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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ginx's Baby, by Edward Jenkins
+
+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: Ginx's Baby
+
+Author: Edward Jenkins
+
+Release Date: July, 1996 [Etext #581]
+Posting Date: November 26, 2009
+Last Updated: March 15, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GINX'S BABY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Keller
+
+
+
+
+
+GINX'S BABY
+
+His Birth and other Misfortunes
+
+A SATIRE
+
+
+By Edward Jenkins
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+CRITIC.--I never read a more improbable story in my life.
+
+AUTHOR.--Notwithstanding, it may be true.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ PART I. WHAT GINX DID WITH HIM.
+ I. Ab initio
+ II. Home, sweet Home!
+ III. Work and Ideas
+ IV. Digressive, and may be skipped without mutilating the History
+ V. Reasons and Resolves
+ VI. The Antagonism of Law and Necessity
+ VII. Malthus and Man
+ VIII. The Baby's First Translation
+
+ PART II. WHAT CHARITY AND THE CHURCHES DID WITH HIM.
+ I. The Milk of Human Kindness, Mother's Milk, and the Milk of
+ the Word
+ II. The Protestant Detectoral Association
+ III. The Sacrament of Baptism
+ IV. Law on Behalf of Gospel
+ V. Magistrate's Law
+ VI. Popery and Protestantism in the Queen's Bench
+ VII. A Protestor, but not a Protestant
+ VIII. “See how these Christians love one another”
+ IX. Good Samaritans, and Good-Samaritan Twopences
+ X. The Force--and a Specimen of its Weakness
+ XI. The Unity of the Spirit and the Bond of Peace
+ XII. No Funds--no Faith, no Works
+ XIII. In transitu
+
+ PART III. WHAT THE PARISH DID WITH HIM.
+ I. Parochial Knots--to be untied without Prejudice
+ II. A Board of Guardians
+ III. “The World is my Parish”
+ IV. Without Prejudice to any one but the Guardians
+ V. An Ungodly Jungle
+ VI. Parochial Benevolence--and another Translation
+
+ PART IV. WHAT THE CLUBS AND POLITICIANS DID WITH HIM.
+ I. Moved on
+ II. Club Ideas
+ III. A thorough-paced Reformer--if not a Revolutionary
+ IV. Very Broad Views
+ V. Party Tactics--and Political Obstructions to Social Reform
+ VI. Amateur Debating in a High Legislative Body
+
+ PART V. WHAT GINX'S BABY DID WITH HIMSELF.
+ The Last Chapter
+
+
+
+
+PART I. WHAT GINX DID WITH HIM.
+
+
+
+
+I.--Ab initio.
+
+The name of the father of Ginx's Baby was Ginx. By a not unexceptional
+coincidence, its mother was Mrs. Ginx. The gender of Ginx's Baby was
+masculine.
+
+On the day when our hero was born, Mr. and Mrs. Ginx were living at
+Number Five, Rosemary Street, in the City of Westminster. The being then
+and there brought into the world was not the only human entity to which
+the title of “Ginx's Baby” was or had been appropriate. Ginx had been
+married to Betsy Hicks at St. John's, Westminster, on the twenty-fifth
+day of October, 18--, as appears from the “marriage lines” retained by
+Betsy Ginx, and carefully collated by me with the original register.
+Our hero was their thirteenth child. Patient inquiry has enabled me
+to verify the following history of their propagations. On July the
+twenty-fifth, the year after their marriage, Mrs. Ginx was safely
+delivered of a girl. No announcement of this appeared in the newspapers.
+
+On the tenth of April following, the whole neighborhood, including Great
+Smith Street, Marsham Street, Great and Little Peter Streets, Regent
+Street, Horseferry Road, and Strutton Ground, was convulsed by
+the report that a woman named Ginx had given birth to “a triplet,”
+ consisting of two girls and a boy. The news penetrated to Dean's Yard
+and the ancient school of Westminster. The Dean, who accepted nothing
+on trust, sent to verify the report, his messenger bearing a bundle of
+baby-clothes from the Dean's wife, who thought that the mother could
+scarcely have provided for so large an addition to her family. The
+schoolboys, on their way to the play-ground at Vincent Square, slyly
+diverged to have a look at the curiosity, paying sixpence a head to Mrs.
