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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>Christopher Crayon's Recollections, by J. Ewing Ritchie</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Christopher Crayon's Recollections, by J.
+Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+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: Christopher Crayon's Recollections
+ The Life and Times of the late James Ewing Ritchie as told by himself
+
+
+Author: J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+
+Release Date: June 14, 2010 [eBook #32806]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRISTOPHER CRAYON'S
+RECOLLECTIONS***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1898 James Clarke &amp; Co. edition by
+David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p0.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"J. Ewing Ritchie, from a photo by The Parade Studio, Leamington
+Spa"
+title=
+"J. Ewing Ritchie, from a photo by The Parade Studio, Leamington
+Spa"
+src="images/p0.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<h1>CHRISTOPHER CRAYON&rsquo;S<br />
+RECOLLECTIONS:</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>The Life and Times of the
+late</i><br />
+JAMES EWING RITCHIE,<br />
+<i>As told by Himself</i>.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">London:<br />
+<span class="smcap">james clarke &amp; co.</span>, 13 &amp; 14,
+<span class="smcap">fleet street</span>.</p>
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">1898.</p>
+<h2><!-- page i--><a name="pagei"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+i</span>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">chapter</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="smcap">page</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>I.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>East Anglia in 1837</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page3">3</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>II.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>A Life&rsquo;s Memories</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page33">33</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>III.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Village Life</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page51">51</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>IV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Village Sports and Pastimes</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page65">65</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>V.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Out on the World</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page83">83</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>VI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>At College</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page95">95</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>VII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>London Long Ago</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page105">105</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>VIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>My Literary Career</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page127">127</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>IX.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Cardiff and the Welsh</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page151">151</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>X.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>A Great National Movement</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page171">171</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>XI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>The Old London Pulpit</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page185">185</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>XII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Memories of Exeter Hall</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page207">207</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>XIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Men I Have Known</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page217">217</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>XIV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>How I Put Up for M.P.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page229">229</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>XV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>How I was Made a Fool Of</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page241">241</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>XVI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Interviewing the President</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page253">253</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>XVII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>A Bank Gone</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page261">261</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2><!-- page 3--><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+3</span>CHAPTER I.<br />
+<span class="smcap">East Anglia in 1837</span>.</h2>
+<p>In 1837 Lord Melbourne was Prime Minister&mdash;the
+handsomest, the most cultivated, the most courteous gentleman
+that ever figured in a Royal Court.&nbsp; For his young mistress
+he had a loyal love, whilst she, young and inexperienced,
+naturally turned to him as her guide, philosopher and
+friend.&nbsp; The Whigs were in office, but not in power.&nbsp;
+The popular excitement that had carried the Reform Bill had died
+away, and the Ministry had rendered itself especially unpopular
+by a new Poor-Law Bill, a bold, a praiseworthy, a successful
+attempt to deal with the growing demoralisation of the
+agricultural population.&nbsp; Lord Melbourne was at that time
+the only possible Premier.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have no small
+talk,&rdquo; said the Iron Duke, &ldquo;and Peel has no
+manners,&rdquo; and few men had such grace and chivalry as Lord
+Melbourne, then a childless widower in his manhood&rsquo;s
+prime.&nbsp; He swore a good deal, as all fine gentlemen did in
+the early days of Queen Victoria.&nbsp; One day Mr. Denison,
+afterwards Lord Ossington, encountered Lord Melbourne as he was
+about to mount his horse, <!-- page 4--><a name="page4"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 4</span>and called attention to some required
+modification in the new Poor-Law Bill.&nbsp; Lord Melbourne
+referred him to his brother George.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have been with
+him,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;but he damned me, and damned
+the Bill, and damned the paupers.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Well, damn
+it, what more could he do?&rdquo; was the rejoinder.&nbsp; And in
+East Anglia there was a good deal of swearing among the
+gentry.&nbsp; I can remember an ancient peer who had been brought
+up in the Navy, who resided in the Eastern Counties, and who
+somehow or other had been prevailed upon to attend as chairman at
+a meeting of the local Bible Society.&nbsp; I have forgotten the
+greater part of the noble Lord&rsquo;s speech, but I well
+remember how his Lordship not a little shocked some of his
+hearers by finishing up with the remark&mdash;that the Bible
+Society was a damned good Society, and ought to be damned well
+supported.&nbsp; Another noble Lord, of Norfolk, had some fair
+daughters, who distinguished themselves in the hunting field,
+where they had a habit of swearing as terribly as an army in
+Flanders.&nbsp; In this respect we have changed for the better;
+ladies never swear now.</p>
+<p>In politics bribery and corruption and drunkenness everywhere
+prevailed.&nbsp; It was impossible to fight an election with
+clean hands.&nbsp; In 1837 there was an election at Norwich; the
+late Right Hon. W. E. Forster has left us a good account of
+it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Went to the nomination <!-- page 5--><a
+name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>of city
+candidates this morning.&nbsp; The nomination was at eight.&nbsp;
+Went in with the mob into the lower court.&nbsp; Great rush when
+the door was opened.&nbsp; When the Crier demanded attention for
+the reading of the Act against bribery and corruption, he burst
+out laughing at the end, in which he was followed by the Sheriff,
+candidates and almost everybody else.&rdquo;&nbsp; The show of
+hands was, as was generally the case, in favour of the
+Liberal.&nbsp; But on the next day&mdash;that of the
+poll&mdash;the Tories were declared to have the majority.&nbsp;
+All round the polling booths the rioting was great, as men were
+brought up in batches to vote&mdash;each party struggling to
+prevent their being done by the other, and a good deal of
+fighting ensued.&nbsp; Mr. Forster writes:&mdash;&ldquo;About
+nine I sallied forth to take observations.&nbsp; At the Magdalen
+Ward booth I saw some dreadful cases of voting by drunken people,
+both Whig and Tory&mdash;one in which the man could hardly speak,
+and there were two men roaring Smith and Nurse (the names of the
+Whig candidates) in his ears.&nbsp; I went to see all the polling
+places in the course of time.&nbsp; About three I saw some
+furious bludgeon-fighting in Palace Plain, the police taking
+bludgeons from some Tory hired countrymen.&nbsp; The Mayor and
+Sheriff were there.&nbsp; One of the police was badly wounded by
+a bludgeon.&nbsp; The soldiers were sent for, and then the Mayor,
+thinking he could do without them, sent George Everett, the <!--
+page 6--><a name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+6</span>Sheriff&rsquo;s son, a boy, and myself to stop
+them.&nbsp; We very soon met them in the road leading from the
+Plain to the barracks trotting forward with their swords
+drawn.&nbsp; We held up our hands and partially stopped them, but
+the Mayor altered his mind and they came on.&nbsp; The policemen
+had got the better, but the soldiers soon cleared the
+place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The election over&mdash;it is said to have cost
+&pound;40,000&mdash;the triumphant Members were borne in chairs
+on men&rsquo;s shoulders and carried through the streets&mdash;a
+very unpleasant process, as they had to smile and bow to the
+crowd of lookers-on in the streets and in the houses along which
+they passed.&nbsp; The old dragon Snap from St. Andrew&rsquo;s
+Hall figured in the show.&nbsp; Out-voters were brought from
+London and other parts of the country in stage coaches hired for
+the purpose.&nbsp; Every one showed his colour, and every one was
+primed with beer and ready for a row.&nbsp; A General Election
+was a saturnalia of the most blackguard character.&nbsp; In all,
+Norfolk returned twelve Members&mdash;four for the county, the
+Eastern Division sending two Members, the influential landlords
+being Lord Wodehouse, the Earl of Desart and the Marquis of
+Cholmondeley, with an electorate of 4,396.&nbsp; In West Norfolk
+the electors were not so numerous, and the influence was chiefly
+possessed by the Earl of Leicester, Lord Hastings, the Marquis of
+Cholmondeley, Lord <!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 7</span>Charles Townshend and the Marquis of
+that name.&nbsp; In both divisions Conservatives were
+returned.&nbsp; In the Eastern Division of Suffolk, which had its
+headquarters at Ipswich, the electorate returned two
+Members&mdash;Lord Henniker and Sir Charles Broke Vere.&nbsp; The
+leading landlords were the Earl of Stradbroke, the Duke of
+Hamilton, the Marquis of Hertford, the Dysart family, and Sir
+Thomas Gooch.&nbsp; Sir Thomas had represented the county up to
+the time of the Reform Bill; in 1832 Robert Newton Shawe was
+elected.&nbsp; West Suffolk, whose chief electoral town was Bury
+St. Edmund&rsquo;s, returned Tories, under the influence of the
+Marquis of Bristol and other landlords.&nbsp; The boroughs did a
+little better; Bury St. Edmund&rsquo;s returned one Liberal, Lord
+Charles Fitzroy, elected by 289 votes, and Lord Jermyn (C.), who
+polled 277 votes.&nbsp; Colchester, however, a very costly seat
+to gain, was held by the Conservatives.&nbsp; Chelmsford and
+Braintree were the chief polling places of Essex north and south,
+and in both divisions Conservatives were returned.&nbsp; Eye
+rejoiced in its hereditary representative, Sir Edward Kerrison,
+Conservative.&nbsp; It is strange that so small a borough was
+spared by the first Reform Bill.&nbsp; In our time it has been
+very properly disfranchised.&nbsp; Sudbury, a Suffolk borough, a
+little larger, which returned two Conservatives in 1837, was very
+properly disfranchised for bribery in 1844.&nbsp; <!-- page
+8--><a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>Ipswich
+was also supposed to be by no means an immaculate borough.&nbsp;
+Dodd writes concerning it: &ldquo;Money has long been considered
+the best friend in Ipswich, and petitions on the ground of
+bribery, &amp;c., have been frequent.&rdquo;&nbsp; In 1837 it
+returned one Liberal and one Conservative, Milner Gibson, whom
+Sir Thomas Gooch, of Benacre Hall, recommended to the electors as
+a promising Conservative colt.&nbsp; He lived to become M.P. for
+Manchester, to be one of the leaders of the Anti-Corn Law
+Movement, the head of the Society for the Repeal of the Taxes on
+Knowledge, a society which owed a great deal of its success to
+his Parliamentary skill as a tactician, and to be a Member of a
+Liberal Administration.&nbsp; There were few finer,
+manlier-looking men in the House of Commons than Thomas Milner
+Gibson.&nbsp; At any rate, I thought so as I watched him, after
+the delivery of a most effective speech in Drury Lane Theatre on
+the Corn Laws, step into a little ham and beef shop close by for
+a light for his cigar.&nbsp; At that time, let me remind the
+reader, waxlights and matches were unknown.&nbsp; The electoral
+body in Ipswich was not a large one.&nbsp; At the Reform Act
+period it consisted of 1,800.&nbsp; At that time the constituency
+had been increased by adding to the freemen, of whom little more
+than three hundred remained, the ten-pound householders within
+the old borough, which <!-- page 9--><a name="page9"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 9</span>included twelve parishes.&nbsp; It is
+curious to note that, in 1839, Mr. Milner Gibson, who had
+resigned his seat on his becoming a Liberal, was rejected, the
+numbers being&mdash;Sir Thomas Cochrane (Conservative), 621;
+Milner Gibson, 615.&nbsp; Ipswich seems always to have been
+undergoing the excitement of a General Election&mdash;and, it is
+to be feared, enjoying the profits of an election contest, as no
+sooner was an election over than it was declared void&mdash;and a
+new writ was issued.&nbsp; In 1837 Thetford, no longer a
+Parliamentary borough, returned two M.P.&rsquo;s, one
+Conservative and one Liberal.&nbsp; A little more has yet to be
+written relative to smaller East Anglian boroughs.&nbsp; Lynn,
+under the influence of the Duke of Portland, in 1837 returned two
+distinguished men to Parliament: Lord George Bentinck, then a
+great racing man, but who was better known as the leader of the
+Protectionist party, and Sir Stratford Canning, the great Eltchi,
+who was to reign imperiously in the East, and at whose frown
+Turkish Sultans trembled.&nbsp; Maldon returned two
+Conservatives.&nbsp; It has long very properly ceased to exercise
+that privilege.&nbsp; Great Yarmouth, which has now an electorate
+of 7,876, at the General Election in 1837 returned two Liberals,
+but the highest Liberal vote was 790, and the highest Tory vote
+699.&nbsp; Money was the best friend at Yarmouth, as in most
+boroughs.&nbsp; In accounting for the loss of his <!-- page
+10--><a name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>seat
+at Weymouth in 1837, one of our greatest East Anglians, Sir
+Thomas Fowell Buxton, writes:&mdash;&ldquo;My supporters told me
+that it would be necessary to open public-houses, and to lend
+money&mdash;a gentle name for bribery&mdash;to the extent of
+&pound;1,000.&nbsp; I, of course, declined.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yet, as
+a boy, I must own I enjoyed the fun, the excitement, the fighting
+of the old elections, much more than the elections of later
+times.&nbsp; If now and then a skull was cracked, what mattered,
+while the Constitution was saved!</p>
+<p>In the religious world the change in East Anglia has been
+immense; the Church was weak, now it has become strong.&nbsp; In
+most of the villages were good Dissenting congregations, but the
+landlords set their faces against the
+Dissenters&mdash;&ldquo;pograms&rdquo; was what they were
+contemptuously called&mdash;and the landlord&rsquo;s lady had no
+mercy on them.&nbsp; The good things in the hall were only
+reserved for those who attended the parish church.&nbsp; At that
+time we had two bishops; both resided in Norwich.&nbsp; One was
+the Bishop of the Diocese; the other was the Rev. John Alexander,
+who preached in Princes Street Chapel, where the Rev. Dr. Barrett
+has succeeded him&mdash;a man universally beloved and universally
+popular, as he deserved to be.&nbsp; As for the clergy of that
+day, I fear many of them led scandalous lives: there was hardly
+one when I was a boy, within reach of the parish where I was
+born, whom decent women, with any <!-- page 11--><a
+name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>serious
+thoughts at all, could go to hear, and consequently they, with
+their families, went to the nearest Independent Chapel, where it
+was a sight to see the farmers&rsquo; gigs on the green in the
+chapel yard.&nbsp; They go to the Church now, as the clergyman is
+quite as devoted to his high calling and quite as earnest in his
+vocation as his Independent brother.&nbsp; Bishop Bathurst had
+let things slide too much, as was to be expected of a man whose
+great complaint in his old age was that they had sent him a dean
+who could not play whist.&nbsp; Bishop Stanley&rsquo;s wife
+complained to Miss Caroline Fox how trying was her
+husband&rsquo;s position at Norwich, as his predecessor was an
+amiable, indolent old man, who let things take their course, and
+a very bad course they took.&nbsp; It was in his Diocese&mdash;at
+Hadleigh&mdash;the Oxford movement commenced, when in 1833 the
+Vicar, the Rev. James Rose, assembled at the parsonage&mdash;not
+the present handsome building, which is evidently of later
+date&mdash;the men who were to become famous as Tractarians, who
+had met there to consider how to save the Church.&nbsp; It was
+then in danger, as Lord Grey had recommended the Bishops to put
+their house in order.&nbsp; Ten Irish Bishoprics had been
+suppressed; a mob at Bristol had burnt the Bishop&rsquo;s palace;
+and in Norwich the cry had been raised for &ldquo;more pigs and
+less parsons.&rdquo;&nbsp; One of the leaders of the Evangelical
+party resided at Kirkley.&nbsp; The Rev. Francis <!-- page
+12--><a name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+12</span>Cuningham&mdash;afterwards Rector of Lowestoft&mdash;had
+established infant schools, which were then a novelty in East
+Anglia.&nbsp; His wife was one of the Gurneys, of Earlham, a
+great power in Norfolk at that time.&nbsp; Joseph John was well
+known in London philanthropic circles and all over the land,
+especially in connection with the anti-Slavery and Bible
+Societies; and at his house men of all religious parties were
+welcome.&nbsp; At that time, Clarkson, the great anti-Slavery
+advocate, had come to Playford Hall, near Woodbridge, there to
+spend in quiet the remainder of his days.&nbsp; In all East
+Anglian leading towns Nonconformity was very respectable, and its
+leading men were men of influence and usefulness in their
+respective localities.&nbsp; It was even so at Bury St.
+Edmund&rsquo;s in Mr. Dewhurst&rsquo;s time.&nbsp; His son, whom
+I met with in South Australia holding a position in the
+Educational Department, told me how Rowland Hill came to the town
+to preach for his father.&nbsp; As there were no railways the
+great preacher came in his own carriage, and naturally was very
+anxious as to the welfare of his horses.&nbsp; Mr. Dewhurst told
+him that he need have no anxiety on that score, as he had a
+horsedealer a member of his church, who would look after
+them.&nbsp; &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said Rowland Hill, in amazement,
+&ldquo;a horsedealer a member of a Christian Church; whoever
+heard of such a thing?&rdquo;&nbsp; From which I gather that
+Rowland <!-- page 13--><a name="page13"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 13</span>Hill knew more of London horsedealers
+than East Anglian ones.&nbsp; I can well remember that many of
+the old Nonconformist pulpits were filled by men such as Ray of
+Bury St. Edmund&rsquo;s, Creak of Yarmouth, Elvin of Bury
+(Baptist), Notcutt of Ipswich, and Sloper of Beccles, a friend of
+Mrs. Siddons.&nbsp; A great power in Beccles and its
+neighbourhood was the Rev. George Wright, the father of the
+celebrated scholar, Dr. Aldis Wright, of Cambridge, who still
+lives to adorn and enlighten the present age.&nbsp; Some of the
+old Nonconformist chapels were grotesque specimens of rustic
+architecture.&nbsp; This was especially so at Halesworth, which
+had a meeting-house&mdash;as it was then called&mdash;with
+gigantic pillars under the galleries.&nbsp; It was there the Rev.
+John Dennant preached&mdash;the grandfather of the popular Sir
+John Robinson, of <i>The Daily News</i>, a dear old man much
+given to writing poetry, of which, alas! posterity takes no
+heed.&nbsp; The charm of the old Nonconformist places was the
+great square pews, lined with green baize, where on a hot Sunday
+afternoon many a hearer was rewarded with&mdash;I can speak from
+experience&mdash;a delightful snooze.&nbsp; The great exception
+was at Norwich, where there was a fine modern Baptist Chapel,
+known as &ldquo;the fashionable watering-place,&rdquo; where, in
+1837, the late William Brock had just commenced what proved to be
+a highly-successful pastoral career.</p>
+<p><!-- page 14--><a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+14</span>As to the theology of the cottagers in East Anglia at
+that time, I can offer no better illustration of it than that
+given by Miss Caroline Fox of a cottage talk she had somewhere
+near Norwich.&nbsp; She writes, &ldquo;A young woman told us that
+her father was nearly converted, and that a little more teaching
+would complete the business,&rdquo; adding &ldquo;He quite
+believes that he is lost, which, of course, is a great
+consolation to the old man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Literature flourished in East Anglia in 1837.&nbsp; Bulwer
+Lytton, an East Anglian by birth and breeding, had just published
+&ldquo;Paul Clifford,&rdquo; and was about to commence a new and
+better style of novel.&nbsp; Norwich had long been celebrated for
+its Literary Society, and one of the most remarkable of the
+literary men of the age was George Borrow, author of the
+&ldquo;Bible in Spain,&rdquo; the materials for which he was then
+collecting, and who spent much of his life in East Anglia, where
+he was born.&nbsp; He was five years in Spain during the
+disturbed early years of Isabella II., and he travelled in every
+part of Castile and Leon, as well as the southern part of the
+Peninsula and Northern Portugal.&nbsp; Again and again his
+adventurous habits brought him into danger among brigands and
+Carlists, as well as Roman Catholic priests, and he experienced a
+brief imprisonment in Madrid.&nbsp; At Norwich also was then
+living Mrs. Opie&mdash;as a Quakeress&mdash;after having spent
+the greater part <!-- page 15--><a name="page15"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 15</span>of her life in London gaiety.&nbsp; A
+lady who met her in Brussels says she spoke with much enthusiasm
+of the eminent artists, who, in her part of the
+world&mdash;videlicet, the Eastern Counties&mdash;had become men
+of mark.&nbsp; Of her husband, who had been dead many years, she
+said playfully that if neither Suffolk nor Norfolk could boast of
+the honour of being his birthplace, he had done his best to
+remedy the evil by marrying a Norwich woman.&nbsp; At Reydon
+Hall, rather a tumble-down old place, as I recollect it, lived
+the Stricklands, and of the six daughters of the house five were
+literary women more or less successful.&nbsp; Of these the best
+known was Agnes, author of &ldquo;The Lives of the Queens of
+England,&rdquo; which owed much of its success to being published
+just after the Princess Victoria had become Queen of England.</p>
+<p>It was amusing to hear her talk, in her somewhat affected and
+stilted style, of politics.&nbsp; She was a Jacobin, and hated
+all Dissenters, whom she sneered at as Roundheads.&nbsp; With
+modern ideas she and her sisters had no sympathy whatever.&nbsp;
+There never was such an antediluvian family.&nbsp; All of them
+were very long-lived, and must have bitterly bewailed the
+progress of Democracy and Dissent.&nbsp; I question whether the
+&ldquo;Lives of the Queens of England&rdquo; has many readers
+now.&nbsp; Near Woodbridge, as rector of Benhall, lived the Rev.
+J. Mitford, an <!-- page 16--><a name="page16"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 16</span>active literary man, the editor of
+<i>The Gentleman&rsquo;s Magazine</i>, and of some of the
+standard works known as Pickering&rsquo;s Classics.&nbsp; As a
+clergyman he was a failure.&nbsp; It was urged in his defence, by
+his friends, that his profession had been chosen for him by
+others, and that when it was too late for him to escape from the
+bonds which held him in thrall he made the discovery that the
+life that lay before him was utterly uncongenial to his tastes
+and habits.&nbsp; His life, when in Suffolk, writes Mrs. Houston,
+author of &ldquo;A Woman&rsquo;s Memories of World-known
+Men,&rdquo; must have been a very solitary one.&nbsp; For causes
+which I have never heard explained, his wife had long left him,
+and his only son was not on speaking terms with the Rector of
+Benhall.&nbsp; In his small lodgings on the second floor in
+Sloane Street, he was doubtless a far happier man than, in spite
+of his well-loved garden and extensive library at Benhall
+Rectory, he ever, in his country home, professed to be.&nbsp; But
+perhaps the most notable East Anglian author at the time was
+Isaac Taylor, of Ongar, whose books&mdash;&ldquo;The Natural
+History of Enthusiasm&rdquo; and &ldquo;The Physical Theory of
+Another Life&rdquo;&mdash;were most popular, and one of which, at
+any rate, had been noticed in <i>The Edinburgh Review</i>.&nbsp;
+In a private letter to the editor, Sir James Stephen describes
+Taylor &ldquo;as a very considerable man, with but small
+inventive but very great diffusive <!-- page 17--><a
+name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>powers,
+possessing a considerable mastery of language, but very apt to be
+over-mastered by it&mdash;too fine a writer to write very well;
+too fastidious a censor to judge men and things equitably; too
+much afraid of falling into cant and vulgarity to rise to freedom
+and ease; an over-polished Dissenter, a little ashamed of his
+origin among that body; but, with all this, a man of vigorous and
+catholic understanding, of eminent purity of mind, happy in
+himself and in all manner of innocent pleasure, and strenuously
+devoted to the grand but impracticable task of grafting on the
+intellectual democracy of our own times the literary aristocracy
+of the days that are passed.&rdquo;&nbsp; Quite a different man
+was dear old Bernard Barton, the Quaker poet, of Woodbridge, with
+whom I dined once, who was more fat than bard beseems, and who
+seemed to me to enjoy a good dinner, a glass of port&mdash;people
+could drink port in those days&mdash;and a pinch of snuff, quite
+as much as any literary talk.&nbsp; Poor Bernard never set the
+Thames on fire&mdash;he would have been shocked at the thought of
+doing anything so wicked; but he was a good man, and quite
+competent to shine in &ldquo;Fulcher&rsquo;s Pocket Book,&rdquo;
+a work published yearly by Fulcher, of Bury St. Edmund&rsquo;s,
+and much better than any of its contemporaries.</p>
+<p>In connection with this subject let me quote from Bernard
+Barton a sketch of a Suffolk yeoman, <!-- page 18--><a
+name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>very rare in
+these times: &ldquo;He was a hearty old yeoman of about
+eighty-six, and occupied the farm in which he lived and died,
+about fifty-five years.&nbsp; Sociable, hospitable, friendly; a
+liberal master to his labourers, a kind neighbour, and a right
+merry companion within the limits of becoming mirth; in politics
+a staunch Whig; in his theological creed as sturdy a Dissenter;
+yet with no more party spirit in him than a child.&nbsp; He and I
+belonged to the same book club for about forty years.&nbsp; He
+entered it about fifteen years before I came into these parts,
+and was really a pillar in our literary temple, not that he
+greatly cared about books or was deeply read in them, but he
+loved to meet his neighbours and get them round him on any
+occasion or no occasion at all.&nbsp; As a fine specimen of the
+true English yeoman I have met few to equal, hardly any to
+surpass him, and he looked the character as well as he acted it,
+till within a very few years, when the strong man was bowed with
+infirmity.&nbsp; About twenty-six years ago, in his dress costume
+of a blue coat and yellow buckskins, a finer sample of John
+Bullism you would rarely see.&nbsp; It was the whole study of his
+long life to make the few who revolved about him in his little
+orbit as happy as he always seemed to be himself; yet I was
+gravely queried with, when I happened to say that his children
+had asked me to write a few lines to his memory, whether <!--
+page 19--><a name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+19</span>I could do so in keeping with the general tenor of my
+poetry.&nbsp; The speaker doubted if he was a decidedly pious
+character.&nbsp; He had at times been known in his altitudes to
+vociferate at the top of his voice a song, the chorus of which
+was not certainly teetotalish:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>Sing, old Rose, and burn the bellows,<br />
+Drink and drive dull care away.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Can anything be finer than this picture of a Suffolk
+yeoman?&nbsp; Is it not a pity that such men are no more to be
+seen?&nbsp; High farming was unknown when the old Suffolk yeoman
+lived.&nbsp; I claim for Bernard Barton that this sketch of the
+Suffolk yeoman is the best thing he ever wrote.&nbsp; Bernard
+Barton&rsquo;s daughter married the great Oriental scholar,
+Edward Fitzgerald, the friend of Carlyle and correspondent of
+Fanny Kemble, who lived in the neighbourhood of Woodbridge, and
+whose fame now he is no more is far greater than when he
+lived.&nbsp; Little could he have anticipated that in after years
+literary men would assemble in the quiet churchyard of Boulge to
+erect his monument over his grave, or to found a society to
+perpetuate his name.</p>
+<p>As I lean back for another glance, my eyes, as Wordsworth
+writes, are filled with childish tears&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>My heart is idly stirred.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I see the dear old village where I was born, <!-- page 20--><a
+name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>almost
+encroaching on Sir Thomas Gooch&rsquo;s park, at Benacre Hall; I
+see the old baronet, a fine old bigoted Tory, who looked the
+picture of health and happiness, as he ambled past on his
+chestnut cob, wearing a blue coat, a white hat and trousers, in
+summer; his only regret being that things were not as they
+were&mdash;his only consolation the fact that, wisely, the
+Eternal Providence that overrules all human affairs had provided
+snug rectories for his kith and kin, however unworthy of the
+sacred calling; and had hung up the sun, moon and stars so high
+in the heavens that no reforming ass</p>
+<blockquote><p>Could e&rsquo;er presume to pluck them down, and
+light the world with gas.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Then comes the village medico, healthy and shrewd and kindly,
+with a firm belief&mdash;alas! that day is gone now&mdash;in
+black draught and blue pill.&nbsp; I see his six sunny daughters
+racing down the village street, guarded by a dragon of a
+governess, and I get out of their way, for I am a rustic, and
+have all the rustic&rsquo;s fear of what the East Anglian peasant
+was used to term &ldquo;morthers&rdquo;; and then comes the
+squire of the next parish, in as shabby a trap as you ever set
+eyes on, and the fat farmer, who hails me for a walk, and going
+to the end of a field, joyously, or as joyously as his sluggish
+nature will permit, exclaims, &ldquo;There, Master James, <!--
+page 21--><a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+21</span>now you can see three farms.&rdquo;&nbsp; My friend was
+a utilitarian, and could only see the beautiful in the
+useful.&nbsp; Then I call up the memory of the village grocer, a
+stern, unbending Radical, who delights me with the loan of
+Cruikshank&rsquo;s illustrations to the &ldquo;House that Jack
+Built,&rdquo; mysteriously wrapped in brown paper and stowed away
+between the sugar and treacle.&nbsp; He does not talk much, but
+he thinks the more.&nbsp; And now it strikes me that conversation
+was not much cultivated in the villages of East Anglia in 1837,
+and yet there were splendid exceptions&mdash;on such evenings as
+when the members of the Book Club met in our parlour, where the
+best tea things were laid, and where a kindly mother in black
+silk and white shawl and quakerish cap made tea; where an
+honoured father, who now sleeps far away from the scene of his
+life-long labours, indulged in a genial humour, which set at ease
+the shyest of his guests; and again, what a splendid talk there
+was when the brethren in black from Beccles, from Yarmouth, from
+Halesworth, gathered for fraternal purposes, perhaps once a
+quarter, to smoke long pipes, to discuss metaphysics and
+politics, and to puzzle their heads over divines and systems that
+have long ceased to perplex the world.&nbsp; Few and simple were
+East Anglian annals then.&nbsp; It was seldom the London coach,
+the Yarmouth Mail and Telegraph brought a cockney down to
+astonish <!-- page 22--><a name="page22"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 22</span>us with his pert ways and peculiar
+talk.&nbsp; Life was slow, but it was kindly, nevertheless.&nbsp;
+There was no fear of bacteria, nor of poison in the pot, nor of
+the ills of bad drainage.&nbsp; We were poor, but honest.&nbsp;
+Are we better now?</p>
+<p>In 1837 the railways which unite the country under the title
+of the Great Eastern had not come into existence.</p>
+<p>All is changed in East Anglia except the boys.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You have seen a good many changes in your time,&rdquo;
+said the young curate to the old village clerk.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;everything is changed
+except the boys, and they&rsquo;re allus the same.&rdquo;&nbsp; I
+fear the boys are as troublesome as ever&mdash;perhaps a little
+more so now, when you cannot touch them with a stick, which any
+one might do years ago.&nbsp; When we caught a boy up to mischief
+a stick did a deal of good in the good old times that are gone
+never to return.</p>
+<p>In connection with literature one naturally turns to the
+Bungay Printing Press, at the head of which was John Childs, who
+assembled round his hospitable board at Bungay many celebrated
+people, and to whom at a later period Daniel O&rsquo;Connell paid
+a visit.&nbsp; It was Childs who gave to the poor student cheap
+editions of standard works such as Burke and Gibbon and
+Bacon.&nbsp; It was he who went to Ipswich Gaol rather than pay
+Church Rates.&nbsp; It was he who was one of the first to attack
+the Bible printing monopoly, and thus to flood the land with
+cheap <!-- page 23--><a name="page23"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 23</span>Bibles and Testaments.&nbsp; A
+self-made man, almost Napoleonic in appearance, with a habit of
+blurting out sharp cynicisms and original epigrams, rather than
+conversing.&nbsp; He was a great phrenologist, and I well
+remember how I, a raw lad, rather trembled in his presence as I
+saw his dark, keen eyes directed towards that part of my person
+where the brains are supposed to be.&nbsp; I imagine the result
+was favourable, as at a later time I spent many a pleasant hour
+in his dining-room, gathering wisdom from his after-dinner talk,
+and inspiration from his port&mdash;as good as that immortalised
+by Tennyson.&nbsp; Mr. Childs had a numerous and handsome family,
+most of whom died after arriving at manhood.&nbsp; His daughter,
+who to great personal charms added much of her father&rsquo;s
+intellect, did not live long after her marriage, leaving one son,
+a leading partner in the great City firm of solicitors, Ashurst,
+Morris, and Crisp.&nbsp; After John Childs, of Bungay, I may
+mention another East Anglian&mdash;D. Whittle Harvey, who was a
+power in his party and among the London cabbies&mdash;to whom the
+London cabby owes his badge V.R.&mdash;which, as one of them
+sagely remarked, was supposed to signify &ldquo;Whittle
+&rsquo;Arvey,&rdquo; an etymology at any rate not worse than that
+of the savant who in his wisdom derived gherkin from Jeremiah
+King.&nbsp; In 1837 Mr. Johnson Fox, born at Uggeshall, near
+Wangford&mdash;better <!-- page 24--><a name="page24"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 24</span>known afterwards as the Norwich
+&ldquo;Weaver Boy,&rdquo; the &ldquo;Publicola&rdquo; of <i>The
+Weekly Dispatch</i>&mdash;the great orator of the Anti-Corn Law
+League, was preaching in the Unitarian Chapel, South Place,
+Finsbury, and a leading man in London literary society.&nbsp; One
+of the best-known men in East Anglia was Allan Ransome, of
+Ipswich, the young Quaker, who was on very friendly terms with
+the Strickland family, who cultivated literature and business
+with equal zest.&nbsp; Nor, in this category, should I pass over
+the name of George Bird, of Yoxford, a local chemist, who found
+time to write of Dunwich Castle and such-like East Anglian
+themes&mdash;I fancy now read by none.&nbsp; A Suffolk man who
+was making his mark in London at that time was Crabbe Robinson,
+the pioneer of the special correspondent of our later day.&nbsp;
+And just when Queen Victoria began to reign, Thomas Woolner, the
+poet-sculptor, was leaving his native town of Hadleigh to begin
+life as the pupil of Boehm, sculptor in ordinary to the
+Queen.&nbsp; And yet East Anglia was by no means distinguished,
+or held to be of much account in the gay circles of wit and
+fashion in town.&nbsp; The gentry were but little better than
+those drawn to the life in the novels of Fielding and
+Smollett.&nbsp; I am inclined to think there was very little
+reading outside Dissenting circles&mdash;where the book club was
+a standing institution, and <i>The Edinburgh Review</i> <!-- page
+25--><a name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>was
+looked up to as an oracle, as indeed it was, sixty years
+ago.&nbsp; There was little encouragement of manly sports and
+pastimes&mdash;indeed, very little for any one in the way of
+amusement but at the public-house.&nbsp; Not that any one was
+ever drunk, in the liberal opinion of the landlord of the
+public-house, only &ldquo;a little fresh,&rdquo; and the village
+policeman was unknown.&nbsp; It is true there might be a
+constable, but he was a very mythical person indeed.&nbsp;
+Everybody drank, and as a rule the poorer people were the more
+they drank.</p>
+<p>One of the early temperance lecturers in the district, Mr.
+Thomas Whittaker, who was mobbed, especially at Framlingham,
+tells us Essex and Suffolk are clayey soils, in some districts
+very heavy and not easily broken up, and the people in many cases
+correspond.&nbsp; It was due to Mr. Marriage, of Chelmsford, a
+maltster, who turned his malting house into a temperance hall,
+and Mr. D. Alexander, of Ipswich, that the temperance reformers
+made way; and at that time James Larner, of Framlingham, aided by
+young Mr. Thompson (now the great London surgeon, Sir Henry
+Thompson), was quite a power.&nbsp; But the difficulties were
+great in the way of finding places for meetings, or of getting to
+them in muddy lanes, or of getting the anti-teetotalers to behave
+decently, or of the lecturers finding accommodation for the
+night.&nbsp; Education would <!-- page 26--><a
+name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 26</span>have been
+left almost alone, had not the Liberals started the British and
+Foreign schools, which roused the Church party to action.&nbsp;
+The one village schoolmaster with whom I came into contact
+was&mdash;as were most of his class&mdash;one who had seen better
+days, who wore top boots, and whose chief instrument in teaching
+the young idea how to shoot was a ruler, of which he seemed to me
+to take rather an unfair advantage.&nbsp; The people were
+ignorant, and, like Lord Melbourne, did not see much good in
+making a fuss about education.&nbsp; They could rarely read or
+write, and if they could there was nothing for them to
+read&mdash;no cheap books nor cheap magazines and
+newspapers.&nbsp; Now we have run to the other extreme, and it is
+to be hoped we are all the better.&nbsp; Cottages were mostly in
+an unsanitary state, but the labourer, in his white smock, looked
+well on a Sunday at the village church or chapel, and the
+children at the Sunday-school were clean, if a little restless
+under the long, dry sermon which they were compelled to hear, the
+caretaker being generally provided with a long stick to admonish
+the thoughtless, to wake up the sleepy, to prevent too much
+indulgence in apples during sermon time, or too liberal a display
+of the miscellaneous treasures concealed in a boy&rsquo;s
+pocket.&nbsp; Perhaps the most influential person in the village
+was the gamekeeper, who was supposed to be armed, and to have the
+power of <!-- page 27--><a name="page27"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 27</span>committing all boys in undue
+eagerness to go bird-nesting to the nearest gaol.&nbsp; He was to
+me, I own, a terror by night and by day, as he was constantly in
+my way&mdash;when tempted to break into the neighbouring park in
+search of flowers or eggs.&nbsp; The farmer then, as now, was
+ruined, but he was a picture of health and comfort as he drove to
+the nearest market town, where after business he would spend the
+evening smoking and drinking, with his broad beaver on his head,
+his fat carcase ornamented with a blue coat with brass buttons,
+and his knee breeches of yellow kerseymere.&nbsp; It was little
+he read to wake up his sluggish intellect, save the county
+newspaper, which it was the habit for people to take between them
+to lessen the expense.&nbsp; A newspaper was sevenpence, of which
+fourpence went to pay for the stamp.&nbsp; Everything was
+dear&mdash;the postage of a letter was 10d. or 1s.&nbsp; The
+franking of letters by Members of Parliament existed at that
+time; they could receive an unlimited number of letters free of
+postage, of any weight, even a pianoforte, a saddle, a haunch of
+venison, and they might send out fourteen a day.&nbsp; Loaf sugar
+was too dear to be in daily use; tea and coffee were heavily
+taxed; soap was too dear to use; and wearing apparel and boots
+and shoes very expensive; even if you went for a drive there was
+the turnpike gate, and a heavy toll to pay.&nbsp; As to
+geography, it was a science utterly <!-- page 28--><a
+name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+28</span>unknown.&nbsp; Poor people when they talked of the
+Midland Counties called them the Shires, and I have heard serious
+disputes as to whether you got to America by sea or land.&nbsp;
+The finest men in East Anglia were the sailors at the various
+sea-ports along the coast, well-shaped, fair-haired, with grand
+limbs and blue eyes, evidently of Saxon or Norse descent, and
+their daughters were as handsome as any girls I ever saw.&nbsp;
+The peasant had his little bit of garden, where he could keep a
+pig and grow a few vegetables and flowers, but much of the
+furniture was of the poorest description, much inferior to what
+it is now, and his lot was not a happy one.&nbsp; As to
+locomotion, it did not exist.&nbsp; To go a few miles from home
+was quite an event; on the main roads ran coaches, with two, or
+three, or four horses, but the general mode of conveyance was the
+carrier&rsquo;s cart, sometimes drawn by one horse and sometimes
+by two.&nbsp; Some of the happiest days of my life were spent in
+the carrier&rsquo;s cart, where the travellers were seated on the
+luggage, their feet well protected by straw, where we were all
+hail fellows well met, and each enjoyed his little joke,
+especially when the rural intellect was stimulated by beer and
+baccy.&nbsp; The old village inn where we stopped to water the
+horses and refresh the inner man seemed to me all the more
+respectable when compared with the pestiferous beershops that had
+then begun to infest the land, to <!-- page 29--><a
+name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>increase the
+crime, the misery, the pauperism of a district which already had
+quite enough of them before.</p>
+<p>But to return to locomotion.&nbsp; A post-chaise was generally
+resorted to when the gentry travelled.&nbsp; It was painted
+yellow and black, and on one of the two horses by which it was
+drawn was seated an ancient, withered old man, generally known as
+the post-boy, whose age might be anywhere between forty and
+eighty, dressed in a jockey costume, in white hat and top boots;
+altogether, a bent, grotesque figure whom Tennyson must have had
+in his eye when he wrote&mdash;for the post-boy was often as not
+an ostler&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>Wrinkled ostler, grim and thin,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Here is custom come your way;<br />
+Take my brute and lead him in,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Stuff his ribs with mouldy hay.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2><!-- page 33--><a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+33</span>CHAPTER II.<br />
+<span class="smcap">A life&rsquo;s memories</span>.</h2>
+<p>Long, long before John Forster wrote to recommend everyone to
+write memoirs of himself it had become the fashion to do
+so.&nbsp; &ldquo;That celebrated orator,&rdquo; writes Dr. Edmund
+Calamy, one of the most learned of our Nonconformist divines,
+&ldquo;Caius Cornelius Tacitus, in the beginning of his account
+of the life of his father-in-law, Julius Agricola (who was the
+General of Domitian, the Emperor, here in Britain, and the first
+who made the Roman part of Britain a Pr&aelig;sidial province),
+excuses this practice from carrying in it anything of
+arrogance.&rdquo;&nbsp; This excellent example was followed by
+Julius C&aelig;sar, Marcus Antoninus, many emperors who kept
+diaries, Flavius Josephus, St. Gregory of Nazianzen, St.
