipsy youth, who was placed with a coach-maker in
+Southampton, after working some time, cut his hand, and then relinquished
+his employment, to wander with his father, who is a rat-catcher. But it
+is hoped that he, as well as others of his brethren who have returned to
+their former courses, will be brought back, or find some other desirable
+and permanent abode; that what has been done by this society may not
+ultimately be lost. Indeed, while writing this, I am happy to be able to
+state, that the morals of this young man appear very correct, and that he
+has, by constant application, learned to read tolerably well since he
+left Southampton. He supports himself by selling brushes, lines, and
+corks, but talks very seriously of giving up his wandering habits to
+return to us again.
+
+Among the reclaimed Gipsies are three women who were notorious
+fortune-tellers, and who doubtless have done much injury to the morals of
+society. They are now very promising; and there is a fair prospect of
+their children being saved from much sin and misery, as they are placed
+at Infants' Schools, where they are gradually acquiring useful scriptural
+knowledge, and correctness of habits; in which, if they persevere, by the
+grace of the Redeemer, their present and everlasting welfare will be
+secured. Such examples of success amply repay the Committee for the
+trouble and expense already bestowed on the Gipsies; and it is hoped its
+members will be stimulated to every exertion in their power by the good
+done to those in a state of reformation and improvement, that the whole
+wandering race may be led into the right way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. IX. Of the plans pursued by the Southampton Committee, and the
+success which has attended them, continued.
+
+
+A gipsy woman, of whose reformation we have already taken some notice,
+having gone to solicit the assistance of the parish to which one of her
+children belonged, met with many difficulties and troubles. She was not
+at this time destitute of the knowledge of religion. She had learned to
+read, and had become acquainted with the Scriptures, at an adult school,
+and by attending at a place of worship; and these instructions were not
+thrown away on her; for although she was frequently invited to eat and
+drink in the tents of the Gipsies on her journey, she conscientiously
+refused, fearing that what they were partaking of might not be honestly
+obtained. She informed them that her Testament had taught her better
+habits than those she had formerly known. Her children helped to keep
+alive her religious impressions. They often talked to her about the
+school from which she had taken them, of their lessons, and the
+observations of the master and mistress, on different parts of the
+Scriptures, and at other times they catechised each other on the objects
+that presented themselves on the road, in the same way they had been used
+to in the Infants' Schools; to which they often begged their mother to
+let them return. These circumstances, she has since said, made her so
+miserable that she felt she _could not live as she had done_.
+
+Some time after this, she made a visit to a parish in which another of
+her children was born, near Basingstoke. She entered the cottage of an
+old couple who sold fruit, &c. Tea being proposed, the old woman
+expressed her surprise that she had not seen her visitor for so long a
+time, saying she was glad she was come, as she wanted her to tell her
+many things, meaning future events. She mentioned a great deal that
+another Gipsy woman had told her, on which the reformed one
+exclaimed--_Don't believe her_, _dame_. _It is all lies_. _She knows no
+more about it than you do_. _If you trust to what she says_, _you will
+be deceived_. The old woman was still more surprised, and asked _how
+she_, who had so often told their fortunes, and had promised them such
+good luck, could be so much altered? The woman taking her Testament from
+her bosom, replied, "I have learned from this blessed book, and from my
+kind friends, _that all liars shall have their portion in the lake that
+burneth with brimstone and fire_; and rather than tell fortunes again, I
+would starve." She then opened her book and began reading a chapter,
+endeavouring to explain as she read, at which her host and hostess began
+to weep. She told them that though she knew she had been a great sinner,
+and was one still, yet she never had felt so happy as then. The old
+woman observed, that _she_ could not say _she was happy_, and wished to
+know what she must do to feel happy. The Gipsy replied, you must leave
+off selling on Sundays, and go to a place of worship, and learn to read
+the Testament, and to pray, and _then_ you will become happy.
+
+This poor Gipsy woman, who was so anxious to instruct those she had many
+times deceived, was soon after taken sick, at which time her distress of
+soul was very great; and she then said, were she to die, her _soul could
+not go to heaven_.
+
+Many were her temptations, while in great poverty, to renew the practice
+of fortune-telling. Several genteel parties have visited her, and
+sometimes offered her gold, tempting her to begin again the sins she had
+for ever given up; but, much to her credit, she at all times resolutely
+refused all such unholy gain.
+
+At one time some very gay young women called on her, desiring to have
+their fortunes told. Her Testament lay on the table, which she had but a
+short time before been reading, and pointing to it, she said--_That
+book_, _and that only_, _will tell your fortunes_; _for it is God's
+book_; _it is his own word_. She reproved them for their sin, and said,
+the Bible had told her, _all unrighteousness is sin_. They then
+requested she would not tell any one that they had called upon her. She
+replied--_Oh_! _you fear man more than God_!
+
+A few days since, this reformed woman was sweeping the pavement in front
+of her house, when two female servants came up, enquiring for the house
+of the fortune-teller; mourning over them for their folly, she said--_My
+dears_, _she cannot tell your fortunes_. _I have been a professed
+fortune-teller_, _and have deceived hundreds_. She succeeded in
+persuading them to go home.
+
+At a meeting of Gipsies held at a gentleman's house, Jan. 1830, the
+youngest child of this woman said to her mother, _Mammy_, _who be all
+these folks_? The mother replied, _They are Gipsies_. _Was_ I _ever
+like 'em_? asked the child. _Yes_, said the mother, _you was once a poor
+little Gipsy without stockings and shoes_, _and glad to beg a halfpenny
+of any body_. It is a circumstance not to be lamented, that the
+condition even of a little child, has been so much bettered by the
+exertions of the Committee.
+
+In addition to the encouragement afforded us by this woman, giving up
+with so much decision the practice of fortune-telling, the author must
+not forget to mention an instance of her forbearance of temper under
+provocation and outrage. She had, when a vagrant, a quarrel with some of
+her ignorant people of another tribe. Meeting with them after her
+reformation, she was severely beaten by them, and had her ear-drops torn
+from her ears, while they contemptuously called her _Methodist_. When
+asked, why she did not bring her persecutors to justice, she replied,
+_How can I be forgiven_, _if I do not forgive_? _That is what my
+Testament tells me_.
+
+The young widow we have before mentioned, continued to tell fortunes for
+some time after we had taken her children; but it pleased the Holy Spirit
+to awaken her conscience, and to shew her the wickedness of such crimes,
+by which she was led to true repentance and reformation of character.
+
+After the death of both the children of this interesting individual, she
+went into the service of a kind and pious lady in London. For this
+situation she was prepared by one of equal benevolence in Southampton,
+who had her for some time in her own house for that purpose. She
+continued in this situation till the lady's death, and has since been in
+other service, where she has conducted herself so well as to prove she is
+become a sincere servant of Christ.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. X. Some Remarks on the Sin of Fortune-telling.
+
+
+The author will be pardoned, he is willing to hope, by the kind reader,
+if he digress in one or two paragraphs in this part of his work,
+purposely to expose the great wickedness of prognostication and
+fortune-telling; as the whole is not only unsound, foolish, absurd and
+false, but is most peremptorily forbidden in the Scriptures.
+
+In the law of Moses it is commanded, that there should not be found among
+the people, any that used divination, or that was an observer of the
+times, or that was an enchanter: Deut. xiii. 10. In the prophecies of
+Malachi, the Lord has declared--_Thou shalt have no more soothsayers_:
+Mal. v. 12. Balaam and Balak were cursed of the Lord of Hosts; the
+former for using enchantments, and the latter for employing Balaam in
+this wicked work. _Woe to them that devise iniquity_: Micah, ii. 1.
+Those who employ unhappy Gipsy women, should think on the portion of the
+liar; Rev. xxi. 8: for the person who tempts another to utter falsehood
+by offering rewards, is equally guilty before God. _A companion of fools
+shall be destroyed_: Prov. xiii. 20. _Though hand join in hand_, in sin,
+_the wicked shall not go unpunished_: Prov. xvi. 5. _The destruction of
+the transgressors and the sinners shall be together_: Isai. i. 28. It
+may be safely affirmed that the sin of those persons, who trifle with
+Gipsy women in having their fortunes told by them, nearly resembles that
+of the first king of Israel; who, by consulting, in his trouble, a wicked
+woman, who pretended to supernatural power, filled up the measure of
+those sins, by which he lost the protection of heaven, his crown, and his
+life, and by which he involved his family in the most ruinous calamity.
+
+Reader, have you encouraged any of these people in such crimes? If you
+have so far forgotten yourselves, the commands of God, and the curse that
+awaits you and those who deceive themselves the same way; reflect, before
+it be too late, on the evil into which you have willingly, wilfully, and
+without the least reasonable excuse, fallen, and on the guilt that must
+of necessity attach to your consciences thereby. Should you never meet
+those you encouraged to sin in this world, and therefore never have an
+opportunity of warning them of their danger, yet must you meet at the bar
+of Christ; and if then loaded with the weight of the sin in question, how
+awful will be your condition! Yourself and a fellow creature turned out
+for ever from God, and heaven, and hope! You may find mercy _now_, if
+you, by faith in the Redeemer, _seek for it_; and who can tell but if you
+sincerely pray for those you led into sin, but that the mercy of which
+you part take, may find out them! May it even be so, to your everlasting
+comfort!
+
+Some have supposed that this contemptible practice was first introduced
+into Europe by the Gipsies: but such persons are greatly mistaken. In
+the dark ages of superstition, in which this wandering people came to our
+part of the world, prognostication and fortune-telling were carried on to
+an infinite extent; and so enraged were the deceivers of those days
+against the Gipsies, that they proclaimed they knew nothing of the _art_;
+that they were deceivers and impostors.
+
+It were well if the Gipsies were _now_ the only persons addicted to such
+wickedness; but this is not the case; for it is well known that almost
+every town is cursed with an astrological, magical, or slight-of-hand
+fortune-teller. There are two now in Southampton; and their wretched
+abodes are visited not only by vain and ignorant servants, but often by
+those who belong to the higher circles, and not unfrequently by those who
+drive their carriages.
+
+To conclude this chapter, it may be safely said, that the sort of
+wickedness in question, is not only forbidden in the Scriptures, and will
+add much to the guilt of an impenitent death; but that it is calculated
+to give us the most airy anticipations, or oppress us with the most
+unreasonable despair. _Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof_; why
+should we then afflict ourselves about ill-fortune in future years? If
+we _seek_, as the first great object of life, _the kingdom of heaven_,
+_all _[necessary] _things shall be added_. And why should we deceive
+ourselves with gay and splendid expectations? _Riches make themselves
+wings and soon fly away_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. XI. Plans suggested to the pious and benevolent for promoting a
+Reformation among the Gipsies.
+
+
+As no event happens without a cause, so no good is accomplished without
+means. It is in the power of man as an instrument, frequently to make
+his fellow-creatures either happy or miserable. And it may safely be
+asserted, that much of the ignorance, depravity, and consequent misery
+found in the world, are occasioned by the want of a united and
+persevering application of the energies of Christians, to the reformation
+of the most debased classes of Society. This backwardness to perform
+that which is good, with respect to our fellow men, must be accounted
+for, by the want of faith in God's word, and the little influence we
+allow the religion of the Saviour to have on our own hearts. It may also
+be occasioned by the strong evidences we have of the corruption of human
+nature, and the little good we see attend the labours of others: and we
+are often likewise discouraged because our own efforts fail. On these
+accounts, how often do we sigh for opportunities of doing good, whilst we
+neglect the openings of Providence in little things, which would
+frequently lead to the accomplishment of most important usefulness. Dr
+Johnson used to say, "He who waits to do a great deal of good at once,
+will never do any." Good is done by degrees. However small in
+proportion the benefit which follows _individual attempts_ to do good, a
+great deal may thus be accomplished by perseverance, even in the midst of
+discouragements and disappointments. The first missionaries who visited
+England, had to contend with all the frightful cruelties of savage life,
+and the more horrid rites of Druidical worship. But now, though much
+wickedness abounds in England, it is, in a religious point of view, the
+paradise of the earth. May all those who wish to diffuse the genuine
+influences of Christianity among the poor Gipsies, imitate the example of
+the adorable Saviour, who _made himself of no reputation_, that he might
+enlighten the most ignorant, and impart happiness to the most miserable.
+
+It will not be denied that the Gipsies are capable of feeling the
+influence, and appreciating the worth of the Gospel: and no one will
+doubt that the earlier the plans are adopted for their improvement, the
+sooner will this desirable work be accomplished.
+
+The reader is requested to pay particular attention to the following
+suggestions.
+
+The establishment of an Institution to supply instruction to the Gipsies
+by regular Ministers, or Missionaries, would be of but little use.
+Indeed such a measure could scarcely be carried into effect. For the
+Gipsies, beside associating in very small companies, are perpetually
+driven from place to place. To supply them, therefore, with regular
+instruction, a preacher would be necessary to every family; who would
+condescend to their mode of life, travel when they travelled, rest when
+they rested, and be content with the ground and straw for his bed, and a
+blanket tent for his covering! All this would subject them to great
+personal inconvenience, and at the same time be very expensive and highly
+improper. Neither would it be possible for ministers to be appointed
+occasionally and alternately to visit the Gipsies in different counties.
+For it might often happen that, before intelligence could be forwarded to
+those appointed to give them instruction, they might be removed by a
+peace officer, or have set out on a journey of several miles distance.
+Benevolent, zealous, and prudent persons may do much by visiting the
+camps near towns; and the most suitable parts of the day for promoting
+this object, are morning and evening. But the most simple and easy plans
+of instruction should invariably be adopted.