+Ginx's friend and crony, Mrs. Spittal, who pocketed the money, and said
+nothing about it to the sick woman. THIS birth was announced in all
+the newspapers throughout the kingdom, with the further news that Her
+Majesty the Queen had been graciously pleased to forward to Mrs. Ginx
+the sum of three pounds.
+
+What could have possessed the woman I can't say, but about a twelvemonth
+after, Mrs. Ginx, with the assistance of two doctors hastily fetched
+from the hospital by her frightened husband, nearly perished in a fresh
+effort of maternity. This time two sons and two daughters fell to the
+lot of the happy pair. Her Majesty sent four pounds. But whatever peace
+there was at home, broils disturbed the street. The neighbors, who had
+sent for the police on the occasion, were angered by a notoriety which
+was becoming uncomfortable to them, and began to testify their feelings
+in various rough ways. Ginx removed his family to Rosemary Street,
+where, up to a year before the time when Ginx's Baby was born, his wife
+had continued to add to her offspring until the tale reached one dozen.
+It was then that Ginx affectionately but firmly begged that his wife
+would consider her family ways, since, in all conscience, he had fairly
+earned the blessedness of the man who hath his quiver full of them;
+and frankly gave her notice that, as his utmost efforts could scarcely
+maintain their existing family, if she ventured to present him with any
+more, either single, or twins, or triplets, or otherwise, he would most
+assuredly drown him, or her, or them in the water-butt, and take the
+consequences.
+
+
+
+
+II.--Home, sweet Home!
+
+The day on which Ginx uttered his awful threat was that next to the one
+wherein number twelve had drawn his first breath. His wife lay on the
+bed which, at the outset of wedded life, they had purchased secondhand
+in Strutton Ground for the sum of nine shillings and sixpence.
+SECOND-HAND! It had passed through, at least, as many hands as there
+were afterwards babies born upon it. Twelfth or thirteenth hand, a
+vagabond, botched bedstead, type of all the furniture in Ginx's rooms,
+and in numberless houses through the vast city. Its dimensions were
+4 feet 6 inches by 6 feet. When Ginx, who was a stout navvy, and Mrs.
+Ginx, who was, you may conceive, a matronly woman, were in it, there
+was little vacant space about them. Yet, as they were forced to find
+resting-places for all the children, it not seldom happened that at
+least one infant was perilously wedged between the parental bodies; and
+latterly they had been so pressed for room in the household that two
+younglings were nestled at the foot of the bed. Without foot-board or
+pillows, the lodgment of these infants was precarious, since any fatuous
+movement of Ginx's legs was likely to expel them head-first. However
+they were safe, for they were sure to fall on one or other of their
+brothers or sisters.
+
+I shall be as particular as a valuer, and describe what I have seen. The
+family sleeping-room measured 13 feet 6 inches by 14 feet.
+
+Opening out of this, and again on the landing of the third-floor, was
+their kitchen and sitting-room; it was not quite so large as the other.
+This room contained a press, an old chest of drawers, a wooden box
+once used for navvy's tools, three chairs, a stool, and some cooking
+utensils. When, therefore, one little Ginx had curled himself up under a
+blanket on the box, and three more had slipped beneath a tattered piece
+of carpet under the table, there still remained five little bodies to be
+bedded. For them an old straw mattress, limp enough to be rolled up and
+thrust under the bed, was at night extended on the floor. With this,
+and a patchwork quilt, the five were left to pack themselves together as
+best they could. So that, if Ginx, in some vision of the night, happened
+to be angered, and struck out his legs in navvy fashion, it sometimes
+came to pass that a couple of children tumbled upon the mass of
+infantile humanity below.
+
+Not to be described are the dinginess of the walls, the smokiness of the
+ceilings, the grimy windows, the heavy, ever-murky atmosphere of these
+rooms. They were 8 feet 6 inches in height, and any curious statist can
+calculate the number of cubic feet of air which they afforded to each
+person.
+
+The other side of the street was 14 feet distant. Behind, the backs of
+similar tenements came up black and cowering over the little yard of
+Number Five. As rare, in the well thus formed, was the circulation of
+air as that of coin in the pockets of the inhabitants. I have seen the
+yard; let me warn you, if you are fastidious, not to enter it. Such
+of the filth of the house as could not, at night, be thrown out of the
+front windows, was there collected, and seldom, if ever, removed. What
+became of it? What becomes of countless such accretions in like places?