+Augustine, to say nothing of Abraham Schultetus, the celebrated
+professor at Heidelberg; of the learned Fuetius; of Basompierre,
+the celebrated marshal of France; of the ever-amusing and
+garrulous Montaigne; or of our own Richard Baxter, or of Edmund
+Calamy himself.&nbsp; The fact is, it has ever been the <!-- page
+34--><a name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+34</span>fashion with men who have handled the pen freely to
+write more or less about themselves and the times in which they
+lived, and there is no pleasanter reading than such biographical
+recollections; and really it matters little whether on the
+world&rsquo;s stage the actor acted high tragedy or low comedy so
+that he writes truthfully as far as he can about himself and his
+times.&nbsp; If old Montaigne is to be believed there is nothing
+like writing about oneself.&nbsp; &ldquo;I dare,&rdquo; he
+writes, &ldquo;not only speak of myself, but of myself
+alone,&rdquo; and never man handled better the very satisfactory
+theme.&nbsp; If I follow in the steps of my betters I can do no
+harm, and I may do good if I can show how the England of to-day
+is changed for the better since I first began to observe that
+working men and women are better off, that our middle and upper
+classes have clearer views of duty and responsibility, that we
+are the better for the political and social and religious reforms
+that have been achieved of late, that, in fact,</p>
+<blockquote><p>. . . through the ages one increasing purpose
+runs,<br />
+And the thoughts of men are widened with the process of the
+suns.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The one great complaint I have to make with respect to my
+father and mother, to whom I owe so much, and whose memory I
+shall ever revere, was that they brought me into the world forty
+or fifty years too soon.&nbsp; In 1820, when I first saw the
+light of day, England was <!-- page 35--><a
+name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 35</span>in a very
+poor way.&nbsp; It was what the late Earl of Derby used to call
+the pre-scientific era.&nbsp; Gross darkness covered the
+land.&nbsp; The excitement of war was over, and the lavish outlay
+it occasioned being stopped, life was stagnant, farmers and
+manufacturers alike were at low-water mark, and the social and
+religious and political reforms required by the times were as yet
+undreamed of.&nbsp; However, one good thing my parents did for
+me.&nbsp; They lived in a country village in the extreme east of
+Suffolk, not far from the sea, where I could lead a natural life,
+where I could grow healthy, if not wise, and be familiar with all
+the impulses which spring up in the heart under the influences of
+rural life.&nbsp; &ldquo;Boyhood in the country,&rdquo; writes
+William Howitt in his autobiography&mdash;&ldquo;Paradise of
+opening existence!&nbsp; Up to the age of ten this life was all
+my own.&rdquo;&nbsp; And thus it was with me.&nbsp; Existence was
+a pleasure, and the weather, I believe, was better then than it
+is now.&nbsp; We had summer in summer time.&nbsp; We had fine
+weather when harvest commenced, and to spend a day at one of the
+neighbouring farmers riding the fore horse was a delight which
+thrilled me with joy; and winter, with its sliding and
+snowballing, with its clear skies and its glittering snows,
+rendering the landscape lovelier than ever, made me forget the
+inevitable chilblains, which was the price we had to pay for all
+its glories and its charms.</p>
+<p><!-- page 36--><a name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+36</span>Our little village was situated on the high road between
+London and Great Yarmouth, along which rolled twice a day the
+London and Yarmouth Royal Mail, drawn by four horses, and driven
+by a fat man in red, whom we raw village lads regarded as a very
+superior person indeed.&nbsp; Behind sat the guard, also in red,
+with a horn, which he blew lustily when occasion required.&nbsp;
+There was a time, but that was much later, when a day coach was
+put on, and, as it changed horses at our village inn, one of our
+chief delights was to see the tired, heated, smoking horses taken
+out, and their places filled by a new set, much given to kicking
+and plunging at starting, to the immense delight of the juvenile
+spectators.&nbsp; Even the passengers I regarded with awe.&nbsp;
+In fourteen hours would they not be in London where the King
+lived&mdash;where were the Houses of Parliament, the Bank and the
+Tower and the soldiers?&nbsp; What would I not have given to be
+on that roof urging on, under the midnight stars, my wild
+career!&nbsp; Now and then a passenger would be dropped in our
+little village.&nbsp; What a nine days&rsquo; wonder he was,
+especially if he were a Cockney and talked in the language of
+Cockaigne&mdash;if he had heard the Iron Duke, or seen royalty
+from afar.&nbsp; Nonconformity flourished in the village in spite
+of the fact that the neighbouring baronet, at the gates of whose
+park the village may be said to have <!-- page 37--><a
+name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 37</span>commenced,
+was Sir Thomas Gooch&mdash;(Guche was the way the villagers
+pronounced his dread name)&mdash;for was he not a county
+magistrate, who could consign people to Beccles Gaol, some eight
+miles off, and one of the M.P.&rsquo;s for the county, and did
+not he and his lady sternly set their faces against
+Dissent?&nbsp; If now and then there were coals and blankets to
+be distributed&mdash;and very little was done in that way,
+charity had not become fashionable then&mdash;you may be sure
+that no Dissenter, however needy and deserving, came in for a
+share.</p>
+<p>The churches round were mostly filled by the baronet&rsquo;s
+relatives, who came into possession of the family livings as a
+matter of course, and took little thought for the souls of their
+parishioners.&nbsp; In fact, very few people did go to
+church.&nbsp; In our chapel, of which my father was the minister
+for nearly forty years, we had a good congregation, especially of
+an afternoon, when the farmers with their families, in carts or
+gigs, put in an appearance.&nbsp; One of the ejected had been the
+founder of Nonconformity in our village, and its traditions were
+all of the most honourable character.&nbsp; A wealthy family had
+lived in the hall, which Sir Thomas Gooch had bought and pulled
+down, one of whom had been M.P. for the county in
+Cromwell&rsquo;s time, and had left a small
+endowment&mdash;besides, there was a house for the
+minister&mdash;to perpetuate the cause, and it was <!-- page
+38--><a name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+38</span>something amidst the B&oelig;otian darkness all round to
+have a man of superior intellect, of a fair amount of learning,
+of unspotted life, of devoted piety, such as the old
+Nonconformist ministers were, ever seeking to lead the people
+upward and onward; while the neighbouring gentry and all the
+parsons round, I am sorry to say, set the people a very bad
+example.&nbsp; In our time we have changed all that, and the
+Church clergy are as zealous to do good as the clergy of any
+other denomination.&nbsp; But that things have altered so much
+for the better, I hold is mainly due to the great progress made
+all over the land by Dissent, which woke up the Church from the
+state of sloth and luxury and lethargy which had jeopardised its
+very existence.&nbsp; Really, at the time of which I write and in
+the particular locality to which I refer, decent godly people
+were obliged to forsake the Parish Church, and to seek in the
+neighbouring conventicle the aids requisite to a religious
+life.&nbsp; At the same time, there was little collision between
+Church and Dissent.&nbsp; The latter had its own sphere,
+supporting, in addition to its local work, the Bible Society, the
+Tract Society, the London Missionary Society, and the
+Anti-Slavery Society.&nbsp; It had also its Sunday-school, very
+much inferior to what they are now; and, if possible, secured a
+day school on the British and Foreign plan.&nbsp; Dissenters paid
+Church rates, which the wealthy Churchmen <!-- page 39--><a
+name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 39</span>were not
+ashamed to collect.&nbsp; They gave the parson his tithes without
+a murmur, and politically they were all on the side of the Whigs,
+to whom they were indebted for the repeal of the Test and
+Corporation Acts&mdash;barbarous laws&mdash;which had ostracised
+intelligent and conscientious Dissenters from all parochial and
+municipal and Parliamentary life.&nbsp; When I was a boy no one
+could be a parish constable without going through the hideous
+farce of taking the Sacrament at his Parish Church.&nbsp; It was
+the Dissenters who created the public opinion which enabled Sir
+Robert Peel and the Iron Duke to grant Roman Catholic
+emancipation.&nbsp; It was they who carried reform and abolished
+rotten boroughs, and gave Manchester and Sheffield and Birmingham
+the representatives which the Tories, and especially the parsons,
+would have denied them.&nbsp; To be a reformer was held by the
+clergy and gentry to be a rogue and rascal of the first
+rank.&nbsp; I cannot call to mind any public action taken in
+support of the suffering and the poor to which the clergy and the
+gentry in our village, or in any of the villages round, lent any
+support whatever.&nbsp; As regards the great Anti-Slavery
+agitation, for instance, the only meeting on the subject was held
+in our chapel, where a Captain Pilkington came down from London
+to lecture, and touched all our hearts as he showed the lash and
+the chains, and the other instruments <!-- page 40--><a
+name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>of torture
+which that cruel system sanctioned and required, and you may be
+quite sure that when next day I, with boyish pride, pardonable
+under the circumstances, was sent round to get signatures for a
+petition to Parliament on the subject, it was not long before I
+got my paper filled.&nbsp; Naturally the Dissenters were active
+in the work, for had not one of their number&mdash;poor Smith,
+missionary at Demerara&mdash;been foully murdered by Demerara
+magistrates and planters because he took the part of the black
+slave against his white owner and tyrant?&nbsp; Yet I was
+disgusted, after remembering the effect produced in our Suffolk
+village by the captain&rsquo;s eloquence, to read thirty years
+after in Sir George Stephens&rsquo;s &ldquo;Anti-Slavery
+Recollections,&rdquo; that &ldquo;Pilkington was a pleasing
+lecturer, and won over many by his amiable manners, but that he
+wanted power, and resigned the duty in about six
+months.&rdquo;&nbsp; In our simple village it was enough for us
+that a lecturer or speaker came from London; or as the country
+people called it Lunnen.&nbsp; That was a sufficient guarantee
+for us of his talent, his respectability, and his power.&nbsp;
+Since then the scales have fallen even from the eyes of the
+rustic, and he no longer sees men as trees walking.&nbsp;
+Railways have rendered the journey to London perilously
+easy.&nbsp; Hodge, in the vain hope to better himself, has left
+his village home, its clear skies, its bracing <!-- page 41--><a
+name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>air, its
+healthy toil, its simple hours, and gone to live in the crowded
+slums.&nbsp; It may be that he earns better wages, but you may
+buy gold too dear.&nbsp; A healthy rustic is far happier in his
+village.&nbsp; It is there he should strive to live, rather than
+in the town; and a time may come when English legislators will
+have wisdom enough to do something to plant the people on the
+land, rather than compel them to come to town, to be poisoned by
+its bad air, its dangerous companionship, and its evil ways.</p>
+<p>As regards intelligence, we were in a poor way.&nbsp; On
+Saturdays <i>The Suffolk Chronicle</i> appeared, much to the
+delight of the Radicals, while the Tories were cheered by <i>The
+Ipswich Journal</i>.&nbsp; At a later time <i>The Patriot</i>
+came to our house, and we got an idea of what was going on in the
+religious and Dissenting world.&nbsp; Foster&rsquo;s Essays were
+to be seen on many shelves, and later on the literary and
+religious speculations of Isaac Taylor, of Ongar, and
+Dick&rsquo;s writings had also a wonderful sale.&nbsp; I fancy no
+one cares much now for any of the writers I have named.&nbsp;
+Such is fame!</p>
+<p>As a boy it seemed to me I had too much of the
+Assembly&rsquo;s Catechism and Virgil, to whose poetic beauties I
+was somewhat blind.&nbsp; I resolved to run away, as I fancied
+there was something better and brighter than village life.&nbsp;
+Religion was not attractive <!-- page 42--><a
+name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>to me.&nbsp;
+Sunday was irksome.&nbsp; The land was barren, from Dan to
+Beersheba.&nbsp; I longed for the conflict and excitement and
+life of the distant town, and I ran away unconscious of the pain
+I should inflict on parents I dearly loved.&nbsp; Oh, that
+running away!&nbsp; If I live&mdash;and there is little chance of
+that&mdash;to the age of Methuselah I shall never forget
+it!&nbsp; It took place in the early morn of a long
+summer&rsquo;s day.&nbsp; The whole scene rises distinctly before
+me.&nbsp; I see myself giving a note to my sister for father and
+mother when they came down to breakfast, I see myself casting an
+eye to the bedroom window to see if there was any chance of their
+being up and so stopping the enterprise on which I had set my
+mind.&nbsp; Happily, as I thought, the blinds were down and there
+was nothing to forbid my opening the garden gate and finding
+myself on the London road.&nbsp; I was anxious to be off and yet
+loth to leave.&nbsp; I had a small parcel under my arm,
+consisting of very small belongings; and I was free of Latin and
+the Assembly Catechism, free as the air&mdash;my own
+master.&nbsp; All the world was hushed in slumber.&nbsp; There
+was no one to stop me or bid me return to the roof where I had
+been happy, and to the parents whom I was to return to, to love
+more than I had ever done before, and whom it then saddened me to
+think that I might never see again.&nbsp; Not a soul was in the
+street, and the few shops which adorned <!-- page 43--><a
+name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>it were shut
+up&mdash;cottagers and shopkeepers, they were all in the arms of
+Morpheus.&nbsp; I hastened on, not wishing to be seen by any one;
+but there was no fear of that, only cows, horses at grass, and
+pigs and hens and birds were conscious of my flight, and they
+regarded me with the indifference with which a Hottentot would
+view an ape.&nbsp; In my path was a hill on which I stayed awhile
+to take a last look at the deserted village.&nbsp; The white
+smoke was then curling up from the chimneys and the common round
+of daily life was about to begin.&nbsp; How peaceful it all
+seemed.&nbsp; What a contrast to my beating heart!&nbsp; There
+was not one of those cottages behind into which I had not been
+with my father as he visited the poor and the afflicted&mdash;not
+a lane or street along which I had not trundled my hoop with
+boyish glee&mdash;not a meadow into which I had not gone in
+search of buttercups and cowslips and primroses or bird&rsquo;s
+nests.&nbsp; I only met one man I knew, the miller, as he came
+from the mill where he had been at work all night, and of him I
+stood somewhat in awe, for once when the mill was being robbed he
+had sat up alone in darkness in the mill till the robbers came
+in, when he looked, through a hole in the upper floor, as they
+were at their wicked work below, and had thus identified them;
+and I had seen them in a cart on their way to Beccles gaol.&nbsp;
+Perhaps, thought I, he <!-- page 44--><a name="page44"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 44</span>will stop me and ask me what I am
+about; but he did nothing of the kind, and henceforth the way was
+clear for me to London, where I was to fight the battle of
+life.&nbsp; Did I not write poetry, and did not I know ladies who
+were paid a guinea a page for writing for the Annuals, and could
+not I do the same?&nbsp; And thus thinking I walked three miles
+till I came to a small beershop, where I had a biscuit and a
+glass of beer.&nbsp; The road from thence was new to me, and how
+I revelled in the stateliness of the trees as I passed a
+nobleman&rsquo;s (Earl Stradbrooke&rsquo;s) mansion and
+park.&nbsp; In another hour or so I found myself at Yoxford, then
+and still known as the Garden of Suffolk.&nbsp; There lived a Mr.
+Bird, a Suffolk poet of some note in his day.&nbsp; On him I
+called.&nbsp; He gave me a cordial welcome, kept me to dinner,
+and set me to play with his children.&nbsp; Alas! Yoxford was to
+me what Capua was to Hannibal&mdash;I got no further; in fact, my
+father traced me to the house, and I had nothing for it but to
+abandon my London expedition and return home.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t
+think I was very sorry that my heroic enterprise had thus
+miscarried.&nbsp; What annoyed me most was that I was sent home
+in an open cart, and as we got into the street all the women came
+to their doors to see Master James brought back.&nbsp; I did not
+like being thus paraded as a show.&nbsp; I found my way to the
+little attic in which I slept, not quite so <!-- page 45--><a
+name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>much of a
+hero as I had felt myself in the early morn.</p>
+<p>It was a stirring time.&nbsp; The nation was being stirred, as
+it was never before or since, with the struggle for Reform.&nbsp;
+The excitement reached us in our out-of-the-way village.&nbsp; We
+were all Whigs, all bursting with hope.&nbsp; Yet some of the
+respectable people who feared Sir Thomas Gooch were rather
+alarmed by my father&rsquo;s determination to vote against
+him&mdash;the sitting Member&mdash;and to support the Liberal
+candidate.&nbsp; People do not read Parliamentary debates
+now.&nbsp; They did then, and not a line was skipped.&nbsp; I was
+a Radical.&nbsp; An old grocer in the village had lent me
+Hone&rsquo;s &ldquo;House that Jack Built,&rdquo; and similar
+pamphlets, all illustrated by Cruikshank.&nbsp; My eyes were
+opened, and I had but a poor opinion of royalty and the Tory
+Ministers and the place men and parasites and other creeping
+vermin that infest courts.&nbsp; It is impossible to believe
+anything more rotten than that glorious Constitution which the
+Tories told us was the palladium of our liberties, the glory of
+our country, and the envy of surrounding nations.&nbsp; The
+Ministry for the time being existed by bribery and
+corruption.&nbsp; The M.P. bought his seat and sold his vote; the
+free and independent electors did the same.&nbsp; The boroughs
+were almost entirely rotten and for sale in consequence of the
+complicated state of <!-- page 46--><a name="page46"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 46</span>voting in them, and especially in
+those incorporated by charter.&nbsp; In one borough the right was
+acquired by birth, in another by servitude, in another by
+purchase, in a fourth by gift, in a fifth by marriage.&nbsp; In
+some these rights were exercised by residents, in others by
+non-residents; in one place by the mayor or bailiff and twelve
+aldermen only, as at Buckingham, Malmesbury, &amp;c.; in another
+by eight aldermen or ten or twelve burgesses, as at Bath,
+Andover, Tiverton, Banbury, &amp;c.; in another by a small number
+of burgesses&mdash;three or four or five, as at Rye, Winchelsea,
+Romney, &amp;c.&nbsp; As to what was called long ago tenure in
+boroughs there was no end to its absurdity.&nbsp; At Midhurst the
+right was in the possession of a hundred stones erected in an
+open field; at Old Sarum it was in the remaining part of the
+possession of a demolished castle; at Westbury in a long
+wall.&nbsp; In many other places it was in the possession of
+half-a-score or a dozen old thatched cottages, the conveyances to
+which were made on the morning of election to a few trusty
+friends or dependents, who held a farcical election, and then
+returned them to the proprietor as soon as the business was
+finished.&nbsp; In the little borough of Aldeburgh, where Crabbe
+was born, the number of electors was eighty, all the property of
+a private individual; at Dunwich, a little further on the coast,
+the number of voters was twelve; at Bury St. <!-- page 47--><a
+name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>Edmunds the
+number of voters was thirty-seven; another little insignificant
+village on the same coast was Orford, where the right of election
+was in a corporation of twenty individuals, composed of the
+family and dependents of the Marquis of Hertford.&nbsp; No wonder
+the popular fury swept away the rotten boroughs, and no wonder
+that the long struggle for reform ended in the triumph, not so
+much of the people, as the middle-class.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 51--><a name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+51</span>CHAPTER III.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Village Life</span>.</h2>
+<p>In recalling old times let me begin with the weather, a matter
+of supreme importance in country life&mdash;the first thing of
+which an Englishman speaks, the last thing he thinks of as he
+retires to rest.&nbsp; When I was a boy we had undoubtedly finer
+weather than we have now.&nbsp; There was more sunshine and less
+rain.&nbsp; In spring the air was balmy, and the flowers fair to
+look on.&nbsp; When summer came what joy there was in the
+hayfield, and how sweet the smell of the new-mown hay!&nbsp; As
+autumn advanced how pleasant it was to watch the fruit ripening,
+and the cornfields waving, far as the eye could reach, with the
+golden grain!&nbsp; People always seemed gay and happy
+then&mdash;the rosy-cheeked squire, the stout old farmer with his
+knee-breeches and blue coat with brass buttons, and Hodge in his
+smock-frock, white as the driven snow, on Sunday, when he went
+now to his parish church, or more generally to the meeting-house,
+where he heard sermons that suited him better, and where the
+musical part of the service, by means of flute and bass violin
+<!-- page 52--><a name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+52</span>and clarionet, was ever a gratification and
+delight.&nbsp; And even winter had its charms in the shape of
+sliding and skating under a clear blue sky&mdash;all the trees
+and hedges everywhere decked out with diamonds, ever sparkling in
+the rays of an unclouded sun.&nbsp; We were all glad when the
+snow came and covered the earth with a robe of white.&nbsp; We
+were glad when it went away, and the birds began to build their
+nests, and the plougher went forth to turn up the soil, which had
+a fragrant savour after the wet and snow of winter, and the sower
+went forth to sow, while the rooks cawed in the morning air as
+they followed like an army in search of worms and whatever else
+they could feed on, and the graceful swallow, under the eaves of
+the old thatched cottage, built her clay nest, and lined it
+carefully for the reception of the little ones that were to
+come.&nbsp; They were always welcome, for in the opinion of the
+villagers they brought good luck.&nbsp; Abroad in the meadows
+there were the white woolly lambs, always at their gambols, and
+leaping all over the meadows.</p>
+<p>It was a great happiness to be born in a village.&nbsp; Our
+village was rather a pretty one.&nbsp; Afar off we heard the
+murmurs and smelt the salt air of the distant sea, and that was
+something.&nbsp; There were no beerhouses then, and, alas! few
+attractions to keep raw village <!-- page 53--><a
+name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>lads under
+good influence.&nbsp; My father, as I have said, was a Dissenting
+minister, painful, godly and laborious, ever seeking the
+spiritual welfare of his people, and relieving as far as possible
+their temporal wants.&nbsp; I had to accompany him in his
+pastoral visits, sometimes an irksome task, as the poor were
+numerous and garrulous, and made the most on such occasions of
+the infirmities of their lot.&nbsp; Some of the old ones were so
+worn and withered that their weird faces often haunted me by
+night and terrified me in my dreams.</p>
+<p>Another thing that gave me trouble was the fact of being a
+Dissenter.&nbsp; It seemed to me a badge of inferiority, as the
+ignorant farmers and tradesmen around made Nonconformity the
+subject of deprecating remarks.&nbsp; &ldquo;Dissenters were
+sly,&rdquo; said the son of the village shopkeeper, the only boy
+of my age in the village, whose father was the most servile of
+men himself to the parochial dignitaries, and I felt that, as a
+Dissenter, I was under a cloud.&nbsp; It was the fashion to call
+us &ldquo;Pograms,&rdquo; and the word&mdash;no one knew what it
+meant&mdash;had rather an unpleasant sound to my youthful
+ears.&nbsp; This I knew, that most of the leading men of the
+place went to church when they went anywhere, and not to our
+meeting-house, where, however, we had good congregations.&nbsp;
+Many of our people were farmers <!-- page 54--><a
+name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 54</span>who came from
+a distance for the afternoon service, and at whose homes when the
+time came I had many a happy day going out ferreting in the
+winter and in the autumn riding on the fore-horse.&nbsp; As the
+harvest was being gathered in, how proud was I to ride that
+fore-horse, though I lost a good deal of leather in consequence,
+and how welcome the night&rsquo;s rest after tumbling about in
+the waggon in the harvest field.&nbsp; Happily did the morning of
+my life pass away amidst rural scenes and sights.&nbsp; It is a
+great privilege to be born in the country.&nbsp; Childhood in the
+city loses much of its zest.&nbsp; Yet I had my dark
+moments.&nbsp; I had often to walk through a small wood, where,
+according to the village boys, flying serpents were to be seen,
+and in the dark nights I often listened with fear and trembling
+to the talk of the villagers of wretched miscreants who were to
+be met with at such times with pitch-plaster, by means of which
+they took away many a boy&rsquo;s life for the sake of selling
+his dead body to the doctor for the purposes of dissection.&nbsp;
+But the winter night had its consolations nevertheless.&nbsp; We
+had the stories of English history by Maria Hack and other light
+literature to read.&nbsp; We had dissecting maps to put together,
+and thus acquire a knowledge of geography.&nbsp; And there was a
+wonderful game invented by a French <i>abb&eacute;</i>, which was
+played in connection with a teetotum and a <!-- page 55--><a
+name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 55</span>map of
+England and Wales, the benefits of which even at this distance of
+time I gratefully record.&nbsp; It is true cards were looked upon
+as sinful, but we had chess and draughts.&nbsp; Later on we had
+<i>The Penny Magazine</i>, and <i>Chambers&rsquo;s Journal</i>,
+and <i>The Edinburgh Review</i>, which had to me all the
+fascination of a novel.&nbsp; We had also <i>The Evangelical
+Magazine</i> and <i>The Youth&rsquo;s Companion</i>, a magazine
+which, I believe, has long ceased to exist, and the volumes with
+illustrations of the Society for Diffusion of Useful and
+Entertaining Knowledge, and we had the book club meetings, when
+it was the fashion for the members to take tea at each
+other&rsquo;s homes, and propose books, and once a year meet to
+sell the old ones by auction.&nbsp; My father shone on such
+occasions.&nbsp; He was a good talker, as times
+went&mdash;conversation not being much of a gift among the
+members of the club, save when the ladies cheered us with their
+presence.&nbsp; As a Scotchman he had a good share of the dry
+humour of his nation.&nbsp; But chiefly did he shine when the
+brethren met.&nbsp; Foremost of the party were Sloper of Beccles,
+who had talked on things spiritual with Mrs. Siddons, Crisp of
+Lowestoft, Blaikie of Bungay, Longley of Southwold, and others,
+who discussed theology and metaphysics all the evening, till
+their heads were as cloudy as the tobacco-impregnated room in
+which they sat.&nbsp; At all these gatherings Alexander Creak of
+Yarmouth was a principal <!-- page 56--><a
+name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 56</span>figure; a
+fine, tall, stately man, minister of a congregation supposed to
+be of a very superior class.&nbsp; One of his sons, I believe,
+still lives in Norfolk.&nbsp; As to the rest they have left only
+their memories, and those are growing dimmer and fainter every
+year.</p>
+<p>At that time amongst the brethren who occasionally dawned upon
+our benighted village were Mayhew of Walpole, good old Mr.