+
+To those persons who are afraid of visiting the Gipsies, lest they should
+be insulted, abused, and robbed, the author may be allowed to say that
+they have not the least grounds for such fears. In Scotland this fear is
+quite as general among the religious people as it is in England; and in
+that country the inhabitants are even afraid to prosecute them for their
+depredations and crimes. In England ladies are frequently known to visit
+their camps singly, when more than a mile from towns, and to sit and read
+and converse with them for a considerable time, with the greatest
+confidence and safety.
+
+There is not the least prospect of doing them good, by forcing
+instruction upon them. About the year 1748, the Empress Theresa
+attempted the improvement of the Gipsies in Germany, by taking away, by
+force, all their children of a certain age, in order to educate and
+protect them; but such an unnatural and arbitrary mode of benevolence,
+defeated its own object; and this is not to be wondered at: the souls of
+the free resist every effort of compulsion, whether the object be good or
+bad. Compulsatory instruction, therefore, would do no good among the
+Gipsies. But they are easily won by kindness, and whoever wishes really
+to benefit them, must convince them that this is his intention, by
+patiently bearing with the unpleasing parts of their characters, and by a
+willingness to lessen their distresses so far as it is in his power.
+Such kindness will never be lost upon them. Nor would the author
+recommend their being encouraged to live in Towns, except they are truly
+desirous of leading a new life, as it is almost certain that their morals
+would be greatly corrupted thereby: and they would be capable of more
+extensive injury to society, should they take to their wandering habits
+again.
+
+A correspondent of a friend of the author, has just communicated the
+following particulars, which prove the truth of the above remarks.
+
+There is in the neighbourhood of Harz, at Nordausen, a colony of Gipsies,
+to whom a Missionary has been sent from Berlin. His last letter speaks
+very favourably of their disposition to receive the word of life. The
+manner of his introduction to them was by no means likely to ensure him a
+favourable reception. "Here," said the person who brought him among
+them, "you have a Missionary, who is come to convert you; now mind and be
+converted, or you shall go to prison." The effect this foolish speech
+produced on the Gipsies may be easily imagined, and likewise how useless
+it rendered the situation of the Missionary who desired to labour among
+them. They took to flight whenever they saw him approach, and thus,
+humanly speaking, there appeared not the least prospect of success, as
+the seed of the word could not so much as be sown. But HE, who alone is
+able to turn the heart, mercifully looked upon the work, and directed him
+to the right means effectually to bring it about.
+
+The Gipsies were obliged to cultivate the land on which they were
+permitted to reside; but being quite ignorant of agriculture, they were
+at a loss how to proceed. The missionary undertook himself to give them
+advice and assistance in the work. Seeing the success that attended his
+labours, they began to be much more diligent in the cultivation of their
+grounds, while their confidence daily increased in their missionary, and
+they became more accessible and willing to be taught. At last they asked
+him for what reason the people at Berlin had sent him among them? and
+when he told them, they were overpowered with gratitude, and melted into
+tears. Their attachment to him and the friends who had sent him, became
+stronger and stronger. In some cases, it may be true, the conquest of
+their prejudices against the missionary, might proceed from the
+advantages they reaped by attending to his advice; and this is much to
+their credit, and is a most desirable improvement. It is hoped they will
+soon be led to attend sincerely to his religious instructions.
+
+A gentleman resident in one of the towns of Hampshire, was agreeably
+surprised one sabbath morning, by seeing a number of Gipsies at public
+worship; and on being induced to converse with them, was pleased to find
+that they regularly attended divine service at Southampton, and other
+places. He directed them to move their tents into a more commodious
+situation in one of his own fields. This unusual act of kindness, which
+however required no great sacrifice on his part, made so deep an
+impression on the hearts of this people, as is not likely to be
+forgotten: they will speak of his kindness as long as they live. This,
+as well as the instances we have mentioned already in this work, and many
+more which we may not notice, shew that we are not without opportunities
+of observing their gratitude for those favours that have been bestowed
+upon them.
+
+They receive with willingness one of their own people, who is now a
+reformed and pious character, living at Southampton, and whom we have
+named in a former page. They now rejoice, too, in the assurance that a
+great number of good Christians pity and love them, and are seeking to
+promote their present and everlasting happiness.
+
+It is therefore much to be wished, that committees of ladies or gentlemen
+were formed in every town in the kingdom, and their attention directed to
+this neglected class of British subjects. An active person might be
+found in every place, to act under the sanction of such committees, who
+should visit their tents, instruct them in the Scriptures, and pray with
+and for them (the latter he should never neglect) by which means he would
+gain their confidence, and would always be looked on as a friend. Such a
+person should not be ashamed to speak kindly to them when he meets them
+in the street, or on the road. Indeed at all times he should converse
+with them plainly and affectionately about the great love of the
+Redeemer, in coming into this our world, to suffer and die for guilty
+sinners, of whom they make a number. But all the labour should not be
+confined to one person. Every member of these committees should be alive
+to this good work; as also all Christians, and especially ministers.
+
+But should there not be sufficient energy and benevolence in all towns to
+form a committee, two or three who are well disposed to the object, may
+unite together and accomplish a great deal. And should there not be
+found more than one person thus benevolently disposed, let not that one
+be discouraged. The single talent must not be neglected, should it be
+only the power to give a cup of cold water, or to speak one word about
+the water of life to a necessitous and perishing Gipsy; for it may not,
+cannot be in vain. Reader, are you doing what you can in this humble
+way? It may be, you would rather ascend the pulpit and preach to
+well-informed Christians, or visit the ignorant in your own town! This
+is well; but the other should not be left undone. The wanderers in the
+wilderness are not to be forgotten; the outcasts of society are to be
+sought after. Let us imitate our adorable Redeemer, _who went about
+doing good_, and who sought those who were not the least desirous of
+finding him. As an encouragement to British Christians, who are alive to
+the happiness of the Gipsies, they should know that there are many among
+them desirous of a new mode of life, as will appear by an application
+lately made to the author.
+
+ "_Bristol_, _Oct._ 11_th_, 1830.
+
+ "My dear Sir,
+
+ "I am unwilling to let a parcel go to Southampton, without sending
+ you a line to give you a little information respecting H---, of whom
+ I made enquiry if she had called on the friends to whom I directed
+ her? This was done by her; but she could obtain no employment. Both
+ H--- and her husband conduct themselves in a very satisfactory
+ manner. A young lady, I hope, will employ her soon; and, perhaps, in
+ time she may get into regular work; but at present, she gets very
+ little, and it is very necessary that the man should have employment.
+ The cork trade is now over; (he used to sell corks.) They can have
+ the loan of a donkey for two months for nothing, and that being the
+ case, I told H--- to look out for a small cart, which I desired her
+ to hire for a week, and sell coals and potatoes in small quantities.
+ {97} I have felt fearful lest you should think me too busy; but
+ necessity has compelled me to do something, or they must have almost
+ _starved_; and I cannot bear the thought of their wanting bread;
+ knowing it must be a great temptation for them to return to their old
+ habits. The man appears much altered for the better. He said one
+ day, when they wanted food, that he would rather beg than oblige his
+ wife to return to fortune-telling. H--- tells me that her husband
+ and she live happily, and that they have had words but once since
+ they left their vagrant life. I am also happy to discover in her
+ pleasing evidences of honesty, as she pays her weekly rent often
+ before it is due, when she has money, fearing that she may spend it
+ in food. Job, their son, has no work, but I hope that he will be
+ able to help his father. Do, my dear Mr Crabb, pray for this little
+ branch of your family. I have received two pounds for your Infants'
+ Schools, from Mr ---, and would send it now, but I have been obliged
+ to expend a considerable part of it on these poor Gipsies. Do write
+ to me when you can, and give me advice respecting this poor family."
+
+ The author must remark that, since the above letter was received,
+ others also have been sent from two ladies in that neighbourhood,
+ which give the Southampton committee great pleasure. The following
+ are extracts.
+
+ "I have seen Mr ---, and have had a pleasing interview with Miss ---,
+ relating to the poor wanderers you wrote to me about. I have had the
+ man and woman at my house. After having heard H--- read, I told her
+ 'that the leprosy she had been reading of, represented the evil of
+ our sinful heart; that we were born with it; that it prevailed in
+ every part of the soul; and that we had lived always under its
+ influence.' She exclaimed, _dear me_! _ I never heard the like of
+ that before_! _now it seems good for me to know this_. She wept
+ much. When I told her of the love of Christ, she appeared struck
+ with her own extreme ingratitude. Her expressions were so simple and
+ full of pathos, that my heart was quite overcome. She ran out of the
+ room for her husband, and on her return, said, "ah! _do talk_ to my
+ poor husband, just what you said to me." I found him not so
+ interesting, but desirous of leaving his wandering life for ever, and
+ get employment if possible. They have made some flower baskets for
+ me; and hoping they may obtain orders for more, I have recommended
+ them to my friends. I have heard of another family, consisting of
+ fourteen souls, who encamp on Bedminster Down, and there by God's
+ help, I intend to send a minister of Jesus, to try what can be done
+ for them. There is also another family expected, who have a house of
+ _their own_ at Bedminster, and who winter there. Should the Lord
+ bless our humble endeavours, we must have a regular Committee, and
+ set about our work in a workman-like manner; nothing short of a
+ Colony will satisfy me. I intend to introduce this interesting
+ subject at a party this evening, and hope the Lord will open the
+ hearts of his people, to do good to those poor benighted wanderers."
+
+The author has also just received from a clergyman in Scotland, a most
+interesting account of a colony of Gipsies in that country, where, I am
+happy to observe, they do not seem so much hunted as in England. And as
+the severity of their winters drive them into houses for three months,
+during that season, there is offered a fair opportunity to both ministers
+and kindly disposed Christians to do them good. The letter alluded to is
+most gladly inserted with the view to encourage the Christian
+denominations of England to imitate the benevolence, zeal, and industry
+of their much respected brethren the Scotch.
+
+ "_Yetholm Hall_, _Dec._ 11_th_, 1830.
+
+ "My dear Sir,
+
+ "Through the report of the Society for ameliorating the condition of
+ that unfortunate race, the Gipsies, I am acquainted with your name,
+ and with your benevolent exertions in their behalf. As the minister
+ of a parish in which perhaps the largest colony of this people in
+ Scotland reside, and naturally, therefore, very much interested in
+ any plan that promises to improve their condition, I take the liberty
+ of writing you; not so much for the purpose of answering the numerous
+ queries subjoined to the report, as of requesting your advice and
+ opinion, with regard to what plan might be adopted for the
+ improvement of the colony, placed, in some degree, under my care and
+ superintendence. I have but lately been called to the ministerial
+ office, and appointed to the pastoral care of this parish; and
+ previous to the period of my appointment, I had no opportunity of
+ being acquainted with the character and habits of the Gipsies. Your
+ longer acquaintance with this people, and experience, may suggest to
+ me some useful hints on the subject, should you take the trouble to
+ notice this letter. The number of Gipsies in the parish of Yetholm
+ is about 100. You are no doubt already in some degree acquainted
+ with the Gipsies of Kirk Yetholm, from the interesting notices
+ furnished by Mr Smith, of Kelso, and published in HOYLAND'S SURVEY,
+ and in one of the earliest numbers of Blackwood's Magazine. And his
+ account of them is substantially correct to this day. It would
+ appear that the Gipsy population of this place is fluctuating. In
+ 1798, there were only 59. In 1818, when Mr Smith wrote, there were
+ 109. In 1830, there are 100. And in a few years more, this number
+ may be considerably diminished or increased. The greater part of
+ them are "muggers," or "potters," who carry earthen-ware about the
+ country for sale. There are two horn spoon makers; all the others
+ are abroad from their head quarters, of Kirk Yetholm, from eight to
+ nine months in the year. The history of some of the individuals and
+ families of the clan, would furnish something very interesting. One
+ of the family of the Taa's is still denominated the "King." The
+ number of children belonging to each family is generally large.
+ There may be thirty children under twelve years of age. The parents
+ express themselves very anxious that their children should be
+ educated, and are willing, for this purpose, to leave them at home
+ all the summer; and farther, that they should be trained to some
+ occupation different from their own. Many of the parents declare,
+ that they would willingly remain at home, could they be supplied with
+ constant employment. Of late, the greater number of them have
+ occasionally attended church, and some of them continue to attend
+ most regularly when at home. A considerable number of the younger
+ children also, when at home, attend our Sabbath School. I have
+ likewise assisted the parents to send most of their children to the
+ Day School: still, however, these children are at home scarcely three
+ months in the depth of winter. Several families have not returned
+ yet. Their education, therefore, even were they sent regularly to
+ school, during this time, would be very limited. And besides, by
+ attending the parents to the country, they contract an attachment to
+ their loose, wandering life, which must tend to perpetuate the
+ peculiarities of the tribe. A few weeks ago I was requested by Dr
+ Baird, the Principal of the University, and one of the ministers of
+ Edinburgh, to write out a pretty full account of these my
+ parishioners. This I have done. The account, however, was written
+ so hastily, that I had not time even to correspond with you on the
+ subject, before doing so, as my object in writing to you was chiefly
+ to propose some plan which might be adopted for their improvement, on
+ which you might give me some useful information. In this account, I
+ have proposed that a fund or subscription should be raised for the
+ purpose of keeping the children at home during those months their
+ parents are traversing the country, for paying their school wages,
+ and, if possible, for giving a salary to a teacher to superintend
+ their education, and that a small additional sum be occasionally in
+ readiness for paying an apprentice-fee with the boys. This account
+ may probably be published. I am in hopes, also, that the Principal
+ will interest himself in the cause. Should the account be published,
+ the proof-sheet may be sent down to me, ere long, in which case I
+ should wish to hear from you before that time, as I may have then an
+ opportunity of supplying any hint, or otherwise altering the plan
+ proposed, from your kind communication. The sum which I conceived
+ would be required for the purpose was about a hundred pounds per
+ annum. Mr B---, of Killau, with whom, I believe, we both have the
+ pleasure of being acquainted, has more than once wished me to open a
+ correspondence with you on this subject. He also is interested in
+ the cause, and promises to use his influence with others. I think he
+ told me that some more detailed account of your plan was published,
+ or preparing for the press, in which various alterations and
+ improvements had been made. This was an additional reason for my
+ wishing to hear from you, before submitting to the people of Scotland
+ any plan on the subject. I should wish to know how the cause
+ prospers with you, and what number you have at present under your
+ care. I am extremely interested for this unfortunate people, and any
+ information therefore with regard to what is doing elsewhere, would
+ be acceptable. May He prosper the cause, whose blessing alone can
+ render our labours effectual!