+Are a large proportion of these filthy atoms absorbed by human creatures
+living and dying, instead of being carried away by scavengers and
+inspectors? The forty-five big and little lodgers in the house were
+provided with a single office in the corner of the yard. It had once
+been capped by a cistern, long since rotted away--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The street was at one time the prey of the gas company; at
+another, of the drainage contractors. They seemed to delight in turning
+up the fetid soil, cutting deep trenches through various strata of
+filth, and piling up for days or weeks matter that reeked with vegetable
+and animal decay. One needs not affirm that Rosemary Street was not so
+called from its fragrance. If the Ginxes and their neighbors preserved
+any semblance of health in this place, the most popular guardian on
+the board must own it a miracle. They, poor people, knew nothing of
+“sanitary reform,” “sanitary precautions,” “zymotics,” “endemics,”
+ “epidemics,” “deodorizers,” or “disinfectants.” They regarded disease
+with the apathy of creatures who felt it to be inseparable from
+humanity, and with the fatalism of despair.
+
+Gin was their cardinal prescription, not for cure, but for oblivion:
+“Sold everywhere.” A score of palaces flourished within call of each
+other in that dismal district--garish, rich-looking dens, drawing to
+the support of their vulgar glory the means, the lives, the eternal
+destinies of the wrecked masses about them. Veritable wreckers they who
+construct these haunts, viler than the wretches who place false beacons
+and plunder bodies on the beach. Bring down the real owners of
+these places, and show them their deadly work! Some of them leading
+Philanthropists, eloquent at Missionary meetings and Bible Societies,
+paying tribute to the Lord out of the pockets of dying drunkards,
+fighting glorious battles for slaves, and manfully upholding popular
+rights. My rich publican--forgive the pun--before you pay tithes of mint
+and cummin, much more before you claim to be a disciple of a certain
+Nazarene, take a lesson from one who restored fourfold the money he had
+wrung from honest toil, or reflect on the case of the man to whom it was
+said, “Go sell all thou hast, and give to the poor.” The lips from which
+that counsel dropped offered some unpleasant alternatives, leaving out
+one, however, which nowadays may yet reach you--the contempt of your
+kind.
+
+
+
+
+III.--Work and Ideas.
+
+I return again to Ginx's menace to his wife, who was suckling her
+infant at the time on the bed. For her he had an animal affection that
+preserved her from unkindness, even in his cups. His hand had never
+unmanned itself by striking her, and rarely indeed did it injure any
+one else. He wrestled not against flesh and blood, or powers, or
+principalities, or wicked spirits in high places. He struggled with
+clods and stones, and primeval chaos. His hands were horny with the
+fight, and his nature had perhaps caught some of the dull ruggedness
+of the things wherewith he battled. Hard and with a will had he worked
+through the years of wedded life, and, to speak him fair, he had acted
+honestly, within the limits of his knowledge and means, for the good of
+his family. How narrow were those limits! Every week he threw into the
+lap of Mrs. Ginx the eighteen or twenty shillings which his strength and
+temperance enabled him continuously to earn, less sixpence reserved
+for the public-house, whither he retreated on Sundays after the family
+dinner. A dozen children overrunning the space in his rooms was then
+a strain beyond the endurance of Ginx. Nor had he the heart to try the
+common plan, and turn his children out of doors on the chance of their
+being picked up in a raid of Sunday School teachers. So he turned out
+himself to talk with the humbler spirits of the “Dragon,” or listen
+sleepily while alehouse demagogues prescribed remedies for State abuses.
+
+Our friend was nearly as guiltless of knowledge as if Eve had never
+rifled the tree whereon it grew. Vacant of policies were his thoughts;
+innocent he of ideas of state-craft. He knew there was a Queen; he had
+seen her. Lords and Commons were to him vague deities possessing strange
+powers. Indeed, he had been present when some of his better-informed
+companions had recognized with cheers certain gentlemen,--of whom Ginx's
+estimate was expressed by a reference to his test of superiority to
+himself in that which he felt to be greatest within him--“I could lick
+'em with my little finger”--as the Chancellor of the Exchequer and the
+Prime Minister. Little recked he of their uses or abuses. The functions
+of Government were to him Asian mysteries. He only felt that it ought to
+have a strong arm, like the brawny member wherewith he preserved order
+in his domestic kingdom, and therefore generally associated Government
+with the Police. In his view these were to clear away evil-doers and
+leave every one else alone. The higher objects of Government were, if
+at all, outlined in the shadowiest form in his imagination. Government
+imposed taxes--that he was obliged to know. Government maintained the
+parks; for that he thanked it. Government made laws, but what they were,
+or with what aim or effects made, he knew not, save only that by them
+something was done to raise or depress the prices of bread, tea, sugar,
+and other necessaries. Why they should do so he never conceived--I am
+not sure that he cared. Legislation sometimes pinched him, but darkness
+so hid from him the persons and objects of the legislators that he could
+not criticise the theories which those powerful beings were subjecting
+to experiment at his cost. I must, at any risk, say something about this
+in a separate chapter.