+Dennant of Halesworth (of whom I chiefly remember that he was a
+bit of a poet, and that he was the author of a couplet which
+delighted me as a boy&mdash;and delights me
+still&mdash;&ldquo;Awhile ago when I was nought, and neither
+body, soul nor thought&rdquo;), and Mr. Ward of Stowmarket, who
+was supposed to be a very learned man indeed, and Mr. Hickman of
+Denton, whose library bespoke an erudition rare in those
+times.&nbsp; Most of them had sons.&nbsp; Few of them, however,
+became distinguished in after life; few of them, indeed, followed
+their fathers&rsquo; steps as ministers.&nbsp; One of the Creaks
+did, and became a tutor, I think, at Spring Hill College,
+Birmingham; but the fact is few of them were trained for contest
+and success in the world.&nbsp; As regards myself, I own I was
+led to think a great deal more of the next world than of
+this.&nbsp; We had too much religion.&nbsp; God made man to rule
+the world and conquer it, to fight a temporal as well as
+spiritual battle, to be diligent in business, whilst at the same
+time fervent in spirit, <!-- page 57--><a name="page57"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 57</span>serving the Lord.&nbsp; What I
+chiefly remember was that I was to try and be good, though at the
+same time it was awfully impressed upon me that of myself I could
+think no good thought nor do one good thing; that I was born
+utterly depraved, and that if I were ever saved&mdash;a fact I
+rather doubted&mdash;it was because my salvation had been decreed
+in the councils of heaven before the world was.&nbsp; Naturally
+my religion was of fear rather than of love.&nbsp; It seems to me
+that lads thus trained, as far as my experience goes, never did
+turn out well, unless they were namby-pamby creatures, milksops,
+in fact, rather than men.&nbsp; I have lived to see a great
+change for the better in this respect, and a corresponding
+improvement of the young man of the day.&nbsp; It may be that he
+is less sentimental; but his religion, when he has any, is of a
+manlier type.&nbsp; I never saw a copy of Shakespeare till I was
+a young man.&nbsp; As a child, my memory had been exercised in
+learning passages from Milton, the hardest chapters in the Old or
+New Testament, and the Assembly Catechism.&nbsp; If that Assembly
+Catechism had never been written I should have been happier as a
+child, and wiser and more useful as a man.&nbsp; I have led an
+erratic life; I have wandered far from the fold.&nbsp; At one
+time I looked on myself as an outcast.&nbsp; With the Old
+Psalmist&mdash;with brave Oliver Cromwell&mdash;with generations
+of tried souls, I had to sing, <!-- page 58--><a
+name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>as Scotch
+Presbyterians, I believe, in Northern kirks still
+sing:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>Woe&rsquo;s me that I in Meshec am<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A sojourner so long,<br />
+Or that I in the tents do dwell<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To Kedar that belong.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Yet nothing was simpler or more beautiful than the lives of
+those old Noncons.; I may say so from a wide experience.&nbsp;
+They were godly men, a striking contrast to the hunting,
+drinking, swearing parsons of the surrounding district.&nbsp;
+Hence their power in the pulpit, their success in the
+ministry.&nbsp; But they failed to understand childhood and
+youth; childhood, with its delight in things that are seen and
+temporal, and youth with its passionate longing to burst its
+conventional barriers, and to revel in the world which looks so
+fair, and of which it has heard such evil.&nbsp; Ah, these
+children of many prayers; how few of them came to be pious; how
+many of them fell, some, alas, to rise no more.&nbsp; One reason
+was that if you did not see your way to become a church member
+and a professor of religion you were cut off, or felt inwardly
+that you were cut off, which is much the same thing, and had to
+associate with men of loose lives and looser thoughts.&nbsp;
+There was no <i>via media</i>; you were either a saint or a
+sinner, of the church or the world.&nbsp; It is not so now, when
+even every Young Men&rsquo;s Christian Association has its
+gymnasium, and the young <!-- page 59--><a
+name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>man&rsquo;s
+passions are soothed by temperance and exercise and not inflated
+by drink.&nbsp; There may not be so much of early piety as there
+was&mdash;though of that I am not sure.&nbsp; There is a great
+deal more of religion than there was, not so much of sensational
+enjoyment or of doctrinal discussion perhaps, but more practical
+religion in all the various walks of life.</p>
+<p>We had to teach in the Sunday-school.&nbsp; My services were
+early utilised in that direction, for the village was badly
+supplied with the stuff of which teachers were made, and as the
+parson&rsquo;s son I was supposed to have an ex-officio
+qualification for the task.&nbsp; I fear I was but a poor hand in
+the work of teaching the young idea how to shoot, especially when
+that idea was developed in the bodies of great hulking fellows,
+my seniors in years and superiors in size.&nbsp; However, one of
+them did turn out well.&nbsp; Many years after he recognised me
+in the Gray&rsquo;s Inn Road, London, where he had made money as
+a builder, and where, though he never learned to
+read&mdash;perhaps that was my fault&mdash;he figured for a time
+largely on the walls as the Protestant churchwarden.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You know, sir,&rdquo; he said to me, &ldquo;how poor we
+all were at W&mdash;&rdquo; (the father, I fear, was a drunkard),
+&ldquo;Well, I came to London, resolving to be either a man or a
+mouse&rdquo;; and here he was, as respectable-looking a man as
+any you could see, thus proving what I hold to be the truth, that
+in this <!-- page 60--><a name="page60"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 60</span>land of ours, however deep in the
+mire a man may be, he may rise, if he has the requisite power of
+work and endurance and self-denial.&nbsp; I fear he did not much
+profit by our Sunday-school, though he told me he had put it down
+in his will for a small legacy.&nbsp; Our chief man was a
+shoemaker named Roberts, who sat with the boys under the pulpit
+in face of all the people; the girls, with the modesty of the
+sex, retiring to the back seats of the gallery.&nbsp; In his hand
+he bore a long wand, and woe to the unfortunate lad who fell
+asleep while the sermon was going on, or endeavoured to relieve
+the tedium of it by eating apples, sucking sweets, or revealing
+to his fellows the miscellaneous treasures of his pocket in the
+shape of marbles or string or knife.&nbsp; On such an offender
+down came the avenging stroke, swift as lightning and almost as
+sharp.&nbsp; As to general education, there was no attempt to
+give it.&nbsp; Later on, the Dissenters raised enough money to
+build a day-school, and then the Churchmen were stirred up to do
+the same.&nbsp; There was a school, kept by an irritable,
+red-faced old party in knee-breeches, who had failed in business,
+where I and most of the farmers&rsquo; sons of the village went;
+but I can&rsquo;t say that any of us made much progress, and I
+did better when I was taken back to the home and educated, my
+father hearing my Latin and Greek as he smoked his pipe, while my
+mother&mdash;a very <!-- page 61--><a name="page61"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 61</span>superior woman, with a great taste
+for literature and art&mdash;acted as teacher, while she was at
+work painting, after the duties of housekeeping were over.&nbsp;
+I ought to have been a better boy.&nbsp; But there were two great
+drawbacks&mdash;one, the absence of all emulation, which too
+often means the loss of all worldly success; the other, the
+painful and useless effort to be good.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 65--><a name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+65</span>CHAPTER IV.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Village Sports and Pastimes</span>.</h2>
+<p>It was wonderful the utter stagnation of the village.&nbsp;
+The chapel was the only centre of intellectual life; next to that
+was the alehouse, whither some of the conscript fathers repaired
+to get a sight of the county paper, to learn the state of the
+markets, and at times to drink more ale than was good for
+them.&nbsp; About ten I had my first experience of death.&nbsp; I
+had lost an aged grandmother, but I was young, and it made little
+impression on me, except the funeral sermon&mdash;preached by my
+father to an overflowing congregation&mdash;which still lives in
+my recollections of a dim and distant past.&nbsp; I was a small
+boy.&nbsp; I was laid up with chilblains and had to be carried
+into the chapel; and altogether the excitement of the occasion
+was pleasing rather than the reverse.&nbsp; But the next who fell
+a victim was a young girl&mdash;whom I thought
+beautiful&mdash;who was the daughter of a miller who attended our
+chapel, and with whom I was on friendly terms.&nbsp; On the day
+of her funeral her little brothers and sisters came to our house
+to be out of the way.&nbsp; But I could <!-- page 66--><a
+name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 66</span>not play with
+them, as I was trying to realise the figure I thought so graceful
+lying in the grave&mdash;to be eaten of worms, to turn to
+clay.&nbsp; But I shuddered as I thought of what we so often
+say:</p>
+<blockquote><p>There are no acts of mercy past<br />
+In the cold grave to which we haste,<br />
+But darkness, death, and long despair<br />
+Reign in eternal silence there.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I was sick at heart&mdash;I am sick at heart now&mdash;as I
+recall the sad day, though more than seventy years have rolled
+over my head since then.</p>
+<p>I have spoken of the excitement of the Reform struggle.&nbsp;
+It was to most of us a time of fear.&nbsp; A mob was coming from
+Yarmouth to attack Benacre Hall, and then what would become of
+Sir Thomas &ldquo;Guche&rdquo;?&nbsp; But older heads began to
+think that the nation would survive the blow, even if Benacre
+Hall were burnt and Sir Thomas &ldquo;Guche&rdquo; had to hide
+his diminished head.&nbsp; As it happened, we did lose Sir
+Thomas&rsquo;s services.&nbsp; He was thrown out for Suffolk, and
+Mr. Robert Newton Shaw, a Whig, reigned in his stead.&nbsp; How
+delighted we all were!&nbsp; Now had come the golden age, and the
+millennium was at hand.&nbsp; Pensioners and place men were no
+longer to fatten on the earnings of a suffering people, Radical
+politicians even looked forward to the time when the parson would
+lose his tithes.</p>
+<p><!-- page 67--><a name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+67</span>The villagers rarely left the village; they got work at
+the neighbouring farms, and if they did not, they did not do so
+badly under the old Poor Laws, which paid a premium to the
+manufacturers of large families.&nbsp; The cottages were
+miserable hovels then, as they mostly are, and charity had full
+scope for exercise, especially at Christmas time, when those who
+went to the parish church were taught the blessedness of serving
+God and mammon.&nbsp; At one time the dear old chapel would hold
+all the meetingers; but soon came sectarian divisions and
+animosities.&nbsp; There was a great Baptist preacher at Beccles
+of the name of Wright, and of a Sunday some of our people walked
+eight miles to hear him, and came back more sure that they were
+the elect than ever, and more contemptuous of the poor blinded
+creatures who, to use a term much in common then, sat under my
+father.&nbsp; Now and then the Ranters got hold of a barn, and
+then there was another secession.&nbsp; Perhaps we had too much
+theological disputation.&nbsp; I think we had; but then there was
+nothing else to think about.&nbsp; The people had no cheap
+newspapers, and if they had they could not have read them, and so
+they saw signs and had visions, and told how the Lord had
+converted them by visible manifestations of His presence and
+power.&nbsp; Well, they were happy, and they needed somewhat to
+make them happy amidst the abounding poverty and <!-- page
+68--><a name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+68</span>desolation of their lives.&nbsp; By means of a
+vehicle&mdash;called a whiskey&mdash;which was drawn by a mule or
+a pony, as chance might determine, the family of which I was a
+member occasionally visited Southwold, prettier than it is now,
+or Lowestoft, which had no port, merely a long row of houses
+climbing up to the cliff; or Beccles, then supposed to be a very
+genteel town, and where there was a ladies&rsquo; boarding
+school; or to Bungay, where John Childs, a sturdy opponent in
+later years of Church rates and Bible monopoly, carried on a
+large printing business for the London publishers, and cultivated
+politics and phrenology.&nbsp; It was a grand outing for us
+all.&nbsp; Sometimes we got as far as Halesworth, where they had
+a Primitive meeting-house with great pillars, behind which the
+sleeper might sweetly dream till the fiddles sounded and the
+singing commenced.&nbsp; But as to long journeys they were rarely
+taken.&nbsp; If one did one had to go by coach, and there was
+sure to be an accident.&nbsp; Our village doctor who, with his
+half-dozen daughters, attended our chapel, did once take a
+journey, and met with a fall that, had his skull been not so
+thick, might have led to a serious catastrophe.&nbsp; Then there
+was Brother Hickman, of Denton, a dear, good man who never
+stirred from the parish.&nbsp; Once in an evil hour he went a
+journey on a stage coach, which was upset, and the consequence
+was a long and dangerous illness.&nbsp; If home-keeping <!-- page
+69--><a name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+69</span>youths have ever homely wits, what homeliness of wit we
+must have had.&nbsp; But now and then great people found their
+way to us, such as Edward Taylor, Gresham Professor of Music, who
+had a little property in the village, which gave him a vote, and
+before the Reform Bill was carried elections were elections, and
+we knew it, for did not four-horse coaches at all times, with
+flags flowing and trumpets blowing, drive through with outvoters
+for Yarmouth, collected at the candidates&rsquo; expense from all
+parts of the kingdom?&nbsp; In the summer, too, we had another
+excitement in the shape of the fish vans&mdash;light four-wheel
+waggons, drawn by two horses&mdash;which raced all the way from
+Lowestoft or Yarmouth to London.&nbsp; They were built of green
+rails, and filled up with hampers of mackerel, to be delivered
+fresh on the London market.&nbsp; They only had one seat, and
+that was the driver&rsquo;s.&nbsp; At the right time of year they
+were always on the road going up full, returning empty, and they
+travelled a good deal faster than the Royal mail.&nbsp; They were
+an ever-present danger to old topers crawling home from the
+village ale-house, and to dirty little boys playing marbles or
+making mud pies in the street.&nbsp; Of course, there was no
+policeman to clear the way.&nbsp; Policemen did not come into
+fashion till long after; but we had the gamekeeper.&nbsp; How I
+feared him as he caught me bird-nesting at an early hour in the
+<!-- page 70--><a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+70</span>Park, and sent me home with a heavy heart as he
+threatened me with Beccles gaol.</p>
+<p>In the winter I used to go out rabbiting.&nbsp; A young farmer
+in our neighbourhood was fond of the sport, and would often take
+me out with him, not to participate in the sport, but simply to
+look on.&nbsp; It might be that a friend or two would bring his
+gun and dog, and join in the pastime, which, at any rate, had
+this advantage as far as I was personally concerned, that it gave
+me a thundering appetite.&nbsp; The ferrets which one of the
+attendants always carried in a bag had a peculiar fascination for
+me, with their long fur, their white, shiny teeth, their little
+sparkling black eyes.&nbsp; The ferret is popped into the hole in
+which the rabbit is hidden.&nbsp; Poor little animal, he is
+between the devil and the deep sea.&nbsp; He waits in his hole
+till he can stand it no longer, but there is no way of escape for
+him out.&nbsp; There are the men, with their guns and the dogs
+eager for the fun.&nbsp; Ah! it is soon over, and this is often
+the way of the world.</p>
+<p>To us in that Suffolk village the sports of big schools and
+more ambitious lads were unknown.&nbsp; For us there was no
+cricket or football, except on rare occasions, when we had an
+importation of juveniles in the house, but I don&rsquo;t know
+that we were much the better for that.&nbsp; We trundled the
+hoop, and raced one with another, and that is capital
+exercise.&nbsp; We <!-- page 71--><a name="page71"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 71</span>played hopscotch, which is good
+training for the calves of the legs.&nbsp; We had bows and arrows
+and stilts, and in the autumn&mdash;when we could get into the
+fields&mdash;we built and flew kites, kites which we had to make
+ourselves.&nbsp; If there was an ancient sandpit in the
+neighbourhood how we loved to explore its depths, and climb its
+heights, and in the freshness of the early spring what a joy it
+was to explore the hedges, or the trees of the neighbouring park,
+when the gamekeepers happened to be out of sight in search of
+birds&rsquo; nests and eggs; and in the long winter evenings what
+a delight it was to read of the past, though it was in the dry
+pages of Rollin, or to glow over the poems of Cowper.&nbsp; We
+were, it is true, a serious family.&nbsp; We had family
+prayers.&nbsp; No wine but that known as gingerbeer honoured the
+paternal hospitable board.&nbsp; Grog I never saw in any
+shape.&nbsp; A bit of gingerbread and a glass of water formed our
+evening meal.&nbsp; Oh, at Christmas what games we had of
+snap-dragon and blind man&rsquo;s buff.&nbsp; I always felt small
+when a boy from Cockneydom appeared amongst us, and that I hold
+to be the chief drawback of such a bringing up as ours was.&nbsp;
+The battle of life is best fought by the cheeky.&nbsp; It does
+not do to be too humble and retiring.&nbsp; Baron Trench owned to
+a too great consciousness of innate worth.&nbsp; It gave him, he
+writes, a too great degree of pride.&nbsp; That is bad, but not
+so bad as <!-- page 72--><a name="page72"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 72</span>the reverse&mdash;that feeling of
+humility which withers up all the noblest aspirations of the
+soul, and which I possessed partly from religion, and partly from
+the feeling that, as a Dissenter, I was a social Pariah in the
+eyes of the generation around.&nbsp; My modesty, I own, has been
+in my way all through life.&nbsp; The world takes a man at his
+own valuation.&nbsp; It is too busy to examine each particular
+claim, and the prize is won by him who most loudly and
+pertinaciously blows his own trumpet.&nbsp; At any rate, in our
+Suffolk home we enjoyed</p>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lively cheer
+of vigour born;<br />
+The thoughtless day&mdash;the easy night&mdash;<br />
+The spirits pure&mdash;the slumbers light&mdash;<br />
+That fly the approach of morn.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The one drawback was the long-drawn darkness of the winter
+night.&nbsp; I slept in an old attic in an old house, where every
+creak on the stairs, when the wind was roaring all round, gave me
+a stroke of pain, and where ghastly faces came to me in the dark
+of old women haggard and hideous and woebegone.&nbsp; De Quincy
+hints in his numerous writings at boyish times of a similar
+kind.&nbsp; I fancy most of us in boyhood are tortured in a
+similar way.&nbsp; Fuseli supped on pork chops to procure fitting
+subjects for his weird sketches.&nbsp; But we never had pork
+chops; yet in the visions of the night what awful faces I
+saw&mdash;almost enough to turn one&rsquo;s brain and to make
+one&rsquo;s <!-- page 73--><a name="page73"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 73</span>hair stand on end like quills upon
+the fretful porcupine.</p>
+<p>Country villages are always fifty years behind the times, and
+so it was with us.&nbsp; In the farmyard there was no steam
+engine, and all the work was done by manual labour, such as
+threshing the corn with the flail.&nbsp; In many families the
+only light was that of the rushlight, often home made.&nbsp;
+Lucifer matches were unknown, and we had to get a light by means
+of a flint and tinder, which ignited the brimstone match, always
+in readiness.&nbsp; Cheap ready-made clothes were unknown, and
+the poor mother had a good deal of tailoring to do.&nbsp; In the
+cottage there was little to read save the cheap publications of
+the Religious Tract Society, and the voluminous writings of the
+excellent Hannah More, teaching the lower orders to fear God and
+honour the king, and not to meddle with those that were given to
+change.&nbsp; Her &ldquo;C&oelig;lebs in Search of a Wife&rdquo;
+was the only novel that ever found its way into religious
+circles&mdash;with the exception of &ldquo;Robinson Crusoe&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;The Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress,&rdquo; and that was
+awfully illustrated.&nbsp; Anybody who talked of the rights of
+man at that time was little better than one of the wicked.&nbsp;
+One of Hannah More&rsquo;s characters, Mr. Fantom, is thus
+described:&mdash;&ldquo;He prated about <i>narrowness</i> and
+<i>ignorance</i> (the derisive italics are Hannah&rsquo;s own),
+and <i>bigotry</i> and <i>prejudice</i> and <!-- page 74--><a
+name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 74</span>priestcraft
+on the one hand, and on the other of <i>public good</i>, the
+<i>love of mankind</i>, and <i>liberality</i> and <i>candour</i>,
+and above all of benevolence.&rdquo;&nbsp; Dear Hannah made her
+hero, of course, come to a shocking end, and so does his servant
+William, who as he lies in Chelmsford gaol to be hung for murder
+confesses, &ldquo;I was bred up in the fear of God, and lived
+with credit in many sober families in which I was a faithful
+servant, till, being tempted by a little higher wages, I left a
+good place to go and live with Mr. Fantom, who, however, never
+made good his fine promises, but proved a hard
+master.&rdquo;&nbsp; Another of Hannah&rsquo;s characters was a
+Miss Simpson, a clergyman&rsquo;s daughter, who is always
+exclaiming, &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis all for the best,&rdquo; though she
+ends her days in a workhouse, while the man through whose
+persecution she comes to grief dies in agony, bequeathing her
+&pound;100 as compensation for his injustice, and declares that
+if he could live his life over again he would serve God and keep
+the Sabbath.&nbsp; And such was the literature which was to stop
+reform, and make the poor contented with their bitter lot!</p>
+<p>But the seed, such as it was, often fell on stony soil.&nbsp;
+The labourers became discontented, and began more and more to
+feel that it was not always true that all was for the best, as
+their masters told them.&nbsp; They were wretchedly clad, and
+lodged, and fed.&nbsp; Science, sanitary or otherwise, was quite
+overlooked <!-- page 75--><a name="page75"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 75</span>then.&nbsp; The parson and the squire
+took no note of them, except when they heard that they went to
+the Baptist, or Independent, or Methodist chapel, when great was
+their anger and dire their threats.&nbsp; Again Hannah More took
+the field &ldquo;to improve the habits and raise the principles
+of the common people at a time when their dangers and
+temptations&mdash;social and political&mdash;were multiplied
+beyond the example of any former period.&nbsp; The inferior ranks
+were learning to read, and they preferred to read the corrupt and
+inflammatory publications which the French Revolution had called
+into existence.&rdquo;&nbsp; Alas! all was in vain.&nbsp; Rachel,
+weeping for her children who had been torn from her to die in
+foreign lands, fighting to keep up the Holy Alliance and the
+right divine of kings to govern wrong, or had toiled and moiled
+in winter&rsquo;s cold and summer&rsquo;s heat, merely to end
+their days in the parish workhouse, refused to be
+comforted.&nbsp; Good people grew alarmed, and goody tracts were
+circulated more than ever.&nbsp; The edifying history of the
+&ldquo;Shepherd of Salisbury Plain&rdquo; was to be seen in many
+a cottage in our village.&nbsp; The shepherd earned a shilling a
+day; he lived in a wretched cottage which had a hole in the
+thatch which made his poor wife a martyr to rheumatism in
+consequence of the rain coming through.&nbsp; He had eight
+children to keep, chiefly on potatoes and salt, but he was happy
+<!-- page 76--><a name="page76"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+76</span>because he was pious and contented.&nbsp; A gentleman
+says to him, &ldquo;How do you support yourself under the
+pressure of actual want?&nbsp; Is not hunger a great weakener of
+your faith?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; replied the shepherd,
+&ldquo;I live upon the promises.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yes, that was the
+kind of teaching in our village and all over England, and the
+villagers got tired of it, and took to firing stacks and barns,
+and actually in towns were heard to cry &ldquo;More pay and less
+parsons.&rdquo;&nbsp; What was the world coming to? said dear old
+ladies.&nbsp; It was well Hannah More had died and thus been
+saved from the evil to come.&nbsp; The Evangelicals were at their
+wits&rsquo; end.&nbsp; They wanted people to think of the life to
+come, while the people preferred to think of the life that
+was&mdash;of this world rather than the next.</p>
+<p>I am sure that in our village we had too much religion.&nbsp;
+I write this seriously and after thinking deeply on the
+matter.&nbsp; A man has a body to be cared for, as well as a soul
+to be saved or damned.&nbsp; Charles Kingsley was the first to
+tell us that it was vain to preach to people with empty
+stomachs.&nbsp; But when I was a lad preaching was the cure for
+every ill, and the more wretched the villagers became the more
+they were preached to.&nbsp; There was little hope of any one who
+did not go to some chapel or other.&nbsp; There was little help
+for any one who preferred to talk of his wrongs or to <!-- page
+77--><a name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 77</span>claim
+his rights.&nbsp; I must own that the rustic worshipper was a
+better man in all the relationships of life&mdash;as servant, as
+husband, as father, as friend&mdash;than the rustic
+unbeliever.&nbsp; It astonished me not a little to talk with the
+former, and to witness his copiousness of Scripture phraseology
+and the fluency of his religious talk.&nbsp; He was on a higher
+platform.&nbsp; He had felt what Burke wrote when he tells us
+that religion was for the man in humble life, to raise his nature
+and to put him in mind of a State in which the privileges of
+opulence will cease, when he will be equal by nature and more
+than equal by virtue.&nbsp; Alas! we had soon Lord
+Brougham&rsquo;s beershops, and there was a sad falling
+away.&nbsp; Poachers and drunkards increased on every side.&nbsp;
+All around there seemed to be nothing but poverty, with the
+exception of the farmers&mdash;then, as now, always grumbling,
+but apparently living well and enjoying life.</p>
+<p>As one thinks of the old country years ago one can realise the
+truth of the story told by the late Mr. Fitzgerald of a Suffolk
+village church one winter&rsquo;s evening:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>Congregation, with the Old Hundredth ready for the
+parson&rsquo;s dismissal words.</p>
+<p><i>Good Old Parson</i> (not at all meaning rhymes): The light
+has grown so very dim I scarce can see to read the hymn.</p>
+<p><!-- page 78--><a name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+78</span><i>Congregation</i> (taking it up to the first half of
+the Old Hundredth):</p>
+<p>The light has grown so very dim,<br />
+I scarce can see to read the hymn.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">(Pause as usual.)</p>
+<p><i>Parson</i> (mildly impatient): I did not mean to sing a
+hymn, I only meant my eyes were dim.</p>
+<p><i>Congregation</i> (to second part of the Old Hundredth):</p>
+<p>I did not mean to read a hymn,<br />
+I only meant my eyes were dim.</p>
+<p><i>Parson</i> (out of patience): I did not mean a hymn at all,
+I think the devil&rsquo;s in you all.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Curious were the ways of the East Anglian clergy.&nbsp; One of
+our neighbouring parsons had his clerk give out notice that on
+the next Sunday there would be no service &ldquo;because master
+was going to Newmarket.&rdquo;&nbsp; No one cared for the people,
+unless it was the woman preacher or Methodist parson, and the
+people were ignorant beyond belief.&nbsp; Few could either read
+or write.&nbsp; It was rather amusing to hear them talk.&nbsp; A
+boy was called bow, a girl was termed a mawther, and if milk or
+beer was wanted it was generally fetched in a gotch.</p>
+<p>Our home life was simple enough.&nbsp; We went early to bed
+and were up with the lark.&nbsp; I was arrayed in a pinafore and
+wore a frill&mdash;which I <!-- page 79--><a
+name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+79</span>abhorred&mdash;and took but little pleasure in my
+personal appearance&mdash;a very great mistake, happily avoided
+by the present generation.&nbsp; We children had each a little
+bed of garden ground which we cultivated to the best of our
+power.&nbsp; Ours was really a case of plain living and high
+thinking.&nbsp; Of an evening the room was dimly lighted by means
+of a dip candle which constantly required snuffing.&nbsp; To
+write with we had the ordinary goose-quill.&nbsp; The room,
+rarely used, in which we received company was called the
+parlour.&nbsp; Goloshes had not then come into use, and women
+wore in muddy weather pattens or clogs.&nbsp; The simple
+necessaries of life were very dear, and tea and coffee and sugar
+were sold at what would now be deemed an exorbitant price.&nbsp;
+Postage was prohibitory, and when any one went to town he was
+laden with letters.&nbsp; As little light as possible was
+admitted into the house in order to save the window-tax.&nbsp;
+The farmer was generally arrayed in a blue coat and yellow brass
+buttons.&nbsp; The gentleman had a frilled shirt and wore Hessian
+boots.&nbsp; I never saw a magazine of the fashions; nowadays
+they are to be met with everywhere.&nbsp; Yet we were never dull,
+and in the circle in which I moved we never heard of the need of
+change.&nbsp; People were content to live and die in the village
+without going half-a-dozen miles away, with the exception of the
+farmers, who might drive <!-- page 80--><a
+name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 80</span>to the
+nearest market town, transact their business, dine at the
+ordinary, and then, after a smoke and a glass of brandy and water
+and a chat with their fellow-farmers, return home.&nbsp; Of the
+rush and roar of modern life, with its restlessness and eagerness
+for something new and sensational, we had not the remotest
+idea.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 83--><a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+83</span>CHAPTER V.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Out on the World</span>.</h2>
+<p>In the good old city of Norwich.&nbsp; I passed a year as an
+apprentice, in what was then known as London Lane.&nbsp; It was a
+time of real growth to me mentally.&nbsp; I had a bedroom to
+myself; in reality it was a closet.&nbsp; I had access to a cheap
+library, where I was enabled to take my fill, and did a good deal
+of miscellaneous study.&nbsp; I would have joined the
+Mechanics&rsquo; Institute, where they had debates, but the
+people with whom I lived were orthodox Dissenters, and were
+rather afraid of my embracing Unitarian principles.&nbsp; The
+fear was, I think, groundless.&nbsp; At any rate, one of the most
+distinguished debaters was Mr. Jacob Henry Tillett, afterwards
+M.P., then in a lawyer&rsquo;s office; and another was his friend
+Joseph Pigg, who became a Congregational minister, but did not
+live to old age.&nbsp; Another of the lot&mdash;who was a great
+friend of Pigg&rsquo;s&mdash;was Bolingbroke Woodward, who was, I
+think, in a bank, from which he went to Highbury, thence as a
+Congregational minister to Wortwell, near Harleston, and died
+librarian <!-- page 84--><a name="page84"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 84</span>to the Queen.&nbsp; Evidently there
+was no necessary connection, as the people where I lived thought,
+between debating and embracing Unitarian principles.</p>
+<p>Norwich seemed to me a wonderful city.&nbsp; I had already
+visited the place at the time when it celebrated the passing of
+the Reform Bill, when there was by day a grand procession, and a
+grand dinner in the open air; where a friend, who knew what boys
+liked, gave me a slice of plum pudding served up on the occasion;
+and then in the evening there were fireworks, the first I had
+ever seen, on the Castle Hill.&nbsp; It was a long ride from our
+village, and we had to travel by the carrier&rsquo;s cart, drawn
+by two horses, and sit beneath the roof on the top of the luggage
+and baggage, for we stopped everywhere to pick up parcels.&nbsp;
+The passengers when seated endeavoured to make themselves as
+comfortable as circumstances would allow.&nbsp; Norwich at that
+time had a literary reputation, and it seemed to me there were
+giants in the land in those days.&nbsp; One I remember was the
+Rev. John Kinghorn, a great light among the Baptists, and whom,
+with his spare figure and primitive costume, I always confounded
+with John the Baptist.&nbsp; Another distinguished personage was
+William Youngman, at whose house my father spent a good deal of
+time, engaged in the hot disputation in which that grand old
+Norwich worthy always delighted.&nbsp; <!-- page 85--><a
+name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 85</span>As a boy, I
+remember I trembled as the discussion went on, for</p>
+<blockquote><p>Mr. MacWinter was apt to be hot,<br />
+And Mr. McKenzie a temper had got.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Yet their friendship continued in spite of difference of
+opinion, and well do I remember him in his square pew in the Old
+Meeting, as, with his gold-headed cane firmly grasped, the
+red-faced fat old man sat as solemn and passionless as a judge,
+while in the pulpit before him the Rev. Mr. Innes preached.&nbsp;
+But, alas! the parson had a pretty daughter, and I lost all his
+sermon watching the lovely figure in the pew just by.&nbsp;
+Another of the deacons, tall and stiff as a poker, Mr.
+Brightwell, had a pew just behind, father of a young lady known
+later as a successful authoress, while from the gallery opposite
+a worthy man, Mr. Blunderfield, gave out the hymn.&nbsp; Up in
+the galleries there were Spelmans and Jarrolds in abundance,
+while in a pew behind the latter was seated a lad who in after
+life attained, and still retains, some fame as a lecturer against
+Christianity, and later in its favour, well known as Dr.
+Sexton.&nbsp; To that Old Meeting I always went with
+indescribable awe; its square pews, its old walls with their
+memorial marbles, the severity of the aspect of the worshippers,
+the antique preacher in the antique pulpit all affected me.&nbsp;
+But I loved the place nevertheless.&nbsp; Even now I am <!-- page
+86--><a name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+86</span>thrilled as I recall the impressive way in which Mr.
+Blunderfield gave out the hymns, and I can still remember one of
+Mr. Innes&rsquo; texts, and it was always a matter of pride to me
+when Mr. Youngman took me home to dinner and to walk on his lawn,
+which sloped down to the river, and to view with wonder the
+peacock which adorned his grounds.&nbsp; The family with which I
+was apprenticed attended on the ministry of the Rev. John
+Alexander, a man deservedly esteemed by all and beloved by his
+people.&nbsp; He was a touching preacher, an inimitable
+companion, and was hailed all over East Anglia as its
+Congregational bishop, a position I fancy still held by his
+successor, the Rev. Dr. Barrett.&nbsp; Dissent in Norwich seemed
+to me much more respected than in my village home.&nbsp; Dr.
+Brock, then plain Mr. Brock, also came to Norwich when I was
+there, and had a fine congregation in St. Mary&rsquo;s, which
+seemed to me a wonderfully fine chapel.&nbsp; I was always glad
+to go there.&nbsp; Once I made my way to the Octagon, a still
+nobler building, but my visit was found out by my master&rsquo;s
+wife, and henceforth I was orthodox, that is as long as I was at
+Norwich.&nbsp; The Norwich of that time, though the old air of
+depression, in consequence of declining manufacture, has given
+place to a livelier tone, in its essential features remains the
+same.&nbsp; There are still the Castle and the old landmarks of
+the Cathedral and the Market <!-- page 87--><a
+name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 87</span>Place.&nbsp;
+The great innovation has been the Great Eastern Railway, which
+has given to it a new and handsome quarter, and the Colman
+mustard mills.&nbsp; Outside the city, in the suburbs, of course,
+Norwich has much increased, and we have now crowded streets or
+trim semidetached villas, where in my time were green fields or
+rustic walks.&nbsp; London did not dominate the country as it
+does now, and Norwich was held to be in some quarters almost a
+second Athens.&nbsp; There lived there a learned man of the name
+of Wilkins, with whom I, alas! never came into contact, who had
+much to do with resuscitating the fame of the worthy Norwich
+physician, Sir Thomas Browne, immortal, by reason of his
+&ldquo;Religio Medici&rdquo; and &ldquo;Urn Burial,&rdquo;
+especially the latter.&nbsp; The Martineaus and the Taylors lived
+there.&nbsp; Johnson Fox&mdash;the far-famed Norwich weaver boy
+of the Anti-Corn League, and Unitarian minister, and subsequently
+M.P. for Oldham&mdash;had been a member of the Old Meeting,
+whence he had been sent to Homerton College to study for the
+ministry, and a sister and brother, if I remember aright, still
+attended at the Old Meeting.&nbsp; When I was a lad there still
+might be seen in the streets of Norwich the venerable figure of
+William Taylor, who had first opened up German literature to the
+intelligent public; and there had not long died Mrs. Taylor, the
+friend of Sir James Mackintosh <!-- page 88--><a
+name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 88</span>and other
+distinguished personages.&nbsp; &ldquo;She was the wife,&rdquo;
+writes Basil Montagu, &ldquo;of a shopkeeper in that city; mild
+and unassuming, quiet and meek, sitting amidst her large family,
+always occupied with her needle and domestic occupations, but
+always assisting, by her great knowledge, the advancement of kind
+and dignified sentiment.&nbsp; Manly wisdom and feminine
+gentleness were united in her with such attractive manners that
+she was universally loved and respected.&nbsp; In high thoughts
+and gentle deeds she greatly resembled the admirable Lucy
+Hutchinson, and in troubled times would have been specially
+distinguished for firmness in what she thought
+right.&rdquo;&nbsp; Dr. Sayers was also one of the stars of the
+Norwich literary circle, and I recollect Mrs. Opie, who had given
+up the world of fashion and frivolity, had donned the Quaker
+dress, and at whose funeral in the Quaker Meeting-house I was
+present.&nbsp; The Quakers were at that time a power in Norwich,
+and John Joseph Gurney, of Earlham, close by, enjoyed quite a
+European reputation.&nbsp; It was not long that Harriet Martineau
+had turned her back on the Norwich of her youth.&nbsp; The house
+where she was born was in a court in Magdalen Street.&nbsp; But
+it never was her dwelling-place after her removal from it when
+she was three months old.&nbsp; Harriet was given to underrating
+everybody who had any sort of reputation, and she certainly
+underrated Norwich society, <!-- page 89--><a
+name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 89</span>which, when I
+was a lad, was superior to most of our county towns.&nbsp; I
+caught now and then a few faint echoes of that world into which I
+was forbidden to enter.&nbsp; Norwich ministers were yet learned,
+and their people were studious.&nbsp; A dear old city was
+Norwich, with much to interest a raw lad from the country, with
+its Cathedral, which, as too often is the case, sadly interfered
+with the free life of all within its reach, with its grand Market
+Place filled on a Saturday with the country farmers&rsquo; wives,
+who had come to sell the produce of their dairy and orchard and
+chickenyard, and who returned laden with their purchases in the
+way of grocery and drapery; and its Castle set upon a hill.&nbsp;
+It was there that for the first time I saw judges in ermine and
+crimson, and learned to realise the majesty of the law.&nbsp;
+Then there was an immense dragon kept in St. Andrew&rsquo;s Hall,
+and it was a wonder to all as he was dragged forth from his
+retirement, and made the rounds of the streets with his red eyes,
+his green scales, his awful tail.&nbsp; I know not whether that
+old dragon still survives.&nbsp; I fear the Reformers, who were
+needlessly active in such matters, abolished him.&nbsp; But the
+sight of sights I saw during my short residence at Norwich was
+that of the chairing of the M.P.&rsquo;s.&nbsp; I forget who they
+were; I remember they had red faces, gorgeous dresses, and silk
+stockings.&nbsp; Norwich was a corrupt place, and a large <!--
+page 90--><a name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+90</span>number of electors were to be bought, and unless they
+were bought no M.P. had a chance of being returned.&nbsp; The
+consequence was party feeling ran very high, and the defeated
+party were usually angry, as they were sure to contend that they
+had been beaten not by honest voting, but by means of bribery and
+corruption, and thus when the chairing took place there was often
+not a little rioting, and voters inflamed with beer were always
+ready for a row.&nbsp; The fortunate M.P.&rsquo;s thus on
+chairing days were exposed to not a little danger.&nbsp; The
+chairs in which they were seated, adorned with the colours of the
+party, were borne by strapping fellows quite able to defend
+themselves, and every now and then ready to give a heave somewhat
+dangerous to the seat-holder, who all the time had to preserve a
+smiling face and bow to the ladies who lined the windows of the
+street through which the procession passed, and to look as if he
+liked it rather than not.&nbsp; The sight, however, I fancy,
+afforded more amusement to the spectators than to the
+M.P.&rsquo;s, who were glad when it was over, and who had indeed
+every right to be, for there was always the chance of a collision
+with a hostile mob, and a <i>d&eacute;nouement</i> anything but
+agreeable.&nbsp; But, perhaps, the sight of sights was Norwich
+Market on Christmas Day, and the Norwich coaches starting for
+London crammed with turkeys outside and in, and <!-- page 91--><a
+name="page91"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 91</span>only leaving
+room for the driver and the guard.&nbsp; At that time London was
+chiefly supplied with its turkeys from Norfolk, and it was only
+by means of stage coaches that the popular poultry could be
+conveyed.&nbsp; In this respect Norwich has suffered, for London
+now draws its Christmas supplies from all the Continent.&nbsp; It
+was not so when I was a lad, but from all I can hear Norwich
+Market Place the Saturday before Christmas is as largely
+patronised as ever, and they tell me, though, alas, I have no
+practical knowledge of the fact, the Norwich turkeys are as good
+as ever.&nbsp; As long as they remain so Norwich has little to
+fear.&nbsp; I have also at a later time a faint recollection of
+good port, but now I am suffering from gout, and we never mention
+it.&nbsp; In these teetotal days &ldquo;our lips are now
+forbidden to speak that once familiar word.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 95--><a name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+95</span>CHAPTER VI.<br />
+<span class="smcap">At College</span>.</h2>
+<p>What more natural than that a son should wish to follow in his
+father&rsquo;s steps?&nbsp; I had a minister for a father.&nbsp;
+It was resolved that I should become one.&nbsp; In Dissenting
+circles no one was supposed to enter the ministry until he had
+got what was denominated a call.&nbsp; I persuaded myself that I
+had such a call, though I much doubt it now.&nbsp; I tried to
+feel that I was fitted for this sacred post&mdash;I who knew
+nothing of my own heart, and was as ignorant of the world as a
+babe unborn.&nbsp; I was sent to a London college, now no more,
+and had to be examined for my qualifications by four dear old
+fossils, and was, of course, admitted.&nbsp; I passed because my
+orthodoxy was unimpeachable, and I was to preach&mdash;I, who
+trembled at the sound of my own voice, who stood in terror of
+deacons, and who had never attempted to make a speech.&nbsp; I
+hope at our colleges they manage these things better now, and
+select men who can show that the ministry is in them before they
+seek to enter the ministry.&nbsp; As it was, I found more than
+one of my fellow-students was <!-- page 96--><a
+name="page96"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 96</span>utterly
+destitute of all qualifications for the pastorate, and was simply
+wasting the splendid opportunities placed within his reach.&nbsp;
+The routine of college life was not unpleasant.&nbsp; We rose
+early, attended lectures from our principal and the classes at
+University College, and took part in conducting family service in
+the hall.&nbsp; Occasionally we preached in the College chapel,
+the principal attendant at which was an old tailor, who thereby
+secured a good deal of the patronage of the students.&nbsp; By
+attending the classes at University College we had opportunities
+of which, alas! only a minority made much use.&nbsp; They who did
+so became distinguished in after life, such as Rev. Joseph
+Mullens, Secretary of the London Missionary Society; and John
+Curwen, who did so much for congregational singing; Dr. Newth,
+and Philip Smith, who was tutor at Cheshunt, and afterwards
+Headmaster at Mill Hill.&nbsp; Nor must I forget Rev. Andrew
+Reed, a preacher always popular, partly on his own and partly on
+his father&rsquo;s account; nor Thomas Durrant Philip, the son of
+the well-known doctor whose splendid work among the Hottentots is
+not yet forgotten; nor Dr. Edkins, the great Chinese scholar; nor
+the late Dr. Henry Robert Reynolds, who won for Cheshunt a
+world-wide reputation.&nbsp; As regards myself, I fear I took
+more interest in the debates at University College, where I made
+<!-- page 97--><a name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+97</span>acquaintance with men with whose names the world has
+since become familiar, such as Sir James Stansfeld, Peter Taylor,
+M.P. for Leicester, Professor Waley, of Jewish persuasion, C. J.
+Hargreaves, Baron of the Encumbered Estates Court, and others who
+seemed to me far superior to most of my fellow-students training
+for the Christian ministry.&nbsp; I was much interested in the
+English Literature Class under the late Dr. Gordon Latham, the
+great Anglo-Saxon scholar, who would fain have had me Professor
+in his place.</p>
+<p>I cannot say that I look back with much pleasure on my college
+career.&nbsp; We had two heads, neither of whom had any influence
+with the students, nor did it seem to me desirable that they
+should.&nbsp; One of them was an easy, pleasant, gentlemanly man,
+who was pleased to remark on an essay which I read before him on
+Christianity, and which was greeted with a round of applause by
+my fellow-students, that it displayed a low tone of religious
+feeling.&nbsp; Poor man, he did not long survive after
+that.&nbsp; The only bit of advice I had from his successor was
+as to the propriety of closing my eyes as if in prayer whenever I
+went into the pulpit to preach, on the plea, not that by means of
+it my heart might be solemnised and elevated for the ensuing
+service, but that it would have a beneficial effect on the
+people&mdash;that, in fact, on account of it they would think all
+the better of <!-- page 98--><a name="page98"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 98</span>me!&nbsp; After that, you may be sure
+I got little benefit from anything the good man might feel fit to
+say.&nbsp; As a scholar he was nowhere.&nbsp; All that I
+recollect of him was that he gave us
+D&rsquo;Aubign&eacute;&rsquo;s History of the Reformation in
+driblets as if we were rather a superior class of Sunday
+scholars.&nbsp; Mr. Stowell Brown tells us that he did not
+perceive that the members of his church were in any respect
+better than those who were hearers alone.&nbsp; And to me
+something similar was manifested in college.&nbsp; We pious
+students were not much better than other young men.&nbsp; It
+seemed to me that we were a little more lazy and flabby, that was
+all.&nbsp; As a rule, few of us broke down morally, though such
+cases were by no means rare.&nbsp; I cannot say, as M. Renan did,
+that there was never a breath of scandal with respect to his
+fellow-students in his Romanist Academy; but the class of young
+men who had come to study for the ministry was not, with very
+rare exceptions, of a high order, either in a religious or
+intellectual point of view.&nbsp; In this respect I believe there
+has been a great improvement of late.</p>
+<p>My pulpit career was short.&nbsp; At times I believe I
+preached with much satisfaction to my hearers; at other times
+very much the reverse.&nbsp; De Foe writes: &ldquo;It was my
+disaster first to be set apart for, and then to be set apart
+from, the honour of that sacred employ.&rdquo;&nbsp; My
+experience was something similar.&nbsp; I never had <!-- page
+99--><a name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 99</span>a
+call to a charge, nor did I go the right way to work to get
+one.&nbsp; I felt that I could gladly give it up, and yet how
+could I do so?&nbsp; I had a father whom I fondly loved, who had
+set his heart on seeing me follow in his honoured steps.&nbsp; I
+was what they called a child of many prayers.&nbsp; How could I
+do otherwise than work for their fulfilment?&nbsp; And if I gave
+up all thought of the ministry, how was I to earn my daily
+bread?&nbsp; At length, however, I drifted away from the pulpit
+and religious life for a time.&nbsp; I was not happy, but I was
+happier than when vainly seeking to pursue an impossible
+career.&nbsp; I know more of the world now.&nbsp; I have more
+measured myself with my fellows.&nbsp; I see what ordinary men
+and women are, and the result is&mdash;fortunately or not, I
+cannot tell&mdash;that I have now a better conceit of
+myself.&nbsp; I often wish some one would ask me to occupy a
+pulpit now.&nbsp; How grand the position! how mighty the
+power!&nbsp; You are out of the world&mdash;in direct contact
+with the living God, speaking His Word, doing His work.&nbsp;
+There in the pew are souls aching to be lifted out of themselves;
+to get out of the mud and mire of the world and of daily life; to
+enter within the veil, as it were; to abide in the secret place
+of the Most High.&nbsp; It is yours to aid them.&nbsp; There are
+those dead in trespasses and sins; it is yours to rouse
+them.&nbsp; There are the aged to be consoled; the young to be
+won over.&nbsp; Can <!-- page 100--><a name="page100"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 100</span>there be a nobler life than that
+which makes a man an ambassador from God to man?</p>
+<p>Yet they were pleasant years I spent at Coward College,
+Torrington Square, supported by the liberality of an old wealthy
+merchant of that name, the friend of Dr. Doddridge, and at
+Wymondley&mdash;to which Doddridge&rsquo;s Academy, as it was
+termed, was subsequently moved&mdash;where were trained, at any
+rate, two of our most distinguished Nonconformists, Edward Miall
+and Thomas Binney.&nbsp; I am sorry Coward College ceased to
+exist as a separate institution.&nbsp; We were all very happy
+there.&nbsp; We had a splendid old library at our disposal, where
+we could learn somewhat of</p>
+<blockquote><p>Many an old philosophy<br />
+On Argus heights divinely sung;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and for many a day afterwards we dined together once a
+year.&nbsp; I think our last dinner was at Mr. Binney&rsquo;s,
+who was at his best when he gathered around him his juniors, like
+himself, the subjects of old Coward&rsquo;s bounty.&nbsp; It was
+curious to me to find how little appreciated was the good
+merchant&rsquo;s grand bequest.&nbsp; I often found that in many
+quarters, especially among the country churches, the education
+given to the young men at Coward&rsquo;s was regarded as a
+disqualification.&nbsp; It was suspected that it impeded their
+religious career, that they were not so sound as good <!-- page
+101--><a name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+101</span>young men who did not enjoy these advantages, that at
+other colleges the preachers were better because not so learned,
+more devotedly pious because more ignorant.&nbsp; It was held
+then that a student might be over-educated, and the more he knew
+the more his religious zeal diminished.&nbsp; In these days the
+feeling has ceased to exist, and the churches are proud of the
+men who consecrate to the service of their Lord all their
+cultivated powers of body and mind.&nbsp; The Christian Church
+has ceased to fear the bugbear of a learned ministry.&nbsp; One
+can quite understand, however, how that feeling came into
+existence.&nbsp; The success of the early Methodists had led many
+to feel how little need there was for culture when the torpor of
+the worldly and the poor was to be broken up.&nbsp; The
+Methodists were of the people and spoke to them in a language
+they could understand.&nbsp; Learning, criticism,
+doubt&mdash;what were they in the opinion of the pious of those
+days but snares to be avoided, perils to be shunned?&nbsp; For
+good or bad, we have outgrown that.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 105--><a name="page105"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 105</span>CHAPTER VII.<br />
+<span class="smcap">London Long Ago</span>.</h2>
+<p>In due time&mdash;that is when I was about sixteen years
+old&mdash;I made my way to London, a city as deadly, as dreary as
+can well be conceived, in spite of the wonderful Cathedral of St.