+
+ I remain, my dear Sir,
+
+ With much respect and esteem,
+ Yours truly,
+ JOHN BAIRD.
+
+"P. S.--I have just received a letter from Principal Baird, informing me
+that my account of the Gipsies of Kirk Yetholm, will be published, and a
+proof for correction be sent to me shortly. It will be published in a
+new statistical account of Scotland, which will ensure for it a very
+extensive circulation, especially among the ministers of the established
+church of Scotland."
+
+Another letter relating to the Gipsies of Yetholm, has been received from
+the same clergyman, extracts of which may be seen in the Appendix.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. XII. Plans suggested to the pious and benevolent, for promoting a
+Reformation among the Gipsies, continued.
+
+
+It is usual, in Southampton, for a few pence to be given to a child who
+informs any of the members of the Committee when a family of Gipsies
+begin to erect their tents on the common, that they may immediately be
+visited by our Reader. This may be done elsewhere. It may be well, too,
+to buy a basket, or any other article they may honestly have to dispose
+of, when opportunity offers; but it is not well to bestow money on them,
+unless in sickness or want. When their wives are confined, a favourable
+opportunity offers to bring into action the sympathies of compassion in
+other females; and what gratitude would such an instance of tenderness
+beget! These poor women have frequently been heard to exclaim, while
+tears filled their eyes, _How kind_, _how good to us_! for favours very
+much less!
+
+The author has seldom met with instances of ingratitude, though he is
+obliged to record one. He was interested in the reformation of a Gipsy
+family that encamped, a short time since, about five miles from
+Southampton, whom he visited early on a Monday morning. Reaching the
+camp, accompanied by the old Gipsy he has often mentioned in the course
+of this work, he said to them, "Since you would not come to see me, I am
+come to see you." The camp, consisting of eight persons, gave him a
+cordial reception, the husband excepted, who said, he did not want his
+company. "You certainly do not mean what you say," said his friend; to
+which he ungratefully replied, "I never speak words without meaning." In
+a good-natured way he was questioned as to the truth of his being a
+Gipsy, accompanied with the remark, that Gipsies were seldom ungrateful
+for the favours which were shown them. In half an hour after, he left
+the camp very angrily. This man had been released from many years'
+imprisonment, through the author's intercession; but having associated
+with thieves so long, the worst principles of his heart were drawn forth.
+Before he left the camp, he said he had no care about his children, but
+to feed and clothe them. "Then you only treat your children as a man
+does his dogs and pigs." He replied, that "such treatment was good
+enough." This is a common sentiment; for the generality of parents have
+no further care about their children than to feed and clothe them. Such
+persons are not perhaps aware how nearly they come to that dreadful state
+of mind and heart, of which this ungrateful Gipsy so wickedly boasted.
+
+After he had left the party, those who remained attended to conversation
+and prayer, when one of the women wept bitterly on account of her sin of
+fortune-telling. The author has since been informed that this poor man
+expresses his sorrow for his uncalled-for behaviour.
+
+The plans adopted in Southampton, for the conversion of the Gipsies in
+Hampshire, are now generally known among their people. Not long ago, an
+old woman brought four orphans of a deceased relative from a great
+distance, in order to place them under the care of the Committee. On
+this occasion the old woman thus addressed the author. "Are you Mr
+Crabb?" Being told, yes, she continued--"Mr Chas. Stanley, a Gipsey,
+desired me to bring you these poor orphans." The author being assured
+that they were orphans, promised, after some conversation, to visit their
+tent the following day. He did so, and never can he forget the
+distressing scene he then witnessed. It was winter, and the weather was
+unusually cold, there being much snow on the ground. The tent, which was
+only covered with a _ragged_ blanket, was pitched on the lee side of a
+_small_ hawthorn bush. The children had stolen a few _green_ sticks from
+the hedges, but they would not burn. _There was no straw_ in the tent,
+and only one blanket to lay betwixt six children and the frozen ground,
+with nothing to cover them. The youngest of these children was three,
+and the eldest, seventeen years old. In addition to this wretchedness,
+the smaller children were nearly naked. The youngest was squatted on the
+ground, her little feet and legs bare, and gnawing a frozen turnip, which
+had been stolen from an adjoining field. None of them had tasted bread
+for more than a day. The moment they saw their visitor, the little ones
+repeatedly shouted, "Here is the _gemman come for us_!" Some money was
+given to the oldest sister to buy bread with, at which their joy was
+greatly increased. Straw was also provided for them to sleep on, four
+were measured for clothes, and, after a few days, they were placed under
+the care of one of our reformed Gipsies. The youngest child died,
+however, a short time after, in consequence of having been so neglected
+in infancy.
+
+The children were cleanly washed and newly clothed, before they were
+removed from the common. Perhaps they had never been thoroughly washed
+before. The oldest sister would not give up her wandering habits; and
+the oldest boy chose to go back to the camp again; so that the Committee
+had soon only three of them in charge. And these were so filthy in their
+habits for a long time, that it was very disagreeable to be near them.
+It is hoped that, though they have lost their earthly parents, they may
+be led, through this event, to God their heavenly Father. These children
+were soon baptized, and two of them are improving at one of the Infants'
+Schools.
+
+A short account of their parents may not be out of place here. The
+mother was a great fortune-teller and swindler. She once robbed a poor
+shepherd in Dorsetshire of twenty pounds, by promising to fill his box
+with money. Their father was a most depraved character. Their life and
+practices are well described in the language of the Apostle, _Let us eat
+and drink_, _for to morrow we die_. 1 Cor. xv. 32. The man was the
+buffoon of their company, and became more depraved every year. They
+often had a great deal of money, which was, no doubt, obtained through
+dishonest means. On one occasion, he and many other Gipsies, entered the
+parlour of a small public house on the borders of Hants, when emptying
+the contents of a dirty purse into an half-pint cup, he nearly filled it
+with sovereigns; and declared, they would not leave the house, till they
+had spent it all. His wife, at this time, who was intoxicated, was
+robbed of all the money she had got from the poor credulous shepherd,
+excepting one pound.
+
+The same man once put 150 sovereigns into his kettle, to treat himself
+with what he called, _gold water_, for his tea; a piece of folly and
+wickedness only equalled by a fact with which the author is well
+acquainted, when an old man had his gold put under his pillow, and often
+shown to him, when he was dying. We need not wonder, therefore, that the
+children of this Gipsy couple should be so ignorant, depraved, and
+destitute. For money that is ill-gotten, and squandered in extravagance,
+entails a double curse on the parties concerned. But to return to the
+subject of this chapter.
+
+To visit the Gipsies in their tents is of great importance. Clergymen of
+the Establishment, dissenting ministers, and home missionaries, have at
+various times done this, and conversed freely with them on the Christian
+religion; and it has _not been in vain_. Indeed, nothing that is done,
+through Jesus Christ, purposely to please God, and benefit the wretched,
+can fail to produce a good effect. The Rev. Messrs Hyatt and Cobbin, who
+were deputed by the Home Missionary Society, to visit many parts of
+England, to enquire into the condition of this people, had no doubt, but
+that much good may be done among them, if proper means are pursued. It
+has many times been proved, that to attempt to raise them in society,
+without the influence of religious instruction, would be improper. They
+have not sufficient principles of honesty, nor purity of conduct, till
+they are taught those principles, and changed, by religion. One, among
+several instances, may be named.
+
+A young female Gipsy, remarkable for the beauty of her person, was much
+noticed by a lady of rank. She was made to sit many times for her
+portrait, was introduced into the drawing-room, and became of consequence
+as one of the family. She might have done well, had she not given up all
+her prospects by running away with a Gipsy youth, for whom she had an
+attachment, and with whom she has ever since lived in great misery. If
+less attention had been paid to her beauty, and more to the cultivation
+of right principles, she might now have been reformed, religious, and
+happy.
+
+To those who wish to forward the instruction of the children of these
+wanderers, which is of vast importance, the use of tins with letters and
+monosyllables stamped upon them, is recommended. A little ink or paint
+will be necessary to make the letters visible. This plan would save much
+expense, and render elementary books unnecessary. They could not be
+torn, as books generally are. The pieces thrown away by the tinman, if
+the corners were taken off, would answer every purpose. To induce those
+children, who cannot be got from the tent, to learn from these tins, the
+visitor might promise them an old garment, or some other trifle. Should
+the Gipsies conduct themselves properly, when thus visited, a little
+willow-wood may be given them to encourage them in industry, and forward
+the manufactory of baskets. And it might be well were a small piece of
+ground devoted to the growth of willows, in neighbourhoods frequented by
+them, on purpose to encourage them thereby. It might be adviseable, too,
+to give them testimonials on a card, of good conduct, when about to
+remove to another district, which might serve as an introduction to
+benevolent persons, and those interested in their welfare in other
+places; and this means would effectually prevent all imposition, keep up
+the attention of the good among them, and would constantly bring them
+before the notice of christian society. Such kindness would be felt by
+the Gipsies, and, in time, might produce a good effect. This method has
+been attended to by the Southampton Committee.
+
+The great object that Christians should have in view, should be to
+instruct them in the blessed truths of the Christian religion, imbue them
+with a happy sense of honesty and morality, and then reclaim them wholly
+from their unsettled and wandering habits; for until they have some
+knowledge of religion, and some anxiety to reform, they would only be
+worse by being brought constantly before the bad examples that would be
+set them in towns. Of course, such a change _cannot be fully
+accomplished in the present generation_; it cannot be expected. But
+their conversion to God will wholly be accomplished in time, if all
+Christians do their duty, depending on the influence of the Holy Spirit.
+
+From what has been said in this chapter, it will appear, that, visiting
+their tents to pray for, and instruct them, teaching such children to
+read as cannot get to public schools, and prevailing on all who are able
+to do so, to attend public worship; are the principal things to be
+attempted, in this great and good undertaking. Those Christians who wish
+for opportunities of doing good to the Gipsies in and about London, will
+find many of them in the suburbs in the months of April, May, and June,
+when they generally find work in the market gardens. In the months of
+July and August they move into Sussex and Kent, and are engaged in the
+harvest. And in the month of September, _great numbers_ of them are to
+be found in the hop-districts of Kent, Sussex and Surry, where they find
+employment. During the winter, many of them settle in London,
+Westminster, Bristol, and other large towns, when a good opportunity is
+presented for teaching, both to the children and adults of this class,
+the elements of reading, and the principles of true religion. For the
+information of those who may wish to visit the Gipsies in London and
+Bristol, during the winter, the author thinks it his duty to name the
+streets where they generally reside.
+
+Tottenham-court Road; Battle Bridge; Paddington; Bolton Street; Church
+Lane; Church Street; Kent Street, Borough; New Street; White Street;
+Banbridge Street; Shore-ditch; Tothill-fields; and Tunbridge Street. In
+Bristol they are principally found in Saint Phillip's, Newfoundland
+Street, Bedminster, and at the March and September fairs.
+
+At the Ascot and Epsom races, they may be met in large numbers; and if a
+benevolent, kind, and zealous minister of Christ were to visit them at
+their encampments at these seasons, and explain to them the facts,
+doctrines, and blessings of the Gospel, much good might be done. The
+morning would be the happiest time to visit these Gipsies, as they are
+too often at races, inebriated before night. It is presumed little could
+be said to profit them in a state of intoxication, and many of the women
+are then employed either in swindling or fortune-telling.
+
+Should the sympathies of the British public be efficiently directed to
+the Gipsies of this country, it may call forth the zeal of other nations
+to improve their still more degraded condition on the Continent, where
+more than half a million of them wander, ignorant as the heathens of all
+that is necessary to salvation. Those of this country loudly call upon
+us for instruction, which may easily be given them. Let all who have
+either time, money, or ability, give a helping hand; and, above all,
+assist by their unfeigned and earnest prayers. It may be very advisable
+to pray publicly for them in places of worship, and at the family altar,
+after visiting them in the highways and hedges. It might impress those
+of them who attend, with a grateful sense of the gracious care of God,
+and lead Christian congregations to think more of them, and to do more
+for them. May the merciful God of heaven and of earth, hasten the happy
+period, when the Gipsies of this, and of all other countries, shall
+embrace, and love, and be obedient to the Gospel of the gracious
+Redeemer!
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. XIII. Further Account of encouraging interviews with Gipsies, and
+interesting Correspondence.