+
+
+
+
+IV.--Digressive, and may be skipped without mutilating the History.
+
+I stop here to address any of the following characters, should he
+perchance read these memoirs:
+
+ You, Mr. Statesman--if there be such;
+ Mr. Pseudo-Statesman, Placeman, Party Leader, Wirepuller;
+ Mr. Amateur Statesman, Dilettante Lord, Civil Servant;
+ Mr. Clubman, Litterateur, Newspaper Scribe;
+ Mr. People's Candidate, Demagogue, Fenian Spouter;
+
+or whoever you may be, professing to know aught or do anything in
+matters of policy, consider, what I am sure you have never fairly
+weighed, the condition of a man whose clearest notion of Government is
+derived from the Police! Imagine one who had never seen a polyp trying
+to construct an ideal of the animal, from a single tentacle swinging out
+from the tangle of weed in which the rest was wrapped! How then any more
+can you fancy that a man to whose sight and knowledge the only part of
+government practically exposed is the strong process of police, shall
+form a proper conception of the functions, reasons, operations, and
+relations of Government; or even build up an ideal of anything but a
+haughty, unreasonable, antagonistic, tax-imposing FORCE! And how can
+you rule such a being except as you rule a dog, by that which alone
+he understands--the dog-whip of the constable! Given in a country a
+majority of creatures like these, and surely despotism is its properest
+complement. But when they exist, as they exist in England to-day, in
+hundreds of thousands, in town and country, think what a complication
+they introduce into your theoretic free system of government. Acts
+of Parliament passed by a “freely-elected” House of Commons, and an
+hereditary House of Lords under the threats of freely-electing citizens,
+however pure in intention and correct in principle, will not seem to
+him to be the resultants of every wish in the community so much as
+dictations by superior strength. To these the obedience he will render
+will not be the loving assent of his heart, but a begrudged concession
+to circumstance. Your awe-invested legislature is not viewed as his
+friend and brother-helper, but his tyrant. Therefore the most natural
+bent of his workman-statesmanship--a rough, bungling affair--will be to
+tame you--you who ought to be his Counsellor and Friend. When he
+finds that your legislative action exerts upon him a repressive and
+restraining force he will curse you as its author, because he sees not
+the springs you are working. Should he even be a little more advanced
+in knowledge than our friend Ginx, and learn that he helps to elect the
+Parliament to make laws on behalf of himself and his fellow-citizens, he
+will scarce trust the assembly which is supposed to represent him.
+Will he, like a good citizen and a politic, accept with dignity and
+self-control the decision of a majority against his prejudices: or will
+he not regard the whole Wittenagemote with suspicion, contempt, or
+even hatred? See him rush madly to Trafalgar Square meetings, Hyde Park
+demonstrations, perhaps to Lord George Gordon Riots, as if there were no
+less perilous means of publishing his opinions! There wily men may lead
+his unconscious intellect, and stir his passions, and direct his forces
+against his own--and his children's good.
+
+Did it ever occur to you, or any of you, how many voters cannot read,
+and how many more, though they can read, are unable to apprehend reasons
+of statesmanship?--that even newspapers cannot inform them, since they
+have not the elementary knowledge needed for the comprehension of those
+things which are discussed in them; nay, that for want of understanding
+the same they may terribly distort political aims and consequences?