+Paul&rsquo;s, as much a thing of beauty as it ever was, and the
+Monument, one of the first things the country cousin was taken to
+see, with the exception of Madame Tussaud&rsquo;s, then in Baker
+Street.&nbsp; In the streets where the shops were the houses were
+mean and low, of dirty red brick, of which the houses in the more
+aristocratic streets and squares were composed.&nbsp; Belgravia,
+with its grand houses, was never dreamt of.&nbsp; The hotels were
+of the stuffiest character; some of them had galleries all round
+for the sleeping chambers, which, however, as often as not were
+over the stables, where the coach horses were left to rest after
+the last gallop into London, and to be ready for the early start
+at five or six in the morning.&nbsp; Perhaps at that time the
+best way of coming into London was sailing up the Thames.&nbsp;
+As there were few steamers then the number of <!-- page 106--><a
+name="page106"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 106</span>ships of
+all kinds was much greater than at present, when a steamer comes
+up with unerring regularity, discharges her cargo, takes in a
+fresh one, and is off again without a moment&rsquo;s delay.&nbsp;
+You saw Greenwich Hospital, as beautiful then as now, the big
+docks with the foreign produce, the miles of black colliers in
+the Pool, the Tower of London, the Customs House, and
+Billingsgate, a very inconvenient hole, more famed for classic
+language then than now.&nbsp; Yet it was always a pleasure to be
+landed in the city after sitting all day long on the top of a
+stage coach.&nbsp; In many ways the railway was but a poor
+improvement on the stage coach.&nbsp; In the first place you
+could see the country better; in the second place the chances
+were you had better company, at any rate people talked more, and
+were more inclined to be agreeable; and the third place, in case
+of an accident, you felt yourself safer.&nbsp; As an old Jehu
+said, contrasting the chances, &ldquo;If you have an accident on
+a coach there you are, but if you are in a railway carriage where
+are you!&rdquo;&nbsp; And some of the approaches to London were
+almost dazzling.&nbsp; Of a winter&rsquo;s night it was quite a
+treat to come into town by the East Anglian coaches, and to see
+the glare of the Whitechapel butchers&rsquo; shops all lit up
+with gas, and redolent of beef and mutton.&nbsp; It was wonderful
+in the eyes of the young man from the country.</p>
+<p><!-- page 107--><a name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+107</span>The one great improvement in London was Regent Street,
+from Portland Place and Regent&rsquo;s Park to the statue an
+infatuated people erected to a shady Duke of York in Trafalgar
+Square.&nbsp; Just by there was the National Gallery, at any rate
+in a situation easy of access.&nbsp; Right past the Mansion House
+a new street had been made to London Bridge, and there the
+half-cracked King William was honoured by a statue, which was
+supposed to represent the Royal body and the Royal head.&nbsp; In
+Cornhill there was an old-fashioned building known as the Royal
+Exchange, which kept alive the memory of the great civic
+benefactor, Sir Thomas Gresham, and the maiden Queen; but
+everywhere the streets were narrow and the houses mean.&nbsp;
+Holborn Hill led to a deep valley, on one side of which ran a
+lane filled with pickpockets, and cut-throats and ruffians of all
+kinds, into which it was not safe for any one to enter.&nbsp; And
+as you climbed the hill you came to Newgate Market, along which
+locomotion was almost impossible all the early morning, as there
+came from the north and the south and the east and the west all
+the suburban butchers for their daily supply.&nbsp; Just over the
+way on the left was that horror of horrors, Smithfield, where on
+a market day some thousands of oxen and sheep by unheard of
+brutality had been penned up, waiting to be purchased and let
+loose mad with hunger and thirst and fright and pain all <!--
+page 108--><a name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+108</span>over the narrow streets of the city, to the danger of
+pedestrians, especially such as were old and feeble.&nbsp;
+Happily, St. Bartholomew&rsquo;s Hospital was close by, and the
+sufferer had perhaps a chance of life.&nbsp; The guardians of the
+streets were the new police, the Peelers or the Bobbies as they
+were sarcastically called.&nbsp; The idiotic public did not think
+much of them; they were the thin edge of the wedge, their aim was
+to destroy the glorious liberty of every man, to do all the
+mischief they could, and to enslave the people.&nbsp; Was not Sir
+Robert Peel a Tory of the Tories and the friend of Wellington, so
+beloved by the people that he had to guard his house with iron
+shutters?&nbsp; At that time the public was rather badly off for
+heroes, with the exception of Orator Hunt, who got into
+Parliament and collapsed, as most of the men of the people
+did.&nbsp; Yet I was a Liberal&mdash;as almost all Dissenters
+were with the exception of the wealthy who attended at the
+Poultry or at Walworth, where John and George Clayton
+preached.</p>
+<p>In the City life was unbearable by reason of the awful noise
+of the stone-paven streets, now happily superseded by
+asphalte.&nbsp; Papers were dear, but in all parts of London
+there were old-fashioned coffee and chop houses where you could
+have a dinner at a reasonable price and read the newspapers and
+magazines.&nbsp; Peele&rsquo;s, in Fleet Street, at the corner of
+Fetter Lane, was <!-- page 109--><a name="page109"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 109</span>a great place for newspapers and
+reporters and special correspondents.&nbsp; Many a newspaper
+article have I written there.&nbsp; Then there were no clubs, or
+hardly any, and such places as the Cheshire Cheese, with its
+memories of old Dr. Johnson, did a roaring trade far into the
+night.&nbsp; There was a twopenny post for London, but elsewhere
+the charge for letters was exorbitant and prohibitory.&nbsp; Vice
+had more opportunities than now.&nbsp; There was no early
+closing, and in the Haymarket and in Drury Lane these places were
+frequented by prostitutes and their victims all night long.&nbsp;
+A favourite place for men to sup at was Evans&rsquo;s in Covent
+Garden, the Cider Cellars in Maiden Lane, and the Coal Hole in
+the Strand.&nbsp; The songs were of the coarsest, and the
+company, consisting of lords and touts, medical students, swell
+mobsmen, and fast men from the City, not much better.&nbsp; At
+such places decency was unknown, and yet how patronised they
+were, especially at Christmas time, when the country farmer stole
+away from home, ostensibly to see the Fat Cattle Show, then held
+in Baker Street.&nbsp; Of course there were no underground
+railways, and the travelling public had to put up with omnibuses
+and cabs, dearer, more like hearses than they are now.</p>
+<p>I should be sorry to recommend any one to read the novels of
+Fielding or of Smollet.&nbsp; And yet in one sense they are
+useful.&nbsp; At any rate, they show how much the England of
+to-day is <!-- page 110--><a name="page110"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 110</span>in advance of the England of 150
+years ago.&nbsp; For instance, take London.&nbsp; It is held that
+London is in a bad way in spite of its reforming County
+Council.&nbsp; It is clear from the perusal of Smollet&rsquo;s
+novels that a purifying process has long been at work with regard
+to London, and that if our County Councillors do their duty as
+their progenitors have done, little will remain to be done to
+make the metropolis a model city.&nbsp; &ldquo;Humphry
+Clinker&rdquo; appeared in 1771.&nbsp; It contains the adventures
+of a worthy Welsh Squire, Matthew Bramble, who in the course of
+his travels with his family finds himself in London.&nbsp; The
+old Squire is astonished at its size.&nbsp; &ldquo;What I left
+open fields, producing corn and hay, I now find covered with
+streets and squares, and palaces and churches.&nbsp; I am
+credibly informed that in the space of seven years 11,000 new
+houses have been built in one quarter of Westminster, exclusive
+of what is daily added to other parts of this metropolis.&nbsp;
+Pimlico is almost joined to Chelsea and Kensington, and if this
+infatuation continues for half-a-century, I suppose, the whole
+county of Middlesex will be covered with brick.&rdquo;&nbsp; A
+prophecy that has almost come to pass in our time.&nbsp; At that
+time London contained one-sixth of the entire population of the
+kingdom.&nbsp; &ldquo;No wonder,&rdquo; he writes, &ldquo;that
+our villages are depopulated and our farms in want of day
+labourers.&nbsp; The villagers come up to London in the hopes of
+<!-- page 111--><a name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+111</span>getting into service where they can live luxuriously
+and wear fine clothes.&nbsp; Disappointed in this respect, they
+become thieves and sharpers, and London being an immense
+wilderness, in which there is neither watch nor ward of any
+signification, nor any order or police, affords them
+lurking-places as well as prey.&rdquo;&nbsp; The old
+Squire&rsquo;s complaint is to be heard every day when we think
+or speak or write of the great metropolis.</p>
+<p>The poor Squire writes bitterly of London life: &ldquo;I start
+every hour from my sleep at the horrid noise of the watchmen
+calling the hour through every street, and thundering at every
+door.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;If I would drink water I must quaff the
+mawkish contents of an open aqueduct, exposed to all manner of
+defilement, or swallow that which comes from the Thames,
+impregnated with all the filth of London and Westminster.&nbsp;
+Human excrement is the least offensive part of the concrete,
+which is composed of all the drugs, minerals and poisons used in
+mechanics and manufactures, enriched with the putrefying carcases
+of beasts and men, and mixed with the scourings of all the
+washtubs, kennels, and common sewers within the bills of
+mortality.&rdquo;&nbsp; The City churches and churchyards were in
+my time constant sources of disease, and the chapels were, where
+they had burying-grounds attached, equally bad.&nbsp; One need
+not remark in this connection <!-- page 112--><a
+name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 112</span>how much
+better off we are in our day.&nbsp; Again the Squire writes:
+&ldquo;The bread I eat is a deleterious paste, mixed up with
+chalk, alum and bone ashes.&rdquo;&nbsp; Here, again, we note
+gladly a change for the better.&nbsp; The vegetables taste of
+nothing but the dung-hills from whence they spring.&nbsp; The
+meat the Squire holds to be villainously bad, &ldquo;and as for
+the pork, it is an abominable carnivorous animal fed with
+horseflesh and distillers&rsquo; grains, and the poultry is all
+rotten in consequence of fever, occasioned by the infamous
+practice of sewing up the guts, that they may be the sooner
+fattened in crops in consequence of this cruel
+restriction.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then there is the butter, a tallowy,
+rancid mass, manufactured with candle grease and butcher&rsquo;s
+stuff.&nbsp; Well, these enormities are permitted no longer, and
+that is a step gained.&nbsp; We have good water; the watchman is
+gone, and the policeman has taken his place; but London as I knew
+it was little better than it was in the Squire&rsquo;s
+time.&nbsp; I fear in eggs we have not improved.&nbsp; The old
+Squire complains that they are imported from Scotland and
+France.&nbsp; We have, alas! for our fresh eggs to go a good deal
+further now.&nbsp; Milk, he tells us, was carried through the
+streets in open pails, exposed to foul rinsings discharged from
+doors and windows, and contaminated in many other ways too
+horrible to mention.&nbsp; No wonder the old Squire longed to get
+back to his old mansion <!-- page 113--><a
+name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 113</span>in Wales,
+where, at any rate, he could enjoy pure water, fresh eggs and
+real milk.&nbsp; It is hard to conceive how the abominations he
+describes could have been tolerated an hour.&nbsp; There was no
+Holborn Viaduct&mdash;nothing but a descent into a
+valley&mdash;always fatal to horses, and for many reasons trying
+to pedestrians.&nbsp; One of the sights of London which I sorely
+missed was the Surrey Gardens, with its fireworks and
+half-starved and very limited zoological collection.&nbsp; It has
+long been built over, but many is the happy summer evening I have
+spent there witnessing the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, or some
+other representation equally striking and realistic.&nbsp; In the
+City Road there were tea-gardens, and at Highbury Barn was a
+dancing establishment, more famous than those of the Eagle or
+White Conduit Fields, and all at times made the scene of
+political demonstrations and party triumphs.&nbsp; In this way
+also were much celebrated the London Tavern and Freemasons&rsquo;
+Hall.&nbsp; There was no attention paid to sanitation, and Lord
+Palmerston had not horrified all Scotland by telling the clergy
+who waited on him that it was not days of humiliation that the
+nation wanted, but a more intimate acquaintance with the virtues
+of soap and water.&nbsp; The clergy as a rule looked upon an
+outbreak of disease, not as an illustration of the evils of want
+and water and defective <!-- page 114--><a
+name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 114</span>drainage,
+but as a sign of the Divine disgust for and against a nation that
+had admitted Dissenters in Parliament, and emancipated the Roman
+Catholics.&nbsp; Perhaps the greatest abomination of all was the
+fearful custom which existed of burying the dead in the midst of
+the living.&nbsp; The custom died hard&mdash;churches and chapels
+made a lot of money in this way, careless of the fact that the
+sickly odours of the vault and the graveyard filled up the
+building where, on Sunday, men and women and children came to
+worship and pray.&nbsp; Yet London got more country air than it
+does now.&nbsp; The Thames was not a sewer, and it was all open
+fields from Camden Town to Hampstead Heath, and at the back of
+the Holloway Road, and such-like places.&nbsp; There was country
+everywhere.&nbsp; As a whole, the London of to-day is a far
+statelier city than the London of my earlier years.&nbsp;
+Everything was mean and dirty.&nbsp; I miss the twopenny postman,
+to whom I had always to entrust a lot of letters&mdash;when I
+came up from my village home&mdash;as thus the writers save a
+good sum of money on every letter.&nbsp; There were few
+omnibuses, and they were dear.&nbsp; Old hackney coaches
+abounded, and the cabs were few and far between, and very dirty
+as well, all of which have immensely improved of late.&nbsp; The
+cab in which I rode when I was set down by the coach at the White
+Horse, Fetter Lane, then a much-frequented <!-- page 115--><a
+name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 115</span>hotel of
+the highest respectability, was an awful affair, hooded and on
+two high wheels, while the driver was perched on a seat just
+outside.&nbsp; I was astonished&mdash;as well I might
+be&mdash;when I got to that journey&rsquo;s end in safety.</p>
+<p>In London and the environs everything was dull and
+common-place, with the exception of Regent Street, where it was
+tacitly assumed the force of grandeur could no further go.&nbsp;
+There was no Thames Embankment, and only a collection of wharves
+and coal agencies, and tumble-down sheds, at all
+times&mdash;especially when the tide was out&mdash;hideous to
+contemplate.&nbsp; The old Houses of Parliament had been burnt
+down, and no costly palace had been erected on their site.&nbsp;
+The Law Courts in Westminster Hall were crowded and
+inconvenient.&nbsp; Where now Queen Victoria Street rears its
+stately head were narrow streets and mean buildings.&nbsp;
+Eating-houses were close and stuffy, and so were the inns, which
+now we call by the more dignified name of hotels.</p>
+<p>As to the poor sixty years ago, society was indifferent alike
+as to the state of their souls or bodies.&nbsp; In Ratcliff
+Highway the sailor was robbed right and left.&nbsp; The common
+lodging-house was a den of thieves.&nbsp; The poor shirt-maker
+and needlewoman lived on starvation wages.&nbsp; Sanitary
+arrangements were unknown.&nbsp; There was no decency of any
+kind; the streets, <!-- page 116--><a name="page116"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 116</span>or rather lanes, where the children
+played, with their open sewers, were nurseries of disease.&nbsp;
+Even in Bethnal Green, the Sanitary Commission found that while
+the mean age of death among the well-to-do residents was
+forty-four, that of the working-classes was twenty-two; and yet
+Bethnal Green with its open spaces was a garden of Eden compared
+with the lodging-houses in some of the streets off Drury
+Lane.&nbsp; Perhaps the most unfortunate classes in the London of
+that time were the poor chimney-sweeps&mdash;little children from
+four to eight years of age, the majority of them orphans, the
+rest bartered or sold by brutal parents.&nbsp; In order to do
+their work they had to move up and down by pressing every joint
+in their bodies against the hard and often broken surface of the
+chimneys; and to prevent their hands and knees from streaming
+with blood, the children were rubbed with brine before a fire to
+harden their flesh.&nbsp; They were liable to a frightful
+disorder&mdash;the chimneysweeper&rsquo;s cancer, involving one
+of the most terrible forms of physical suffering.&nbsp; They
+began the day&rsquo;s work at four, three, and even two in the
+morning; they were half suffocated by the hot sulphurous air in
+the flues; often they would stick in the chimneys and faint; and
+then if the usual remedy&mdash;straw lighted to bring them
+round&mdash;failed, they were often half killed, and sometimes
+killed outright, by the <!-- page 117--><a
+name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 117</span>very means
+used to extricate them.&nbsp; They lived in low, ill-drained,
+ill-ventilated, and noxious rooms and cellars, and often slept
+upon the soot heaps.&nbsp; They remained unwashed for weeks, and
+on Sundays they were generally shut up together so that their
+neighbours might not see their miserable condition.&nbsp; Perhaps
+the worst part of London when I knew it was Field Lane, at the
+bottom of Holborn Hill, now happily improved off the face of the
+earth.&nbsp; It was known as &ldquo;Jack Ketch&rsquo;s
+Warren,&rdquo; from the fact that the greater part of the persons
+hanged at Newgate came from the lanes and alleys in the
+vicinity.&nbsp; The disturbances that occurred in these low
+quarters were often so great that from forty to fifty constables
+armed with cutlasses were marched down, it being often impossible
+for officers to act in fewer numbers or disarmed.&nbsp; Some of
+the houses close beside the Fleet Ditch were fitted with dark
+closets, trapdoors, sliding panels, and other means of escape,
+while extensive basements served for the purpose of concealing
+goods; and in others there were furnaces used by coiners and
+stills for the production of excisable spirits.&nbsp; It was here
+that in 1843 the Ragged School movement in London commenced its
+wonderful and praiseworthy career.</p>
+<p>Naturally in this connection I must speak of the Earl of
+Shaftesbury, the great philanthropist of the Victorian era, a
+nobleman whose long <!-- page 118--><a name="page118"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 118</span>and honourable life was spent in the
+service of man and the fear of God.&nbsp; He was somewhat
+narrow-minded, an Evangelical Churchman of a now almost extinct
+type, not beloved by Cobden and the Free Traders, occasionally
+very vehement in his utterances, a man who, if he had stuck to
+the party game of politics, would have taken a high place in the
+management of public affairs.&nbsp; I knew him well, and he was
+always friendly to me.&nbsp; In his prime he must have been a
+remarkably handsome man, tall, pale, with dark hair and a
+commanding presence.&nbsp; Perhaps he took life a little too
+seriously.&nbsp; To shake hands with him, said his brother, was a
+solemn function.&nbsp; But his earnestness might well make him
+sad, as he saw and felt the seriousness of the great work to
+which he had devoted his life.&nbsp; He had no great party to
+back him up.&nbsp; The Dissenters regarded him with suspicion,
+for he doubted their orthodoxy, and in his way he was a Churchman
+to the core.&nbsp; He was too much a Tory for the Whigs, and too
+Radical a philanthropist for the old-fashioned Tory fossils then
+abounding in the land.&nbsp; On one occasion Lord Melbourne, when
+dining with the Queen in his company, introduced him to royalty
+as the greatest Jacobin in her dominions.&nbsp; In Exeter Hall he
+reigned supreme, and though dead he still lives as his works
+survive.&nbsp; He was the friend of all the weak, the poor, the
+desolate who needed help.&nbsp; <!-- page 119--><a
+name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>He did much
+to arouse the aristocracy to the discharge of their duties as
+well as the maintenance of their rights.&nbsp; All the world is
+the better for his life.&nbsp; It was a miracle to me how his
+son, the eighth Earl, came to commit suicide, as he always seemed
+to me the cheerfullest of men, of the rollicking sailor
+type.&nbsp; I often met him on board the steamer which took us
+all down the river to the <i>Chichester</i> and <i>Arethusa</i>,
+founded by the late Mr. William Williams in 1843&mdash;a good man
+for whom Earl Shaftesbury had the most ardent esteem&mdash;as
+refuges for homeless and destitute children to train up for a
+naval career.</p>
+<p>London poverty and London vice flourished unchecked till long
+after Queen Victoria had commenced her reign.&nbsp; When I first
+knew London the streets after dark were fearful, and a terrible
+snare to all, especially the young and idle and well-to-do.&nbsp;
+The public-houses were kept open till a late hour.&nbsp; There
+were coffee-houses that were never closed; music-halls, where the
+songs, such as described in Thackeray&rsquo;s &ldquo;Cave of
+Harmony,&rdquo; were of a most degrading character; Judge and
+Jury Clubs, where the low wit and obscenity of the actors were
+fearful; saloons for the pickpocket, the swell mobsman, and the
+man about town, and women who shone in evening dress, and were
+alike fair and frail.&nbsp; It is only within the last twenty
+years that the Middlesex <!-- page 120--><a
+name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 120</span>magistrates
+refused Mr. Bignell a licence for the Argyle Rooms; that was not
+until Mr. Bignell had found it worth while to invest
+&pound;80,000 in the place.&nbsp; Year after year noble lords and
+Middlesex magistrates had visited the place and licensed
+it.&nbsp; Indeed, it had become one of the institutions of the
+metropolis, one of the places where Bob Logic and Corinthian
+Tom&mdash;such men still existed, though they went by other
+names&mdash;were safe to be found of an evening.&nbsp; The
+theatre was too staid and respectable for them, though dashing
+Cyprians, as they were termed, were sure to be found at the
+refreshment saloon.&nbsp; When the Argyle was shut up, it was
+said a great public scandal was removed.&nbsp; Perhaps so; but
+the real scandal was that such a place was ever needed in the
+capital of a land which handsomely paid clergymen and deans and
+bishops and archbishops to exterminate the lust of the flesh, and
+the lust of the eye, and the pride of life, which found their
+full development in such places as the Argyle Rooms.&nbsp; It was
+a scandal and a shame that men who had been born in English
+homes, and nursed by English mothers, and confirmed by English
+bishops, and had been trained in English public schools and
+Universities, and worshipped in English churches and cathedrals,
+should have helped to make the Argyle Rooms a successful public
+institution.&nbsp; Mr. Bignell created no public vices; he merely
+pandered to <!-- page 121--><a name="page121"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 121</span>what was in existence.&nbsp; It was
+the men of wealth and fashion who made the place what it
+was.&nbsp; It was not an improving spectacle in an age that
+sacrificed everything to worldly show, and had come to regard the
+brougham as the one thing needful&mdash;the outward sign of
+respectability and grace&mdash;to see equipages of this kind,
+filled with fashionably dressed women, most of them</p>
+<blockquote><p>Born in a garret, in a kitchen bred&mdash;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>driving up nightly to the Argyle, or the Holborn, or the
+Piccadilly, or Bob Croft&rsquo;s in the Haymarket, with their
+gallants or protectors or friends, or whatever they might term
+themselves, amidst a dense crowd of lookers-on, rich or poor,
+male or female, old or young, drunk or sober.&nbsp; In no other
+capital in Europe was such a sight to be seen.&nbsp; It was often
+there that a young and giddy girl, with good looks and a good
+constitution, and above all things set on fine dresses and gay
+society, and weary of her lowly home and of the drudgery of daily
+life, learned what she could gain if she could make up her mind
+to give her virtue; many of them, indeed, owing to the disgusting
+and indecent overcrowding in rustic cottages and great cities
+having but little virtue to part with.&nbsp; Then assailed her
+the companionship of men of birth and breeding and wealth, and
+the gaiety and splendour of successful vice.&nbsp; <!-- page
+122--><a name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 122</span>I
+knew of two Essex girls, born to service, who came to town and
+led a vicious life, and one became the wife of the son of a
+Marquis, and the other married a respectable country solicitor;
+the portrait of the lady I have often seen amongst the
+photographs displayed in Regent Street.&nbsp; The pleasures of
+sin, says the preacher, are only for a season, but a similar
+remark, I fancy, applies to most of the enjoyments of life.&nbsp;
+It is true that in the outside crowd there were in rags and
+tatters, in degradation and filth, shivering in the cold, wan and
+pale with want, hideous with intemperance, homeless and
+destitute, and prematurely old, withered hags, whom the policemen
+ordered to move on&mdash;forlorn hags, who were once
+<i>habitu&eacute;s</i> of the Argyle and the darlings of
+England&rsquo;s gilded youth&mdash;the bane and the antidote side
+by side, as it were.&nbsp; But when did giddy youth ever realise
+that riches take to themselves wings and fly away, that beauty
+vanishes as a dream, that joy and laughter often end in despair
+and tears?&nbsp; The amusements of London were not much better
+when the music-hall&mdash;which has greatly improved of
+late&mdash;came to be the rage.&nbsp; One has no right to expect
+anything intellectual in the way of amusements.&nbsp; People
+require them, and naturally, as a relief from hard work, a change
+after the wearying and wearisome drudgery of the day.&nbsp; A
+little amusement is a necessity of our common humanity, whether
+rich or poor, <!-- page 123--><a name="page123"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 123</span>saintly or the reverse.&nbsp; And,
+of course, in the matter of amusements, we must allow people a
+considerable latitude according to temperament and age, and their
+surroundings and education, or the want of it; and it is an
+undoubted fact that the outdoor sports and pastimes, in which
+ladies take part as well as men, have done much to improve the
+physical stamina and the moral condition of young men.&nbsp;
+Scarcely anything of the kind existed when I first knew London,
+and the amusements of the people chiefly consisted in drinking or
+going to see a man hanged.&nbsp; At one time there were many
+debating halls, where, over beer and baccy, orators, great in
+their own estimation, settled the affairs of the nation, at any
+rate, let us hope, according to their own estimation, in a very
+satisfactory manner.&nbsp; In Fleet Street there was the Temple
+Forum, and at the end, just out of it, was the Codgers&rsquo;
+Hall, both famous for debates, which have long ceased to
+exist.&nbsp; A glance at the modern music-hall will show us
+whether we have much improved of late.&nbsp; It is more showy,
+more attractive, more stylish in appearance than its
+predecessors, but in one respect it is unchanged.&nbsp; Primarily
+it is a place in which men and women are expected to drink.&nbsp;
+The music is an afterthought, and when given, is done with the
+view to keep the people longer in their places, and to make them
+drink more.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t <!-- page 124--><a
+name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 124</span>you
+think,&rdquo; said the manager of one of the theatres most warmly
+patronised by the working classes, to a clerical friend of
+mine&mdash;&ldquo;don&rsquo;t you think that I am doing good in
+keeping these people out of the public-house all night?&rdquo;
+and my friend was compelled to yield a very reluctant
+consent.&nbsp; When I first knew London the music-hall was an
+unmitigated evil.&nbsp; It was there the greenhorn from the
+country took his first steps in the road to ruin.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 127--><a name="page127"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 127</span>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
+<span class="smcap">My Literary Career</span>.</h2>
+<p>I drifted into literature when I was a boy.&nbsp; I always
+felt that I would like to be an author, and, arrived at
+man&rsquo;s estate, it seemed to me easier to reach the public
+mind by the press than by the pulpit.&nbsp; I could not exactly
+come down to the level of the pulpit probationer.&nbsp; I found
+no sympathetic deacons, and I heard church members talk a good
+deal of nonsense for which I had no hearty respect.&nbsp; Perhaps
+what is called the root of the matter was in me conspicuous by
+its absence.&nbsp; I preached, but I got no call, nor did I care
+for one, as I felt increasingly the difference between the pulpit
+and the pew.&nbsp; Now I might use language in one sense, which
+would be&mdash;and I found really was&mdash;understood in quite
+an opposite sense in the pew.&nbsp; My revered parent had set his
+heart on seeing me a faithful minister of Jesus Christ; and none
+can tell what, under such circumstances, was the hardness of my
+lot, but gradually the struggle ceased, and I became a literary
+man&mdash;when literary men abode chiefly <!-- page 128--><a
+name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 128</span>in Bohemia,
+and grew to fancy themselves men of genius in the low
+companionship of the barroom.&nbsp; Fielding got to a phase of
+life when he found he had either to write or get a living by
+driving a hackney coach.&nbsp; A somewhat similar experience was
+mine.</p>
+<p>It is now about sixty years since I took to writing.&nbsp; I
+began with no thought of money or fame&mdash;it is quite as well
+that I did not, I am inclined to think&mdash;but a new era was
+opening on the world, a new divine breath was ruffling the
+stagnant surface of society, and I thought I had something to say
+in the war&mdash;the eternal war of right with wrong, of light
+with darkness, of God and the devil.&nbsp; I started a
+periodical.&nbsp; In the prospectus I stated that I had started
+it with a view to wage war with State Church pretensions and
+class legislation.&nbsp; I sent some copies of it to Thomas
+Carlyle&mdash;then rising into prominence as the great teacher of
+his age.&nbsp; He sent me a short note back to the effect that he
+had received and read what I had written, and that he saw much to
+give his cordial consent to, and ended by bidding me go on and
+prosper.&nbsp; Then I sent Douglas Jerrold a paper for his
+<i>Shilling Magazine</i>, which he accepted, but never published
+it, as I wanted it for a magazine which came out under my own
+editorship.&nbsp; One of my earliest patrons was Dr. Thomas
+Price, the editor of the <i>Eclectic</i>, who had formerly been a
+Baptist minister, but who became secretary <!-- page 129--><a
+name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 129</span>of an
+insurance society, and one of a founders of the Anti-State Church
+Association, a society with which I was in full accord, and
+which, as I heard Edward Miall himself declare, owed not a little
+to my literary zeal.&nbsp; We had a fine time of it when that
+society was started.&nbsp; We were at Leicester, where I stayed
+with a dear old college friend, the Rev. Joseph Smedmore, and
+fast and furious was the fun as we met at the Rev. James
+Mursell&rsquo;s, the popular pastor of the Baptist Chapel, and
+father of a still more popular son.&nbsp; Good company, good
+tobacco, good wine, aided in the good work.&nbsp; Amongst the
+company would be Stovel, an honoured Baptist minister Whitechapel
+way, at one time a fighter, and a hard hitter to the end of his
+lengthy life; John Burnett of Camberwell, always dry in the
+pulpit, but all-victorious on the public platform, by reason of
+his Scotch humour and enormous common-sense; Mursell in the
+Midlands was a host in himself; and Edward Miall, whose
+earnestness in the cause led him to give up the Leicester pulpit
+to found the London <i>Nonconformist</i>.&nbsp; John Childs, the
+well-known Bungay printer, assisted, an able speaker himself, in
+spite of the dogmatism of his face and manner.&nbsp; When the
+society became rich and respectable, and changed its name, I left
+it.&nbsp; I have little faith in societies when they become
+respectable.&nbsp; When on one occasion I <!-- page 130--><a
+name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 130</span>put up for
+an M.P., I was amused by the emissary of the society sending to
+me for a subscription on the plea that all the Liberal candidates
+had given donations!&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you think,&rdquo; said I,
+&ldquo;that I am going to bid for your support by a paltry
+&pound;5 note?&nbsp; Not, I, indeed!&nbsp; It is a pity
+M.P.&rsquo;s are not made of sterner staff.&rdquo;&nbsp; One of
+my intimate friends at one time was the late Peter Taylor, M.P.
+for Leicester.&nbsp; He was as liberal as he was wealthy, yet he
+never spent a farthing in demoralising his Leicester constituents
+by charity, or, in other words, bribery and corruption.&nbsp; The
+dirty work a rich man has to do to get into
+Parliament&mdash;especially if he would represent an intelligent
+and high-toned democracy&mdash;is beyond belief.</p>
+<p>The ups and downs of a literary career are many.&nbsp; Without
+writing a good hand it is now impossible to succeed.&nbsp; It was
+not so when I first took to literature; but nowadays, when the
+market is overstocked with starving genius in the shape of
+heaven-born writers, I find that editors, compositors, readers,
+and all connected with printing, set their faces rigidly against
+defective penmanship.&nbsp; I look upon it that now the real
+literary gent, as <i>The Saturday Review</i> loved to call him,
+has ceased to exist altogether; there is no chance for him.&nbsp;
+Our editors have to look out for articles written by lords and
+ladies, and men and women who have achieved <!-- page 131--><a
+name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 131</span>some
+passing notoriety.&nbsp; They often write awful stuff, but then
+the public buys.&nbsp; A man who masters shorthand may get a
+living in connection with the Press, and he may rise to be editor
+and leader-writer; but the pure literary gent, the speculative
+contributor to periodical literature, is out of the
+running.&nbsp; If he is an honourable, if he is a lord or M.P.,
+or an adventurer, creditable or the reverse, he has a chance, but
+not otherwise.&nbsp; A special correspondent may enjoy a happy
+career, and as most of my work has been done in that way, I may
+speak with authority.&nbsp; As to getting a living as a London
+correspondent that is quite out of the question.&nbsp; I knew
+many men who did fairly well as London correspondents; nowadays
+the great Press agencies keep a staff to manufacture London
+letters on the cheap, and the really able original has gone clean
+out of existence.&nbsp; Two or three Press agencies manage almost
+all the London correspondence of the Press.&nbsp; It is an
+enormous power; whether they use it aright, who can say?</p>
+<p>I had, after I left college, written reviews and
+articles.&nbsp; But in 1850 Mr. John Cassell engaged me as
+sub-editor of the <i>Standard of Freedom</i>, established to
+promote the sale of his coffees, or rather, in consequence of the
+sale of them&mdash;to advocate Free Trade and the voluntary
+principle, and temperance in particular, and philanthropy in
+general.&nbsp; In time I became <!-- page 132--><a
+name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 132</span>chief
+editor, but somehow or other the paper was not a success, though
+amongst the leader writers were William Howitt and Robertson, who
+had been a writer on the <i>Westminster Review</i>.&nbsp; It was
+there also I saw a good deal of Richard Cobden, a man as genial
+as he was unrivalled as a persuasive orator, who had a wonderful
+facility of disarming prejudice, and turning opponents into
+friends.&nbsp; I fancy he had a great deal of sympathy with Mr.
+John Cassell, who was really a very remarkable man.&nbsp; John
+Cassell may be described as having sprung from the dregs of the
+people.&nbsp; He had but twopence-halfpenny in his pocket when he
+came to town; he had been a carpenter&rsquo;s lad; education he
+had none.&nbsp; He was tall and ungainly in appearance, with a
+big head, covered with short black hair, very small dark eyes,
+and sallow face, and full of ideas&mdash;to which he was
+generally quite unable to give utterance.&nbsp; I was always
+amused when he called me into his sanctum.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mr.