+
+
+The author laments that he has passed so many years of his life wholly
+careless of the Gipsies of this country. Having travelled many times
+through England, he has had frequent opportunities of seeing them. But,
+till now, he looked on their conversion as a hopeless case, and nearly
+wholly neglected them. He has already stated the manner his attention
+was first roused to consider their condition and necessities more
+particularly, and he reflects with pleasure on the kindness of Providence
+in leading him to witness those events which called for sympathy towards
+them; and on the mercy of God so apparent in blessing the labours of
+himself and others in their behalf.
+
+The late Rev. Legh Richmond felt a deep interest in the conversion of
+this people. To awaken the sympathies and energies of his countrymen to
+that subject, he composed the following hymn on their behalf.
+
+ THE GIPSIES' PETITION.
+
+ Oh! ye who have tasted of mercy and love,
+ And shared in the blessings of pardoning grace;
+ Let us the kind fruits of your tenderness prove,
+ And pity, oh! pity the poor Gipsy race
+
+ For long have we wandered, neglected and wild,
+ Esteemed by all people as wretched and base;
+ Nor once on our darkness has light ever smiled;
+ Then pity, oh! pity the poor Gipsy race.
+
+ Like you, we have lost that pure gem, which, when lost,
+ Not the mines of Golconda {115} can ever replace;
+ To redeem it the blood of a Saviour it cost:
+ Then pity, oh! pity the poor Gipsy race.
+
+ Like us, you were wild in the sight of your God;
+ But he looked, and he loved, and he pitied your case;
+ The Redeemer has cleansed you in streams of his blood;
+ Then pity, oh! pity the poor Gipsy race.
+
+ Ye, who have found mercy, that mercy display;
+ Ye sons of adoption, your origin trace;
+ And then sure you cannot your face turn away,
+ But will pity and pray for the poor Gipsy race;
+
+ That we may form part of that numerous throng,
+ Redeemed from destruction by infinite grace;
+ And mingle with you in the heavenly song;
+ Then pity, oh! pity the poor Gipsy race.
+
+It has been the custom of the author to have a yearly meeting of the
+Gipsies at his own house, which is then open to all their families.
+Here, early in the year 1830, those who were in the lanes and on the
+common near Southampton, met many of their kind and religious friends,
+who are interested in their happiness. The morning was agreeably spent
+in a religious service, conducted for their spiritual benefit; after
+which some attention was paid to their temporal wants. Forty-eight of
+them, all nearly related to each other, who were at that time assembled
+in the neighbourhood to renew their family friendships, attended on this
+occasion, and were much pleased with the services in which they engaged.
+Different portions of the Scriptures were read and expounded to them,
+after which they had a plain and familiar address. It was a pleasure to
+meet these people at a throne of grace. After partaking of bread and
+cheese and ale, during which they conducted themselves very properly, a
+blanket was presented to the proprietor of each tent, a pair of stockings
+to every individual, and a quantity of calico for changes for the
+children. There were thirteen reformed Gipsies among them, who spent the
+rest of the day in reading the Scriptures to their brethren at their own
+houses.
+
+These people expressed themselves very gratefully. One of the families,
+of whom the mother could read, begged a bible. Some weeks after this
+bible had been given, the family was visited in its tent, when this copy
+of the Holy Scriptures was shewn to him, who observed many of the pages
+doubled down to mark the passages with which the reader had been
+impressed. The father of the family said--"I will never rest till I can
+read that book through." This poor man now attends divine service
+whenever he has an opportunity, although he strongly opposed, at one
+time, the reading of the Scriptures in his tent.
+
+A lady, who was present at this meeting, asked one of the reformed
+Gipsies, how she had felt herself on that morning? She replied--"I never
+was so happy;" and, after a short silence, continued--"The dinner we had
+last year, was much better than that we had to-day, as it was roast beef
+and plum-pudding; but what I heard then, of the minister's address, was
+only the word of man to me; but to-day, it has been the word of God; I am
+sure it has."
+
+Although it may be feared, that to many Gipsies then present, the reading
+of the Scriptures, and the familiar address, were only as _the words of
+man_, yet is there reason to hope they understood it, and that they will
+benefit thereby.
+
+This woman had an only surviving brother who was killed in fighting, and
+whose death was instantaneous. She was exceedingly distressed, and
+observed, in reference to this awful circumstance, "I should not have
+thought of his soul after death, at one time; but now I can read my
+Testament, I am sure that none can go to heaven but those who are born
+again." And she made an observation, too, of the utmost importance,
+shewing the great necessity there is for the Gipsies to be taught to
+read. _My being able to read myself_, said she, _has a great deal more
+effect upon me_, _than it would if another read it to me_, _and I could
+not read_; _for now_ I AM SURE IT IS IN THE BOOK. She carries her
+Testament in her pocket when she goes a journey, and reads it to her
+former companions, when she meets them on the road; and if they express
+any wonder at the change that has taken place, she refers them to the
+Scriptures as the cause, and her kind friends at Southampton, as the
+instruments.
+
+The following circumstance lately occurred, and will shew the improvement
+that has taken place in her daughters. One of them had been sent by her
+mother to receive the weekly sum allowed her. On receiving the money,
+she said, "This is twopence too much, sir." Being accustomed now and
+then to give her a few pence towards buying a Testament, she was told to
+keep it for that purpose. "I thank you," said she, "I have got a
+Testament, now, and mother has given her's to my next sister, since she
+has had a bible; and my youngest sister had a Testament given her at the
+Sunday School: but one of us is saving money to buy a hymn-book with; I
+will give _her_ the twopence."
+
+This incident, trifling as it may seem to some, will not fail to gratify
+others, whose hearts are anxiously desirous of improving the Gipsies.
+
+In the autumn of 1830, the author felt a strong desire to visit Farnham,
+where were, at that time, thousands of poor people assembled to pick
+hops, among whom were many Gipsies. Stanley was sent a few days before
+to make known his intentions of preaching to them on the evening of a
+fixed day. While at Farnham, Stanley ate, drank, and slept in some of
+their camps, by which he gained their confidence and affection.
+
+During the author's stay he accompanied Stanley to various
+hop-plantations, where great numbers of the most wretched part of the
+community are employed in the hopping season. Great numbers of tracts
+were distributed among them, while the author entered into many free and
+familiar conversations with them. Many were found very much depraved;
+but none were more depraved among the Gipsies, than many of the other
+class; for they were blasphemers of God and his religion. One man, like
+many of old, stirred up the people to reject and despise the truth. He
+said, "No one would get any thing by praying to God;" and, "if people
+wanted bread on a Sunday, it would be better for them to steal a mess of
+potatoes, and wood to cook them with, than go to church." Some of the
+poor shuddered at his boldness, and contempt of God's law. With much
+impudence he declared, "that he knew a man who put his dough into the
+oven on a Sunday without heating it, and then went to church to pray that
+God would bake it for him; but that the fool was disappointed." The
+minister said to him--"You know that you have told a wilful lie. You
+never knew such a man. There is not one of these little children will
+believe you." He appeared confounded at this unexpected rebuke. May
+this sinner repent and be saved!
+
+Among the hop-pickers of Farnham were many Gipsies the visitors had long
+known; and their smiling faces spoke the gladness of their hearts and the
+warmth of their gratitude, when they were noticed by their friends
+affectionately and kindly; nor had they forgotten the favours that had
+been shewn them at Southampton.
+
+Those of the Gipsies who were not acquainted with the object the author
+had in view, in paying them a visit, were much alarmed when enquiries
+were made for the Gipsies in the hop-grounds; supposing they were pursued
+by the magistrates. One youth told Stanley, that he knew not whether to
+run, or stay where he was; but recollecting to have been _in no spray
+lately_, he resolved on staying. When Stanley spoke to him in his own
+language, and introduced the minister, all his fears vanished. The
+Gipsies were astonished that any one should travel forty miles to see
+them.
+
+Their public meeting was after the labours of the day, near one of the
+hop-grounds, about half an hour after sun-set. A few small candles gave
+light to a small tenement, used as a lodging place for the hop-gatherers,
+where the congregation was accommodated. A few of the inhabitants of
+Farnham, and some of the female Gipsies, who were much delighted to
+mingle with them in the worship of God, were put inside, and the men,
+with such women and children as could not get in, stood outside, the
+place being very much too small for so great a number of people. The
+preacher stood on the threshold of the door and addressed the people, of
+whom those without could only be seen now and then, as an adjacent wood
+fire cast at intervals upon them an intermitting light. The Rev. Mr
+Johnson kindly attended, and assisted in the devotional part of the
+service; and some of his congregation obligingly assisted in the singing.
+
+On this occasion the Gospel of Christ was addressed to many who had never
+before heard an exposition of the blessed word of God. The sermon was
+from Psalm lxxxvi. 5. After service the Gipsies were exhorted to seek
+for opportunities of attending the house of God; to beg of some minister
+a bible for every tent; and to ask every one who may come near them to
+read certain of its pages to them.
+
+During the address, many of _their crimes_ were enlarged upon, and their
+dread of, and liability to punishment for them in this world; and they
+were urged to call on the God of all compassion and mercy, for help and
+for forgiveness, by that all-powerful motive, that he will never be
+inattentive to the prayers of the most helpless, wretched, and guilty
+sinner, when presented to God by faith in our only mediator, Jesus
+Christ.
+
+Stanley, who, after the service, accompanied the Gipsies to their tents,
+found that the sermon afforded conversation for the whole evening. One
+of them said, "The minister has told us every thing, as though he had
+lived with us." Another observed, "If it be all true what the gentleman
+has said, not a Gipsy can be saved." A third exhorted his children
+"never to say bad words again." The little creature replied--"Then I
+hope my _grandfer_ (grandfather) will never swear any more." Many of
+them talked of the evils of fortune-telling, and some resolved on going
+to Southampton, to see the reformed Gipsies.
+
+During the stay of the minister in that neighbourhood, eighty of them
+were visited, among whom was a dying woman, who very gladly received
+instruction, and heard prayer. A minister, in the neighbourhood, had
+been asked to visit her, but had neglected to do so.
+
+The author must not forget to acknowledge the kindness of the farmers who
+assisted him in the distribution of tracts, &c. &c., and who solicited
+that some might be left them for that purpose.
+
+This visit afforded an opportunity to contradict many false reports of
+the treatment with which the Gipsy children had met in the Infants'
+Schools at Southampton. It was said that they were all confined, and
+would at a future period be transported. This shews how easily people
+who deceive others, are imposed on themselves.
+
+The following letter was addressed to the author by a Gipsy woman when
+she was in great trouble of mind. It is presented to the reader just as
+it was received, and may be found interesting to the friends of their
+cause.
+
+ "Sir,
+
+ "I Hope you will Excuse Me for Riun These few Lines too you, I did
+ Not Now where To Cend to My Sister, I Have Been very Il and my
+ Familee. My Children Ave Had The Measils, They are Got Well from
+ That. I am Sorry to hinform you I Have Had A Shockin Accedent To my
+ Little Girl, She was Burnd to Death. I Give My Luv To My Son Job.
+ Plese to Give My Luv to My Sister Paishince, and Hur Childern. Plese
+ to Give My Luv To My Ant Pheny, and Plese to Lett Me Now How My Cuzin
+ James doos Go on, Plese to Lett Me Now How My Unkil Charls and His
+ Famly Is. Wm Duff Gives His Best Rispecs To All. Plese To Tel My
+ Sister too Anser This Letter By Returne of Post. I Am So unappy in
+ My Mind Till I Do Hear From Er. Dear Sister, I Have Mett With so
+ Much Trubel Sinc I Saw you Last, That I Am Sorre To inform you.
+ Plese to Tel my Child from Me To Bee A Good Boy, and Think Imself Wel
+ off Wher He Is. My Distris and My Trubel Makes Me Think More of My
+ Sister. Ples To Direct the Letter To Be Left At The Post Offis, for
+ Haryett Duff, Till Caulld for, in Bristil. Plese To Give My Luv To
+ My Son Job. So No More At Prezint from your Umble Sarvint. Plese
+ God I Am Coming To See You Some time This Munth.
+
+ "My Littel Girl Met The Accedent Wednesday, April 23, 1828."
+
+The following letter, too, refers to the writer of the above.
+
+ _Bristol_, _August_, 1830.
+
+ "My dear Sir,
+
+ "As I know that you are deeply interested in every circumstance
+ relating to the Gipsies, I trouble you with the following anecdote.
+ In the month of January last, when walking in the city of Bristol, I
+ met a Gipsy woman, who accosted me with the usual salutation of her
+ race, "Shall I tell you your fortune?" I enquired her name, and then
+ said, "You well know that you are not able to tell me my fortune; and
+ I am sorry to see you carrying on such deception." I then
+ endeavoured to speak to her about the importance of considering her
+ eternal welfare, and of seeking the salvation which is in Christ
+ Jesus; at the same time pointing out the certain condemnation she was
+ bringing upon herself, by willingly following the _multitude to do
+ evil_, even carrying _a lie in her right hand_. She urged that her
+ trade (which she acknowledged to be built on deceit and falsehood)
+ was her only support; and that she must starve if she followed my
+ advice. I reminded her that she would be like Dives, if she gained
+ the whole world and lost her own soul; but that were she indeed to
+ honour God, by giving up her wicked trade, because she knew that it
+ was displeasing to him, he would never suffer her to want any good
+ thing. After much more conversation, she assured me that she would
+ never tell fortunes again, and would discontinue her evil habits of
+ life. I told her that I could not allow her to make to me any
+ promise of the kind; for she did not know her wickedness, nor the
+ power which could alone prevent her from committing sin. I again
+ besought her to avail herself of the means of instruction within her
+ power.