+
+Might it not be worth while for you, gentlemen--may it not be your duty
+to devise ways and means for conveying such elementary instruction
+by good street-preachers on politics and economy, or even political
+bible-women or colporteurs, and so to make clear to the understanding of
+every voter what are the reasons and aims of every act of Legislation,
+Home Administration, and Foreign Policy? If you do not find out some
+way to do this he may turn round upon you--I hope he may--and insist on
+annually-elected parliaments, and thus oblige ambitious state-mongers,
+in the rivalry of place, to come to him and declare more often their
+wishes and objects. Other attractions may be found in that solution:
+such as the untying of some knots of electoral difficulty, and removing
+incitements to corruption. Ten thousand pounds for one year's power were
+a high price even to a contractor. Think then whether at any cost some
+general political education must not be attempted, since there is a
+spirit breathing on the waters, and how it shall convulse them is no
+indifferent matter to you or to me. Everywhere around us are unhewn
+rocks stirred with a strange motion. Leave these chaotic fragments of
+humanity to be hewn into rough shape by coarse artists seeking only
+a petty profit, unhandy, immeasurably impudent; or dress them by your
+teaching--teaching which is the highest, noblest, purest, most efficient
+function of Government, which ought to be the most lofty ambition of
+statesmanship--to be civic corner-stones polished after the similitude
+of a palace.
+
+
+
+
+V.--Reasons and Resolves.
+
+Ginx has been waiting through three chapters to explain his truculence
+upon the birth of his twelfth child. Much explanation is not necessary.
+When he looked round his nest and saw the many open mouths about him, he
+might well be appalled to have another added to them. His children
+were not chameleons, yet they were already forced to be content with a
+proportion of air for their food. And even the air was bad. They were
+pallid and pinched. How they were clad will ever be a mystery, save to
+the poor woman who strung the limp rags together and Him who watched the
+noble patience and sacrifice of a daily heroism. Of her own unsatisfied
+cravings, and the dense motherly horrors that sometimes brooded over her
+while she nursed these infants, let me refrain from speaking, since if
+as vividly depicted as they were real, you, Madam, could not endure
+to read of them. Her poor, unintelligent mind clung tenaciously to the
+controverted aphorism, “Where God sends mouths he sends food to fill
+them.” Believing that there was a God, and that He must be kind, she
+trusted in this as a truth, and perhaps an all-seeing eye reading some
+quaint characters on her simple heart, viewed them not too nearly, but
+had regard to their general import, for, as she expressed it, “Thank
+God! they had always been able to get along.”
+
+In the rush and tumult of the world it is likely that the summum
+bonum of nine-tenths of mankind is embraced in that purely negative
+happiness--to get along. Not to perish: to open eyes, however wearily,
+on a new morning: to satisfy with something, no matter what, a craving
+appetite: to close eyes at night under some shadow or shelter: or, it
+may be, in certain ranks to walk another day free from bankruptcy or
+arrest: Thank Heaven, they are just able to get along!
+
+Convinced that another infant straw would break his back, Ginx calmly
+proposed to disconcert physical, moral, and legal relations by drowning
+the straw Mrs. Ginx clinging to Number Twelve listened aghast. If a
+mother can forget her sucking child she was not that mother. The stream
+of her affections, though divided into twelve rills, would not have been
+exhausted in twenty-four, and her soul, forecasting its sorrow, yearned
+after that nonentity Number Thirteen. She pictured to herself the
+hapless strangeling borne away from her bosom by those strong arms,
+and--in fact she sobbed so that Ginx grew ashamed, and sought to comfort
+her by the suggestion that she could not have any more. But she knew
+better.
+
+
+
+
+VI.--The Antagonism of Law and Necessity.
+
+In eighteen months, notwithstanding resolves, menaces, and prophecies,
+GINX'S BABY was born. The mother hid the impending event long, from
+the father. When he came to know it, he fixed his determination by much
+thought and a little extra drinking. He argued thus: “He wouldn't go on
+the parish. He couldn't keep another youngster to save his life. He had
+never taken charity and never would. There was nothink to do with it but
+drown it!” Female friends of Mrs. Ginx bruited his intentions about the
+neighborhood, so that her “time” was watched for with interest. At last
+it came. One afternoon Ginx, lounging home, saw signs of excitement
+around his door in Rosemary Street. A knot of women and children awaited
+his coming. Passing through them he soon learned what had happened.
+Poor Mrs. Ginx! Without staying to think or argue, he took up the little
+stranger and bore it from the room----
+
+“O, O, O, Ginx! Ginx!!”
+
+She would have risen, but a strong power called weakness pulled her
+back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+The man meanwhile had reached the street.
+
+“Here he comes! There's the baby! He's going to do it, sure enough!”
+ shrieked the women. The children stood agape. He stopped to consider. It
+is very well to talk about drowning your baby, but to do it you need two
+things, water and opportunity. Vauxhall Bridge was the nearest way to
+the former, and towards it Ginx turned.
+
+“Stop him!”