+Ritchie,&rdquo; he would say, &ldquo;I want you to write a good
+article on so-and-so.&nbsp; You must say,&rdquo; and here he
+would wave his big hand, &ldquo;and here you must,&rdquo; and
+then another wave of his hand, and thus he would go on waving his
+hand, moving his lips, which uttered no audible sound, and thus
+the interview would terminate, I having gained no idea from my
+proprietor, except that he wanted a certain subject
+discussed.&nbsp; At times <!-- page 133--><a
+name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 133</span>he had a
+terrible temper, a temper which made all his friends thankful
+that he was a strict teetotaler.&nbsp; But his main idea was a
+grand one&mdash;to elevate morally and socially and
+intellectually the people of whose cause he was ever an ardent
+champion and true friend.&nbsp; He died, alas too soon, but not
+till he saw the firm of Cassell, Petter, and Galpin one of the
+leading publishing firms of the day.&nbsp; <i>The Standard of
+Freedom</i> was incorporated with <i>The Weekly News and
+Chronicle</i>, of which the working editor was Mr. John
+Robinson&mdash;now Sir John Robinson, of <i>The Daily
+News</i>&mdash;who was at the same time working editor of <i>The
+Inquirer</i>.&nbsp; I wrote for <i>The Weekly
+News</i>&mdash;Parliamentary Sketches&mdash;and for that purpose
+had a ticket for the gallery of the House of Commons, where,
+however, I much preferred to listen to the brilliant talk of
+Angus Reach and Shirley Brooks, as they sat waiting on the back
+bench to take their turns, to the oratory of the M.P.&rsquo;s
+below.&nbsp; Let me not, however, forget my obligations to Sir
+John Robinson.&nbsp; It was to him that I owed an introduction to
+<i>The Daily News</i>, and to his kindness and liberality, of
+which many a literary man in London can testify, I owe
+much.&nbsp; Let me also mention that again I became connected
+with Mr. John Cassell when&mdash;in connection with Petter and
+Galpin&mdash;the firm had moved to Playhouse Yard, next door to
+<i>The Times</i> printing office, and thence to the present <!--
+page 134--><a name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+134</span>magnificent premises on Ludgate Hill.&nbsp; At that
+time it became the fashion&mdash;a fashion which has been
+developed greatly of late years&mdash;to print for country papers
+a sheet of news, or more if they required it, which then was
+filled with local intelligence, and became a local paper.&nbsp;
+It was my duty to attend to the London paper, of which we printed
+fresh editions every day.&nbsp; In that position I remained till
+I was rash enough to become a newspaper proprietor myself.&nbsp;
+Mr. John Tallis, who had made a handsome fortune by publishing
+part numbers of standard works, was anxious to become proprietor
+of <i>The Illustrated London News</i>.&nbsp; For this purpose he
+desired to make an agreement with Mr. Ingram, M.P., the
+proprietor of the paper in question, but it came to nothing, and
+Mr. Tallis commenced <i>The Illustrated News of the
+World</i>.&nbsp; When he had lost all his money, and was
+compelled to give it up, in an evil hour I was tempted to carry
+it on.&nbsp; It came to an end after a hard struggle of a couple
+of years, leaving me a sadder and a wiser and a poorer man.&nbsp;
+Once, and once only, I had a bright gleam of sunshine, and that
+was when Prince Albert died, of whom and of the Queen I published
+fine full-length portraits.&nbsp; The circulation of the paper
+went up by leaps and bounds; it was impossible to print off the
+steel plates fast enough to keep pace with the public demand, but
+that was soon over, and the paper sank <!-- page 135--><a
+name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+135</span>accordingly.&nbsp; Next in popularity to the portraits
+of Royalty I found were the portraits of John Bright, Cobden,
+Spurgeon, and Newman Hall.&nbsp; For generals, and actors and
+actresses, even for such men as Gladstone, or Disraeli, or
+Charles Kingsley, the public at the time did not seem greatly to
+care.&nbsp; But that was an episode in my career on which I do
+not care to dwell.&nbsp; I only refer to it as an illustration of
+the fact that a journalist should always stick to his pen, and
+leave business to business men.&nbsp; Sir Walter Scott tried to
+combine the two, and with what result all the world knows.&nbsp;
+In my small way I tried to do the same, and with an equally
+disastrous result.&nbsp; Happily, I returned to my more
+legitimate calling, which if it has not led me to fame and
+fortune, has, at any rate, enabled me to gain a fair share of
+bread and cheese, though I have always felt that another
+sovereign in any pocket would, like the Pickwick pen, have been a
+great blessing.&nbsp; Alas! now I begin to despair of that extra
+sovereign, and fall back for consolation on the beautiful truth,
+which I learned in my copy-book as a boy, that virtue is its own
+reward.&nbsp; When I hear people declaim on the benefits the
+world owes to the Press, and say it is a debt they can never
+repay, I always reply, &ldquo;You are right, you can never repay
+the debt, but I should be happy to take a small sum on
+account.&rdquo;&nbsp; But it is a great blessing to think and say
+what you like, and that is a blessing <!-- page 136--><a
+name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 136</span>enjoyed by
+the literary man alone.&nbsp; The parson in the pulpit has to
+think of the pew, and if a Dissenter, of his deacons.&nbsp; The
+medical man must not shock the prejudices of his patients if he
+would secure a living.&nbsp; The lawyer must often speak against
+his convictions.&nbsp; An M.P. dares not utter what would offend
+his constituents if he would secure his re-election.&nbsp; The
+pressman alone is free, and when I knew him, led a happy life, as
+he wrote in some old tavern, (Peele&rsquo;s coffee-house in Fleet
+Street was a great place for him in my day), or anywhere else
+where a drink and a smoke and a chat were to be had, and managed
+to evolve his &ldquo;copy&rdquo; amidst laughter and cheers and
+the fumes of tobacco.&nbsp; His clothes were shabby, his hat was
+the worse for wear; his boots had lost somewhat of their original
+symmetry, his hands and linen were&mdash;but perhaps the less one
+says about them the better.&nbsp; He had often little in his
+pocket besides the last half-crown he had borrowed of a friend,
+or that had been advanced by his &ldquo;uncle,&rdquo; but he was
+happy in his work, in his companions, in his dreams, in his
+nightly symposium protracted into the small hours, in his
+contempt of worldly men and worldly ways, in his rude defiance of
+Mrs. Grundy.&nbsp; He was, in reality, a grander man than his
+cultured brother of to-day, who affects to be a gentleman, and is
+not unfrequently merely a word-grinding machine, who has been
+<!-- page 137--><a name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+137</span>carefully trained to write, whereas the only true
+writer, like the poet, is born, not made.&nbsp; We have now an
+Institute to improve what they call the social status of the
+pressman.&nbsp; We did not want it when I began my journalistic
+career.&nbsp; It was enough for me to hear the chimes at
+midnight, and to finish off with a good supper at some Fleet
+Street tavern, for as jolly old Walter Mapes sang&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>Every one by nature hath a mould that he was cast
+in;<br />
+I happen to be one of those who never could write fasting.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Let me return to the story of my betters, with whom business
+relations brought me into contact.&nbsp; One was Dr. Charles
+Mackay, whose poetry at one time was far more popular than
+now.&nbsp; All the world rejoiced over his &ldquo;Good time
+coming, boys,&rdquo; for which all the world has agreed to wait,
+though yearly with less prospect of its realisation, &ldquo;a
+little longer.&rdquo;&nbsp; He was the editor of <i>The
+Illustrated News</i> till he and the proprietor differed about
+Louis Napoleon, whom Mackay held to be an impostor and destined
+to a speedy fall.&nbsp; With Mr. Mackay was associated dear old
+John Timbs, every one&rsquo;s friend, the kindliest of gossips,
+and the most industrious of book-makers.&nbsp; Then there was
+James Grant, of <i>The Morning Advertiser</i>, always ready to
+put into print the most monstrous <i>canard</i>, and to fight in
+the ungenial columns of the licensed victualler&rsquo;s organ to
+the <!-- page 138--><a name="page138"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 138</span>bitter end for the faith once
+delivered to the saints.&nbsp; And then there was marvellous
+George Cruikshank, the prince of story-tellers as well as of
+caricaturists to his dying day.&nbsp; It is curious to note how
+great was the popularity of men whom I knew&mdash;such as George
+Thompson, the M.P. for the Tower Hamlets and the founder of
+<i>The Empire</i> newspaper&mdash;and how fleeting that
+popularity was!&nbsp; Truly the earth has bubbles as the water
+hath!&nbsp; Equally unexpected has been the rise of others.&nbsp;
+Sir Edward Russell, of <i>The Liverpool Daily Post</i>, when I
+first knew him was a banker&rsquo;s clerk in the City, which
+situation he gave up, against my advice, to become the editor of
+<i>The Islington Gazette</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Passmore Edwards, of
+<i>The Echo</i>, at one time M.P. for Salisbury, and one of the
+wisest and most beneficent of philanthropists, when I first knew
+him was a struggling publisher in Horse Shoe Court, Ludgate Hill;
+Mr. Edward Miall, M.P. for Bradford, the founder of <i>The
+Nonconformist</i> newspaper and of the Anti-State Church
+Association, as the Society for the Liberation of Religion from
+State Patronage and Control loved to describe itself&mdash;(good
+heavens, what a mouthful!)&mdash;was an Independent minister at
+Leicester.&nbsp; How many whom I knew as pressmen are gone!&nbsp;
+Of one of them I would fain recall the memory, and that is Mr.
+James Clarke, of <i>The Christian World</i>, with whom it was my
+privilege to be <!-- page 139--><a name="page139"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 139</span>associated many a long year.&nbsp;
+In all my experience of editors I never knew a more honourable,
+upright man, or one of greater clearness of head and kindliness
+of heart.&nbsp; He died prematurely, but not till he had
+revolutionised the whole tone of our popular theology.&nbsp; It
+was an honour to be connected with such a man.&nbsp; He commenced
+life as a reporter, and lived to be a wealthy man by the paper he
+conducted with such skill.&nbsp; And what a friend he was to the
+struggling literary man or reporter!&nbsp; I lay emphasis on
+this, because my reviewers sometimes tell me I am cynical.&nbsp;
+I ask, How can a man be otherwise who has been behind the scenes,
+as I have been, for nearly fifty years?</p>
+<p>One meets with curious characters among the gentlemen of the
+Press.&nbsp; I recall the memory of one who was often to be seen
+in Fleet Street at the time I was in Mr. Cassell&rsquo;s
+employ.&nbsp; He was fair-haired, short and stout in figure, very
+good-natured, with an amount of cheek only equalled by his
+ignorance.&nbsp; Originally, I think he had been a printer, till
+his ambition soon led him to fly at higher game, and under a
+military <i>nom-de-plume</i> he compiled several handbooks of
+popular games&mdash;games of which, by the bye, he knew as little
+as a Hottentot&mdash;and, I believe, came to be the sporting
+correspondent of a London paper&mdash;a position he held at the
+time of his death.&nbsp; For statements that were rather <!--
+page 140--><a name="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+140</span>unreliable he had a capacity which almost bordered on
+the sublime.&nbsp; On one occasion he walked up Ludgate Hill with
+an acquaintance of my own, and nodded familiarly to certain
+individuals.&nbsp; That was Dickens, he said to my friend, after
+one of these friendly encounters.&nbsp; Of another he explained,
+that was Thackeray, and so on.&nbsp; Unfortunately, however, my
+friend knew that the individual thus pointed was engaged as a
+bookseller&rsquo;s assistant in the Row.&nbsp; Once when I
+happened to meet him he was rather seedy, which he accounted for
+to me by the remark that he had been dining with a lord&mdash;a
+statement about as true as the generality of his remarks.&nbsp;
+He was very good-natured&mdash;it was impossible to offend
+him&mdash;and wrote touching poems in cheap journals about this
+&ldquo;fog-dotted earth,&rdquo; which never did anybody any harm
+so far as I was aware of.&nbsp; He was one of the numerous tribe
+who impose on publishers by their swagger till they are found
+out.&nbsp; Another of the same class was a gentleman of a higher
+station and with scholarly pretensions.&nbsp; On one occasion he
+served me rather a scurvy trick.&nbsp; I had published a volume
+of sketches of British statesmen.&nbsp; One of the characters, a
+very distinguished politician, died soon after.&nbsp; My
+gentleman at that time was engaged to write biographical sketches
+of such exalted personages when they died, and accordingly he
+wrote an article which appeared the next day <!-- page 141--><a
+name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 141</span>in one of
+the morning papers.&nbsp; On reading it, I found it was almost
+word for word the sketch which I had written in my own book,
+without the slightest acknowledgment.&nbsp; On my remonstrating,
+he complained that the absence of acknowledgment was quite
+accidental.&nbsp; Owing to the hurry in which he wrote, he had
+quite forgotten to mention my name, and if I would say nothing
+about it, he would do me a good service at the first
+opportunity.&nbsp; My friend failed to do so.&nbsp; Indeed, I may
+say that as a literary man his career was somewhat of a failure,
+though he managed for a time to secure appointments on good
+newspapers, and became connected with more than one or two
+distinguished firms of publishers.&nbsp; He was known to many,
+yet I never heard any one say a good word on his behalf.</p>
+<p>I always avoided literary society.&nbsp; Perhaps in that
+respect I did wrong as regards my own interest, for I find the
+pressmen who belong to clubs are always ready to give each other
+a helping hand in the way of good-natured reference, and hence so
+much of that mutual admiration which forms so marked a feature in
+the literary gossip of our day, and which is of such little
+interest to the general reader.&nbsp; When I read such stuff I am
+reminded of the chambermaid who said to a lady acquaintance,
+&ldquo;I hear it is all over London already that I am going to
+leave my lady,&rdquo; and of the footman who, being <!-- page
+142--><a name="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+142</span>newly married, desired his comrade to tell him freely
+what the town thought of it.&nbsp; It is seldom that literary men
+shine in conversation, and that was one reason I cared little to
+belong to any of the literary clubs which existed, and I dare say
+exist now.&nbsp; Dean Swift seems to have been of a similar
+opinion.&nbsp; He tells us the worst conversation he ever
+remembered to have heard in his life was that at Wells&rsquo;
+Coffee House, where the wits, as they were termed, used formerly
+to assemble.&nbsp; They talked of their plays or prologues or
+Miscellanies, he tells us, as if they had been the noblest effort
+of human nature, and, as if the fate of kingdoms depended on
+them.&nbsp; When Greek meets Greek there comes, we are told, the
+tug of war.&nbsp; When literary men meet, as a rule, the very
+reverse is the case.&nbsp; I belonged to the Whittington
+Club&mdash;now, alas! extinct&mdash;for it was the best
+institution of the kind ever started in London, of which Douglas
+Jerrold was president, and where young men found a home with
+better society than they could get elsewhere, and where we had
+debates, in which many, who have since risen to fame and fortune,
+learned how to speak&mdash;perhaps a questionable benefit in
+those days of perpetual talk.&nbsp; One of our prominent members
+was Sir J. W. Russell, who still, I am happy to say, flourishes
+as the popular editor of <i>The Liverpool Daily Post</i>.</p>
+<p>As a writer, unpleasant experiences have been <!-- page
+143--><a name="page143"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+143</span>few.&nbsp; I have had letters from angry
+correspondents, but not more than two or three of them.&nbsp; One
+of the most amusing was from a clergyman now deceased&mdash;a
+very great man in his own opinion&mdash;a controversialist whom
+none could withstand.&nbsp; Once upon a time he had a controversy
+with the late Mr. Charles Bradlaugh, a man of whom I knew a
+little, and for whose honesty I had a high regard.&nbsp; I was
+present at the discussion, and in my account of it intimated
+that, in my humble opinion, the clergyman was hardly the man to
+grapple with Mr. Bradlaugh.&nbsp; I had a letter from the
+clergyman thanking me in the name of all the devils in
+hell&mdash;of whom he informed me I should shortly be
+one&mdash;for the article I had written.&nbsp; On another
+occasion a distinguished Congregational minister attacked me
+bitterly in a journal that soon came to grief, which was intended
+to supersede the newspaper with which it is my pride to have been
+connected more than thirty-five years.&nbsp; I commenced an
+action against him for libel; the reverend divine paid damages
+into court, and I dropped the action.&nbsp; I had no wish to harm
+the worthy divine, for such undoubtedly he was, by getting him
+branded as a convicted libeller.&nbsp; I only wanted to teach him
+that while in the pulpit a man was free to say what he liked, it
+was quite a different thing to rush hastily and angrily into
+print.&nbsp; One letter amused <!-- page 144--><a
+name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 144</span>me
+rather.&nbsp; My usual signature was &ldquo;Christopher
+Crayon.&rdquo;&nbsp; Once, as I had a paper under that signature,
+I had written another with a different signature, which appeared
+in the same issue, and immediately a correspondent wrote to
+complain that the latter article was but a poor imitation of
+&ldquo;Christopher Crayon.&rdquo;&nbsp; Once a reviewer on a
+leading London morning newspaper referred to me as a young
+lady.&nbsp; I refer to that soft impeachment simply as an
+illustration of the carelessness with which London reviewers
+often write.&nbsp; I can quite understand such blunders.&nbsp; A
+reviewer has so many books to look at, and such little time
+allowed him for the right discharge of his duty, that it is no
+wonder he often errs.</p>
+<p>I have written several books.&nbsp; Perhaps here I ought to
+refer to Mr. Burton, of Ipswich, who was the first to anticipate
+the growing demand for good and cheap literature by the
+publication of the &ldquo;Run and Read Library,&rdquo; which
+deserved a better sale than it really secured.&nbsp; He published
+my first book&mdash;a reprint of sketches of leading ministers of
+all denominations, which had appeared in a London weekly paper,
+and paid me for it in the most liberal manner.&nbsp; I fear Mr.
+Burton was a little in advance of his age.&nbsp; At any rate, he
+soon disappeared from Ipswich and the publishing trade.&nbsp;
+Surely such a spirited town as Ipswich might have better
+supported such a thoroughly <!-- page 145--><a
+name="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 145</span>deserving
+man.&nbsp; Possibly my experiences may be useful.&nbsp; One thing
+is clear, that a review may one day praise you highly, and
+another day as strongly condemn.&nbsp; How is this?&mdash;a
+matter of personal prejudice say the public.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t
+believe it.&nbsp; Personal prejudice is not so common in reviews
+as the ignorant public thinks.&nbsp; Accident has a great deal to
+do with it.&nbsp; A newspaper proprietor once told me he had two
+reviewers, one of whom always cut up all the books sent for
+review, while the other praised them, and it depended upon the
+chance into whose hands your book might fall, whether you were
+praised or censured.&nbsp; Again, it is much easier to find fault
+than to praise.&nbsp; A youthful reviewer is specially gratified
+when he can &ldquo;slate&rdquo; an author, and besides how it
+flatters his own self-esteem!&nbsp; It is true the reviewer in
+doing so often blunders, but no one finds it out.&nbsp; For
+instance, many years ago no man was better known in certain
+circles than Mr. John Morley, the brother, the philanthropic
+brother of that great philanthropist, Mr. Samuel Morley.&nbsp; I
+had written in a book on City life that a certain portion of the
+Gospels had been given away by Mr. John Morley on a certain
+occasion.&nbsp; Our great Mr. John Morley was then only known to
+a select few.&nbsp; The general public would perfectly understand
+who was the Mr. John Morley to whom I referred.&nbsp; The
+reviewer who deprecated <!-- page 146--><a
+name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 146</span>my book,
+briefly, as somewhat gloomy&mdash;it had not become the fashion
+then to expose the sores of City life&mdash;sneeringly observed
+that it would be interesting if I would state what were the
+portions of the Gospels given away by Mr. John Morley, evidently
+ignorant that there could be any John Morley besides the one he
+knew.&nbsp; I do not for a moment suppose that the reviewer had
+any personal pique towards myself.&nbsp; His blunder was simply
+one of ignorance.&nbsp; In another case it seemed to me that the
+reviewer of a critical journal which had no circulation had
+simply made his review a ground of attack against a weekly paper
+of far greater circulation and authority than his own.&nbsp; I
+had published a little sketch of travel in Canada.&nbsp; The
+review of it was long and wearisome.&nbsp; I could not understand
+it till I read in the closing sentence that there was no reason
+why the book should have been reprinted from the obscure journal
+in which it originally appeared&mdash;that obscure journal at the
+time being, as it is to this day, one of the most successful of
+all our weeklies.&nbsp; In his case the <i>motif</i> of the
+ill-natured criticism was very obvious.</p>
+<p>In some cases one can only impute a review of an unfavourable
+character to what the Americans call &ldquo;pure
+cussedness.&rdquo;&nbsp; For instance, I had written a book
+called &ldquo;British Senators,&rdquo; of which <i>The Pall Mall
+Gazette</i> had spoken in the highest terms.&nbsp; It fell into
+the hands of the <!-- page 147--><a name="page147"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 147</span><i>Saturday</i> reviewer when <i>The
+Saturday Review</i> was in its palmy days, always piquant and
+never dull.&nbsp; It was a fine opportunity for the reviewer, and
+he wielded his tomahawk with all the vigour of the Red
+Indian.&nbsp; I was an unknown man with no friends.&nbsp; It was
+a grand opportunity, though he was kind enough to admit that I
+was a literary gent of the Sala and Edmund Yates type (it was the
+time when George Augustus Sala was at the bottom&mdash;the
+<i>Saturday</i> took to praising him when he had won his
+position), a favourable specimen if I remember aright.&nbsp; So
+far so good, but the aim of the superfine reviewer was of course
+to make &ldquo;the literary gent&rdquo; look like a fool.&nbsp;
+As an illustration of the way in which we all contract our ideas
+from living in a little world of our own, I said that I had heard
+the late Mr. Joseph Sturge, of Birmingham, say at a peace meeting
+at Edinburgh that there were more tears shed on the occasion of
+the death of Mr. Bradshaw of the Railway Guide than when the Duke
+of Wellington died.&nbsp; The <i>Saturday</i> reviewer exultingly
+wrote &ldquo;Here is a blunder of Ritchie&rsquo;s; what Mr.
+Sturge said, and what Ritchie should have said, was that there
+were more tears shed when Mr. Braidwood of the Fire Brigade died,
+than when the Duke of Wellington died.&rdquo;&nbsp; No doubt many
+a reader of the <i>Saturday</i> chuckled over the blunder of
+&ldquo;the literary gent&rdquo; thus held up to derision.&nbsp;
+But unfortunately for <!-- page 148--><a name="page148"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 148</span>the <i>Saturday</i> reviewer, Mr.
+Sturge died before Mr. Braidwood, and thus it was impossible that
+he could have referred to the tears shed on the occasion of the
+death of the latter.&nbsp; The laugh really ought to have been
+the other way.&nbsp; But the mischief was done, &ldquo;the
+literary gent&rdquo; snubbed, and that was all the
+<i>Saturday</i> superfine reviewer cared about.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 151--><a name="page151"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 151</span>CHAPTER IX.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Cardiff and the Welsh</span>.</h2>
+<p>In 1849 I lived at Cardiff.&nbsp; I had come there to edit
+<i>The Principality</i>, a paper started, I believe, by Mr. David
+Evans, a good sort of man, who had made a little money, which, I
+fear, he lost in his paper speculation.&nbsp; His aim was to make
+the paper the mouthpiece for Welsh Nonconformity.&nbsp; I must
+own, as I saw how Cardiff was growing to be a big place, my aim
+was to make the paper a good local organ.&nbsp; But the Cardiff
+of that time was too Conservative and Churchified for such a
+paper to pay, and as Mr. John Cassell offered me a berth on his
+paper, <i>The Standard of Freedom</i>, my connection with Cardiff
+came to an end.&nbsp; I confess I left it with regret, as I had
+some warm friends in the town, and there was a charming little
+blue-eyed maid&mdash;I wonder if she is alive now&mdash;the
+daughter of an alderman and ex-mayor, with whom I had fallen
+desperately in love for a time.</p>
+<p>At that time Cardiff had a population of some 14,000.&nbsp;
+Lord Bute had built his docks, not by any means as extensive as
+they are now, and it was beginning to do an extensive trade in
+coal <!-- page 152--><a name="page152"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 152</span>brought down by the Taff Vale
+Railway.&nbsp; There was no rail to Cardiff then.&nbsp; To get to
+it from London I had to take the rail to Bristol, spend the night
+there, and go to Cardiff by the steamer which plied daily,
+according to the state of the tide, between that port and
+Bristol, at that time the commercial capital of the South Wales
+district.&nbsp; The mails from London came by a four-horse coach,
+which plied between Gloucester and Cardiff.&nbsp; I felt rather
+miserable when I landed at the docks and looked at the sad
+expanse of ground behind me and the Bristol Channel.&nbsp; A long
+street led up to the town, with shabby houses on one side and a
+large expanse of marshy land on the other.&nbsp; I had heard so
+much of the romance of Wales that when I realised where I really
+was my heart quite sank within me.&nbsp; At the end of St. Mary
+Street was a very primitive old town hall, where I gave a lecture
+on &ldquo;The Progress of the Nation,&rdquo; the only time I ever
+gave a lecture in my life.&nbsp; The chairman was Mr. Vachell,
+father of the late Dr. Vachell, an old resident in Cardiff, a man
+of considerable eminence in the town&mdash;as he was supposed to
+be very wealthy&mdash;and in the Cardiff of that day wealth was
+regarded as the only claim to respect; he, at the end of my
+lecture, expressed an opinion favourable to my talents, but at
+the same time intimating that he had no sympathy with much I had
+uttered.&nbsp; Especially he <!-- page 153--><a
+name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 153</span>differed
+from me in the estimate I had given of the &ldquo;Rights of
+Man,&rdquo; by Tom Paine.&nbsp; Once more I had an opportunity of
+lifting up my voice in the Old Town Hall.&nbsp; It was on the
+subject of Teetotalism.&nbsp; My opponent was a worthy, sturdy
+teetotaler known as Mr. Cory, whose sons still flourish as the
+great coal merchants of our day.&nbsp; Cardiff was a town of
+publicans and sinners, and I am sorry to say I secured an easy
+triumph; and Mr. Cory created great laughter as he said, in the
+course of his oration, that if he were shut up in a cask he would
+cry out through the bunghole, &ldquo;Teetotalism for
+ever!&rdquo;&nbsp; He kept a place at the lower end of the town
+to supply ships&rsquo; stores, and was in every way, as I
+afterwards found by the friendship that existed between us, a
+sterling character.</p>
+<p>Just opposite the Town Hall, on the other side of the way, was
+the Castle, then in a very neglected condition, with a large
+enclosure which was open to the public as a promenade.&nbsp; The
+street between them contained the best shops in the town.&nbsp;
+It extended a little way to Crockherbtown on one side and to the
+Cardiff Arms Hotel on the other, and then you were in the
+country.&nbsp; Beyond the Cardiff Arms was a pleasant walk
+leading to Llandaff Cathedral, then almost in a state of decay;
+and to Penarth a charming hill, overlooking the Bristol Channel,
+on the other, with a little old-fashioned <!-- page 154--><a
+name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 154</span>hotel; much
+frequented in the summer.&nbsp; There was only one good house,
+that built by Mr. Parry, of the firm of Parry and Brown, ship
+brokers, where Mrs. Parry, a fine, handsome lady, dispensed
+graceful hospitality.&nbsp; Her brother, Mr. David Brown,
+afterwards removed to London to a fine office in Leadenhall
+Street, and lived and died at a charming retreat he built for
+himself in Harrow.&nbsp; There I one day met Lord Shaftesbury,
+who came to a drawing-room meeting held in connection with the
+London City Mission, and where we were all handsomely
+regaled.</p>
+<p>Perhaps at that time the most active man in Cardiff was Mr.
+John Batchelor&mdash;whose statue, erected by his admirers, still
+adorns the place&mdash;a sad thorn in the side of the
+old-fashioned people who then ruled the town, especially the
+Marquis of Bute&rsquo;s trustees or the men who represented them
+in Cardiff.&nbsp; Mr. John Batchelor was a keen critic, a good
+speaker, a sturdy Nonconformist, and a man of high character and
+great influence.&nbsp; His death was a great loss to the
+town.&nbsp; Just outside the town lived Mr. Booker, the
+proprietor of tin-works at Velindra, a fine well-made man, and a
+good speaker, who got into Parliament to maintain Protection, in
+which attempt he failed.&nbsp; His admirers had a full portrait
+of him painted by Mr. John Deffet Francis, who afterwards lived
+in Swansea.&nbsp; Mr. Francis was a very versatile genius, and
+got up <!-- page 155--><a name="page155"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 155</span>an amateur performance in which he
+acted the part of a vagabond to perfection, somewhat to the
+confusion of some of the ladies, who had never witnessed such a
+realistic performance before.&nbsp; In connection with myself
+quite a storm in a teacup took place.&nbsp; In St. Mary Street
+there was an Athen&aelig;um, as the local reading-room was
+called.&nbsp; It was thought by some of my friends that I ought
+to be on the committee, but as I was not qualified a motion was
+made to set the standing rules on one side in order that I might
+be elected.&nbsp; The little town was quite excited on the
+occasion, and the great Mr. Booker was appealed to to use his
+influence against me, which he did, but I was elected
+nevertheless.&nbsp; In my capacity of committee-man I did
+something to get up some lectures, which were a great
+success.&nbsp; One of the lecturers was Mr. George Dawson, with
+whom I spent a pleasant day.&nbsp; Another was my old and comic
+friend, Mr. George Grossmith, the celebrated father of a yet more
+celebrated son.&nbsp; Another was Mrs. Balfour, the mother of the
+Balfour who, in later times, was to do a lot of misdeeds and to
+attain a very disagreeable notoriety in consequence.&nbsp; On
+another occasion I was also enabled to do the town some service
+by getting Mr. James Taylor, of Birmingham, to come and explain
+his scheme for the formation of Freehold Land Societies, an idea
+then in its infancy, but which has been for the social and <!--
+page 156--><a name="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+156</span>moral elevation of the working classes, who used to
+spend in drink what they now devote to a better purpose.&nbsp;
+There was a great deal of drinking in Cardiff.&nbsp; Indeed, it
+was the chief amusement of the place.&nbsp; The sailors, at that
+time consisting of representatives of almost every nation under
+heaven, were much given to drinking, and some of the
+boarding-houses were by no means of a respectable
+character.&nbsp; There was no other form of social enjoyment
+unless you belonged to the strict religious bodies who, as
+Congregationalists, or Baptists, or Calvinistic Methodists, had
+many chapels, which were well filled.&nbsp; It was in one of
+these chapels Harry Vincent came to lecture when I was at
+Cardiff, and electrified the town.</p>
+<p>The Member of Parliament for the town lived a very quiet life,
+and seemed to take but little interest in political
+affairs.&nbsp; One of the most accomplished and certainly
+best-educated men in the place was Mr. Chas. Bernard, architect
+and surveyor; without him life would have been very dull to me at
+Cardiff.&nbsp; I imagine that his chief reason for pitching his
+tent in what must have been to him a very ungenial clime was that
+his sister was married to the late Mr. Reece, local
+Coroner.&nbsp; It grieves me to state that he has long since
+joined the majority.&nbsp; Another great friend of mine was Mr.
+Peter Price&mdash;now, alas! no more, who was destined, however,
+to do much good before he passed away.&nbsp; The <!-- page
+157--><a name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+157</span>Public Library, which he did much to establish, still
+retains his portrait.&nbsp; Another of the excellent of the earth
+was Mr. W. P. James, the brother-in-law of Mr. Peter Price, who
+came to Cardiff to build the new Town Hall.&nbsp; They were all
+gentlemen who had come from a distance to settle in Cardiff, the
+character of which they did much to improve and elevate.&nbsp; We
+all did something to get up an Eisteddfod, which, if it did
+nothing else, had this advantage, that it did something to
+develop the powers of a Cardiff artist&mdash;Mr. D.
+Marks&mdash;who, when I saw him last, had a studio in Fitzroy
+Square, London, and was engaged to paint several portraits of
+distinguished personages, one of these being a fine portrait of
+the great and good Earl of Shaftesbury.&nbsp; It was presented to
+his lordship at a great meeting held in the Guildhall, presided
+over by the Lord Mayor, Sir William Macarthur, in April, in
+1881.&nbsp; The committee of the Ragged School Union took the
+initiative to do honour to their president.</p>
+<p>As a newspaper man in Cardiff and a comparative stranger to
+the town I had a somewhat unscrupulous opponent, the editor of
+the local organ, <i>The Cardiff and Merthyr Guardian</i>.&nbsp;
+He was a very unscrupulous man, apparently all smiles and
+friendship, but I never could trust him.&nbsp; Nor was I
+surprised to learn that when he became secretary of the Cardiff
+Savings Bank there was a very serious defalcation in the <!--
+page 158--><a name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+158</span>funds.&nbsp; The man always seemed to me utterly
+untrustworthy, but his civil manners apparently won him many
+friends.&nbsp; As editor of a Liberal newspaper I had to fight
+the battle under very great disadvantages.&nbsp; It was no easy
+thing to run a newspaper then.&nbsp; The taxes on knowledge were
+a great impediment.&nbsp; On every paper a penny stamp had to be
+paid, and the advertisement duty was eighteenpence on every
+advertisement.&nbsp; The repeal of these taxes was a great boon
+for the local papers; and then there was a tax on paper, which
+was an additional obstacle.&nbsp; As to telegraphs, they were
+unheard of; and it was to the London dailies that we had to trust
+for foreign news.&nbsp; One of the most important events when I
+was at Cardiff was the opening of the South Wales Railway as far
+as Swansea.&nbsp; The first train was driven by Mr. Brunel, the
+eminent engineer, accompanied by a distinguished party of
+directors and local magnates.&nbsp; I joined the train at
+Cardiff.&nbsp; At Swansea the event was celebrated in grand
+style.&nbsp; All the population seemed to me to have turned out
+to witness the arrival of the train.&nbsp; There were flags and
+decorations everywhere, and later on a grand banquet, at which I
+was privileged to assist so far as eating and drinking and
+cheering the speakers went.&nbsp; And thus my reminiscences
+close.&nbsp; I cannot look back on my career at Cardiff with
+unmixed satisfaction.&nbsp; I was by no means the steady old
+party I have <!-- page 159--><a name="page159"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 159</span>since become.&nbsp; It is not always
+easy to put an old head upon young shoulders, but at any rate in
+my small way I did something for the advent of that brighter and
+better day which has dawned not only upon Cardiff but on all the
+land.</p>
+<p>In this connection I may naturally add a few particulars of
+worthy Welshmen I have known.&nbsp; The Scotchman who prayed that
+the Lord would give them a good conceit of themselves, had he
+lived among the Welsh, would have found that portion of his
+prayer superfluous.&nbsp; It is to the credit of the Welsh that
+they always have a good conceit of themselves.&nbsp; As a rule,
+the world takes people at their own valuation, and the man who
+assumes a superiority over his fellows&mdash;at any rate, till he
+is found out&mdash;has his claim allowed.&nbsp; A Welshman has a
+profound faith in his country and himself, especially as regards
+oratory.&nbsp; There are no such preachers as those of Wales, and
+I was quite amused when I first lived in Cardiff with the way in
+which a Welshman, who lodged in the house where I had taken up my
+abode, descanted on the gifts of Welshmen in London of whom I had
+never heard, and I felt quite ashamed of my ignorance as he
+rolled forth one Welsh name after another, and had to admit my
+ignorance of the eminent men whose names he had at his
+fingers&rsquo; ends.&nbsp; Why, there were no such clever men
+anywhere, according to his <!-- page 160--><a
+name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 160</span>account,
+and yet I knew not the name of any of them!&nbsp; At the same
+time I had come into contact with some Welshmen who had made
+their mark in London.&nbsp; First on my list is that of Caleb
+Morris, who preached in Fetter Lane Chapel, now in a declining
+state, but at times filled with a large and very respectable
+congregation.&nbsp; He was much given to discuss the objective
+and subjective, a novelty to me at that time in pulpit
+discourse.&nbsp; The state of his health latterly interfered with
+his pulpit success; and before he died he had taken to preaching
+in a room in Mecklenburg Square, where a large number of his
+admirers flocked to hear him.&nbsp; He was an amiable and
+thoughtful man, universally esteemed.&nbsp; Another Welshman of
+whom I used to know more was the Rev. Henry Richard, who was then
+a young man, preaching with a great deal of fire, in the
+Congregational Chapel in the Marlborough Road, on the other side
+of the water.&nbsp; He lived to become the popular M.P. for
+Merthyr, and to be known all the world over as the advocate of
+Peace.&nbsp; He was the secretary for many years of the Peace
+Society.&nbsp; He became a successful platform speaker, and his
+speeches were full of a humour which always told at public
+meetings.&nbsp; Short and sturdy in build, he was always fit for
+work, and had a long and laborious public life.&nbsp; He was a
+Welshman to the core&mdash;always ready with his pen or tongue to
+do battle for his <!-- page 161--><a name="page161"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 161</span>native land when aspersed by
+ignorant or partisan writers, and he did much to help on the
+Liberation Society, being after all a much more popular
+speaker&mdash;especially in the House of Commons&mdash;than his
+fellow-worker Edward Miall, and his loss to the Nonconformists
+all over the land was very great.</p>
+<p>But, after all, the Welshman with whom I was most intimate,
+and whom I most admired, was Joseph Edwards, the sculptor.&nbsp;
+He came from the neighbourhood of Merthyr, where he had many
+relatives, whom he never forgot, and whose poverty he was always
+ready to relieve.&nbsp; He had a studio in Robert Street,
+Hampstead Road, and lived in the house close by.&nbsp; He had an
+uphill work to fight, and to lead a life of labour and
+self-denial, relieved by a few intervals of sunshine, as when at
+a dinner party he had the privilege of meeting Mr.
+Gladstone&mdash;or as when staying at the Duke of
+Beaufort&rsquo;s, from whom he had a commission, he had the
+honour of escorting the Duchess into the drawing-room&mdash;an
+honour on which I never forgot to chaff him as I used to sit in
+his studio watching him at work.&nbsp; He must have had to work
+hard to make both ends meet; and when I went to see him on his
+death-bed, as it proved to be, I was shocked with grief to see a
+man of such rare and lofty genius have to sleep in a little room
+at the very top of the house.&nbsp; But commissions were rare,
+and the material on <!-- page 162--><a name="page162"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 162</span>which he had to work (marble) was
+very costly, and the sculptor works at a great disadvantage
+compared with the popular portrait painter.&nbsp; I believe he
+derived a great part of his income by going to the studio of a
+more successful artist, and giving finishing touches to what work
+might be on hand, much to the astonishment of the assistants,
+who, when they returned in the morning, were astonished to find
+what progress had been made in the night, which they attributed
+to the visitation of a ghost.&nbsp; Edwards was an enthusiastic
+poet, and many of his works in plaster&mdash;waiting, alas! for
+the commission to transfer to the marble which never
+came&mdash;were exquisitely beautiful, and were often engraved in
+<i>The Art Journal</i>.&nbsp; Both Mr. Hall, the editor, and his
+wife, the clever authoress, were great admirers of Mr.