+
+ Before leaving the city, I commended her to the care of some pious
+ friends, who were interested in my account of her, and who kindly
+ promised not to lose sight of her. Since that time I have received
+ very pleasing accounts from them respecting her. They have purchased
+ materials in order that she may be able to support herself by
+ basket-making, which she has begun; and I trust she has relinquished
+ her former trade. She is making progress in reading, and constantly
+ attends the preaching of the Gospel. I hope also that she is really
+ in earnest for the welfare of her soul. I earnestly wish that every
+ one would take an interest in the same; and I should be much rejoiced
+ if the circumstance which I have just mentioned, should be the means
+ of encouraging any one to notice those Gipsies with whom they may
+ occasionally meet, and to exert themselves in saving them from their
+ present degraded condition.
+
+ "I am, my dear Sir,
+ "Yours respectfully,
+ * * * * *
+
+_Wm. Stanley's Letter to the Author_.
+
+ "Hon. Sir,
+
+ "As you wish me to give you some account of the Gipsies, I gladly
+ comply with your request. I am a poor individual of that wandering
+ race, called Gipsies; yet, by the mercies of God, I was _rescued_
+ from that wandering life. In my _youthful days_ I entered into the
+ Wiltshire militia, when it pleased God to bring me under the
+ preaching of the Gospel at Exeter; and it was the means of awakening
+ my conscience. _From that time I have often been led to bepity the
+ sad state of the people whereof I made a part_. I have given them
+ the best instruction that lay in my power, and by reading the
+ Scriptures to them; but with very little visible effect for many
+ years. Neither did I think, till lately, that there were any of them
+ in the world, that cared for their souls, till the year 1827; when I
+ was quite _overcome with love to God_, _to find that the Lord had put
+ it into the hearts of his dear people at Southampton_, _to pity them
+ in their forlorn condition_; and now wonder not if I am at a loss for
+ words to speak the feeling of my heart; for, since that time I have
+ seen _seventeen or eighteen_; _nay_, _from twenty to thirty_; _nay_,
+ _from forty to fifty attend divine worship_; and _add_ to this the
+ many happy hours I have spent with them in their tents near
+ Southampton, in reading and praying with them; and some of them that
+ six months ago would not stay in their camp on my approach to them,
+ but would go away swearing, will now receive me gladly, and produce a
+ Bible or a Testament, which _had_ been given to them, and desire me
+ to read it to them, saying, this book was given to me by our dear
+ friends in Southampton. But, _dreadful to relate_, I find some
+ children, _from three years old to fifteen_, who never _said a prayer
+ to their God_; who never heard any one pray, and who _was_ never in a
+ church or chapel, nor have heard of the name of Christ, but in
+ blaspheming; and these are the inhabitants of England! Oh, England!
+ England! they are living and dying without God: no wonder if they
+ draw down the divine vengeance of Heaven on the land!
+
+ "Many of these poor _ignorant mortals_ do not know that they are
+ doing wrong by fortune-telling; and being informed that it is
+ displeasing to God, and ruinous to their own souls, they will say, it
+ is _of no service for me to give attendance to religion_, for I am
+ forced to ruin my soul for every morsel of bread I eat; but if God
+ spares my life I will leave it off as soon as I can; while others who
+ are both ignorant and hardened in their crimes, have told me it was
+ the gift of God to them, by which they were to gain their living.
+ Surely they call _darkness light_! Many of my people who join in
+ talk with me, declare, that if the Bible which I read to them be
+ true, there cannot be many saved. But they say that a reformation is
+ needful, and this is promised by them; and I am in great hopes that
+ the time is at hand. Oh, Lord! work for thine own glory, and stir up
+ the minds of thy people in all parts of the land, that they may help
+ forward this good work amongst these poor wanderers!
+
+ "Their ignorance and their crimes seem to have increased of late
+ years. When I was a boy, I well recollect their parting expressions,
+ which _was_ so common amongst them--_Artmee Devillesty_, which
+ is--_God bless you_. But now it is _truly awful_; it is _darkness
+ itself_, _for they now ask God to send them good luck_ in their
+ crimes. I _myself_ thought for many years, _till __I heard the
+ Gospel_, _that God was like some great gentleman_, _living at a great
+ distance from us_; but I had not a thought that he was every where
+ present to notice the conduct of his creatures, or to hear prayer.
+ The ignorance of _my people_ is a loud call to Christians to assist;
+ and, blessed be God, they find that assistance in Southampton. The
+ Bible has often been taken away from Southampton in the Gipsies'
+ pack, and I have seen it when they have returned, preserved with a
+ great deal of care, and produced for me to read, with great delight
+ on their part.
+
+ "Surely this blessed book will not be idle, but will do _wonders_
+ amongst them, _through God's grace_. I see the effects already; do
+ you say, how? I answer, _Was it ever known_, _till now_, that
+ Gipsies assembled on the sabbath day on the common and in the lanes
+ for divine worship? Did you ever see them come to town on a sabbath
+ day in such great numbers as they now do, when encamping near
+ Southampton? Some of the most ignorant of them are now learning to
+ read the Scriptures. This is the beginning of good days. Oh! the
+ good this will do to _my people at large_! Nothing of importance
+ took place in their camp all last summer, _and I almost fainted under
+ the discouragement_; but of late _it shows another face_; and I make
+ no doubt but it will spread, and I shall soon see greater things than
+ these.
+
+ I am, hon. Sir,
+ Your most obliged and humble Servant,
+ WILLIAM STANLEY."
+
+ "P. S.--On examining the different _branches of my family_, I find
+ upwards of 200 of us in different parts of England."
+
+This poor man, when a soldier, and in the habit of attending divine
+service, as a part of his duty, often heard his comrades speak of the
+text, on their return to the barracks. He one day made up his mind to
+bring home the text also, the next time he went to church. He heard with
+attention, and when he returned to the barracks, he said, "I've got the
+text now." "What is it, Stanley?" he was asked by a comrade, when he
+answered, "The 19th day of the month, and the 95th Psalm." When relating
+this to the author, he added, "I had the mortification to be laughed at
+by all my comrades who witnessed my ignorance." Do not many professing
+Christians come away from the house of God as ignorant as this poor
+Gipsy? Or if they have been taught to know and remember the text, it is
+all they attend to. This man's mind did not long remain in this dark
+state. After the above event he learned to read, and one day, taking up
+a Testament from the barracks' table, he read a portion of it, (for so he
+expressed himself) _The sublimity of the language struck his mind with
+astonishment_, and he said, _I will buy that book if I can_. His comrade
+asked him three halfpence for it; and he was glad of his purchase;
+although the Testament was very much torn. The Holy Scriptures were
+scarce in those days, a copy of which could seldom be bought by the poor;
+nor, indeed, would the word of life have been useful to them, as not one
+in a hundred could read.
+
+Soon after this, he was invited to attend a Wesleyan chapel in Exeter,
+where a funeral sermon was to be preached by the Rev. Wm. Aver. The text
+was, _Let me die the death of the righteous_, _and let my last end be
+like his_. While the minister was describing the happiness of the
+righteous, divine light shone upon his soul, he felt that _he_ was not
+that character, and that there was no prospect of his dying happily,
+unless he possessed it. This sermon was the means of his conversion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. XIV. Interesting particulars of the Gipsies, related by a
+Clergyman.
+
+
+The following account is selected from a tract published in York, in
+1822, detailing several interesting visits that a Yorkshire clergyman
+made to some of the camps of that wandering and neglected people. Were
+the author of the little book known, application would have been made to
+him, for permission to reprint these extracts. But it is hoped he will
+excuse the liberty taken, as the design is to _induce other clergymen and
+ministers to go and do likewise_. This clergyman, having fallen in with
+a gang of Gipsies on the road, who were travelling to their place of
+encampment, addressed a young female among them, and found her not
+ignorant of religion. "How," said the clergyman, "did you obtain the
+knowledge of religion?" "Sir," answered she, "in the depth of winter,
+the men folks only travel; the women and children belonging to my family
+and party, always live in the town. In those seasons I have gone with
+some of our relatives, who live there, and are religious people, to the
+worship of God: in that way I have learned these things."
+
+"This was a practical comment on the text which says, _The entrance of
+the word giveth light_; _it giveth __understanding to the simple_. After
+giving her some suitable advice, and with it his benediction, he left
+her; but not without hopeful expectations that the seeds of grace were
+sown in her heart.
+
+"He next overtook the grandmother and several of her grandchildren. She
+was pleased at his noticing her, and answered his enquiries with modesty
+and propriety. She corroborated what her daughter had said, and in her
+answers discovered not only an acquaintance with the general truths of
+the Gospel, but a feeling sense of their importance. She said, 'I love
+to go to church, and do go _now_, sir, when I can; but do not always meet
+with the right doctrines: my prayers I offer up night and morning, under
+the hedge. I hope God Almighty hears my prayers.' The clergyman
+observed, that sincere prayer was acceptable to God any where, equally
+under the hedge, as in the parlour, or in the church. When arrived at
+their camp, he promised them a Bible, as they had none, and directed some
+of the party to call at the friend's house in the neighbourhood where he
+was staying. Soon after his return thither, a knock was heard at the
+door, when it was announced, 'Two Gipsies, sir, are come for a Bible.'
+On going out, he found in the hall the young man who could read, and a
+younger brother, a fine boy of about fourteen years of age." The
+gentleman who wrote the account, adds as follows:--
+
+"Their countenances were very animated and expressive; there seemed to be
+a ray of heavenly brightness resting upon them; and while I gave them a
+charge how to read the sacred gift, they were much affected: the boy, in
+particular, listened with eager attention, fixing his eyes first on me,
+then on the Bible. After I had inscribed their names in the title-page,
+they departed with my blessing; and what is better--with the blessing of
+God."
+
+At another part of the year, this clergyman returned to the same spot
+where he had before been so delightfully engaged in attempting to benefit
+the poor Gipsies. He found out another camp, and thus writes of them.
+
+"On my approach to the camp (where was a group of nearly naked children,)
+the Gipsy girls rose up, and, in a modest and respectful manner, answered
+my questions; while the little swarthy group of children gathered around
+me. To one of these girls I said, 'How is it that you bear such a
+wandering and exposed life?' In reply, she said, 'Sir, it is _use_;
+_use_ is second nature.' 'But have you any religion? Do you think about
+God, about judgment, and eternity? Do you know how to pray?' She
+answered, 'I say my prayers, sir, night and morning.' I then said, 'can
+any of your people read?' 'Yes, sir,' she replied, 'one of our men that
+is not here, can read very well.' 'Have you a Bible among you?' 'No,
+sir; we should be thankful for one, sir.'"
+
+On leaving the camp, the clergyman promised to call on them again, when
+the other part of the family should be returned from the town, where they
+were gone to vend their wares.
+
+"On my return to the encampment," says he, "I was met by two men who came
+out to greet me. I asked them kindly of their names. They informed me
+it was Bosvill. The women and children were now collected around me. I
+inquired who among them could read. Captain Bosvill, for so I called
+him, answered me, 'My wife, sir, can read any thing in English.' I was
+glad to hear this, and asked them if they had any books. Bosvill went to
+a package and brought forth his stock, fragments of an old Testament, and
+an old spelling-book. 'And what use do you make of your spelling book?'
+asked I. 'My wife,' replied Bosvill, 'when she has time, teaches the
+children their letters.' I now shewed them the Bible I had in my pocket,
+saying, that as it was so holy and blessed a book, it ought not to be
+given in an indifferent and common manner; and asked, if I were to ride
+over in the evening to give it them, and to explain to them its use,
+whether they would be all together to hear me. 'Yes, yes;' was the
+reply, from many voices. I appointed seven o'clock for the purpose. I
+then distributed amongst them some tracts, containing passages for every
+day in the week, and also the tract of Short Sermons; for which they were
+very thankful. I told them that I intended to give them a Bible in the
+evening, a book which few of them had ever seen, and which fewer
+understood. I was pleased with the modesty of their deportment, and with
+their eagerness for instruction. Surely they are a people whose hearts
+the Lord has prepared for the reception of his word.
+
+"At the hour appointed, I put the Bible in my pocket, and rode again to
+the camp. The evening was particularly fine: the sun, hidden behind some
+thick fleecy clouds, had thrown around a mild and pleasing tint; the
+birds were every where singing their evening song; the ploughman was
+'whistling o'er the lea;' and nature, after the labours of the day, was
+preparing for her wonted rest. It was a fit time for meditation, prayer,
+and praise. Such an evening, perhaps, as that which led the patriarch of
+old to meditation, when he lifted up his eyes and saw the returning
+servants of his father bringing home his future wife. As I drew near to
+the camp, I began to revolve in my mind the best way of making them
+acquainted with the importance of the most essential doctrines contained
+in the holy book I was about to give them. On my arrival, I found that I
+had been long expected. The men, however, were not there; they were gone
+to water a horse, which they had lent all the day to a farmer; but a
+tawny girl ran with great speed, barefooted, and brought them to the
+camp. I now dismounted, and gave my horse, with my stick, to the care of
+one of the men. The family circle was formed into an irregular circle
+round some pale embers, some of them sitting cross-legged on the grass,
+and others standing. I placed myself so as to have the women and
+children chiefly before me. The woman who could read, was seated
+opposite me: the men, the tents, and the package to the right; while the
+horses and asses belonging to the tribe, were quietly grazing at a short
+distance in the lane. All was solemn stillness; all was attentive
+expectation. As I took from my pocket the Bible, the eyes of the whole
+company were instantly fixed upon it. This book, said I, which I bring
+you, is the book of God; it is sent from heaven to make poor miserable
+and dying man happy. I then spoke a short time on God; on creation; how
+God created man upright; how he was once happy in paradise; the way in
+which he sinned, and broke the law of his Maker, and became guilty,
+polluted, and exposed to death and hell; that to save men from this
+dreadful state, God devised a plan of mercy; that he sent his Son, and
+the Scriptures of truth, which shew unto us the way of salvation. This
+was something of the outline of my lecture; but I added the
+responsibility of men to read the book, and to seek to understand it. I
+solemnly charged them, by the sacred book itself, and by the account
+which they, at the day of judgment, must give to God for it, to make the
+most sacred and constant use of it, by reading it together daily in their
+camp. In the course of my discourse, I stopped, and said,--'Now do you
+understand what I say?' Captain Bosvill's wife replied, 'We understand
+you, sir; but we have not the same words which you have.' In conclusion,
+I spoke of the coming judgment, when they and all men must stand and be
+judged at the righteous bar of God. The Bible was then delivered to the
+care of the captain of the gang, and of his wife, the woman who could
+read.