+
+“Murder!”
+
+“Take the child from him!”
+
+The crowd grew larger, and impeded the man's progress. Some of his
+fellow-workmen stood by regarding the fun.
+
+“Leave us aloan, naabors,” shouted Ginx; “this is my own baby, and I'll
+do wot I likes with it. I kent keep it; an' if I've got anythin' I kent
+keep, it's best to get rid of it, ain't it? This child's goin' over
+Wauxhall Bridge.”
+
+But the women clung to his arms and coattails.
+
+“Hallo! What's all this about?” said a sharp, strong man, well-dressed,
+and in good condition, coming up to the crowd; “another foundling!
+Confound the place, the very stones produce babies. Where was it found?”
+
+CHORUS (recognizing a deputy-relieving officer). It warn't found at all;
+it's Ginx's baby.
+
+OFFICER. Ginx's baby? Who's Ginx?
+
+GINX. I am.
+
+OFFICER. Well?
+
+GINX. Well!
+
+CHORUS. He's goin' to drown it.
+
+OFFICER. Going to drown it? Nonsense.
+
+GINX. I am.
+
+OFFICER. But, bless my heart, that's murder!
+
+GINX. No 'tain't. I've twelve already at home. Starvashon's sure to kill
+this 'un. Best save it the trouble.
+
+CHORUS. Take it away, Mr. Smug, he'll kill it if you don't.
+
+OFFICER. Stuff and nonsense! Quite contrary to law! Why, man, you're
+bound to support your child. You can't throw it off in that way;--nor on
+the parish neither. Give me your name. I must get a magistrate's order.
+The act of parliament is as clear as daylight. I had a man up under
+it last week. “Whosoever shall unlawfully abandon or expose any child,
+being under the age of two years whereby the life of such child shall
+be endangered or the health of such child shall have been or shall be
+likely to be permanently injured (drowning comes under that I think)
+shall be GUILTY OF a MISDEMEANOR and being convicted thereof shall be
+liable at the discretion of the court to be KEPT IN PENAL SERVITUDE for
+the term of three years or to be imprisoned for any term not exceeding
+two years with or without hard labor.”
+
+Mr. Smug, the officer, rolled out this section in a sonorous monotone,
+without stops, like a clerk of the court. It was his pride to know by
+heart all the acts relating to his department, and to bring them down
+upon any obstinate head that he wished to crush. Ginx's head, however,
+was impervious to an act of parliament. In his then temper, the
+Commination Service or St. Ernulphus's curse would have been feathers
+to him. The only feeling aroused in his mind by the words of the
+legislature was one of resentment. To him they seemed unjust, because
+they were hard and fast, and made no allowance for circumstances. So he
+said:
+
+GINX. D---- the act of parliament! What's the use of saying I shan't
+abandon the child, when I can't keep it alive?
+
+OFFICER. But you're bound by law to keep it alive.
+
+GINX. Bound to keep it alive? How am I to do it? There's the rest on 'em
+there (nodding towards his house) little better nor alive now. If that's
+an act of Parleyment, why don't the act of Parleyment provide for 'em?
+You know what wages is, and I can't get more than is going.
+
+CHORUS. Yes. Why don't Parleyment provide for 'em? You take the child,
+Mr. Smug.
+
+OFFICER (regardless of grammar). ME take the child! The parish has
+enough to do to take care of foundlings and children whose parents can't
+or don't work. You don't suppose we will look after the children of
+those who can?
+
+GINX. Jest so. You'll bring up bastards and beggars' pups, but you won't
+help an honest man to keep his head above water. This child's head is
+goin' under water anyhow!--and he prepared to bolt, amid fresh screams
+from the Chorus.
+
+
+
+
+VII.--Malthus and Man.
+
+Two gentlemen, who had been observing the excitement, here came forward.
+
+FIRST GENTLEMAN. This is our problem again, Mr. Philosopher.
+
+Mr. PHILOSOPHER (to Ginx). You don't know what to do with your infant,
+my friend, and you think the State ought to provide for it? I understand
+you to say this is your thirteenth child. How came you to have so many?
+
+This question, though put with profound and even melancholy gravity,
+disconcerted Ginx, Officer, and Chorus, who united in a hearty outburst
+of laughter.