+Edwards&rsquo; lofty and poetical idealisms, which sometimes
+soared a little above my poor prosaic qualities.&nbsp; As I
+listened to his rapt and ardent speech, I felt impelled somewhat
+to make a few remarks to bring him down from his starry heights,
+and the result ended in a hearty peal of laughter, for no man
+better loved a joke.&nbsp; I have a medallion of myself which he
+gave me after it had been exhibited at the Royal Academy, which I
+cherish as the most beautiful work of art in my possession; but
+he was too modest and retiring, and never gained the public
+esteem to which he had an undoubted claim.&nbsp; I <!-- page
+163--><a name="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+163</span>was present at the unveiling of his fine marble bust of
+Edith Wynne, then radiant in her glory as the Welsh Nightingale,
+of whom I saw enough to learn that she was as charming in private
+as in public life.&nbsp; The place was Hanover Square
+Rooms.&nbsp; My friend Edwards received quite an ovation, the Sir
+Watkin Wynne of that day presiding; but on the whole I fear that
+Edwards by his genius did more for Wales than ever Wales did for
+him.&nbsp; His life ought to have been written.&nbsp; Young men,
+I am sure, would have learned many a useful lesson.&nbsp; He was
+a true genius, with, as far as I could see, none of the failings
+which by some are supposed to be associated with genius.&nbsp; It
+was my painful privilege to be one of the mourners at his funeral
+in Highgate Cemetery.&nbsp; His works he left to the Cymmrodorion
+Society, where I hope that they are guarded with tender
+care.&nbsp; South Wales has reason to rejoice in having had born
+to her such a son.&nbsp; Let me mention another Merthyr man whom
+I knew, who, if not such a genius as Joseph Edwards, had at any
+rate as great an enthusiasm for the literature and language of
+Wales.&nbsp; He was a chemist and druggist, named Stephens, and
+found time to write a work on Wales, which was deemed worthy of
+the prize offered on the subject by some Welshman of wealth and
+position, whose name has, alas, escaped my treacherous <!-- page
+164--><a name="page164"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+164</span>memory.&nbsp; At that time Wales had failed to attract
+much attention on the part of England.&nbsp; It was far away and
+difficult to get at.&nbsp; Now and then an adventurous Englishman
+made his way thither, and wrote a book to show how grand was the
+scenery and hospitable the people, and how cheap it was as a
+place of residence.&nbsp; But as a rule the average Englishman
+knew as little of it as he did of Timbuctoo.&nbsp; Since then
+Wales has learnt the art of advertising and is better known, and
+that is an advantage not to be overlooked, for it is now all the
+richer.&nbsp; Then few English resided there, and those chiefly
+from motives of economy.</p>
+<p>Another Welshman whom I had the honour to reckon as a friend
+was Sir Hugh Owen, an earnest worker in the Temperance cause, and
+for the social elevation of the people and righteousness.&nbsp;
+In his case his high position on the Poor-Law Board was won by
+merit, and by merit alone, as he entered the Department in a
+subordinate capacity, and gradually worked his way up to the top
+of the tree, not having the advantage of aristocratic birth and
+breeding.&nbsp; I first met him in Claremont Chapel&mdash;a
+Congregational place of worship in Pentonville&mdash;at one time
+one of the most flourishing churches of that body, though I fear
+it has somewhat declined of late.&nbsp; He was a man of kindly
+speech and presence, always ready to help whatever <!-- page
+165--><a name="page165"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+165</span>was worthy of help, and lived in the Holloway Road,
+where I once spent with him a pleasant Sunday, and was much
+charmed with one of his married daughters, who happened to be
+there at the time.&nbsp; No Temperance gathering in general, and
+no Welsh gathering in particular, was complete without Mr. Hugh
+Owen, as he then was called.&nbsp; In all London there was no
+more genial representative of gallant little Wales.&nbsp; He
+lived to a good old age, beloved and respected.&nbsp; The last
+time I met him was in the Farringdon Road, when he complained
+that he felt a little queer in his head.&nbsp; My reply was that
+he had no need to trouble himself on that account, as I knew many
+people who were in the same condition who seemed to get on very
+well nevertheless.</p>
+<p>Another Welshman who yet lives&mdash;in a far-off
+land&mdash;was Dr. Llewellen Bevan, the popular Congregational
+minister in the beautiful city of Melbourne, where he is, as he
+justly deserves to be, a great power.&nbsp; He commenced his
+labours in London as co-pastor with Mr. Thomas Binney.&nbsp;
+Thence he moved to Tottenham Court Chapel, which became very
+prosperous under his popular ministry.&nbsp; From there he went
+to America, where he did not remain long.&nbsp; He now lives in a
+beautiful bungalow a few miles out of Melbourne, where I once
+spent with him a very pleasant night, chatting of England and old
+times.&nbsp; A curious memory occurs to me <!-- page 166--><a
+name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 166</span>in
+connection with my visit to the reverend and popular divine at
+Melbourne.&nbsp; On one occasion I heard him at a public meeting
+in Tottenham Court Road Chapel declare, amidst the cheers of the
+great audience, that he had given up smoking because one of his
+people complained to him that her son had come home the worse for
+liquor, which he had taken while smoking, and he thought there
+could be no harm in smoking, because he had seen Mr. Bevan
+smoking.&nbsp; &ldquo;From that hour,&rdquo; said Mr. Bevan,
+amidst prolonged applause, &ldquo;I resolved to give up
+smoking,&rdquo; and the deacons looked at me to see if I was not
+ashamed of my indulgence in a habit which in the case alluded to
+had produced such disastrous results.&nbsp; I must own that the
+reason adduced by the reverend gentleman was not to me
+convincing, for as far as my experience goes the smoker
+infinitely prefers a cup of coffee with his cigar or pipe to any
+amount of alcoholic liquor.&nbsp; Judge, then, of my surprise
+when at Melbourne, after our evening meal, Mr. Bevan proposed to
+me that we should adjourn to his study and have a smoke&mdash;an
+invitation with which I gladly complied.&nbsp; After my
+recollection of the scene in the London chapel I was glad to find
+the Doctor, as regards tobacco, sober and in his right
+mind.&nbsp; Long may he be spared after the labours of his busy
+life to soothe his wearied mind with the solace of the
+weed!&nbsp; The Doctor has a noble <!-- page 167--><a
+name="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 167</span>presence,
+and seemed to me when I saw him last to be getting in face more
+and more like England&rsquo;s greatest orator&mdash;as regards
+latter days&mdash;Mr. John Bright.&nbsp; In his far-away home he
+seemed to me to retain his love for Wales and the sense of the
+superiority of the Welshman to any one on the face of the
+earth.&nbsp; The Doctor is an ardent Gladstonite&mdash;and people
+of that way of thinking are not quite as numerous in the Colonies
+as they are at home.</p>
+<p>Another Welshman who made his mark in London was the Rev. Dr.
+Thomas, a Congregational minister at Stockwell, a fine-looking
+young man when I first knew him as a minister at Chesham.&nbsp;
+He developed the faculty of his countrymen for lofty ideas and
+aims to an extent that ended in disastrous failure.&nbsp; It was
+he who originated the idea of <i>The Dial</i>&mdash;which was to
+be a daily to advocate righteousness, and to beat down and to
+supplant <i>The Times</i>.&nbsp; The motto was to be
+&ldquo;Righteousness exalteth a nation, but sin is a reproach to
+any people.&rdquo;&nbsp; He got a great many people to take
+shares, and commenced the publication of <i>The Dial</i> in the
+first place as a weekly.&nbsp; But the paper was a failure from
+the first.&nbsp; Another idea of his was to raise a million to
+build workmen&rsquo;s institutes and recreation halls all over
+the kingdom, but as the late Earl of Derby, when appealed to on
+the subject, replied, it carried its own condemnation in the face
+of it.&nbsp; A society, <!-- page 168--><a
+name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 168</span>however,
+was started, but it never came to much.&nbsp; The real fact is
+that institutions established for working men, not by them, are
+rarely a success.&nbsp; Dr. Thomas also claimed to have started
+the idea of the University for Wales, and was very angry with me
+when I, after some inquiry, failed to support his claim.&nbsp;
+His great success was the publication of a magazine for
+preachers, under the title of <i>The Homilist</i>.&nbsp; The
+writer was a great man, not so much so, perhaps, as he thought,
+and had his full share of Welsh enthusiasm and fire.&nbsp; But he
+made a terrible blunder over his <i>Dial</i> scheme.&nbsp; He had
+done better had he kept to the pulpit.&nbsp; Parsons are not
+always practical, and the management of successful daily
+newspapers is not exactly in their line.&nbsp; The shoemaker
+should stick to his last; but in spite of Welsh poetic geniuses,
+the great fact which always strikes men in London is the
+commercial successes of the Welshmen who venture to try their
+fortune on the metropolitan stage.&nbsp; This especially strikes
+me with regard to the drapery trade.&nbsp; Many of the largest
+establishments in that way are owned at this present time by
+Welshmen&mdash;such as Jones, of Holloway; Evans, of Oxford
+Street, and many more.&nbsp; Few of them had capital or friends
+to help them, yet few men have done better in the pleasant art of
+money-making&mdash;an art rare, alas! to the class to which I
+have the honour to belong.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 171--><a name="page171"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 171</span>CHAPTER X.<br />
+<span class="smcap">A Great National Movement</span>.</h2>
+<p>One national movement in which I took a prominent part was the
+formation of freehold land societies, which commenced somewhere
+about 1850, and at which <i>The Times</i>, after its manner in
+those days, sneered, asking scornfully what was a freehold land
+society.&nbsp; The apostle of the new movement, which was to
+teach the British working man how to save money and buy a bit of
+land on which to build a house and secure a vote, was Mr. James
+Taylor, born in Birmingham in 1814.&nbsp; Like all other
+Birmingham boys, James was early set to work, and became an
+apprentice in one of the fancy trades for which Birmingham was
+famed.&nbsp; His industrious habits soon acquired for him the
+approbation of his master, who, on retiring from business before
+Taylor was of age, gave him his indentures.&nbsp; About that time
+Taylor, earning good wages and not having the fear of Malthus
+before his eyes, got married and lived happily till, like too
+many of his class, he took to drink.&nbsp; After years of utter
+misery and degradation, Taylor, in a happy hour for himself and
+society, <!-- page 172--><a name="page172"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 172</span>took the temperance pledge and
+became a new man.&nbsp; Nor was he satisfied with his own reform
+alone.&nbsp; He was anxious that others should be rescued from
+degradation as he had been.&nbsp; For this purpose he identified
+himself with the Temperance cause, and was honorary secretary to
+the Birmingham Temperance Society till he became the leader and
+originator of the Freehold Land Movement, and then for years his
+life was given to the public.&nbsp; He had but one speech, but it
+was a racy one, and his voice was soon lifted up in every town in
+the land.&nbsp; The plan pursued was to buy an estate, cut it up
+into allotments, and offer them almost free of legal
+expense.&nbsp; There never was such a chance for the working man
+as an investment, and thousands availed themselves of
+it&mdash;and were all the better for it&mdash;especially those
+who to pay their small subscriptions became teetotalers and gave
+up drink.&nbsp; And yet a learned writer in <i>The Edinburgh
+Review</i> had the audacity to write, &ldquo;Notwithstanding this
+rapid popularity, however, notwithstanding also the high
+authorities which have been quoted on their behalf, we cannot
+look on these associations with unmixed favour, and we shall not
+be surprised if any long time elapses without well-grounded
+disappointment and discontent arising among their members.&nbsp;
+However desirable it may be for a peasant or an artisan to be
+possessor of the garden which he cultivates and of <!-- page
+173--><a name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+173</span>the house he dwells in, however clear and great the
+gain to him in this case, it is by no means equally certain that
+he can derive any pecuniary advantage from the possession of a
+plot of ground which is too far from his daily work for him
+either to erect a dwelling on it or to cultivate it as an
+allotment, and which from its diminutive size he will find it
+difficult for him to let for any sufficient remuneration.&nbsp;
+In many cases a barren site will be his only reward for &pound;50
+of saving, and however he may value this in times of excitement
+it will in three elections out of four be of little real interest
+or moment to him.&rdquo;&nbsp; Happily the working men knew
+better than the <i>Edinburgh</i> reviewer, and the societies
+flourished all the more.&nbsp; The Conservatives were, of course,
+utterly indignant at this wholesale manufacture of faggot votes,
+as they were contemptuously termed, which threatened the seats of
+so many respectable Conservative county members, but in the end
+they thought better of it, and actually started a Conservative
+Freehold Land Society themselves, a fact announced to me in a
+letter from Mr. Cobden, which I have or ought to have somewhere
+in my possession.&nbsp; The societies increased so greatly that a
+journal was started by Mr. Cassell, called <i>The Freeholder</i>,
+of which I was editor, and was the means of often bringing me
+into contact with Mr. Cobden, a man with whom no one ever came in
+contact without <!-- page 174--><a name="page174"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 174</span>feeling for him the most ardent
+admiration.&nbsp; At one time I saw a good deal of him, as it was
+my habit, at his request, to call on him each morning at his
+house in Westbourne Park, to talk over with him matters connected
+with the Freehold Land Movement, in which he took, as in
+everything that increased human progress, the deepest
+interest.&nbsp; As he once remarked half the money spent in gin
+would give the people the entire county representation, and
+besides provide them with desirable investments against a rainy
+day.&nbsp; Mr. James Taylor was always cheered as he showed his
+hearers how a man who drank a quart of ale a day engulfed at the
+same time a yard of solid earth.&nbsp; Land at that time was to
+be had remarkably cheap, and great profits were made by the early
+investors, and the moral benefit was great.&nbsp; Men learned the
+value of economy and thrift, and were all the better for gaining
+habits of forethought and self-denial.&nbsp; In our days the
+societies have become chiefly building societies, the political
+need of getting a vote in that way not being of so much
+importance as it was then.</p>
+<p>In the early days of the Victorian era the workman had no
+inducement to save, and he spent his money foolishly because he
+had no opportunity of spending it better.&nbsp; The Poor-laws as
+they were till they were reformed by the Whigs&mdash;a heroic
+reform which made them <!-- page 175--><a
+name="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 175</span>everywhere
+unpopular&mdash;actually offered a premium on immorality, and the
+woman who had a number of illegitimate children&mdash;the parish
+rewarding her according to their number&mdash;was quite a prize
+in the matrimonial market.&nbsp; The old Poor-law administration
+became the demoralising agency to such an extent for the
+manufacture of paupers that honest wage-earners were at a
+discount, while numbers of the rate-paying classes found their
+lot so intolerable that they elected to swell the pauper ranks,
+and thereby much increased their pecuniary, if not their social,
+condition.&nbsp; The earlier a labourer became a married man and
+the father of a family the better off he became and the more he
+got out of his parish.&nbsp; We can scarcely credit it, yet it is
+an undoubted fact that under the old Poor-law, if a labourer was
+known to be thrifty or putting away his savings, he was refused
+work till his money was gone and he was reduced to his proper
+level.&nbsp; Even the labourer usually at work received parish
+pay for at least four children, and if he worked on the roads
+instead of the fields he received out of the highway rates a
+pound a-week instead of the usual nine shillings.&nbsp; If a
+working man joined a benefit club it generally met in a
+public-house, and a certain proportion of the funds were spent in
+refreshments&mdash;rather for the benefit of the landlords than
+for that of the members.&nbsp; It was not till 1834 that a
+reformed <!-- page 176--><a name="page176"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 176</span>Poor-law made the practice of thrift
+possible.&nbsp; In many quarters law and custom have combined to
+prevent its growth among rural labourers who had been taught to
+live on the rates&mdash;to extract as much permanent relief as
+they could out of a nearly bankrupt body of ratepayers and to do
+in return as little hard work as was possible.&nbsp; The
+condition of things was then completely changed.&nbsp; The
+industrious man had a little better chance, and the idlers were
+put to the rout and, much to their disgust, forced to work, or at
+any rate to attempt to do so.&nbsp; Even the best benefit
+societies remained under a cloud and, till Parliament later on
+took the matter in hand, worked under great disadvantages.&nbsp;
+Frauds were committed; funds were made away with, and no redress
+could be obtained.&nbsp; Thrifty habits were discouraged on every
+side.</p>
+<p>All England is ringing with the praise of thrift.&nbsp; Not
+Scotland, for a Scotchman is born thrifty&mdash;just as he is
+said to be born not able to understand a joke.&nbsp; And as to
+Irishmen, it is to be questioned whether they have such a word in
+their dictionary at all.&nbsp; No class of mutual thrift
+institution has flourished there, says the latest writer on the
+subject, Rev. Francis Wilkinson; and mostly our earlier thrift
+societies were started by a landlord for his own benefit, rather
+than for that of the members.&nbsp; Those were drinking days,
+says Mr. <!-- page 177--><a name="page177"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 177</span>Wilkinson.&nbsp; The public-house
+was not only the home, but the cause of their existence; and as
+an evidence of the value of benefit clubs to the publican, we
+find the establishment of such advertised as one of the assets
+when the house is put up for sale.&nbsp; Then there was the
+competition of rival houses.&nbsp; The &ldquo;Blue Boar&rdquo;
+must have its &ldquo;friendly&rdquo; as well as the &ldquo;Black
+Lion&rdquo; over the way; and thus the number of clubs, as well
+as of public-houses, increased beyond the requirements of the
+village or parish, and deterioration was the natural result; and
+this was the humorous way in which the past generation acquired
+the habit of thrift, of which nowadays we hear so much.</p>
+<p>It is very hard to be thrifty.&nbsp; He who would become so
+has to fight against tremendous odds.&nbsp; Let me illustrate my
+case by my own unpleasant experiences.&nbsp; I had a friend who
+was a mining broker.&nbsp; One day I had been studying the late
+Captain Burton&rsquo;s valuable work on Brazil, which seemed to
+me a country of boundless resources and possibilities.&nbsp; The
+next day when I got into the train to go to town, there was my
+friend the broker.&nbsp; I talked with him about Brazil in a
+rather enthusiastic strain.&nbsp; He agreed with everything I
+said.&nbsp; There was no such place in the world, and I could not
+do better than buy a few General Brazilian shares.&nbsp; They
+were low just at that time, but if I were to buy some I should be
+<!-- page 178--><a name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+178</span>certain to make ten shillings a share in a month, at
+any rate, and by a fortunate coincidence he had a few hundreds he
+had bought for an investment, and as a friend he would let me
+have a few.&nbsp; I am not a speculating man.&nbsp; The fact is I
+have never had any cash to spare; but was tempted, as our Mother
+Eve was by the old serpent, and I fell.&nbsp; I bought a few
+General Brazilians.&nbsp; As soon as I had paid for them there
+came a call for a shilling a share, and a little while after
+another call, and so it went on till the General Brazilians went
+down to nothing.&nbsp; Shortly after this my friend left the
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; He had got all his acquaintances to invest
+in shares, and the neighbourhood was getting unpleasant for
+him.&nbsp; He began life in a humble way; he now lives in a fine
+place and keeps his carriage, but he gets no more money out of
+me, though occasionally he did send me a circular assuring me of
+an ample fortune if I would only buy certain shares which he
+recommended.&nbsp; I may have stood in my own light, as he told
+me I did, but I have bought no more mining shares since.</p>
+<p>Again, take the case of life assurance.&nbsp; Every one ought
+to insure his life when he marries.&nbsp; Like a wise man, I did,
+but like a fool I took the advice of a friend who recommended me
+a society which paid him a commission for his disinterested and
+friendly advice.&nbsp; After a time it declared a bonus which,
+instead of receiving <!-- page 179--><a name="page179"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 179</span>in cash, I thought it better to add
+to the principal.&nbsp; In a few years, that insurance society
+was wound up.&nbsp; After the affairs of the company had been
+carefully investigated at an enormous and surely unnecessary
+expense by a distinguished firm of City accountants, another
+company took over our policies, marking them about a fourth of
+their original value.&nbsp; My bonus was not even added to my
+principal; and now, being too old to go anew into a life
+assurance company, a paltry sum is all I can look forward to to
+leave my family on my decease.&nbsp; It is really very ludicrous
+the little games played by some of these insurance
+companies.&nbsp; It is not every one who raises the cry of thrift
+who is anxious to promote that saving virtue.&nbsp; It is too
+often the case that even the professed philanthropist, feeling
+how true it is that charity begins at home, never troubles
+himself to let it go any further.&nbsp; We have Scriptural
+authority for saying that one who neglects to provide for his own
+house has denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel.&nbsp;
+We are abundantly justified, then, in looking after the
+cash.&nbsp; A great philosopher remarked that there are times
+when a man without money in his pocket may find himself in a
+peculiarly unpleasant position.&nbsp; It was, I think, Hazlitt
+who said it, and he was right.&nbsp; Be that as it may, it is a
+melancholy truth many of us have learned by experience.&nbsp; I
+can send <!-- page 180--><a name="page180"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 180</span>to gaol the poor wretch who in the
+street picks my pocket, but the company promoter who offers me a
+premium for thrift, and then robs me of my all, or as much of it
+as he can lay hold of, gets off scot free.&nbsp; Friendly
+societies, as they are called, are on this account often to be
+much suspected.&nbsp; The story of one that smashed up is
+interesting and amusing.&nbsp; The chief promoter early in life
+displayed his abilities as a rogue.&nbsp; He became a
+letter-carrier, only to lose his situation and undergo a severe
+term of imprisonment for stealing letters.&nbsp; Subsequently, he
+entered the service of an Assurance Company, but had eventually
+to be dismissed.&nbsp; Then he got a new character, and started
+afresh as a Methodist preacher.&nbsp; Afterwards he founded a
+friendly society, by means of which he raised large funds for the
+benefit of himself, and apparently no one else.</p>
+<p>Let me give another case out of my own personal
+experience.&nbsp; Last year I received a prospectus of a company
+that was formed to purchase the business of a firm which had an
+immense number of shops engaged in carrying on a business in
+various parts of the metropolis.&nbsp; A firm of accountants
+reported that the gross returns of the firm in 1894 amounted to
+over &pound;103,000, and it was added that the profit of the
+company would admit of annual dividends at the rate of nine per
+cent., and allow of &pound;1,300 for the expenses of management
+and <!-- page 181--><a name="page181"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 181</span>reserve.&nbsp; It was further shown
+that a considerable saving of expenditure could be effected,
+which would ensure an additional dividend of three per
+cent.&nbsp; Well, the thing looked so feasible that I wrote for
+and obtained five shares, thinking I had done a sensible
+thing.&nbsp; A few months afterward a West-end firm offered me a
+large number of shares at par, stating that the company were
+about to pay a dividend, and that the profit on the year&rsquo;s
+earnings would be some fifty per cent.&nbsp; However, I did not
+accept the promising offer, and I thought no more of the
+matter.&nbsp; In January of this year a gentleman sent me a
+circular offering me shares at a shilling under par, assuring me
+that the company was about to pay a dividend of ten per cent. in
+the course of the next week.&nbsp; Again I declined to increase
+my holding, and it is well I did, as no dividend has been paid,
+although the circular stated that the business was of &ldquo;a
+most profitable nature,&rdquo; and &ldquo;sure to considerably
+increase in value in the course of a few months.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Since then a Manchester firm has twice written to me to offer the
+pound shares at sixteen shillings each.&nbsp; These tempting
+offers I have declined, and the promised dividend seems as far
+off as ever.&nbsp; Surely outside brokers who put forward such
+lying statements ought to be amenable to law, as well as the
+promoters of the company itself.&nbsp; To my great disgust, since
+the above was <!-- page 182--><a name="page182"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 182</span>written I have received another
+letter from another outside firm, offering me fifty shares in the
+precious company at thirteen shillings a share.&nbsp; The writers
+add, as the dividend of ten per cent. will be paid almost
+immediately, they are well worth my attention.&nbsp; I suppose
+this sort of thing pays.&nbsp; The worst of it is that the class
+thus victimised are the class least able to bear a pecuniary
+loss.&nbsp; I happen to know of a case in which a man with an
+assumed name, trading at the West End, gained a large sum of
+money&mdash;chiefly from clergymen and widows&mdash;by offering
+worthless shares, certain to pay large dividends in a week or
+two, at a tremendous sacrifice.&nbsp; As a rule the victims to
+this state of things say nothing of their losses.&nbsp; They are
+ashamed when they think how easily they have been persuaded to
+part with their cash.&nbsp; It is time, however, that public
+attention should be called to the matter, that the eyes of the
+public were opened, and that the game of these gentry were be
+stopped.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 185--><a name="page185"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 185</span>CHAPTER XI.<br />
+<span class="smcap">The Old London Pulpit</span>.</h2>
+<p>I doubt whether the cynical old poet who wrote &ldquo;The
+Pleasures of Memory,&rdquo; would have included in that category
+the recollections of the famous preachers whom he might have
+heard.&nbsp; Yet possibly he might, as his earliest
+predilections, we were told, were for the pulpit, and all have,
+more or less, of the parsonic element in them.&nbsp; The love to
+lecture, the desire to make their poor ignorant friends as
+sensible as themselves, the innate feeling that one is a light
+and guide in a wildering maze exist more or less in us all.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Did you ever hear me preach?&rdquo; said Coleridge one day
+to Lamb.&nbsp; &ldquo;Did I ever hear you do anything
+else?&rdquo; was the reply.&nbsp; And now, when we have got an
+awakened Christianity and a forward ministry, it is just as well
+to run over the list of our old popular ministers to remind the
+present generation that great men have filled the London pulpits
+and quickened the London conscience and aroused the London
+intellect before ever it was born.&nbsp; It is the more necessary
+to do this as the fact is that no one has so short-lived a
+popularity as <!-- page 186--><a name="page186"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 186</span>the orator: whether in Exeter Hall,
+whether on the stage, whether in the pulpit, what comes in at one
+ear soon goes out at the other.&nbsp; The memory of a great
+preacher dies as soon as his breath leaves the body&mdash;often
+before.&nbsp; The pulpit of to-day differs in one respect <i>in
+toto</i> from the past.&nbsp; The preacher who would succeed now
+must remember that this is the age of advertisement, that if he
+has a talent he must not wrap it in a napkin.&nbsp; He must write
+letters to newspapers; he must say odd things that make men talk
+about him; he must manage to be the subject of newspaper gossip;
+he must cling to the skirts of some public agitation&mdash;in
+fact, his light must be seen and his voice heard everywhere.</p>
+<p>It was not so in the times when, half a century ago, I had
+more to do with the London pulpit than I have now.&nbsp; Some of
+the men in it were giants.&nbsp; One was Melville, who preached
+somewhere over the water&mdash;Camberwell way.&nbsp; He was a
+High Churchman; he had a grand scorn of the conventicle.&nbsp; I
+should say he was a Tory of the Tories&mdash;a man who would be
+impossible in a London suburban church now; but what a crowd he
+drew to hear him, as he, like a mighty, rushing wind, swept over
+the heads of an audience who seemed to hang upon his lips!&nbsp;
+He was tall, dark, with a magnificent bass voice that caused
+every sentence he read&mdash;for he read, and rapidly&mdash;to
+vibrate from the <!-- page 187--><a name="page187"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 187</span>pulpit to the furthest corner of the
+church.&nbsp; His style was that of the late Dr. Chalmers, always
+sweeping to a climax, which, when reached and mastered, was a
+relief to all.&nbsp; I think he was made Canon of St.
+Paul&rsquo;s.&nbsp; He also was the Golden Lecturer somewhere
+near the Bank&mdash;an appropriate locality.&nbsp; His sermons
+were highly finished&mdash;I am told he laboured at them all the
+week.&nbsp; He was a preacher&mdash;nothing less, nothing
+more.</p>
+<p>Next there rises before me the vision of Howard Hinton&mdash;a
+big, cadaverous, grey-haired man, preaching in a small chapel on
+the site in Shoreditch now occupied by the Great Eastern
+Railway.&nbsp; The congregation was not large, but it was very
+select; I fancy it represented the <i>&eacute;lite</i> of the
+London Baptists.&nbsp; He was a very fascinating preacher by
+reason of his great subtlety of thought, and at times he was
+terribly impressive, as his big, burly frame trembled with
+emotion, and his choked-up utterance intimated with what agony he
+had sought to deliver his soul from blood-guiltiness, as, wailing
+and weeping, he anticipated the awful doom of the
+impenitent.&nbsp; I must own I got wearied of his metaphysical
+subtleties, which seemed to promise so much, and whose
+conclusions were so lame and impotent, ever disappointing; and it
+often seemed to me that his celebrated son&mdash;the late James
+Hinton&mdash;too soon removed, as it seemed to many of
+us&mdash;inherited not a little of <!-- page 188--><a
+name="page188"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 188</span>his
+father&rsquo;s ingenuity in this respect.&nbsp; But he was a
+grand man; you felt it in his presence, and still more as you
+walked home thinking of what he said.</p>
+<p>Amongst the Independents&mdash;as they were termed&mdash;the
+leading men were the Brothers Clayton: one preaching at the
+Poultry, the other in Walworth, to large congregations&mdash;fine
+portly men, and able in their way, though it was an old-fashioned
+one.&nbsp; Nor must Dr. Bengo Collyer be forgotten&mdash;a fat,
+oily man of God, as Robert Hall called him, who had at one time
+great popularity, and whom the Duke of Kent had been to hear
+preach.</p>
+<p>It is a curious sign of the times&mdash;the contrast between
+what exists now and what existed then&mdash;as regards
+theological speculation.&nbsp; We are now sublimely indifferent
+whether a preacher is orthodox or the reverse, whatever that may
+mean, so long as we feel his utterances are helpful in the way of
+Christian work and life.&nbsp; It was not so fifty years
+ago.&nbsp; Ministers scanned their brethren in the ministry
+severely, and the deacon, with his Matthew Henry and Doddridge,
+sat grimly in his pew, eager to note the deflection of the
+preacher in the pulpit from the strait and narrow line of
+orthodoxy, and to glow with unholy zeal as he found him missing
+his footing on the tight-rope.&nbsp; In London there was such a
+man in the shape of Thomas Binney, who had come from the Isle of
+Wight to the <!-- page 189--><a name="page189"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 189</span>King&rsquo;s Weigh House Chapel, now
+swept away by the underground railway just opposite the
+Monument.&nbsp; Binney was a king among men, standing head and
+shoulders above his fellows.&nbsp; All that was intelligent in
+Dissenting London, among the young men especially, heard him
+gladly.&nbsp; Yet all over the land there were soulless deacons
+and crabbed old parsons, whose testimony no man regarded, who
+said Binney was not orthodox.&nbsp; He lived long enough to
+trample that charge down.&nbsp; He lived to see the new era when
+men, sick of orthodoxy, hailed any utterance from whatever
+quarter, so that it were God-fearing and sincere.&nbsp; As you
+listened to Binney struggling to evolve his message out of his
+inner consciousness, you felt that you stood in the presence of a
+man who dwelt in the Divine presence, to whom God had revealed
+Himself, whose eye could detect the sham, and whose hot
+indignation was terrible to listen to.</p>
+<p>Let me chronicle a few more names.&nbsp; Dr. Andrew Reed,
+whose occasional sermons at other places&mdash;I never heard him
+at Wycliffe Chapel&mdash;were most effective; Morris of Fetter
+Lane, who preached to a crowded audience with what seemed to me
+at the time a slight touch of German mysticism; Stratten, far
+away in Paddington, whom rich people loved to listen to, as he
+was supposed to be a man of means himself; and old Leifchild at
+Craven Chapel, filled to overflowing with a crowd who <!-- page
+190--><a name="page190"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+190</span>knew, however the dear old man might prose in the
+opening of his sermon, he would go off with a bang at the
+end.&nbsp; But I may not omit two Churchmen who, if they had not
+Melville&rsquo;s power, had an equal popularity.&nbsp; One was
+the Hon. and Rev. Baptist Noel, who preached in a church, long
+since pulled down, in Bedford-row.&nbsp; He was tall,
+gentlemanly, silver-tongued, and perfectly orthodox.&nbsp; His
+people worshipped him, for was he not the son of a lord?&nbsp;
+His influence in London was immense, but he left the Church for
+conscientious reasons, and became a Baptist minister.&nbsp; That
+was a blow to his popularity which he never got over, though he
+lived to a grand old age.&nbsp; Another popular Evangelical
+preacher was Dale, who preached at St. Bride&rsquo;s, Fleet
+Street.&nbsp; He was a poet and more or less of a literary man;
+but he had more worldly wisdom than Baptist Noel.&nbsp; Dale was
+a Professor of Literature at University College; but it was
+understood that University College, with its liberal
+institutions, with its Dissenters and Jews, was no place for a
+Churchman who wished to rise.&nbsp; Dale saw this, gave up his
+professorship in Gower Street, and reaped a rich reward.</p>
+<p>London was badly off for <i>illuminati</i> fifty years
+ago.&nbsp; The only pulpit effectually filled was that of South
+Place, Finsbury, where W. Johnson Fox, the celebrated orator and
+critic, <!-- page 191--><a name="page191"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 191</span>lectured.&nbsp; He had been trained
+to be an orthodox divine at Homerton.&nbsp; One day he said to
+me, &ldquo;The students always get very orthodox as they get to
+the end of their collegiate career, and are preparing to settle,
+as the phrase is.&rdquo;&nbsp; Fox, it seems, was the exception
+that proves the rule.&nbsp; He was eloquent and attractive as
+preacher and lecturer.&nbsp; Dickens and Macready and Foster
+were, I believe, among his hearers.&nbsp; At any rate, he had a
+large following, and died an M.P.&nbsp; Lectures on all things
+sacred and profane were unknown in London fifty years ago.&nbsp;
+I once heard Robert Dale Owen somewhere at the back of Tottenham
+Court Road Chapel, but he was a weariness of the flesh, and I
+never went near him again.&nbsp; The provinces occasionally sent
+us popular orators; one was Raffles, of Liverpool, a man who
+looked as if the world had used him well.&nbsp; I well remember
+how he dealt in such alliteration as &ldquo;the dewdrop
+glittering in the glen.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then there was Parsons of
+York, with his amazing rhetoric, all whispered with a thrill that
+went to every heart, as he preached in Surrey Chapel, where also
+I heard Jay of Bath, who, however, left on me no impression other
+than he was a wonderful old man for his years.&nbsp; Sherman, the
+regular preacher there, was a great favourite with the
+ladies&mdash;almost as much as Dr. Cumming, a dark,
+scholarly-looking man, who held forth in a court just opposite
+Drury <!-- page 192--><a name="page192"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 192</span>Lane Theatre, and whose prophetic
+utterances obtained for him a popularity he would otherwise have
+sought in vain.&nbsp; It makes one feel old to write of these
+good men who have long since passed away, not, however,
+unregretted, or without failing to leave behind them</p>
+<blockquote><p>Footprints on the sands of Time.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>When I first became familiar with the Dissenting world of
+London the most bustling man in it was the Rev. Dr. John
+Campbell, who preached in what was then a most melancholy pile of
+buildings known as the Tottenham Court Road Chapel, the pulpit of
+which had been at one time occupied by the celebrated George
+Whitfield.&nbsp; In or about 1831 Dr. Campbell became the
+minister, and at the same time found leisure to write in <i>The
+Patriot</i> newspaper; to fight and beat the trustees of the
+Tottenham Court Road, who had allowed the affairs of the chapel
+to get into a most disorderly state; to make speeches at public
+meetings; to write in a monthly that has long ceased to
+exist&mdash;<i>The Eclectic Review</i>&mdash;a review to which I
+had occasionally the honour of contributing when it was edited by
+Dr. Price;&mdash;and to publish a good many books which had a
+fair sale in his day.&nbsp; Dr. Campbell had also much to do with
+the abolition of the Bible printing monopoly&mdash;a movement
+originated by Dr. Adam Thomson, of Coldstream, <!-- page 193--><a
+name="page193"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 193</span>powerfully
+supported by one of my earliest friends, Mr. John Childs, a
+spirited and successful printer at Bungay, whose one-volume
+editions of standard authors, such as Bacon&rsquo;s works,
+Milton&rsquo;s, and Gibbon&rsquo;s &ldquo;Decline and Pall of the
+Roman Empire,&rdquo; are still to be seen on the shelves of
+second-hand booksellers.&nbsp; The Queen&rsquo;s Printer affected
+to believe that the Bible could not be supplied to the public
+with equal efficiency or cheapness on any other system than that
+which gave him the monopoly of printing, but as it was proved
+before a Committee of the House of Commons that the Book could be
+printed at much less cost and in every way equal to the copies
+then in existence, the monopoly was destroyed.</p>
+<p>In 1830 there came into existence the Congregational Union of
+England and Wales, of which Dr. Campbell became one of the
+leading men.&nbsp; He was at the same time editor of <i>The
+Christian Witness</i> and <i>The Christian&rsquo;s Penny
+Magazine</i>&mdash;the organs of the Union&mdash;both of which at
+that time secured what was then considered a very enormous
+sale.&nbsp; When in 1835 Mr. Nasmith came to London to establish
+his City Mission Dr. Campbell was one of his earliest supporters
+and friends.&nbsp; The next great work which he took in hand was
+the establishment of <i>The British Banner</i>, a religious paper
+for the masses, in answer to an appeal made to him by the
+committee of <!-- page 194--><a name="page194"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 194</span><i>The Patriot</i> newspaper.&nbsp;
+The first number of the new journal appeared in 1848, and gained
+a circulation hitherto unknown in a weekly paper, and this in
+time was succeeded by <i>The British Standard</i>.&nbsp; As time
+passed on Dr. Campbell became less popular.&nbsp; He had rather
+too keen a scent for what was termed neology.&nbsp; In one case
+his zeal involved him in a libel suit and the verdict was for the
+plaintiff, who was awarded by the jury forty shillings damages
+instead of the &pound;5,000 he had claimed.&nbsp; In the Rivulet
+Controversy, as it was termed, Dr. Campbell was not quite so
+successful.&nbsp; Mr. Lynch was a poet, and preached, as his
+health was bad, to a small but select congregation in the
+Hampstead Road.&nbsp; He published a volume of refined and
+thoughtful poetry which has many admirers to this day.&nbsp; The
+late Mr. James Grant&mdash;a Scotch baker who had taken to
+literature and written several remarkably trashy books, the most
+popular of which was &ldquo;Random Recollections of the House of
+Commons,&rdquo;&mdash;at that time editor of the publican&rsquo;s
+paper, <i>The Morning Advertiser</i>, in his paper described the
+work of Mr. Lynch as calculated to inspire pain and sadness in
+the minds of all who knew what real religion was.&nbsp; Against
+this view a powerful protest was made by many leading men of the
+body to which Mr. Lynch belonged.&nbsp; At this stage of the
+controversy Dr. Campbell struck in by publishing letters
+addressed to the principal <!-- page 195--><a
+name="page195"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 195</span>professors
+of the Independent and Baptist colleges of England, showing that
+the hymns of Mr. Lynch were very defective as regards Evangelical
+truth&mdash;containing less of it than the hymns ordinarily sung
+by the Unitarians.&nbsp; The excitement in Dissenting circles was
+intense.&nbsp; The celebrated Thomas Binney, of the King&rsquo;s
+Weigh House Chapel, took part with Mr. Lynch and complained of
+Dr. Campbell in the ensuing meetings of the Congregational Union,
+and so strong was the feeling on the subject that a large party
+was formed to request the Congregational Union formally to sever
+their official connexion with Dr. Campbell&mdash;a matter not
+quite so easy as had been anticipated.&nbsp; One result, however,
+was that Dr. Campbell gave up the editing of <i>The British
+Banner</i> and established <i>The British Standard</i> to take
+its place, in which the warfare against what is called Neology
+was carried on with accelerated zeal.&nbsp; In 1867 the
+Doctor&rsquo;s laborious career came to an end happily in comfort
+and at peace with all.&nbsp; His biographers assure the reader
+that Dr. Campbell&rsquo;s works will last till the final
+conflagration of the world.&nbsp; Alas! no one reads them
+now.</p>
+<p>To come to later times, of course my most vivid recollections
+are those connected with the late Mr. Spurgeon.&nbsp; In that
+region of the metropolis known as &ldquo;over the water&rdquo;
+the Baptists flourish as they do nowhere else, and <!-- page
+196--><a name="page196"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+196</span>some of their chapels have an interesting
+history.&nbsp; Amongst many of them rather what is called high
+doctrine is tolerated&mdash;not to say admired.&nbsp; They are
+the elect of God, preordained before the world was formed to
+enjoy an existence of beatific rapture, that shall continue when
+the world has passed away.&nbsp; Of one of the most popular
+preachers in that locality, the late Jemmy Wells, it is said that
+when told that one of his hearers had fallen out of a cart and
+broken his leg his reply was, &ldquo;Oh, what a blessed thing it
+is he can&rsquo;t fall out of the Covenant.&rdquo;&nbsp; When one
+of the chapels in that locality was at low-water mark, there came
+to it the Rev. Charles Haddon Spurgeon&mdash;then little more
+than a boy, but already famous in East Anglia as a boy
+preacher&mdash;and never had a preacher a more successful
+career.&nbsp; There was no place in London that was large enough
+to contain the audiences that flocked to hear him.&nbsp; I first
+heard him at the Surrey Music Hall, and it was wonderful to see
+what hordes came there of saints and sinners, lords and ladies,
+City magnates and county squires, Anonymas from St. John&rsquo;s
+Wood, Lady Clara Vere de Veres from Belgravia.&nbsp; It was the
+fashion to go there on a Sunday morning, just as it was the
+fashion a generation previously to rush to Hatton Garden to hear
+Edward Irving.&nbsp; The hall was handsome and light and airy,
+free from the somewhat oppressive <!-- page 197--><a
+name="page197"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 197</span>air of Cave
+Adullam and Little Bethel, and there upon the platform which did
+duty for a pulpit stood a young man short of stature, broadly
+built, of a genial though not handsome countenance, with a big
+head and a voice it was a treat to listen to and audible in every
+part of that enormous building.&nbsp; What was the secret of his
+success?&nbsp; He was bold, he was original, he was humorous, and
+he was in earnest.&nbsp; He said things to make his hearers
+laugh, and what he said or did was magnified by rumour.&nbsp; Old
+stories of Billy Dawson and Rowland Hill were placed to Mr.