+
+"Now, I said, let us all kneel down on the grass, and pray for God's
+blessing with this holy book. Instantly a female brought from her tent a
+small piece of carpet, and spread it before me on the grass, for me to
+kneel upon; and then all kneeling down, I prayed that the minds of these
+miserable outcasts of society might be enlightened, to discover the
+exceeding sinfulness of sin, and the blessedness and efficiency of the
+Saviour; that the sacred book given them through the influence of the
+Holy Ghost, might lead them into the way of righteousness, and finally
+guide them to everlasting life. When we rose from our knees, gratitude
+was seen in every countenance, and expressed by every tongue. '_God
+bless you_, _sir_; _thank you_, _sir_;' echoed throughout the camp."
+
+The next evening this clergyman went again to the camp, when one of the
+Gipsies came to meet him, and informed him of the arrival of some of
+their relatives. "I shook hands with them," says the clergyman, "and
+asked of their welfare. Never was a king received with a more hearty
+welcome, or with greater attention and respect.
+
+"As I was expected, the utmost order, cleanliness, and quiet, prevailed
+throughout the camp; and all were dressed in their best clothes to
+receive me. The arrangement of my congregation was much the same as the
+preceding evening. I spoke to them of the blessed Jesus; his birth, his
+ministry, his death, passion, and grace; and his glory at his second
+coming _in the clouds of heaven_, _to judge the world in righteousness_.
+I spoke also of death, and of the immortality of the soul.
+
+"I had not proceeded far in my lecture, before several farmers and
+passengers, some on horse back, and others on foot, joined my
+congregation.
+
+"Before concluding my address, I said, 'It may seem singular to some of
+you that a stranger should interest himself on your behalf in the way I
+have done; and it might be expected that I should give some reasons for
+doing as I have. My chief reason is a sense of duty. Gipsies have long
+been neglected, and left to perish in their sins; but Gipsies have souls
+equally precious as others, and of equal price in the sight of God. Who,
+I asked, cares for the souls of Gipsies? who uses means for their
+instruction in righteousness? Yet must it be equally our duty to care
+for them, and to endeavour their conversion and happiness, as to plan
+societies, obtain subscriptions, and send out missionaries to the
+heathen.'
+
+"I said, moreover, that, 'supposing, when I first saw your camp, I had
+rode by you on the other side, and taken no notice of you, nor felt an
+interest in your welfare; and after that, had met you at the bar of
+judgment; what would have been the language with which you might have
+addressed me at that awful period? Might you not have charged the misery
+of your eternal condemnation upon me, and said, The curse we are doomed
+to bear, thoughtless man, might, perchance, have been prevented by you?
+You saw us when riding by our camp lying in ignorance, and unbelief: you
+might have rode up to us, and imparted instruction to our perishing
+souls; because to you were committed the oracles of God, and you knew the
+way to heaven. But, no, _cruel man_, our state excited in you no
+compassion, or desire for our salvation. In your conduct there was no
+imitation of your Lord and Master. Go, cruel man, and if heaven you
+enter, let your felicity be embittered by the recollection of neglect to
+the Gipsy wanderers, whom Providence had placed in your way, that you
+might direct them to God, but which you neglected.' In conclusion, I
+again referred to the holy Bible, which I had given them; and again
+repeated the way to use it. After which I said, Now we will conclude
+with prayer, as we did last evening. Immediately the same female who
+before brought the carpet, again spread it, with great civility, for me
+to kneel upon; and again I offered up a solemn prayer for the salvation
+of these lost and perishing mortals. The greatest seriousness and awe
+rested upon the assembly. Surely the prayer was registered in heaven,
+and shall, in time not far distant, be answered.--Come, and take these
+heathens for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for
+thy possession.--When I proposed to take leave of my swarthy flock, it
+was not without feelings of attachment on both sides. I had observed
+several of them much affected under my discourse, and now they manifested
+it more openly. As I shook hands with them, I said, 'You see, I did not
+come among you to give you money. I considered religious instruction of
+the most value; therefore I have endeavoured to impart it.' 'Sir,'
+replied several, 'we did not want your money; your instruction is better
+to us than money; and we thank you for coming.' The camp now resounded
+with voices, saying, 'Thank you, sir; God bless you, sir;' and every
+countenance seemed to glow with gratitude. The young branches of the
+family seemed to think a great honour and blessing had been conferred
+upon them.
+
+"As I mounted my pony to come away, I observed one of the females, a fine
+young woman about twenty-five years of age, the same that brought the
+carpet from the package, and spread on the grass for me to kneel upon, to
+retire from the rest. She walked slowly near to the hedge, and appeared
+evidently much distressed. Her expressive eyes were lifted up to heaven,
+while the big tears rolling down her cheeks, were wiped away with her
+long black tresses. I thought--Here, surely, are some of the first
+fruits!--Thus did the woman, who was a sinner, weep, and with her hair
+wipe away the tears from the feet of her Saviour. May those tears be as
+acceptable to God: may the same Redeemer bid her go in peace! Her
+conduct attracted the notice of her family, and she was asked the reason
+of her sorrow. At first she could scarcely speak; but at length
+exclaimed, 'Oh! I am a sinner!' Then lifting up her eyes to heaven, she
+wept aloud, and again wiped away the falling tears with her hair. 'But
+did you not know that before? we are all sinners. What have you done to
+cause you so much distress?' She made no reply, but shook her head and
+wept."
+
+The author of the GIPSIES' ADVOCATE, who, for the encouragement of his
+readers, has embodied the above interesting paragraphs in his work,
+sincerely hopes and prays that all ministers of Christ will, ere long, be
+led to imitate this clergyman in his benevolent and Christian attempts to
+benefit by the influence of religion and the word of God, the lost, and
+ignorant, and miserable, and perishing among mankind.
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. XV. Interesting visits to Gipsy camps, including an Anecdote of
+his late beloved MAJESTY, GEORGE THE THIRD.
+
+
+The following account is extracted from the Home Missionary Magazine for
+June, 1823.
+
+_March_, 1823. "Sir,
+
+"If the following facts should afford any encouragement to the benevolent
+intentions of the Home Missionary Society, which has, for one of its
+objects, the improvement of the state of the _poor Gipsies_, my end in
+relating them will be amply answered.
+
+"On Saturday evening, in the month of October, the narrator followed
+several Gipsy families. Being arrived at the place of their encampment,
+his first object was to gain their confidence. This was accomplished;
+after which, to amuse their unexpected visitant, they shewed forth their
+night diversions in music and dancing; likewise the means by which they
+obtained their livelihood, such as tinkering, fortune-telling, and
+conjuring. That the narrator might be satisfied whether he had obtained
+their confidence or not, he represented his dangerous situation, in the
+midst of which, they all with one voice cried, 'Sir, we would kiss your
+feet, rather than hurt you!' After manifesting a confidence in return,
+the master of this formidable gang, about forty in number, was challenged
+by the narrator for a conjuring match. The challenge was instantly
+accepted. The Gipsies placed themselves in the circular form, and both
+being in the middle, commenced with their conjuring powers to the best
+advantage. At last the narrator proposed the making of something out of
+nothing. This proposal was accepted. A stone which never existed, was
+to be created, and appear in a certain form in the middle of a circle
+made on the turf. The master of the gang commenced, and after much
+stamping with his foot, and the narrator warmly exhorting him to cry
+aloud; like the roaring of a lion, he endeavoured to call forth nonentity
+into existence. Asking him if he could do it? he answered, 'I am not
+strong enough.' They were all asked the same question, which received
+the same answer. The narrator commenced. Every eye was fixed upon him,
+eager to behold this unheard-of exploit; but (and not to be wondered at,)
+he failed!--telling them, he possessed no more power to _create_ than
+themselves. Perceiving the thought of insufficiency pervading their
+minds, he thus spoke:--"Now, if you have not power to create a poor
+little stone, and if I have not power either; what must that power be,
+which made the whole world out of nothing?--men, women, and children!
+that power I call God Almighty."
+
+The night's diversion having received a change, the golden moment was
+eagerly seized to impress on their minds the infinite power, holiness,
+and justice of their Creator. This being done, the origin of sin, and
+the immortality of the soul, were, in the second place, impressed on
+their minds. Then followed the awful effects of sin, and the soul's
+eternal punishment in hell, because of offending this great God, whose
+holiness could not look on sin, and whose justice would punish it.
+Representing the soul's eternal punishment by the wrath of an incensed
+God, never did the preacher before witness such an effect; the poor
+Gipsies, with tremulous voice, crying, '_Did you ever hear the like_! _
+What ever shall we do_?' These expressions gave new energies to the
+preacher, and still brighter hopes of a good effect. Going on with the
+awful representation, and in the act of turning, as if to leave them, he
+bade them the long farewell. 'Never, never more to meet till we meet in
+hell! Oh! what a dreadful thing it is, my fellow-sinners, that we have
+to part in this world with the thought of meeting in an eternal world of
+pains, never to see God! never to see heaven! never to see any thing to
+comfort our poor souls! Oh! we are lost, lost, poor souls, we are lost
+for ever!--farewell!' In the act of leaving them, these poor creatures
+cried, 'Not yet, Sir, not yet.' Now was the glorious moment come, which
+the preacher eagerly anticipated of proclaiming the glad tidings of
+salvation through a crucified Saviour. Asking how long they would stand
+to hear the way of escape from the wrath to come, they instantly lifted
+up their voices, answering, 'All night, Sir, all night.' Then the
+preacher, without much persuasion, exhibited a Saviour, in all his
+sufferings, merits, death, and glory. They were sorry that such a good
+being should suffer so much; but the preacher took care to show the
+absolute necessity of his sufferings. Their manner bespoke an imperfect
+idea of a substitute. This was soon made clear to their understandings
+by comparisons, when the master of the gang cried, 'I see it, I see it!'
+He was asked what he saw? 'I see Jesus Christ getting between us and
+God, and satisfying our great God's justice by dying instead of us.'
+This truly made the preacher's heart glad, seeing the great plan of
+salvation was so clearly understood by those who declared (although in a
+land of light,) they never heard of Jesus Christ before.
+
+"The preacher sang the hymn:--
+
+ "How condescending, and how kind
+ Was God's eternal Son, &c,"
+
+and then ended with prayer. They solicited him to return on the sabbath
+morning; he did so, and, as he hopes, under the influence of the Holy
+Spirit. The master gratefully accepted of a bible; for though the
+Gipsies could not read, a little boy was among them, who was not a Gipsy,
+that could read remarkably well, having been taught at a Sunday school at
+Hastings, in Sussex. They all joyfully anticipated the pleasure of going
+to the Rev. J. Carter's Chapel, of Braintree, in the afternoon, but met
+with a disappointment, arising from an unexpected decampment. About one
+month after, in the latter end of November, two Gipsy women called on the
+narrator, earnestly entreating him to go and preach to them, which they
+called conversation. Asking the reason, why they entreated this favour?
+their answer was, 'We have heard much about your conversation, sir, and
+we should like to hear it. Come, do come, and we will be all ready to
+receive you.' Asking who they were that told them of the conversation
+just mentioned, they said, 'some of our people, Sir, that you were with
+about a month since. They told us a great deal about your conversation,
+and we should so much like to hear it. Oh! sir, do come to us poor
+creatures, for we have an invitation for you, if you would condescend to
+take it, to meet with the Gipsies on Christmas day.' That night, the
+narrator walked a few miles to their camp, and in their smoky tent
+preached Jesus Christ the only way of salvation, to these poor, despised,
+neglected creatures. After being with them two hours and a half, he bade
+them farewell, and going behind a hedge, anxious to know what effect the
+new unheard of doctrines would produce on their minds, he listened for a
+short time. In the midst of conversation with each other, one of them
+said, 'Well, I know this, if I could get a house near where that
+gentleman lives, and could live by my business, I would send all my
+children to that school there, and hear him as long as ever I could
+live.' While they were conversing about Adam and Eve, and the evil
+effects of sinning against God; one of the women said, 'However, you see,
+all the punishment that us women get, is sorrow and pains in
+child-bearing.' 'Stop, stop,' says one of the men, 'that won't do, Ann,
+that won't do. If sorrow and pains in child-bearing be all the
+punishment that women are to have, what punishment must those women have
+that do not bear children? You are quite wrong, Ann; you women are as
+bad as _us_.' This led on to a further discovery, and the conversation
+among themselves was truly interesting.
+
+"One of the children telling a lie, the mother touched it on the head,
+saying, 'What are you telling lies about? Have you forgotten what the
+gentleman said to night? You will go to hell, if you tell any more lies.
+Let me never hear you tell another, you bad lad, for God will not take
+you to heaven.'
+
+"These, and several remarks about Jesus Christ, afforded no small
+pleasure to the preacher, and he hopes that these facts will afford no
+small encouragement to the Home Missionary Society.
+
+ "Your very humble
+ Servant,
+ "J. H. C."
+
+Before the author relates one of the most extraordinary anecdotes with
+which he is acquainted, one, of which a King and a dying Gipsy are the
+characters, he will relate another interesting account of a visit to a
+Gipsy camp, which will, it is hoped, prove that such visits are not in
+vain, when made in dependence on the Divine blessing. A Gipsy, in great
+distress of mind, and with weeping eyes, came to inform him of one of
+their people, who was in great anguish of mind, and entreated him to
+visit them at the camp, which was several miles distant. The request was
+gladly complied with. On arriving at the tent, he found a woman sitting
+in a melancholy attitude on the ground; and distress and anguish were
+strongly marked in her countenance. She appeared quite indifferent to
+any thing that was said; and kept herself apparently engaged with the
+sticks and brands around the fire near the mouth of the tent. The man
+also appeared very melancholy. We learned that the cause of their
+distress was jealousy on the part of the man, who was called her husband.
+The circumstance which gave rise to those unhappy feelings had taken
+place several years before; yet the poor man has been so unhappy, that he
+has often intended to destroy both himself and his wife; and not many
+days before this visit to the camp, he had threatened to execute his
+purpose. The author talked and prayed with him, and exhorted him to look
+to God for strength and grace. Their repeated conversations were made
+useful to him, and those miserable feelings were subdued, and he now
+lives happily with the woman he had before hated, even to an intention of
+murder. This is another evidence, although a distressing one, that a
+want of chastity is evil in their sight.
+
+"A king of England, of happy memory, who loved his people and his God,
+better than kings in general are wont to do, occasionally took the
+exercise of hunting. Being out one day for this purpose, the chase lay
+through the shrubs of the forest. The stag had been hard run; and, to
+escape the dogs, had crossed the river in a deep part. As the dogs could
+not be brought to follow, it became necessary, in order to come up with
+it, to make a circuitous route along the banks of the river, through some
+thick and troublesome underwood. The roughness of the ground, the long
+grass and frequent thickets, gave opportunity for the sportsmen to
+separate from each other; each one endeavouring to make the best and
+speediest route he could. Before they had reached the end of the forest,
+the king's horse manifested signs of fatigue and uneasiness; so much so,
+that his Majesty resolved upon yielding the pleasures of the chase to
+those of compassion for his horse. With this view, he turned down the
+first avenue in the forest, and determined on riding gently to the oaks,
+there to wait for some of his attendants. His Majesty had only proceeded
+a few yards, when, instead of the cry of the hounds, he fancied he heard
+the cry of human distress. As he rode forward, he heard it more
+distinctly. 'Oh, my mother! my mother! God pity and bless my poor
+mother!' The curiosity and kindness of the king led him instantly to the
+spot. It was a little green plot on one side of the forest, where was
+spread on the grass, under a branching oak, a little pallet, half covered
+with a kind of tent; and a basket or two, with some packs, lay on the
+ground at a few paces distant from the tent. Near to the root of the
+tree he observed a little swarthy girl, about eight years of age, on her
+knees, praying, while her little black eyes ran down with tears.
+Distress of any kind was always relieved by his Majesty, for he had a
+heart which melted at 'human woe;' nor was it unaffected on this
+occasion. And now he inquired, 'What, my child, is the cause of your
+weeping? For what do you pray?' The little creature at first started,
+then rose from her knees, and pointing to the tent, said, 'Oh, sir! my
+dying mother!' 'What?' said his Majesty, dismounting, and fastening his
+horse up to the branches of the oak, 'what, my child? tell me all about
+it.' The little creature now led the King to the tent:--there lay,
+partly covered, a middle-aged female Gipsy, in the last stages of a
+decline, and in the last moments of life. She turned her dying eyes
+expressively to the royal visitor, then looked up to heaven; but not a
+word did she utter; the organs of speech had ceased their office; _the
+silver cord was loosed_, _and the wheel broken at the cistern_. The
+little girl then wept aloud, and, stooping down, wiped the dying sweat
+from her mother's face. The King, much affected, asked the child her
+name, and of her family; and how long her mother had been ill. Just at
+that moment another Gipsy girl, much older, came, out of breath, to the
+spot. She had been at the town of W---, and had brought some medicine
+for her dying mother. Observing a stranger, she modestly courtsied, and,
+hastening to her mother, knelt down by her side, kissed her pallid lips,
+and burst into tears. 'What, my dear child,' said his Majesty, 'can be
+done for you?' 'Oh, sir!' she replied, 'my dying mother wanted a
+religious person to teach her, and to pray with her, before she died. I
+ran all the way before it was light this morning to W---, and asked for a
+minister, _but no one could I get to come with me to pray with my dear
+mother_!' The dying woman seemed sensible of what her daughter was
+saying, and her countenance was much agitated. The air was again rent
+with the cries of the distressed daughters. The King, full of kindness,
+instantly endeavoured to comfort them: he said, 'I am a minister, and God
+has sent me to instruct and comfort your mother.' He then sat down on a
+pack, by the side of the pallet, and taking the hand of the dying Gipsy,
+discoursed on the demerit of sin, and the nature of redemption. He then
+pointed her to Christ, the all sufficient Saviour. While the King was
+doing this, the poor creature seemed to gather consolation and hope: her
+eyes sparkled with brightness, and her countenance became animated. She
+looked up; she smiled; but it was the last smile; it was the glimmering
+of expiring nature. As the expression of peace, however, remained strong
+in her countenance, it was not till some little time had elapsed, that
+they perceived the struggling spirit had left mortality.
+
+"It was at this moment that some of his Majesty's attendants, who had
+missed him at the chase, and who had been riding through the forest in
+search of him, rode up, and found the King comforting the afflicted
+Gipsies. It was an affecting sight, and worthy of everlasting record in
+the annals of kings.
+
+"His Majesty now rose up, put some gold into the hands of the afflicted
+girls, promised them his protection, and bade them look to heaven. He
+then wiped the tears from his eyes, and mounted his horse. His
+attendants, greatly affected, stood in silent admiration. Lord L--- was
+now going to speak, when his Majesty, turning to the Gipsies, and
+pointing to the breathless corpse, and to the weeping girls, said, with
+strong emotion, 'Who, my lord, who, thinkest thou, was neighbour unto
+these?'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. XVI. Further interesting Correspondence.
+
+
+ "Dear Sir,
+
+ "In answer to your inquiries, I have to say, that within my
+ knowledge, little or nothing has as yet been accomplished for the
+ Gipsies. The Home Missionaries have frequently paid flying visits to
+ their camps, and prayed, read, preached and distributed tracts. In
+ all cases they have been treated with much respect, and their labour
+ has been repaid with the most sincere marks of gratitude. But I
+ never met with very warm support in carrying on this object, but was
+ often exposed to some sarcastical insinuations or sardonic smiles
+ from those who thought the attempt to ameliorate the condition of the
+ Gipsies, only Quixotic.
+
+ "I think their wandering life is one very great impediment in the way
+ of improving the Gipsy tribes, and yet they are so attached to it,
+ that, when taken into families, as servants, they will not stay. Nor
+ can any good be done to their children; for, like all wild people,
+ the parents are attached to them to a fault; so that they cannot
+ allow them to be absent from them even to enjoy the instruction of a
+ school, suspecting that such a separation might end in their final
+ disunion.
+
+ "Were a distinct society formed to effect a reformation among the
+ Gipsies, many of the nobility, and other classes of the higher
+ orders, would no doubt subscribe. There is a feeling among them on
+ the subject, and many times the formation of a society has been on
+ the tapis. The Gipsies are singularly attached to the Establishment,
+ and many of them are married at the parish churches; and it is a pity
+ the episcopalian body have not taken them up. There is a prejudice
+ against them which I think is unfounded; but I cannot enter into
+ details in a mere letter. People look on them as vagabonds, and
+ _they_ seem shy in return; and hence they continue a kind of outcast
+ body in a civilized country.
+
+ "If any further steps are taken, and if I can in any way assist in
+ promoting your good object, you may command my services.
+
+ "I am, dear sir, respectfully yours,
+
+ "I. COBBIN."
+
+_Extracts from the Letter of a Clergyman's Lady_.
+
+ "Sir,
+
+ "My best thanks are due to you for your compliance with my request;
+ and, in return, I beg to assure you, that I consider your answer to
+ my friend's objection, as quite satisfactory and efficient. I
+ rejoice to hear that God has been pleased to bless the endeavours and
+ earnest exertion of the Scripture-readers (to the Gipsies) with
+ success. To behold sixteen, and afterwards twenty-one Gipsies
+ voluntarily attending Divine worship, must have conveyed feelings of
+ heartfelt gratitude to the heart of every Christian, and at the same
+ time encourage him to persevere in earnest prayer to the Father of
+ mercies, to pour his holy Spirit into their souls, that they might
+ become the true and faithful followers of the Redeemer. You say you
+ would be glad to receive any intelligence respecting this interesting
+ people; by which I am led to suppose that an account of an interview
+ which I had with some of them, may not be unacceptable; an interview
+ that was highly pleasing and satisfactory, as I found them less
+ ignorant of spiritual concerns, and to possess better qualities, than
+ I had imagined.
+
+ "Having sent for two women, (the heads of the camps) I received them
+ in a cottage in the town of ---, and after allowing them some
+ refreshment, proceeded to put the different questions to them that
+ are inserted in the Observer. They told me that their family,
+ altogether, consisted of eighteen persons, who travelled about the
+ country in three camps; that the men found it difficult to obtain
+ regular employment; that sometimes, during the winter, they made
+ cabbage-nets, and mended culinary utensils; that in the summer, men
+ and women were occasionally employed in making hay, &c. These women
+ appeared very destitute of necessary clothing, which they said they
+ found great difficulty in obtaining. They appeared careful to speak
+ the truth, alleging that it hurt their consciences to speak
+ otherwise. On the question being put to them, whether they
+ appropriated to themselves the property of those near whom they
+ encamped? they candidly confessed that they sometimes took a little
+ straw, hay, and sticks; but no fowls or any other live-stock. They
+ shewed a very affectionate disposition and warm feelings towards
+ their children. The eldest of them assured me, that if any in their
+ camp became orphans, she considered herself more bound to provide for
+ them than her own, as the former needed it the more, being destitute.
+ She did not object to their gaining instruction, if it came in the
+ way, and she wished to be read to herself, and appeared to take much
+ pleasure in listening to my explanations of the important doctrines
+ of religion. They said that none of their party could read, but that
+ they were sometimes visited by a relative who was a good scholar.
+ She said, too, that she always kept in her possession a _godly book_,
+ for the purpose of asking, as opportunity offered, a traveller to
+ read to them. She assured me, too, (which I rather doubted,) that
+ they constantly attended Divine worship, when encamped near enough to
+ churches; that they send for the nearest clergyman _to preach_ to the
+ dying, and that they never omit having their babes _full christened_,
+ excepting in cases of sickness, when the child is only baptized: and
+ should such child die, they obtain the services of a parochial
+ clergyman to inter it. They said, thinking, no doubt, to please me,
+ that they did not like the Ranters, but that they thought well of the
+ _church folks_. I fear that, though they had a general knowledge of
+ the Supreme Being, they were sadly ignorant of the most important
+ point of Christianity, namely, the all-sufficient sacrifice that was
+ made for the whole world. While I expatiated to them on the day of
+ judgment and the final doom of man, displaying the extreme and
+ exquisite happiness of the righteous part of the human family, and
+ the dreadful misery of the wicked, the younger of them, who appeared
+ indisposed, was considerably agitated. They then said, that they
+ were not in the habit of swearing, but occasionally did so, though
+ they were aware it was very wicked. When travelling, they told me
+ that they avoid breaking the sabbath; and that they visit all places
+ included in the district through which they wander, three times per
+ year, from which plan they seldom deviate. I inquired if they would
+ like to settle in cottages, and gain their livelihood by industry.
+ They replied, that _if house-rent_, _clothes_, _food_, _and all other
+ necessaries were found them_, they would; but that they would not
+ settle on any other condition.
+
+ "I am desirous of obtaining your opinion respecting the plan I have
+ lately formed to benefit this people; for, should you approve of it,
+ it will be carried into immediate execution. I thought it would be
+ very advantageous to offer an adequate remuneration to a pious person
+ who would devote every half-day to reading and explaining the
+ Scriptures to the old, and teaching the young to read. I was aware
+ that it would be difficult to obtain one, who, while he would teach
+ the young to read, and explain the Scriptures to the aged, would be
+ wise enough to give wholesome advice to every case of mental
+ distress, and be gifted to guide the first steps of those who are
+ disposed to be good, in the way of Christian godliness. After much
+ anxiety and many attempts, I at length succeeded in meeting with a
+ person most disinterestedly pious; one who was willing to accede to
+ any proposal to benefit his fellow-creatures. He appears to attach
+ little importance to himself, but to have much confidence in God, in
+ reference to his exertions. He is really desirous to promote the
+ immortal interests of the poor people to whom his attention has been
+ directed, and is pious, zealous and intelligent. He, however, cannot
+ devote himself to this work more than three days per week. He will
+ visit all Gipsy camps for seven or eight miles round.