+Spurgeon&rsquo;s credit.&nbsp; The caricaturists made him their
+butt.&nbsp; There was no picture more commonly displayed at that
+time than one entitled &ldquo;Brimstone and
+Treacle&rdquo;&mdash;the former representing Mr. Spurgeon, the
+latter Mr. Bellew, then a star of the first order in many an
+Episcopalian pulpit.&nbsp; Bellew soon ran through his ephemeral
+popularity&mdash;that of Mr. Spurgeon grew and strengthened day
+by day.&nbsp; Do you, like the late Sir James Graham, want to
+know the reason why?&nbsp; The answer is soon given.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I am going into the ministry,&rdquo; said a youthful
+student to an old divine.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah, but, my dear friend,
+is the ministry in you?&rdquo;&nbsp; Well, the ministry was in
+Mr. Spurgeon as it rarely is in any man; hence his unparalleled
+success.</p>
+<p>One little anecdote will illustrate this.&nbsp; I have a
+friend whose father had a large business <!-- page 198--><a
+name="page198"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 198</span>in the
+ancient city of Colchester.&nbsp; Mr. Spurgeon&rsquo;s father was
+at one time in his employ.&nbsp; Naturally, he said a good deal
+of the preaching talent of his gifted son, and of the intention
+beginning to be entertained in the family circle of making a
+minister of him.&nbsp; The employer in question was a Churchman,
+but he himself offered to help Mr. Spurgeon in securing for his
+son the benefits of a collegiate education.&nbsp; The son&rsquo;s
+reply was characteristic.&nbsp; He declined the offered aid,
+adding the remark that &ldquo;ministers were made not in colleges
+but in heaven.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In connection with Mr. Spurgeon&rsquo;s scholastic career let
+me knock a little fiction on the head.&nbsp; There is a house in
+Aldeburgh, in Suffolk, famous now as the birthplace of Mrs.
+Garrett Anderson and her gifted sisters, which at one time was a
+school kept by a Mr. Swindell, and they told me at Aldeburgh this
+last summer that Mr. Spurgeon was a pupil there.&nbsp; This is
+not so.&nbsp; It is true Mr. Spurgeon was a pupil at Mr.
+Swindell&rsquo;s, but it was at Newmarket, to which the latter
+had moved from Aldeburgh.</p>
+<p>One or two Spurgeon anecdotes which have not yet appeared in
+print may be acceptable.&nbsp; At Hastings there are, or were,
+many High Church curates.&nbsp; A few years ago one of them did a
+very sensible thing.&nbsp; He had a holiday; he was in town and
+he went to the Tabernacle, getting a seat exactly under Mr.
+Spurgeon&rsquo;s nose, as it were.&nbsp; It seems that during the
+<!-- page 199--><a name="page199"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+199</span>week Mr. Spurgeon had been attending a High Church
+service, of which he gave in the pulpit a somewhat ludicrous
+account, suddenly finishing by giving a sort of snort, and
+exclaiming, &ldquo;Methinks I smell &rsquo;em now,&rdquo; much to
+the delight of the curate sitting underneath.&nbsp; Referring to
+Mr. Spurgeon&rsquo;s nose, I am told he had a great admiration of
+that of his brother, a much more aristocratic-looking article
+that his own.&nbsp; &ldquo;Jem,&rdquo; he is reported to have
+said on one occasion, &ldquo;I wish I had got your
+nose.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you?&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;I
+wish I had got your cheek.&rdquo;&nbsp; Let me give another
+story.&nbsp; On one occasion an artist wanted to make a sketch of
+Mr. Spurgeon for publishing.&nbsp; &ldquo;What are you going to
+charge?&rdquo; asked the preacher, as the artist appeared before
+him.&nbsp; &ldquo;You must not make the price more than twopence;
+the public will give that for me&mdash;not a penny more.&nbsp; A
+photographer published a portrait of me at eighteenpence, and no
+one bought it.&rdquo;&nbsp; This conversation took place on the
+occasion of a week-night service.&nbsp; At the close of the
+service the artist came up into the vestry to show his
+sketch.&nbsp; &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mr. Spurgeon, &ldquo;it is
+all very well, but I should like to hear what others say about
+it.&nbsp; They say women and fools are the best judges of this
+kind of thing,&rdquo; and accordingly the likeness was referred
+to a friend who happened to come into the room in the nick of
+time.</p>
+<p><!-- page 200--><a name="page200"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+200</span>It always seemed to me the great characteristic of Mr.
+Spurgeon was good-natured jollity.&nbsp; He was as full of fun as
+a boy.&nbsp; I saw him once before getting into a wagonette pitch
+all the rugs on his brother&rsquo;s head, who naturally returned
+the compliment&mdash;much to the amusement of the
+spectators.&nbsp; On one occasion I happened to be in the
+Tabernacle when the Baptist Union dined there, as it always did
+at the time of the Baptist anniversaries.&nbsp; I suppose there
+would be many hundreds present who enjoyed the ample repast and
+the accompanying claret and sherry.&nbsp; After the dinner was
+over Mr. Spurgeon came up to where I was sitting and, laying his
+hand on my shoulder and pointing to the long rows of empty
+bottles left standing on the table, with a twinkle in his eye,
+said, &ldquo;Teetotalism does not seem to flourish among the
+brethren, does it?&rdquo;&nbsp; And he was as kind as he was
+cheerful.&nbsp; Once and once only I had to write to him.&nbsp;
+He returned me a reply addressed to me in my proper name, and
+then&mdash;as I was writing weekly articles under a <i>nom de
+plume</i> in a highly popular journal&mdash;added, in a
+postscript, &ldquo;Kind regards to &mdash;&rdquo; (mentioning my
+<i>nom de plume</i>).&nbsp; The anecdote is trivial, but it shows
+how genial and kind-hearted he was.</p>
+<p>And to the last what crowds attended his ministry at the
+Tabernacle!&nbsp; One Saturday I went to dine with a friend
+living on Clapham <!-- page 201--><a name="page201"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 201</span>Common.&nbsp; Going back to town
+early in the morning I got into an omnibus, and was amused by
+hearing the conductor exclaim, &ldquo;Any more for the
+Tabernacle!&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Now, then, for the
+Tabernacle!&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;This way for the
+Tabernacle!&rdquo; and, sure enough, I found all my
+fellow-passengers got out when we arrived at the Tabernacle; nor
+was the &rsquo;bus in which I was riding the only one thus
+utilised.&nbsp; There was no end of omnibuses from all quarters
+drawing up at the entrance.&nbsp; According to the latest
+utterance of Mr. Herbert Beerbohm Tree, in this age of ours faith
+is tinged with philosophic doubt, love is regarded as but a spasm
+of the nervous system, life itself as the refrain of a music-hall
+song.&nbsp; At the Tabernacle the pastor and people were of a
+very different way of thinking.</p>
+<p>And Mr. Spurgeon was no windbag&mdash;<i>vox et pr&aelig;terea
+nihil</i>; no darling pet of old women whose Christianity was
+flabby as an oyster.&nbsp; He was an incessant worker, and taught
+his people to work as well in his enormous church.&nbsp; Such was
+the orderly arrangement that, as he said, if one of his people
+were to get tipsy, he should know it before the week was
+out.&nbsp; He never seemed to lose a moment.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Whenever I have been permitted,&rdquo; he wrote on one
+occasion, &ldquo;sufficient respite from my ministerial duties to
+enjoy a lengthened tour or even a short excursion, I have been in
+the habit of carrying with me a small note-book, in which I have
+<!-- page 202--><a name="page202"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+202</span>jotted down any illustrations that occurred to me on
+the way.&nbsp; The note-book has been useful in my travels as a
+mental purse.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yet the note-book was not
+intrusive.&nbsp; A friend of mine took Mr. Spurgeon in his steam
+yacht up the Highlands.&nbsp; Mr. Spurgeon was like a boy out of
+school&mdash;all the while naming the mountains after his
+friends.</p>
+<p>It is also to be noted how the public opinion altered with
+regard to Mr. Spurgeon.&nbsp; When he came first to London aged
+ministers and grey-haired deacons shook their heads.&nbsp; What
+could they think of a young minister who could stop in the middle
+of his sermon, and say, &ldquo;Please shut that window down,
+there is a draught.&nbsp; I like a draught of porter, but not
+that kind of draught&rdquo;?&nbsp; It was terrible!&nbsp; What
+next? was asked in fear and trepidation.&nbsp; These things were,
+I believe, often said on purpose, and they answered their
+purpose.&nbsp; &ldquo;Fire low,&rdquo; said a general to his men
+on one occasion.&nbsp; &ldquo;Fire low,&rdquo; said old Jay, of
+Bath, as he was preaching to a class of students.&nbsp; Mr.
+Spurgeon fired low.&nbsp; It is astonishing how that kind of
+preaching tells.&nbsp; I was travelling in Essex last summer, and
+in the train were two old men, one of whom lived in Kelvedon,
+where Mr. Spurgeon was born, who had sent the Baptist preacher
+some fruit from Kelvedon, which was, as he expected, thankfully
+received.&nbsp; &ldquo;Did you see what Mr. Spurgeon says in this
+week&rsquo;s <!-- page 203--><a name="page203"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 203</span>sermon?&rdquo; said he to the
+other.&nbsp; &ldquo;No.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Why, he said the
+devil said to him the other day, &lsquo;Mr. Spurgeon, you have
+got a good many faults,&rsquo; and I said to the devil, &lsquo;So
+have you,&rsquo;&rdquo; and then the old saints burst out
+laughing as if the repartee was as brilliant as it seemed to me
+the reverse; but I leave censure to the censorious.&nbsp; In his
+early youth, Sadi, the great Persian classic, tells us, he was
+over much religious, and found fault with the company sleeping
+while he sat in attendance on his father with the Koran in his
+lap, never closing his eyes all night.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, emanation
+of your father,&rdquo; replied the old man, &ldquo;you had better
+also have slept than that you should thus calumniate the failings
+of mankind.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 207--><a name="page207"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 207</span>CHAPTER XII.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Memories of Exeter Hall</span>.</h2>
+<p>As the season of the May Meetings draws near, one naturally
+thinks of Exeter Hall and its interesting associations.&nbsp;
+When I first came to London it had not long been open, and it was
+a wonder to the young man from the country to see its capacious
+interior and its immense platform crowded in every part.&nbsp; It
+had a much less gorgeous interior than now, but its capacities
+for stowing away a large audience still remains the same; and
+then, as now, it was available alike for Churchmen and Dissenters
+to plead the claims of the great religious societies, but it
+seems to me that the audiences were larger and more enthusiastic
+at that early date, though I know not that the oratory was
+better.&nbsp; Bishops on the platform were rare, and the
+principal performer in that line was Bishop Stanley, of Norwich,
+a grotesque-looking little man, but not so famous as his
+distinguished son, the Dean of Westminster.&nbsp; Leading
+Evangelical ministers from the country&mdash;such as James, of
+Birmingham, who had a very pathetic voice, and Hugh McNeile, of
+Liverpool, <!-- page 208--><a name="page208"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 208</span>an Irishman, with all an
+Irishman&rsquo;s exuberance of gesture and of language&mdash;were
+a great feature.&nbsp; At times the crowds were so great that a
+meeting had to be improvised in the Lower Hall, then a much
+darker hall than it is now, but which, at any rate, answered its
+end for the time being.&nbsp; The missionary meetings were the
+chief attraction.&nbsp; Proceedings commenced early, and were
+protracted far into the afternoon; but the audience remained to
+the last, the ladies knitting assiduously all the while the
+report was being read, and only leaving off to listen when the
+speaking began.&nbsp; Perhaps the most crowded meeting ever held
+there&mdash;at any rate, in my time&mdash;was when Prince Albert
+took the chair to inaugurate Sir Fowell Buxton&rsquo;s grand, but
+unfortunate, scheme for the opening up of the Congo.&nbsp; He
+spoke in a low tone, and with a somewhat foreign accent.&nbsp;
+Bishop Wilberforce&rsquo;s oratory on that occasion was
+overpowering; the Prince&rsquo;s eyes were rivetted on him all
+the while.&nbsp; Sir Robert Peel spoke in a calm, dignified,
+statesmanlike manner, but the expression of his face was too
+supercilious to be pleasing.&nbsp; And there was Daniel
+O&rsquo;Connell&mdash;big, burly, rollicking&mdash;who seemed to
+enjoy the triumph of his own presence, though not permitted to
+speak.&nbsp; The other time when I remember an awful crush at
+Exeter Hall was at an anti-slavery meeting, when Lord Brougham
+<!-- page 209--><a name="page209"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+209</span>took the chair; an M.P. dared to attack his lordship,
+and his reply was crushing, his long nose twitching all the while
+with a passion he was unable to repress.&nbsp; He looked as angry
+as he felt.&nbsp; Amongst the missionaries, the most popular
+speakers were John Williams, the martyr of Erromanga, and William
+Knibb, the famous Baptist missionary from Jamaica, and
+Livingstone&rsquo;s father-in-law, the venerable Dr. Moffat, who,
+once upon his legs, seemed as if he could never sit down
+again.&nbsp; Williams was a heavy man in appearance, but of such
+evident goodness and earnestness that you were interested in what
+he said nevertheless.&nbsp; William Knibb was, as far as
+appearance went, quite the reverse; a fiery speaker, the very
+picture of a demagogue, the champion of the slave, and a terrible
+thorn in the sides of the slave-owners.&nbsp; Of women orators we
+had none in those primitive times, and some of the American women
+who had come to speak at one or other of the Anti-Slavery
+Conventions&mdash;at that time of constant occurrence&mdash;were
+deeply disappointed that, after coming all the way from America
+on purpose to deliver their testimony, they were not allowed to
+open their mouths.&nbsp; It was at Exeter Hall that I first heard
+Mr. Gough, the Temperance advocate&mdash;an actor more than an
+orator, but of wonderful power.</p>
+<p>It was at Crosby Hall that I first heard George Dawson.&nbsp;
+I think it was at one of the <!-- page 210--><a
+name="page210"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 210</span>meetings
+held there in connection with what I may call the anti-Graham,
+demonstration.&nbsp; On the introduction, in 1843, by Sir James
+Graham of his Factories Education Bill, the Dissenters assailed
+it with unexpected vehemence.&nbsp; They denounced it as a scheme
+for destroying the educational machinery they had, at great
+expense, provided, and for throwing the care of the young into
+the hands of the clergy of the Church of England.&nbsp; It was in
+the East of London that the opposition to this measure
+originated, and a committee was formed, of which Dr. Andrew Reed
+was chairman, and his son, afterwards Sir Charles, who lived to
+become Chairman of the London School Board, was secretary.&nbsp;
+The agitation spread all over the country, and delegates to a
+considerable number on one occasion found their way to Crosby
+Hall.&nbsp; In the course of the proceedings a young man in the
+gallery got up to say that he came from Birmingham to show how
+the popular feeling had changed there from the time when
+Church-and-State mobs had sacked the Dissenting chapels, and
+driven Dr. Priestley into exile.&nbsp; &ldquo;Your name,
+sir?&rdquo; asked the chairman.&nbsp; &ldquo;George
+Dawson,&rdquo; was the reply, and there he stood in the midst of
+the grave and reverend seigneurs, calm, youthful, self-possessed,
+with his dark hair parted in the middle, a voice somewhat husky
+yet clear.&nbsp; He was a Baptist minister, he said, <!-- page
+211--><a name="page211"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+211</span>yet he looked as little like one as it was possible to
+imagine.</p>
+<p>It was a little later, that is, in 1857, Mr. Samuel Morley
+made his <i>d&eacute;but</i> in political life, at a meeting in
+the London Tavern, of which he was chairman, to secure
+responsible administration in every department of the State, to
+shut all the back doors which lead to public employment, to throw
+the public service open to all England, to obtain recognition of
+merit everywhere, and to put an end to all kinds of promotion by
+favour or purchase.&nbsp; Mr. Morley&rsquo;s speech was clear and
+convincing&mdash;more business-like than oratorical&mdash;and he
+never got beyond that.&nbsp; The tide was in his favour&mdash;all
+England was roused by the tale <i>The Times</i> told of neglect
+and cruel mismanagement in the Crimea.&nbsp; Since then
+Government has done less and the people more.&nbsp; Has the
+change been one for the better?</p>
+<p>One of the most extraordinary meetings in which I ever took a
+part was an Orange demonstration in Freemasons&rsquo; Hall, the
+Earl of Roden in the chair.&nbsp; I was a student at the time,
+and one of my fellow-students was Sir Colman O&rsquo;Loghlen, the
+son of the Irish Master of the Rolls.&nbsp; He was a friend of
+Dan O&rsquo;Connell&rsquo;s, and he conceived the idea of getting
+all or as many of his fellow-students as possible to go to the
+meeting and break it up.&nbsp; We walked accordingly, each one of
+us with a <!-- page 212--><a name="page212"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 212</span>good-sized stick in his hand, to the
+Free-Mason&rsquo;s Tavern, the mob exclaiming, as we passed
+along, &ldquo;There go the Chartists,&rdquo; and perhaps we did
+look like them, for none of us were overdressed.&nbsp; In the
+hall we took up a conspicuous position, and waited patiently, but
+we had not long to wait.&nbsp; As soon as the clergy and leading
+Orangemen on the platform had taken their seats, we were ready
+for the fray.&nbsp; Apart from us, the audience was not large,
+and we had the hall almost entirely to ourselves.&nbsp; Not a
+word of the chairman&rsquo;s address was audible.&nbsp; There was
+a madman of the name of Captain Acherley who was in the habit, at
+that time, of attending public meetings solely for the sake of
+disturbing them, who urged us on&mdash;and we were too ready to
+be urged on.&nbsp; With our voices and our sticks we managed to
+create a hideous row.&nbsp; The meeting had to come to a
+premature close, and we marched off, feeling that we had driven
+back the enemy, and achieved a triumph.&nbsp; Whether we had done
+any good, however, I more than doubt.&nbsp; There were other and
+fairer memories, however, in connection with Freemasons&rsquo;
+Hall.&nbsp; It was there I beheld the illustrious Clarkson, who
+had come in the evening of his life, when his whole frame was
+bowed with age, and the grasshopper had become a burden, to
+preside at the World&rsquo;s Anti-Slavery Convention.&nbsp; All I
+can remember of him was that he had a red face, <!-- page
+213--><a name="page213"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+213</span>grey hair, and was dressed in black.&nbsp; There, and
+at Exeter Hall, Joseph Sturge, the Apostle of Peace, was often to
+be seen.&nbsp; He was a well-made man, with a singularly pleasant
+cast of countenance and attractive voice, and, as was to be
+expected, as cool as a Quaker.&nbsp; Another great man, now
+forgotten, was Joseph Buckingham, lecturer, traveller, author,
+and orator, M.P. for Sheffield.</p>
+<p>In the City the places for demonstrations are fewer now than
+they were.&nbsp; The London Tavern I have already
+mentioned.&nbsp; Then there was the King&rsquo;s Arms, I think it
+was called, in the Poultry, chiefly occupied by Dissenting
+societies.&nbsp; At the London Coffee House, at the Ludgate Hill
+corner of the Old Bailey, now utilised by Hope Brothers, but
+interesting to us as the scene of the birth and childhood of our
+great artist, Leech, meetings were occasionally held; and then
+there was the Crown and Anchor, in the Strand, on your left, just
+before you get to Arundel Street, where Liberals, or, rather,
+Whigs, delighted to appeal to the people&mdash;the only source of
+legitimate power.&nbsp; It was there that I heard that grand
+American orator, Beecher, as he pleaded, amidst resounding
+cheers, the cause of the North during the American Civil War, and
+the great Temperance orator, Gough, who took Exeter Hall by
+storm.&nbsp; But it was to Exeter Hall that the tribes
+repaired&mdash;as <!-- page 214--><a name="page214"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 214</span>they do now.&nbsp; When I first knew
+Exeter Hall, no one ever dreamt of any other way of regenerating
+society.&nbsp; Agnosticism, Secularism, Spiritualism, and
+Altruism had not come into existence.&nbsp; Their professors were
+weeping and wailing in long clothes.&nbsp; Now we have, indeed,
+swept into a younger day, and society makes lions of men of whom
+our fathers would have taken no heed.&nbsp; We have become more
+tolerant&mdash;even Exeter Hall has moved with the times.&nbsp;
+Perhaps one of the boldest things connected with it was the
+attempt to utilise it for public religious worship on the
+Sunday.&nbsp; Originally some of the Evangelical clergy had
+agreed to take part in these services, but the rector of the
+parish in which Exeter Hall was situated disapproved, and
+consequently they were unable to appear.&nbsp; The result was the
+services were conducted by the leading ministers of other
+denominations, nor were they less successful on that account.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 217--><a name="page217"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 217</span>CHAPTER XIII.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Men I Have Known</span>.</h2>
+<p>It is the penalty of old age to lose all our friends and
+acquaintances, but fortunately our hold on earth weakens as the
+end of life draws near.&nbsp; In an active life, we see much of
+the world and the men who help to make it better.&nbsp; Many
+ministers and missionaries came to my father&rsquo;s house with
+wonderful accounts of the spread of the Gospel in foreign
+parts.&nbsp; At a later time I saw a knot of popular lecturers
+and agitators&mdash;such as George Thompson, the great
+anti-slavery lecturer, who, born in humble life, managed to get
+into Parliament, where he collapsed altogether.&nbsp; As an
+outdoor orator he was unsurpassed, and carried all before
+him.&nbsp; After a speech of his I heard Lord Brougham declare it
+was one of the most eloquent he had ever heard.&nbsp; He started
+a newspaper, which, however, did not make much way.&nbsp; Then
+there was Henry Vincent, another natural orator, whom the common
+people heard gladly, and who at one time was very near getting
+into Parliament as M.P. for Ipswich, then, as now, a go-ahead
+town, full of Dissenters <!-- page 218--><a
+name="page218"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 218</span>and
+Radicals.&nbsp; He began life as a Chartist and printer, and, I
+believe, was concerned in the outbreak near Newport.&nbsp; Of the
+same class was a man of real genius and immense learning,
+considering the disadvantages of his lowly birth, Thomas Cooper,
+the Chartist, and author of that magnificent poem, &ldquo;The
+Purgatory of Suicides,&rdquo; written when he was in gaol for
+being connected with a Chartist outbreak.&nbsp; He had been a
+Methodist, he became a Freethinker, and, when I knew him, was
+under the influence of Strauss&rsquo;s Life of Jesus, a book
+which George Eliot had translated, and which made a great
+sensation at the time of its appearance, though it is utterly
+forgotten now.&nbsp; Cooper and I were members of an obscure
+club, in one of the Fleet Street courts, where he used to declaim
+with great eloquence on the evil doings of the Tories and the
+wrongs of the poor, while at the same time he had a true
+appreciation of the utter worthlessness of some of the Chartist
+leaders.&nbsp; As he advanced in years he gave up his infidel
+opinions and became an earnest advocate of the faith he once
+laboured to destroy.&nbsp; The last time I saw him was at his
+house in Lincoln shortly before he died.&nbsp; He seemed sound in
+body, considering his years, but his mind was gone and he
+remembered no one.&nbsp; At the same time I saw a good deal of
+Richard Lovett&mdash;a noble character&mdash;who worked all his
+life for the mental and <!-- page 219--><a
+name="page219"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 219</span>moral
+improvement of the working man, of whom he was such an
+illustrious example.&nbsp; Cooper and Vincent and Lovett did much
+between them to make the working man respected as he had never
+been before.</p>
+<p>One of the grandest old men I ever knew was George Cruikshank,
+the artist, in his later years an ardent advocate of Temperance,
+but a real Bohemian nevertheless, enjoying life and all its
+blessings to the last.&nbsp; At a dinner-party or at a social
+gathering of any kind he was at his best, full of anecdote,
+overflowing with wit and mimicry; as an orator also he had great
+power, and generally managed to keep his audience in a roar of
+laughter.&nbsp; While perfectly sober himself, he was very happy
+in taking off the drunkard&rsquo;s eccentricities, and would sing
+&ldquo;We are not fou,&rdquo; or &ldquo;Willie brewed a peck
+o&rsquo; malt,&rdquo; as if he deemed a toper the prince of good
+fellows.&nbsp; In his old age he had persuaded himself that to
+him Dickens owed many of his happiest inspirations, a remark
+which the author of &ldquo;The Pickwick Papers&rdquo; strongly
+resented.&nbsp; At his home I met on one occasion Mrs. Dickens, a
+very pleasant, motherly lady, with whom one would have thought
+any husband could have happily lived, although the great novelist
+himself seemed to be of another way of thinking.&nbsp;
+Cruikshank&rsquo;s wife seems to have been devoted to him.&nbsp;
+She was proud of him, as well she might be.&nbsp; He had a good
+<!-- page 220--><a name="page220"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+220</span>head of hair, and to the last cherished a tremendous
+lock which adorned his forehead.&nbsp; He was rather
+square-built, with an eye that at one time must have rivalled
+that of the far-famed hawk.&nbsp; He lived comfortably in a good
+house just outside Mornington Crescent, in the Hampstead Road;
+but he was never a wealthy man, and was always publishing little
+pamphlets, which, whatever the fame they brought him, certainly
+yielded little cash.&nbsp; He had seen a good deal of life, or
+what a Cockney takes to be such, and when he was buried in Kensal
+Green, the attendance at the funeral showed how large was the
+circle of his friends and admirers.&nbsp; To the last he was
+proud of his whiskers.</p>
+<p>Another friend of mine buried in the same place was Dr.
+Charles Mackay, the original editor of <i>The Illustrated London
+News</i>, and who differed so much with the proprietor, Mr.
+Ingram, M.P., on the character of the late French Emperor, for
+whom Dr. Mackay had a profound contempt, that he had to resign,
+and commenced <i>The London Review</i>, which did not last
+long.&nbsp; At one time his songs, &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a good
+time coming, boys,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Cheer boys, cheer,&rdquo;
+were played on every barrel-organ, and were to be heard in every
+street.&nbsp; Another of the workers on <i>The Illustrated
+News</i> was John Timbs, the unwearying publisher of popular
+books of anecdotes, by which, I fear, he did not make <!-- page
+221--><a name="page221"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+221</span>much money, as he had to end his days in the Charter
+House.&nbsp; His department was to look after the engravings, a
+duty which compelled him to sit up all night on Thursdays.&nbsp;
+Before he had joined Mr. Ingram&rsquo;s staff, he had edited a
+small periodical called <i>The Mirror</i>, devoted to useful and
+amusing literature.&nbsp; I fancy his happiest hours were passed
+chatting with the literary men who were always hovering round the
+office of the paper&mdash;like Mr. Micawber, in the hope of
+something turning up.&nbsp; You could not be long there without
+seeing Mark Lemon&mdash;a mountain of a man connected with
+<i>Punch</i>, who could act Falstaff without stuffing&mdash;who
+was Mr. Ingram&rsquo;s private secretary.&nbsp; A wonderful
+contrast to Mark Lemon was Douglas Jerrold, a little grey-haired,
+keen-eyed man, who seemed to me to walk the streets hurriedly, as
+if he expected a bailiff to touch him on the back.&nbsp; Later, I
+knew his son, Mr. Blanchard Jerrold, very well, and always found
+him a very courteous and pleasant gentleman.&nbsp; With Hain
+Friswell, with the ever-sparkling, black-eyed George Augustus
+Sala, with that life-long agitator Jesse Jacob Holyoake, for whom
+I had a warm esteem, I was also on very friendly terms.&nbsp;
+Once, and once only, I had an interview with Mr. Charles
+Bradlaugh who, when he recognised me as &ldquo;Christopher
+Crayon&rdquo; of <i>The Christian World</i>, gave me a hearty
+shake of the hands.&nbsp; Had he <!-- page 222--><a
+name="page222"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 222</span>lived, I
+believe he would have become a Christian.&nbsp; At any rate, of
+later years, his hostility to Christianity seemed to have
+considerably toned down.&nbsp; Be that as it may, I always held
+him to be one of the most honest of our public men.&nbsp; I had
+also the pleasure once of sitting next Mr. Labouchere at a dinner
+at a friend&rsquo;s.&nbsp; He talked much, smoked more, and was
+as witty as Waller, and like him on cold water.&nbsp; Another
+teetotaler with whom I came much into contact was the late Sir
+Benjamin Ward Richardson, a shortish, stout man to look at, a
+good public speaker, and warmly devoted alike to literature and
+science.&nbsp; Another distinguished man whom I knew well was Mr.