+
+ "Some clear, forcible, simple, religious tracts, such as are likely
+ to instruct and awaken, with the Scriptures, would, perhaps, be of
+ service. I shall hold out rewards of clothes and books to those of
+ whom I hear the best accounts, and shall endeavour to meet them, a
+ few at a time, in a cottage, at least once per year. Will you let me
+ know whether you think I am doing right?"
+
+_Extracts of a Letter from a man of plain_, _but pious character_,
+_addressed to the Southampton Committee_.
+
+ "Gentlemen,
+
+ "It is natural for me to suppose that you expect, by this period, to
+ hear something of the success that has attended my labours on the
+ common among the people called Gipsies. I visit them three or four
+ times a-week, besides going among them on sabbath days. I go from
+ tent to tent, and talk to them on religious subjects, read and
+ explain the word of God to them, so far as I am able, and pray with
+ them. At such times they thankfully receive what I humbly
+ communicate to them, and often, with tears and gratitude, wonder that
+ I should think of them in their poor degraded state. I hope some of
+ them may be brought to the knowledge of God."
+
+After some other pleasing details, this humble person concludes his
+letter thus:
+
+ "With regard to the children, I meet with here and there _one_ among
+ them that can read, but it is very little. These children, however,
+ are desirous, I may say very desirous to have some little books. To
+ such I have given books, till I have none left. I could have given
+ away, where desired, and with the prospect of knowing they might be
+ useful, many more, had I possessed them. Upon the whole I think
+ there is cause for much encouragement.
+
+ "I am, gentlemen, your humble servant,
+ "* * * * *"
+
+A clergyman, a most valuable correspondent, observes, while addressing
+the Committee, through the author:
+
+ "In speaking to the Gipsies on the road side, and offering a tract, I
+ have never but once met with impertinence. It is probable that the
+ individual had been impertinently treated, first, by people called
+ Christians.
+
+ "Dr More has well said, with respect to the Jews, 'If Christians had
+ believed and acted like Christians, it would have been a miracle if
+ the Jews had not been converted.'
+
+ "This observation is equally applicable to the Gipsies of England;
+ for, if Christian denominations did their duty, they would cease to
+ be Gipsies."
+
+
+
+
+CHAP. XVII. Concluding Remarks.
+
+
+Had the author availed himself of all the facts relating to the addresses
+which have been given in different places by clergymen, home
+missionaries, and other ministers, and published all the letters of an
+interesting nature addressed to himself and the Southampton Committee, in
+reference to the Gipsies, together with the gratitude they have shown for
+such Christian attentions, it might have gratified many readers; but
+these pages would thereby have been increased to too great a number.
+
+But, before concluding this little work, he desires to impress upon the
+reader, the necessity there is of engaging in the great work of the
+conversion of the poor Gipsies.
+
+Why do not all ministers, and all good people unite in it? May we not
+conclude that they do not feel the value of their souls as they ought, if
+they do not perform all that is in their power for this end? Both
+ministers and their congregations are too lukewarm. We are discouraged
+by difficulties under the influence of unbelief, and we often say, How
+can these things be accomplished? Every Christian is called by his
+Saviour to attempt the instruction of his fellow-creatures; and no common
+excuse, such as business, poverty, a want of time, acknowledged
+ignorance, and a want of talent, can justify us in neglecting the attempt
+to speak a word of advice, or reproof, or promise, to our
+fellow-creatures. This is the duty of every Christian, and if done in
+faith, Almighty God will bless the effort.
+
+To the magistrates the author would make a most ardent appeal on behalf
+of the despised members of the Gipsy family. Most respectfully and most
+earnestly does he entreat them to pity their destitute condition, when
+brought before them as vagrants, and from which they have been so often
+made to suffer; for, sooner would the wild creatures of the forest be
+tamed, than those branches of the human family be brought, through
+coercion, to dwell in houses and follow trades, who were born under the
+hedges, and have, through life, made unfrequented solitudes their homes.
+Much better would it be for the magistrates to encourage the education of
+their children, with the view to improve and reform the rising
+generation. The author hopes and prays that they may. _Blessed are the
+merciful_, _for they shall obtain mercy_.
+
+If we all felt the importance and necessity of discharging our Christian
+duties as the sailor and the soldier do in their different stations, no
+difficulties would deter us; but God expects every _Christian_ to do his
+duty. A celebrated commander once called his officers together, and
+said, "We must carry such a garrison." The officers said, "It is
+impossible; the attempt would be vain." The general replied, "It can,
+and must be done, for I have the order in my pocket." Oh! ye ministers
+of Christ! you have the order lying on your table, and in your desks, at
+this moment; read it in the Bible:--_Go ye into the highways and hedges_,
+_and compel them to come in_, _that my house may be filled_. Luke xiv.
+23. The duty is ours: have we done it? Have we done it as opportunities
+have presented themselves? Have we done it as we ought? Yea, more; have
+we sought for opportunities to instruct souls? Our adorable Master did
+so. He came from heaven to earth, to seek and to save them who were
+lost. Private Christians! you also have your order from the high throne
+of heaven, in your houses, perhaps unnoticed; or, it may be, you have not
+rightly interpreted these orders to their full extent. Others may have
+acted the coward's part, and thrown these orders aside. Would a soldier
+or a sailor thus serve his king and country? If you saw your countrymen
+perishing on your shores by shipwreck, or likely to be destroyed by fire,
+would you not be anxious to assist both the virtuous and the wicked?
+Gipsies are perishing around you; hear their cries, ere they are plunged
+into eternity; and attend to these orders from the King of Kings:--
+
+_Thou shalt not avenge_, _nor bear any grudge against the children of thy
+people_; _but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself_. Leviticus, xix.
+18. _The stranger that dwelleth with you shall be as one born amongst
+you_, _and thou shalt love him as thyself_; xxxiv. 5. _Beware of
+hardness of heart toward thy poor brother_. Deut. vii. 15, 9. _Be ye
+therefore __merciful_, _as your Father who is in heaven is merciful_.
+Luke vi. 36. _For he raiseth up the poor out of the dust and lifteth the
+needy out of the dunghill_. Psalm cxiii. 7. _Therefore all things
+whatsoever ye would that men should do to you_, _do ye even so to them_;
+_for this is the law and the prophets_. Matt. vii. 12. _Thou shalt love
+thy neighbour as thyself_. Matt. xix. 19. And who is thy neighbour?
+Read the parable of the Good Samaritan, and _Go and do likewise_. Luke
+x. 15.
+
+The author will finally conclude by observing, that England will have a
+great deal to answer for in reference to the Gipsies of past generations.
+For, from a very moderate calculation that he has made, 150,000 of these
+outcasts have passed into the eternal world, uninformed, unacquainted
+with God, since they came to this country. May the present, and
+succeeding generations, be wiser than the past!
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+Since the GIPSIES' ADVOCATE was put to press, the author, as might
+naturally be expected on a subject so interesting as the conversion of
+the Gipsies, has had many other pleasing communications. From his
+Bristol correspondents he has been favoured with several of delightful
+interest, in reference to a small colony in that neighbourhood; and these
+state that several of the Gipsies not only begin to evidence an aversion
+to their former life, but increase in seriousness, and in habits of
+industry. And happy is he to say, that several influential Christians of
+that city are growing in the interest they manifest to these outcasts of
+society; for they are endeavouring to improve every opportunity of
+affording them instruction. It is with peculiar pleasure too, the author
+learns, that the students of the Baptist Academy of the above-named city,
+are not dead to the affecting necessities of this poor people. Some of
+the students of that academy spent the whole of one day in endeavouring
+to find one of their large encampments, of which they had had some
+previous information, and spent the evening in giving such instruction as
+appeared to them to be the best calculated to enlighten and reform the
+people to whom they were so anxious to do good; some of them occupying
+themselves with the children, and others with the adults. May their
+example have its due influence on surrounding Christians!
+
+The author must not forget to mention here, that he has been apprised by
+the clergyman in Scotland, whose letter forms so interesting a part of
+the ninth chapter, that the account he mentioned to him, as gaining
+insertion in a statistical publication, has not been published, he
+believes, in consequence of the death of the gentleman who had interested
+himself for its insertion in the work referred to; but that he hopes it
+may meet the public eye in a short time.
+
+And now, having redeemed the pledge which he gave his friends about
+twelve months since; having furnished them with a history of the Gipsies,
+such a one as he hopes will be beneficial to the race, whose conduct,
+condition, and necessities it narrates; he will conclude by thanking
+those kind friends who have unintentionally contributed to the interest
+of these pages, and by asking the continuation of their favours, with a
+view to give increasing interest to an intended second edition. He would
+not forget publicly to solicit, likewise, the correspondence of ladies
+and gentlemen who may be in possession of facts or plans likely to
+interest the public towards the Gipsies.
+
+The author now commits these pages to the all-influential blessing of
+God, earnestly praying that these poor, hard-faring wanderers, whose
+character he has endeavoured to delineate, may be speedily rescued from
+their present forlorn condition, and, that they may eventually be
+conducted to the mansions of eternal bliss, where neither storm nor
+tempest shall any longer afflict them, but where they shall join with the
+ransomed of the Lord, in ascribing _blessing_, _and honour_, _and glory_,
+_and power_, _unto him that sitteth upon the throne_, _and unto the Lamb
+for ever and ever_.
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF AUTHORS
+WHO HAVE WRITTEN ON THE GIPSIES.
+
+
+H. M. G. GRELLMAN'S DISSERTATION ON THE GIPSIES. Translated by M.
+Rapier.
+
+HOYLAND'S SURVEY OF THE GIPSIES.
+
+TWISS'S TRAVELS IN SPAIN.
+
+SWINBURNE'S TRAVELS IN ITALY.
+
+DR C. D. CLARK'S TRAVELS IN RUSSIA.
+
+CAPT. DAVID RICHARDSON. Referred to in the seventh volume of _Asiatic
+Researches_.
+
+SIR THOMAS BROWN'S VULGAR ERRORS.
+
+While these are the leading authors, whose works are either composed in,
+or translated into English, it may impress us with the importance by
+which the Gipsies have been viewed, to know, that nearly 200 have written
+about them in other languages.
+
+
+
+
+ERRATA.
+
+
+Page Line
+
+31, 24, _For_ 'would be in a town,' _read_, 'would be in, in a town.'
+
+55, 30, _For_ 'dispatching,' _read_, 'despatching.'
+
+ BAKER AND SON, PRINTERS, SOUTHAMPTON.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+
+{10} See a late account of this Colony in a subsequent page.
+
+{11a} See Hoyland, pages 78, 79, and 80.
+
+{11b} We should not forget that the grace of God can change their hearts
+and morals. The facts contained in this book are very encouraging
+examples of the power of divine grace upon the heart and character of the
+Gipsy people. The reader would do well to turn to the following
+scriptures--Isaiah, XI. 6, 7, 8, 9. 1 Cor. VI. 9, 10, 11.
+
+{12} Children, after grown up to men and women, have an affection for
+their parents somewhat childish. A young Gipsey man known to the author,
+when his mother stays longer from the camp than usual, expresses his
+anxiety for her return, by saying--_Where is my mum_? _I wish my mum
+would come home_.
+
+{14} Some of those Gipsies who have families, and a little property,
+provide themselves with a cart, or waggon, as most convenient for a
+warehouse for their goods, and more comfortable than a tent to dwell in
+during winter.
+
+{16} "Should any be inclined to doubt, which I scarcely suppose
+possible, the identity of the Gipsy or Cingari, and Hindostanee
+languages, still it will be acknowledged as no uninteresting subject,
+that tribes wandering through the mountains of Nubia, or the plains of
+Romania, have conversed for centuries in a dialect precisely similar to
+that spoken at this day, by the obscure, despised, and wretched people in
+England, whose language has been considered as a fabricated gibberish,
+and confounded with a cant in use among thieves and beggars; and whose
+persons have been, till within the period of the last year, an object of
+the persecution, instead of the protection of our laws."--Extract from a
+letter of William Marsden, Esq. addressed to Sir Joseph Banks, F. R. S.,
+and read to the Society of Antiquaries in London, 1785.
+
+{18} "The gentleman spoke dixen to me," said a Gipsy to the Author; that
+is, long hard words.
+
+{28} May not this be a proof of their Hindostanee origin? There is this
+difference, however--the clothes, &c. of the deceased Gipsy, are burnt
+instead of his body!
+
+{45} One Gipsy, I believe, has been convicted of having some stolen
+poultry in his tent; but he had received it from the thief. No other
+fact of the sort has come to my knowledge.
+
+{72} Sold by Seeley, and by Westley and Co, London; Clark, Bristol;
+Binns, Bath; and Lindsay and Co, Edinburgh.
+
+{75} I ought to say perhaps, that though this young and ignorant woman
+ran away, she did not go with any thing that was not her own; for she
+left behind her a bonnet that had been lent her, while she had nothing
+more on her head than a piece of cloth.
+
+{76} The latter was the daughter of the dying Gipsy, an account of whom
+may be seen in the tract numbered 803, and published by the Tract
+Society.
+
+{97} The friends of this good cause at Bristol, now think that manual
+labour is far more conducive to their conversion than hawking any article
+whatever: the above plan is therefore totally abandoned for labour.
+
+{115} A district in East India celebrated for diamonds.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIPSIES' ADVOCATE***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 19852.txt or 19852.zip *******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/8/5/19852
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://www.gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
diff --git a/19852.zip b/19852.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6a3c09e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/19852.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0d8973a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #19852 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/19852)