+James Hinton, the celebrated aurist and a writer on religious
+matters which at one time had great effect.&nbsp; He was the son
+of the celebrated Baptist preacher, the Rev. John Howard Hinton,
+and I was grieved to learn that he had given up his practice as
+an aurist in Saville Row, and had bought an orange estate far
+away in the Azores, where he went to die of typhoid fever.</p>
+<p>On the whole I am inclined to think I never had a pleasanter
+man to do with than Mr. Cobden.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you
+commence a movement in favour of Free Trade in land?&rdquo; I one
+day said to him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; was his reply, &ldquo;I
+am too old for that.&nbsp; I have done my share of work.&nbsp; I
+must leave that to be taken up by <!-- page 223--><a
+name="page223"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 223</span>younger
+men.&rdquo;&nbsp; And, strange to say, though this has always
+seemed to me the great want of the age, the work has been left
+undone, and all the nation suffers in consequence.&nbsp; As an
+illustration of Mr. Cobden&rsquo;s persuasiveness let me give the
+following.&nbsp; Once upon a time he came to Norwich to address
+an audience of farmers there&mdash;in St. Andrew&rsquo;s Hall, I
+think.&nbsp; On my asking an old Norfolk farmer what he thought
+of Mr. Cobden as a speaker, his reply was, &ldquo;Why he got such
+a hold of us that if he had held up a sheet of white paper on the
+platform and said it was black, there was not a farmer in the
+hall but would have said the same.&rdquo;&nbsp; Cobden never
+irritated his opponents.&nbsp; He had a marvellous power of
+talking them round.&nbsp; In this respect he was a wonderful
+contrast to his friend and colleague, John Bright.</p>
+<p>A leading teetotaler with whom I had much to do was the late
+Mr. Smithies, founder of <i>The British Workman</i> and
+publications of a similar class.&nbsp; At an enormous expense he
+commenced his illustrated paper, full of the choicest engravings,
+and published at a price so as to secure them a place in the
+humblest home.&nbsp; For a long while it was published at a
+loss.&nbsp; But Mr. Smithies bravely held on, as his aim, I
+honestly believe, was to do good rather than make money.&nbsp; He
+was a Christian social reformer, a Wesleyan, indifferent to
+politics, as Wesleyans more or less were at one time.&nbsp; <!--
+page 224--><a name="page224"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+224</span>Square-built, of rather less than medium height, with a
+ruddy face, and a voice that could be heard all over Exeter
+Hall&mdash;he looked the picture of health and happiness.&nbsp; I
+never saw him frown but when I approached him with a cigar in my
+mouth.&nbsp; Mr. Smithies was one of the earliest to rally round
+the Temperance banner.&nbsp; His whole life was devoted to doing
+good in his own way.&nbsp; He never married, and lived with his
+mother, a fine old lady, who contrived to give her dutiful and
+affectionate son somewhat of an antiquated cast of thought, and
+never was he happier than when in the company of Lady Burdett
+Coutts or great Earl Shaftesbury.</p>
+<p>I had also a good deal to do with Mr. W. H. Collingridge, who
+founded that successful paper, <i>The City Press</i>, which his
+genial son, Mr. G. Collingridge, still carries on.&nbsp; By means
+of my connection with <i>The City Press</i> I came into contact
+with many City leaders and Lord Mayors, and saw a good deal of
+City life at the Mansion House and at grand halls of the City
+Companies.&nbsp; I think the tendency in these days is much to
+run down the City Corporation.&nbsp; People forget that the
+splendid hospitality of the Mansion House helps to exalt the fame
+and power of England all the world over.&nbsp; Once upon a time I
+attended a Liberal public meeting at which two M.P.&rsquo;s had
+spoken.&nbsp; One of the committee said to me, &ldquo;Now you
+must <!-- page 225--><a name="page225"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 225</span>make a speech.&rdquo;&nbsp; My reply
+was that there was no need to do so, as the M.P.&rsquo;s had said
+all that was required.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; said my
+friend, &ldquo;not a word has been said about the Corporation of
+London.&nbsp; Pitch into them!&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo;
+I replied.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have drunk too much of their punch and
+swallowed too much of their turtle-soup.&rdquo;&nbsp; I will
+never run down the City Fathers, many of whom I knew and
+respected, and at whose banquets men gathered&mdash;not merely
+City people, but the leading men of all the world.&nbsp; The
+glory of the Mansion House is the glory of the land.</p>
+<p>I could go on for a long while.&nbsp; Have I not been to
+<i>soir&eacute;es</i> at great men&rsquo;s houses and met all
+sorts and conditions of people?&nbsp; Only two men have I given
+myself the trouble to be introduced to&mdash;one was Barnum,
+because he frankly admitted he was a humbug, though he seemed a
+decent fellow enough in private life.&nbsp; Another was Cetewayo,
+the jolliest-looking Kaffir I ever saw, and I went to see him
+because our treatment of him was a shame and a national
+disgrace.&nbsp; Once on a time as we were waiting for Royalty on
+a distant platform, one of the committee offered to introduce me
+to H.R.H.&nbsp; I declined, on the plea that I must draw the line
+somewhere, and that I drew it at princes, but oh! the vanity of
+wasting one&rsquo;s time in society.&nbsp; Of the gay world,
+perhaps the wittiest and pleasantest, as far as my personal
+experience <!-- page 226--><a name="page226"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 226</span>is concerned, was the late Charles
+Mathews.&nbsp; I had seen him on the stage and met him in his
+brougham and talked with him, and once I was invited to a grand
+party he gave to his friends and admirers.&nbsp; As I went into
+the reception-room I wondered where the jaunty and juvenile actor
+could be.&nbsp; All at once I saw a venerable, bald-headed old
+man coming down on me.&nbsp; Oh! I said to myself, this must be
+the butler coming to account for his master&rsquo;s
+absence.&nbsp; Lo, and behold! it was Charley Mathews
+himself!</p>
+<h2><!-- page 229--><a name="page229"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 229</span>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
+<span class="smcap">How I Put up for M.P.</span></h2>
+<p>By this time people have got sick of electioneering.&nbsp; It
+is a great privilege to be an English elector&mdash;to feel that
+the eyes of the world are on you, and that, at any rate, your
+country expects you to do your duty.&nbsp; But to the candidate
+an election contest is, at any rate, fraught with
+instruction.&nbsp; Human nature is undoubtedly a curious
+combination, and a man who goes in for an election undoubtedly
+sees a good deal of human nature.&nbsp; I was put up for a
+Parliamentary borough&mdash;I who shudder at the sound of my own
+voice, and who have come to regard speechmakers with as much
+aversion as I should the gentleman in black.&nbsp; A borough was
+for the first time to send a member to Parliament.&nbsp; It had
+been hawked all over London in vain, and as a <i>dernier
+ressort</i> the Liberal Association of the borough&mdash;a
+self-elected clique of well-meaning nobodies&mdash;had determined
+to run a highly respectable and well-connected gentleman whose
+name and merits were alike unknown.&nbsp; Under such
+circumstances I consented to fight the battle for freedom and
+independence, as I hold that our <!-- page 230--><a
+name="page230"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 230</span>best men
+should be sent to Parliament irrespective of property&mdash;that
+candidates should not be forced on electors, and that unless our
+Liberal Associations are really representative they may be worked
+in a way injurious to the country and destructive of its
+freedom.&nbsp; At my first meeting, like another C&aelig;sar, I
+came, I saw, I conquered.&nbsp; The chiefs of the Liberal
+Association had assembled to put me down.&nbsp; I was not put
+down, and, amidst resounding cheers, I was declared the adopted
+candidate.&nbsp; The room was crowded with friends.&nbsp; I never
+shook so many dirty hands in my life.&nbsp; A second meeting,
+equally successful, confirmed the first, and I at once plunged
+into the strife.&nbsp; I am not here to write the history of an
+election, but to tell of my personal experiences, which were
+certainly amusing.&nbsp; The first result of my candidature led
+to a visit from an impecunious Scot at my suburban residence, who
+had read my programme with infinite delight.&nbsp; He came to
+assure me of his best wishes for my success.&nbsp; He was,
+unfortunately, not an elector, but he was a Scotchman, as he was
+sure I was, and sadly in want of a loan, which he was certain,
+from my Liberal sentiments, I would be the last to refuse to a
+brother Scot.&nbsp; I had hardly got rid of him before I was
+called upon by an agent of one of our great Radical
+societies&mdash;a society with which I had something to do in its
+younger days before it <!-- page 231--><a
+name="page231"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 231</span>had become
+great and powerful, but which, like most people when they got up
+in the world, forgot its humble friends.&nbsp; Ah, thought I, the
+society is going to give me a little aid to show its appreciation
+of my ancient service, and I felt pleased accordingly.&nbsp; Not
+a bit of it.&nbsp; Mr. P. was the collector of the society, and
+he came to see what he could get out of me, assuring me that
+almost all the Liberal candidates had responded to his
+appeal.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you think I am going to buy the sanction
+of your society by a paltry fiver?&rdquo; was my reply; and the
+agent went away faster than he came.&nbsp; My next visitor was a
+pleasant, plausible representative of some workmen&rsquo;s
+league, to assure me of his support, and then, with abundance of
+promise, he went his way, leaving me to look for a performance of
+which I saw no sign.&nbsp; Then came the ladies.&nbsp; Would I
+give them an interview?&nbsp; Some of them wanted to set me right
+on Temperance questions; others on topics on which no
+right-minded woman should care to speak, and on which few would
+speak were it not for the morbid, sensational, hysterical feeling
+which often overcomes women who have no families of their own to
+look after, no household duties to discharge, no home to adorn
+and purify.&nbsp; As I had no town house, and did not care to
+invite the ladies to the smoking-room of my club, I in every such
+case felt bound to deny myself the pleasure <!-- page 232--><a
+name="page232"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 232</span>of an
+interview.&nbsp; But my correspondents came from every quarter of
+the land.&nbsp; Some offered me their services; others favoured
+me with their views on things in general.&nbsp; It was seldom I
+took the trouble to reply to them.&nbsp; One gentleman, I fear,
+will never forgive me.&nbsp; He was an orator; he sent me
+testimonials on the subject from such leading organs of public
+opinion as <i>The Eatanswill Gazette</i> or <i>The Little
+Pedlington Observer</i>, of the most wonderful character.&nbsp;
+Evidently as an orator he was above all Greek, above all Roman
+fame, and he was quite willing to come and speak at my meetings,
+which was very kind, as he assured me that no candidate for whom
+he had spoken was ever defeated at the poll.&nbsp; I ought to
+have retained his services, I ought to have sent him a cheque, or
+my thanks.&nbsp; Doubtless he would have esteemed them,
+especially the latter.&nbsp; Alas! I did nothing of the kind.</p>
+<p>But oh! the wearisome canvassing, which seems to be the only
+way to success.&nbsp; Meetings are of little avail, organisation
+is equally futile, paid agency simply leads the candidate into a
+Serbonian bog, where</p>
+<blockquote><p>Whole armies oft have perished.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is house-to-house visitation that is the true secret
+now.&nbsp; As far as I carried it out I was successful, though I
+did not invariably embrace the wife of the voter or kiss the
+babies.&nbsp; The <!-- page 233--><a name="page233"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 233</span>worst of it is, it takes so much
+time.&nbsp; Now and then your friend is supernaturally
+wise.&nbsp; You must stop and hear all he has to say, or you make
+him an enemy.&nbsp; Some people&mdash;and I think they were
+right&mdash;seemed to think a candidate has no business to
+canvass electors at all.&nbsp; One highly respectable voter
+seemed really angry as he told me, with a severity worthy of a
+judge about to sentence a poor wretch to hanging, it was quite
+needless for me to call, that he was not going to disgrace his
+Baptist principles.&nbsp; Passing a corner public one Saturday I
+was met with a friendly recognition.&nbsp; &ldquo;We&rsquo;re all
+going to oblige you, Sir,&rdquo; said the spokesman of the party,
+in a tone indicating that either he had not taken the Temperance
+pledge, or that he was somewhat lax in his observance of it,
+&ldquo;and now you must oblige us will you?&rdquo;&nbsp; Him I
+left a sadder and a wiser man, as I had to explain that the
+trifling little favour he sought at my hands might invalidate my
+election.&nbsp; One female in a Peabody Building was hurt because
+I had in my haste given a postman&rsquo;s rap at the door,
+instead of one more in use in genteel society.&nbsp; In many a
+model lodging-house I found a jolly widow, who, in answer to my
+appeal if there were any gentlemen, seemed to intimate that the
+male sex were held in no particular favour.&nbsp; The
+Conservative female was, as a rule, rather hard and sarcastic,
+and I was glad to beat <!-- page 234--><a
+name="page234"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 234</span>a retreat,
+as she gave me to understand that she was not to be deceived by
+anything I might say, and that she should take care how her
+husband voted.&nbsp; Now and then I was favoured with a
+dissertation on the evil of party, but I could always cut that
+short by the remark, &ldquo;Oh, I see you are going to vote for
+the Conservative candidate!&rdquo;&mdash;a remark which led to a
+confession that in reality such was the case.&nbsp; The newly
+enfranchised seemed proud of their privilege.&nbsp; It was not
+from them I got the reply which I often heard where I should have
+least expected it, &ldquo;Oh, I never interfere in
+politics.&rdquo;&nbsp; People who had fads were a great
+bore.&nbsp; One man would not vote for me because I was not sound
+on the Sunday question; others who were of the same political
+opinions as myself would not support me because I laughed at
+their pet theories.&nbsp; But the great drawback was that I had
+come forward without leave from the party chiefs, and hence their
+toadies, lay or clerical, sternly held aloof.&nbsp; Barely was I
+treated uncourteously, except when my declaration that I was a
+Radical led to an intimation on the part of the voter that the
+sooner I cleared out the better.</p>
+<p>I would suggest that all canvassing be prohibited&mdash;you
+want to get at the public opinion of the borough, and that you do
+not obtain when you extort a promise from a voter who has no
+definite opinion himself.&nbsp; <!-- page 235--><a
+name="page235"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 235</span>Public
+meetings and an advertisement or circular should be sufficient;
+but there are many voters who will not take the trouble to
+attend, and a public meeting, even if enthusiastic, is no
+criterion of what the vote will be.&nbsp; It is easy to get up a
+public meeting if a candidate will go to the necessary expense;
+and it is easier still to spoil one if the opposition committee
+can secure the services of a few roughs or an Irishman or
+two.&nbsp; Democratic Socialists I also found very efficient in
+that way, unable as they would have been to carry a candidate, or
+to hold a public meeting themselves.&nbsp; One of the funniest
+performances was, after you had had your say, to reply to the
+questions.&nbsp; As a rule, the questioner thinks chiefly of
+himself.&nbsp; He likes the sound of his voice, and he sits down
+with a self-satisfied smile&mdash;if he be an old hand&mdash;as
+if he had made it self-evident that he knew a thing or two, and
+that he was not the sort of man you could make a fool of.&nbsp;
+But heckling, as it is called, is a science little
+understood.&nbsp; It is one of the fine arts.&nbsp; A candidate,
+for instance, likes to make a statement when he replies to a
+question.&nbsp; The questioner, if he is up to the mark, will
+gain a cheer, as he denounces all attempts at evasion, and
+demands a straightforward, Yes or No.&nbsp; A man asks you, for
+instance, Have you left off beating your wife yet?&nbsp; How are
+you to answer Yes or <!-- page 236--><a name="page236"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 236</span>No in such a case?&nbsp; As a rule,
+the questioners are poor performers, and ask you what no one need
+ask who hears a candidate&rsquo;s speech, or reads his
+programme.&nbsp; One thing came out very clearly&mdash;that is,
+the terror platform orators, lay or clerical, have of any body
+calling itself a Liberal Association, whether it is really that
+or not.&nbsp; You can get any number of orators, on the condition
+that you have an association at your back.&nbsp; But they dare
+not otherwise lend you a helping hand.&nbsp; Liberalism is to
+have the stamp of Walbrook on it.&nbsp; It must be such as the
+wirepullers approve.&nbsp; I said to a Radical M.P.: &ldquo;I am
+fighting a sham caucus.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Ain&rsquo;t they all
+shams?&rdquo; was his reply.&nbsp; There is a danger in this;
+even though there are still men left in this age of mechanical
+organism who value the triumph of principles more even than that
+of party.</p>
+<p>My experience is anybody can get into Parliament if he will
+keep pegging away and has plenty of money.&nbsp; Let him keep
+himself before the public&mdash;by writing letters to the
+newspapers, and by putting in an appearance at all public
+meetings, and by promising wholesale as to what he will do.&nbsp;
+If he can bray like a bull, and has a face of brass, and has
+money or friends who have it, he may be sure of success.&nbsp; As
+a rule, the best way is to get yourself known to the public in
+connection with some new development of philanthropic life.&nbsp;
+But a little <!-- page 237--><a name="page237"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 237</span>money is a great help.&nbsp; Gold
+touches hearts as nothing else can.&nbsp; The biggest Radical of
+two candidates naturally prefers the richer.&nbsp; Men who can
+crowd into all meetings, and shout &ldquo;Buggins for
+ever,&rdquo; are useful allies, and men of that stamp have little
+sympathy with the poor candidates.&nbsp; Once in Parliament you
+are useless, at the beck and call of the whipper-in, a slave to
+party; but you are an M.P. nevertheless, and may not call your
+soul your own.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 241--><a name="page241"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 241</span>CHAPTER XV.<br />
+<span class="smcap">How I Was Made a Fool Of</span>.</h2>
+<p>At length I am in the home of the free, where all men are
+equal, where O&rsquo;Donovan Rossa may seek to blast the glories
+of a thousand years, where a Henry George may pave the way for an
+anarchy such as the world has never yet seen, where even Jem
+Blaine, as his admirers term him, passes for an honest man, and
+claims to have a firm grip on the Presidential chair.</p>
+<p>I am unfortunate on my landing.&nbsp; I have the name of one
+of Cook&rsquo;s hotels on my lips, and as I know Mr. John Cook
+makes better terms for his customers than they can do for
+themselves, I resolve to go there, but every one tells me there
+is no such hotel as that I ask for in New York, and I am taken to
+one which is recommended by a respectable-looking
+policeman.&nbsp; Unfortunately, it is the head-quarters of the
+veteran corps of the Army of the Potomac, who swarm all over the
+place, as they did all over the South in the grand times of
+old.&nbsp; I am not fond of heroes; heroes are the men who have
+kept out of danger, while their less fortunate comrades have been
+mowed down, and who appropriate the honours which belong often to
+<!-- page 242--><a name="page242"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+242</span>the departed alone.&nbsp; Well, these heroes are
+holding the fort so tightly that I resolve to leave my quarters
+and explore the Broadway, one of the most picturesque promenades
+in the world.&nbsp; Suddenly I meet a stranger, who asks me how I
+am.&nbsp; I reply he has the advantage of me.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;you were at our store last
+night.&rdquo;&nbsp; I reply that was impossible.&nbsp; He tells
+me his name is Bodger, I tell him my name, which, however, he
+does not catch, whereupon he shakes my hand again, says how happy
+he is to have met me, and we part to meet no more.&nbsp; I go a
+few steps farther, and go through the same process with another
+individual.&nbsp; I bear his congratulations with fortitude, but
+when, a few minutes after, the same thing occurs again, I begin
+to wish I were in Hanover rather than in New York, and I resolve
+to seek out Cook&rsquo;s Agency without further delay.&nbsp; Of
+course I was directed wrong, and that led to a disaster which
+will necessarily shorten my visit to Uncle Sam.&nbsp; Perhaps I
+ought not to tell my experience.&nbsp; People generally are
+silent when they have to tell anything to their own
+discredit.&nbsp; If I violate that rule, it will be to put people
+on their guard.&nbsp; If I am wrong in doing so, I hope the rigid
+moralist will skip this altogether.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, a young man came rushing up to me, with a face
+beaming with joy.&nbsp; &ldquo;Good morning, Mr.&mdash;,&rdquo;
+he exclaimed; &ldquo;I am so glad we have met.&rdquo;&nbsp; I
+intimated that I did not <!-- page 243--><a
+name="page243"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 243</span>recollect
+him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;we came over in the
+<i>Sarnia</i> together.&rdquo;&nbsp; Well, the story was not
+improbable.&nbsp; Of the 1,000 on board the <i>Sarnia</i> I could
+not be expected to remember all.&nbsp; &ldquo;My name is
+G.,&rdquo; mentioning a well-known banker in London, and then he
+began to tell me of his travels, at what hotel he was staying,
+and finally added that he had been presented with a couple of
+Longfellow&rsquo;s <i>Poems</i>, handsomely bound, as a prize,
+and that he would be glad if I would accept one.&nbsp; Well, as
+my copy of Longfellow was rather the worse for wear, I told him I
+would accept it with pleasure.&nbsp; But I must come with him for
+it.&nbsp; I did so, and while doing so learned from him that the
+prize had been given in connection with a lottery scheme for
+raising money to build a church down South.&nbsp; The idea seemed
+to me odd, but Brother Jonathan&rsquo;s ways are not as ours, and
+I was rather pleased to find that I had thus a new chance of
+seeing religious life, and of having something fresh to write
+about.&nbsp; I am free to confess, as the great Brougham was wont
+to say, I jumped at the offer.&nbsp; In a few minutes we were
+inside a respectable-looking house, where a tall gentleman
+invited us to be seated, regretting that the copies of Longfellow
+had not come home from the binder&rsquo;s, and promising that we
+should have them by noon.&nbsp; Next he unfolded what I thought
+was a plan of the proposed church, <!-- page 244--><a
+name="page244"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 244</span>but which
+proved to be a chart with figures&mdash;with prizes, as it seemed
+to me, to all the figures.&nbsp; To my horror my friend took up
+the cards, and asked me to select them for him.&nbsp; This I did,
+and he won a thousand dollars, blessing me as he shook hands with
+me warmly, and saying that as I had won half I must have
+half.&nbsp; Well, as the ticket had certain conditions, and as I
+felt that it was rather hard on the church to take all that
+money, I continued the game for a few minutes, my young friend
+being eager that I should do so, till the truth dawned upon me
+that I had been drawn into a swindlers&rsquo; den, and that I and
+my friend were dupes, and I resolved to leave off playing, much
+to the regret of my friend, who gave the keeper of the table a
+cheque for &pound;100, which he would pay for me, as I would not,
+and thus by another effort retrieve my loss.&nbsp; There was one
+spot only on the board marked blank, and that, of course, was
+his.&nbsp; Burning with indignation I got up to go, my friend
+following me, saying how much he regretted that he had led me
+into such a place, offering to pay me half my losses when he
+returned to town, and begging me not to say a word about the
+subject when I got back to London, as it might get him into a
+row.&nbsp; I must say, so great has been my experience of honour
+among men, and never having been in New York before, I believed
+in that young man till <!-- page 245--><a
+name="page245"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 245</span>we parted,
+as I did not see how he could have gained all the knowledge he
+displayed of myself and movements unless he had travelled with me
+as he said, and had never heard of Bunkum men.&nbsp; I had not
+gone far, however, before I was again shaken by the hand by a
+gentlemanly young fellow, who claimed to have met me at Montreal,
+where he had been introduced to me as the son of Sir H&mdash;
+A&mdash;.&nbsp; He had been equally lucky&mdash;had got two
+books, and, as he was going back to Quebec that very afternoon,
+would give me one of them if I would ride with him as far as his
+lodgings.&nbsp; Innocently I told him my little tale.&nbsp; He
+advised me to say nothing about it, as I had been breaking the
+law and might get myself into trouble, and then suddenly
+recollecting he must get his ticket registered, and saying that
+he would overtake me directly, left me to go as far as the place
+of our appointed rendezvous alone.&nbsp; Then the truth flashed
+on me that both my pretended friends were rogues, and that I had
+been the victim of what, in New York, they call the Bunkum men,
+who got 300 dollars out of Oscar Wilde, and a good deal more out
+of Mr. Adams, formerly American Ambassador in England.&nbsp; I
+had never heard of them, I own, and both the rogues had evidently
+got so much of my history by heart that I might well fancy that
+they were what they described themselves to be.&nbsp; As to
+finding <!-- page 246--><a name="page246"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 246</span>them out to make them regorge that
+was out of the question.&nbsp; Landlords and policemen seemed to
+take it quite as a matter of course that the stranger in New York
+is thus to be done.&nbsp; Since then I have hardly spoken to a
+Yankee, nor has a Yankee spoken to me.&nbsp; I now understand why
+the Yankees are so reserved, and never seem to speak to each
+other.&nbsp; They know each other too well.&nbsp; I now
+understand also how the men you meet look so thin and careworn,
+and can&rsquo;t sleep at nights.&nbsp; We are not all saints in
+London.&nbsp; Chicago boasts that it is the wickedest city in the
+world, but I question whether New York may not advance a stronger
+claim to the title.&nbsp; Yet what an Imperial city is New
+York!&nbsp; How endless is its restless life! and how it runs
+over with the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and worldly
+pride!&nbsp; As I wandered to the spot in Wall Street (where, by
+the bye, the stockbrokers and their clerks are not in appearance
+to be compared to our own) I felt, sad as I was, a thrill of
+pleasure run through me, as there Washington took the oath as the
+first President of the young and then pure Republic; and then, as
+the evening came on, I strolled up and down in the park-like
+squares by means of which New York looks like a fairy world by
+night, with the people sitting under the shade of the trees,
+resting after the labours of the day; while afar the gay <!--
+page 247--><a name="page247"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+247</span>crowds are dining or supping at Delmonico&rsquo;s, or
+wandering in and out of the great hotels which rear their heads
+like palaces&mdash;as I looked at all that show and splendour
+(and in London we have nothing to compare with it), one seemed to
+forget how evanescent was that splendour, how unreal that
+show!&nbsp; I was reminded of it, however, as I retired to rest,
+by the announcement that in one part of my hotel was the way to
+the fire-escape, and by the notice in my bedroom that the
+proprietor would not be responsible for my boots if I put them
+outside the door to be blackened.&nbsp; In New York there seems
+to be no confidence in anybody or anything.</p>
+<p>As I told my story to a sweet young American lady she said,
+&ldquo;Ah, you must have felt very mean.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Not
+a bit of it,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;the meanness seemed to be all
+on the other side.&rdquo;&nbsp; Americans talk English, so they
+tell me, better than we do ourselves!&nbsp; Since then I have
+seen the same game played elsewhere.&nbsp; In Australia I have
+heard of many a poor emigrant robbed in this way.&nbsp; A
+plausible looking gentleman tried it on with me at Melbourne when
+I was tramping up and down Burke Street one frying
+afternoon.&nbsp; He had come with me, he said, by the steamer
+from Sydney to Melbourne.&nbsp; I really thought I had met him at
+Brisbane.&nbsp; At any rate, his wife was ill, and he was going
+back with her to London by the very steamer <!-- page 248--><a
+name="page248"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 248</span>that I was
+travelling by to Adelaide.&nbsp; Would I come with him as far as
+the Club?&nbsp; Of course I said yes.&nbsp; The Melbourne Club is
+rather a first-class affair.&nbsp; But somehow or other we did
+not get as far as the Club.&nbsp; My friend wanted to call on a
+friend in a public-house on the way.&nbsp; Would I have a
+drink?&nbsp; No, I was much obliged, but I did not want a
+drink.&nbsp; I sat down smoking, and he came and sat beside
+me.&nbsp; Presently a decent-looking man came up to my new friend
+with a bill.&nbsp; &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you wait till
+to-morrow?&rdquo; asked my friend.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well, I am rather
+pressed for money,&rdquo; said the man, respectfully.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh, then, here it is,&rdquo; said my friend, pulling a
+heap of gold, or what looked like it, out of his pocket.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;By the bye,&rdquo; said he, turning to me, &ldquo;I am a
+sovereign short; can you lend me one?&rdquo;&nbsp; No, I could
+not.&nbsp; Could I lend him half-a-sovereign?&nbsp; No; I could
+not.&nbsp; Could I lend him five shillings?&nbsp; I had not even
+that insignificant sum to spare.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, it does not
+matter,&rdquo; said my friend; &ldquo;I can get the money over
+the way, I will just go and fetch it, and will be back in five
+minutes.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he and his confederate went away
+together to be seen no more by me.&nbsp; Certainly he was not on
+board the <i>Austral</i>, as I took my passage in her to
+Adelaide.</p>
+<p>As I left I met a policeman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you any rogues in these parts?&rdquo; I innocently
+asked.</p>
+<p><!-- page 249--><a name="page249"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+249</span>&ldquo;Well, we have a few.&nbsp; There was one from
+New York a little while ago, but he had to go back home.&nbsp; He
+said he was no match for our Melbourne rogues at
+all.&rdquo;&nbsp; It was well that I escaped scot-free.&nbsp; On
+the steamer in which I returned there was a poor third-class
+passenger who had lost his all in such a way.&nbsp; He was fool
+enough to let the man treat him to a drink, and that little drink
+proved rather a costly affair.&nbsp; All his hard-earned savings
+had disappeared.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 253--><a name="page253"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 253</span>CHAPTER XVI.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Interviewing the President</span>.</h2>
+<p>It is about time, I wrote one day in America, I set my face
+homeward.&nbsp; When on the prairie I was beginning to speculate
+whether I should ever be fit to make an appearance in descent
+society again.&nbsp; Now, it seems to me, the question to be
+asked is, Whether I have not soared so high in the world as to
+have lost all taste for the frugal simplicity of that home life,
+where, in the touching words of an American poet I met with this
+morning, it is to be trusted my</p>
+<blockquote><p>Daughters are acting day by day,<br />
+So as not to bring disgrace on their papa far away.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Here, in Washington, I am made to pass for an
+&ldquo;Honourable,&rdquo; in spite of my modest declarations to
+the contrary, and have had the honour of a private interview with
+the greatest man in this part of the world&mdash;the President of
+the United States.&nbsp; One night, when I retired to rest, I
+found my bedroom on the upper storey&mdash;contiguous to the
+fire-escape, a convenience you <!-- page 254--><a
+name="page254"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 254</span>are always
+bound to remember in the U.S.&mdash;had been changed for a
+magnificent bedroom, with a gorgeous sitting-room attached, on
+the first floor, and there loomed before me a terrific vision of
+an hotel bill which I supposed I should have to pay: but then,
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the odds so long as you are
+happy?&rdquo;&nbsp; The question is, How came the change to be
+made?&nbsp; Well, the fact is, I had a letter to a distinguished
+politician, the Hon. Senator B&mdash;, and he, in his turn, sent
+me a packet addressed to the Hon. J. E&mdash; R&mdash;; and all
+at once I became a great man myself in the hotel.&nbsp; In a note
+Mr. B&mdash; sent to the President he informed him that I had
+been for thirty years a correspondent of certain papers; and in
+another note to officials he has the goodness to speak of me as
+&ldquo;the Hon. Mr. R&mdash;, a distinguished citizen and
+journalist of England.&rdquo;&nbsp; Certainly, then, I have as
+good a right to the best accommodation the hotel affords as any
+other man, and accordingly I do take my ease in my inn, and not
+dream, but do dwell, in marble halls, while obsequious blackies
+fan me as I eat my meals, which consist of all the dainties
+possible&mdash;the only things a fellow can eat this hot
+weather.&nbsp; I am glad I have put up at Ebbet House,
+Washington, where I am in clover.&nbsp; Like Bottom, I feel
+myself &ldquo;translated.&rdquo;&nbsp; At Baltimore, the only
+night I was there, I did not get a minute&rsquo;s sleep till
+daylight, because the <!-- page 255--><a name="page255"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 255</span>National Convention of Master
+Plumbers was holding its annual orgy just beneath, and I
+seriously believed the place would be burned down before the
+morning.&nbsp; In the dignified repose of Ebbet House I have no
+such fear; my only anxiety is as to how I can ever again
+reconcile myself to the time-honoured cold mutton of domestic
+life after all this luxurious living.&nbsp; What made Senator
+B&mdash; confer the dignity of Hon. on me I am at a loss to
+understand.&nbsp; I know there are times when I think it right
+and proper to blow my own trumpet in the unavoidable absence of
+my trumpeter; but, in the present instance, I must candidly
+confess to have done nothing of the kind.&nbsp; It is to be
+presumed that my improved position, as regards lodging in Ebbet
+House, Washington, is to be attributed to the social status given
+me by Senator B&mdash;, a gentleman who, in personal appearance
+and size, bears somewhat of a resemblance to our late lamented
+Right Hon. W. E. Forster, with the exception that Mr. B&mdash;
+brushes his hair&mdash;a process which evidently our Bradford
+M.P. disdained.</p>
+<p>This morning I have shaken hands with the President at the
+White House&mdash;a modest building not larger than our Mansion
+House, and, like that, interesting for its many
+associations.&nbsp; Mr. Arthur is in the prime of life&mdash;a
+tall, well-made man, with dark-brown hair and <!-- page 256--><a
+name="page256"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 256</span>eyes, of
+rather sluggish temperament, apparently.&nbsp; He did not say
+much to me, nor, I imagine, does he say much to anybody.&nbsp;
+His plan seems to be to hear and see as much, and say as little
+as he can.&nbsp; We met in a room upstairs, where, from ten to
+eleven, he is at home to Congress men, who would see him on
+public affairs before Congress meets, as eleven in the morning is
+the usual hour when it commences business.&nbsp; There were seven
+or eight waiting to speak to the President as he stood up at his
+table, so as to get the light on his visitors&rsquo; faces, while
+his own was shaded as much as possible; and, owing to the heat in
+Washington, the houses are kept so shaded that, coming out of the
+clear sunlight, it is not always easy at the first glance to see
+where you are.&nbsp; The President did not seem particularly
+happy to see anybody, and looked rather bored as the Senators and
+Congress men buttonholed him.&nbsp; Of course, our conversation
+was strictly private and confidential, and wild horses shall
+never tear the secret from me.&nbsp; Posterity must remain in the
+dark.&nbsp; It is one of those questions never to be revealed, as
+much so as that which so provoked the ancients as to the song the
+syrens sang to Ulysses.&nbsp; The President&rsquo;s enemies call
+him the New York dude, because he happens to be a
+gentlemanly-looking man, and patronises Episcopalianism, which in
+America, as in England, <!-- page 257--><a
+name="page257"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 257</span>is reckoned
+&ldquo;the genteel thing.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Americans are hard to
+please.&nbsp; Mr. James Russell Lowell had got the gout, and the
+New York writers said, when I was there, he had attained the
+object of a snob&rsquo;s ambition.&nbsp; It is thus they talked
+of one of their country&rsquo;s brightest ornaments.&nbsp; But to
+return to the President.&nbsp; He is a wise man, and keeps his
+ears open and his mouth shut&mdash;a plan which might be adopted
+by other statesmen with manifest advantage to themselves and the
+community.&nbsp; The President wore a morning black coat, with a
+rose in his buttonhole, and had the air about him of a man
+accustomed to say to one, &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; and he comes; to
+another, &ldquo;Go,&rdquo; and he goes.&nbsp; I made some few
+remarks about Canada and America, to which he politely listened,
+and then we shook hands and parted, he to be seized on by eager
+Congress men, I to inspect the public apartments of the White
+House.&nbsp; He has rather a hard life of it, I fancy, as he has
+to work all day, and his only relaxation seems to be a ride in
+the evening, as there are no private grounds connected with the
+House.&nbsp; In the model Republic privacy is unknown.&nbsp;
+Everything is open and aboveboard.&nbsp; Intelligent citizens
+gain much thereby.</p>
+<p>As to interviewing Royalty, that is another affair.&nbsp; An
+American interviews his President as a right.&nbsp; In the Old
+World monarchs keep people at arm&rsquo;s-length.&nbsp; And they
+are right.&nbsp; <!-- page 258--><a name="page258"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 258</span>No man is a hero to his valet.&nbsp;
+But I have interviewed the President of the United States; that
+is something to think of.&nbsp; The interview was a
+farce&mdash;but such is life.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 261--><a name="page261"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 261</span>CHAPTER XVII.<br />
+<span class="smcap">A Bank Gone</span>.</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;Was there much of a sensation there when you left
+B&mdash; this morning?&rdquo; said the manager of a leading daily
+to me as I was comfortably seated in his pleasant room in the
+fine group of buildings known to all the world as the printing
+and publishing offices of <i>The West Anglian Daily</i>, where I
+had gone in search of a little cash, which, happily, I
+obtained.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None at all,&rdquo; said I, in utter ignorance of what
+he was driving at.&nbsp; &ldquo;None at all; no one knew I was
+leaving,&rdquo; and I smiled as if I had said something good.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I did not mean that,&rdquo; said the manager.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It seems you have not heard the news.&nbsp; Brown and Co.
+have suspended payment.&nbsp; We have just had a telegram to that
+effect,&rdquo; which he handed me to read.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you
+bank there?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Upon my word,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
+know.&nbsp; I never read the name of the firm; I only know that I
+pay a small sum in monthly, and write a few cheques as occasion
+requires.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a pretty fellow,&rdquo; said the
+manager.</p>
+<p><!-- page 262--><a name="page262"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+262</span>&ldquo;Now I come to think of it,&rdquo; said I,
+&ldquo;that must be my bank, as there is no other in the place,
+except a small branch which has just been opened within the last
+few months by Burney and Co.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I am sorry for you,&rdquo; said my friend.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it don&rsquo;t matter much to me,&rdquo; I replied,
+with a vain attempt at a smile.&nbsp; Yet I was terribly annoyed,
+nevertheless.&nbsp; I had let my deposit increase more than was
+my general habit, thinking as Christmas was coming I would
+postpone settling little accounts till after the festivities of
+the Christmas season were over.&nbsp; I was now lamenting I had
+done anything of the kind.&nbsp; I was not very happy.&nbsp; Our
+little town of B&mdash; is a rising place, where people come and
+spend a lot of money in the summer.&nbsp; Some spirited
+individual or other is always putting up new buildings.&nbsp;
+Speculation is rife, and the tradesmen hope to grow prosperous as
+the place prospers.&nbsp; Anybody with half-a-crown in his pocket
+to spare is hardly ever seen.&nbsp; They all bank at
+Brown&rsquo;s.&nbsp; I daresay such of them as are able
+overdraw.&nbsp; Private bankers who are anxious to do business
+offer great facilities in this respect; but still there are many,
+chiefly poor widows and sailors who make a little money in the
+summer, and they bank it all.&nbsp; We have a church that is
+about to be enlarged, and the money that has been raised for the
+purpose was placed <!-- page 263--><a name="page263"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 263</span>in the bank, and we have a few
+retired officers and tradesmen who have their money there.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;They ha&rsquo; got &pound;300 of my money,&rdquo; said an
+angry farmer, as he banged away at the closed door, on which a
+notice was suspended that, in consequence of temporary
+difficulties, the bank had stopped payment for a few days.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You might ha&rsquo; given a fellow the hint to take out
+his money,&rdquo; said another irritated individual to the
+manager, whom persistent knocking had brought to the door.&nbsp;
+I was sorry for the manager; he always wore a smile on his
+face.&nbsp; That smile had vanished as the last rose of
+summer.&nbsp; No one in B&mdash; was more upset than he was when
+the catastrophe occurred.&nbsp; Some of the knowing ones in town
+had smelt a rat; one or two depositors had drawn out very
+heavily.&nbsp; Our smiling manager had no conception of what was
+to happen till, just as he was sitting down to his breakfast,
+with his smiling wife and ruddy, fat-cheeked little ones, there
+came to him a telegram from headquarters to the effect that he
+was not to open, followed by a messenger with despatches of which
+he was as ignorant as the merest ploughboy.&nbsp; I must say that
+in the headquarters the secret was well kept, whatever the
+leakage elsewhere.</p>
+<p>Coming back to B&mdash;, the bright little town seemed sitting
+in the shadow of death.&nbsp; &ldquo;Any news?&rdquo; said I to
+the station-master as I got <!-- page 264--><a
+name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 264</span>out of the
+train.&nbsp; &ldquo;Only that the bank is broke,&rdquo; was the
+reply.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah! that won&rsquo;t matter to you,&rdquo;
+said one to me, &ldquo;your friends will help you.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In vain I repeated that I had no friends.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah,
+well,&rdquo; said another, &ldquo;you can work; it is the old,
+the infirm, the sick, who are past work, for whom I am
+sorry.&rdquo;&nbsp; And thus I am left to sleep off my losses as
+best I may, trying to believe that the difficulty is only
+temporary, and positively assured in some quarters that the bank
+will open all right next day.&nbsp; Alas! hope tells a flattering
+tale.&nbsp; Next morning, after a decent interval, to show that,
+like Dogberry, I am used to losses, I take my morning walk and
+casually pass the bank, only to see that the door is as firmly
+closed as ever; I read all the morning papers, and they tell me
+that the bank will be opened as usual at ten.&nbsp; I know
+better, and all I meet are sorrowing.&nbsp; One melancholy
+depositor, who tells me that the bank has all the money he has
+taken this summer and his pension besides, assures me that the
+bank will open at twelve.&nbsp; I pass two hours later, and it is
+still shut.&nbsp; Women are weeping as they see ruin staring them
+in the face.&nbsp; Woe to me; my butcher calls for his little
+account.&nbsp; I have to ask him to call again.&nbsp; I see the
+tax-gatherer eyeing me from afar, likewise the shoemaker; but I
+rush inside to find that the midday mail has arrived, bringing me
+a letter from town, as <!-- page 265--><a
+name="page265"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 265</span>follows:
+&ldquo;With respect to your cheque on Brown&rsquo;s Bank,
+received yesterday, I regret to hear this day of the suspension
+of the bank.&nbsp; Under these circumstances your cheque will not
+be cleared, so that we shall have to debit your account with
+it.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is pleasant.&nbsp; I have another cheque
+sent by the same post as the other.&nbsp; I begin to fear on that
+account.&nbsp; Happily, no more letters of that kind come in, and
+I take another turn in the open air.&nbsp; Every one looks
+grave.&nbsp; There are little knots of men standing like
+conspirators in every street.&nbsp; They are trying to comfort
+one another.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, it will be all right,&rdquo; I hear
+them exclaim; but they look as if they did not believe what they
+said, and felt it was all wrong.&nbsp; Now and then one steals
+away towards the bank, but the door is still shut, and he comes
+back gloomier-looking than ever.&nbsp; I am growing sad
+myself.&nbsp; I have not seen a smile or heard a pleasant word
+to-day, except from my neighbour, who chuckles over the fact that
+his account is overdrawn.&nbsp; He laughs on the other side of
+his mouth, however, when he realises the fact that he has cheques
+he has not sent in.&nbsp; Another day comes, and I know my
+fate.&nbsp; Some banks have agreed to come to the rescue.&nbsp;
+They will pay all bank-notes in full, and will make advances not
+exceeding 15s. in the pound in respect of credit accounts as may
+be necessary.&nbsp; Happily, our little town is safe.&nbsp; <!--
+page 266--><a name="page266"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+266</span>Another day or two of this strain on our credit must
+have thrown us all into a general smash.&nbsp; This is good as
+far as it goes, but I fail to see why the holder of one of
+Brown&rsquo;s banknotes is to have his money in full, while I am
+to accept a reduction of five shillings in the pound or
+more.&nbsp; However, I have no alternative.&nbsp; I would not
+mind the reduction if my friends the creditors would accept a
+similar reduction in their little accounts.&nbsp; Alas! it is no
+use making such a proposal to them; I must grin and bear
+it.&nbsp; One consolation is that my wife&mdash;bless
+her!&mdash;is away holiday-making and does not need to ask me for
+cash.&nbsp; On the third day we begin to fear that we may not get
+ten shillings in the pound, and the post brings me back another
+cheque with a modest request for cash by return.&nbsp; All over
+the country there is weeping and wailing.&nbsp; One would bear it
+better a month hence.&nbsp; Christmas is coming!&nbsp; Already
+the bells are preparing to ring it in.&nbsp; I must put on the
+conventional smile.&nbsp; Christmas cards are coming in, wishing
+me a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! and, oh dear! I must
+say, Thank you!&nbsp; Alas! alas! troubles are like
+babies&mdash;the more you nurse them, the bigger they grow.</p>
+<p>And now it is time for me to make my bow and retire.&nbsp;
+Having said that my bank was smashed up, I cannot expect any one
+to be subsequently interested in my proceedings.&nbsp; We live in
+a commercial country and a commercial <!-- page 267--><a
+name="page267"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 267</span>age, and
+the men whom the society journals reverence are the men who have
+made large fortunes, either by their own industry and forethought
+and self-denial, or by the devil&rsquo;s aid.&nbsp; And I am
+inclined to think that he has a good deal to do with the
+matter.&nbsp; If ever we are to have plain living and high
+thinking, we shall have to give up this wonderful worship of
+worldly wealth and show.&nbsp; Douglas Jerrold makes one of his
+heroes exclaim, &ldquo;Every man has within him a bit of a
+swindler.&rdquo;&nbsp; When Madame Roland died on the scaffold,
+whither she had been led by the so-called champions of liberty
+and equality and the rights of man, she exclaimed, as every
+school-boy knows, or ought to know, &ldquo;Oh, Liberty, what
+crimes are done in thy name!&rdquo;&nbsp; So say I, Oh, wealth,
+which means peace and happiness, and health and joy (Sydney Smith
+used to say that he felt happier for every extra guinea he had in
+his pocket, and most of us can testify the same), what crimes are
+done in thy name; not alone in the starvation of the poor, in the
+underpaying of the wage-earning class who help to make it, but in
+the way in which sharks and company promoters seek to defraud the
+few who have saved money of all their store.&nbsp; You recollect
+Douglas Jerrold makes the hero already referred to say,
+&ldquo;You recollect Glass, the retired merchant?&nbsp; What an
+excellent man was Glass!&nbsp; A pattern man to make a whole
+generation by.&nbsp; <!-- page 268--><a name="page268"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 268</span>What could surpass him in what is
+called honesty, rectitude, moral propriety, and other
+gibberish?&nbsp; Well, Glass grows a beard.&nbsp; He becomes one
+of a community, and immediately the latent feeling (swindling)
+asserts itself.&rdquo;&nbsp; And the worst of it is that Glass as
+a company director and promoter is worshipped as a great man,
+especially if he secures a gratuitous advertisement by liberality
+in religious and philanthropic circles, and exercises a lavish
+liberality in the way of balls and dinners.&nbsp; Society crawls
+at his feet as they used to do when poor Hudson, the ex-draper of
+York, reigned a few years in splendour as the Railway King.&nbsp;
+Glass goes everywhere, gets into Parliament.&nbsp; Rather
+dishonest, a sham and a fraud as he is, we make him an idol, and
+then scorn far-away savages who make idols of sticks and
+stones.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>W. Speaight &amp; Sons</i>,
+<i>Printers</i>, <i>Fetter Lane</i>, <i>London</i>.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRISTOPHER CRAYON'S RECOLLECTIONS***</p>
+<pre>
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