+
+GINX. Haw, Haw, Haw! How came I to have so many? Why my old woman's a
+good un and----
+
+In fact, after searching his mind for some clever way of putting a
+comical rejoinder, Ginx laughed boisterously. There are two aspects of a
+question.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. I am serious, my friend. Did it never occur to you that you
+had no right to bring children into the world unless you could feed and
+clothe and educate them?
+
+CHORUS. Laws a' mercy!
+
+GINX. I'd like to know how I could help it, naabor. I'm a married man.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Well, I will go further and say you ought not to have
+married without a fair prospect of being able to provide for any
+contingent increase of family.
+
+CHORUS. Laws a' mercy!
+
+PHILOSOPHER (waxing warm). What right had you to marry a poor woman, and
+then both of you, with as little forethought as two--a--dogs, or other
+brutes--to produce between you such a multitudinous progeny--
+
+GINX. Civil words, naabor; don't call my family hard names.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Then let me say, such a monstrous number of children as
+thirteen? You knew, as you said just now, that wages were wages and did
+not vary much. And yet you have gone on subdividing your resources by
+the increase of what must become a degenerate offspring. (To the Chorus)
+All you workpeople are doing it. Is it not time to think about these
+things and stop the indiscriminate production of human beings, whose
+lives you cannot properly maintain? Ought you not to act more like
+reflective creatures and less like brutes? As if breeding were the whole
+object of life! How much better for you, my friend, if you had never
+married at all, than to have had the worry of a wife and children all
+these years.
+
+The philosopher had gone too far. There were some angry murmurs among
+the women and Ginx's face grew dark. He was thinking of “all those
+years” and the poor creature that from morning to night and Sunday to
+Sunday, in calm and storm, had clung to his rough affections: and the
+bright eyes, and the winding arms so often trellised over his tremendous
+form, and the coy tricks and laughter that had cheered so many tired
+hours. He may have been much of a brute, but he felt that, after
+all, that sort of thing was denied to dogs and pigs. Before he could
+translate his thoughts into words or acts a shrewd-looking, curly-haired
+stonemason, who stood by with his tin on his arm, cut into the
+discussion.
+
+STONEMASON. Your doctrines won't go down here, Mr. Philosopher. I've
+'eard of them before. I'd just like to ask you what a man's to do and
+what a woman's to do if they don't marry: and if they do, how can you
+honestly hinder them from having any children?
+
+The stonemason had rudely struck out the cardinal issues of the
+question.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Well, to take the last point first, there are physical and
+ethical questions involved in it, which it is hard to discuss before
+such an audience as this.
+
+STONEMASON. But you must discuss 'em, if you wish us to change our ways,
+and stop breeding.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Very well: perhaps you are right. But, again, I should
+first have to establish a basis for my arguments, by showing that the
+conception of marriage entertained by you all is a low one. It is not
+simply a breeding matter. The beauty and value of the relation lies
+in its educational effects--the cultivation of mutual sentiments and
+refinements of great importance to a community.
+
+STONEMASON. Ay! Very beautiful and refining to Mr. and Mrs. Philosopher,
+but I'd like to know where the country would have been if our fathers
+had held to that view of matrimony? Why, ain't it in natur' for all
+beings to pair, and have young? an' you say we ain't to do it! I think a
+statesman ought to make something out of what's nateral to human beings,
+and not try to change their naturs. Besides, ain't there good of another
+kind to be got out of the relation of parents and children? Did you ever
+have a child yourself?
+
+GINX (contemplating the Philosopher's physique). HE have a youngster! He
+couldn't.
+
+CHORUS. Ha! Ha! Ha!
+
+STONEMASON. I don't believe in yer humbuggin' notions. They lead to
+lust and crime;--I'm told they do in France. If you yourself haven't the
+human natur in you to know it, I'll tell you, and we can all tell you
+that as a rule if the healthy desires of natur ain't satisfied in a
+honest way, they will be in another. You can't stop eating by passin' an
+act of Parleyment to stop it. And as for yer eddication and cultivation,
+that makes no difference. We know something here about yer eddicated
+men;--more than they think. Who is it we meet about the streets late at
+night, goin' to the gay houses? Some of 'em stand near as high as you,
+but that don't alter their natur. They have their passions like other
+men; and eddication don't keep 'em down. Well, if that's the case, how
+can you ask people of our sort to put on the curb, or make us do it?
+Are we to live more like beasts than we are now, or do what's worse
+than murder? I don't see no other way. Among us I tell you, sir,
+three-fourths of our eddication, is eddication of the heart. We have
+to learn to be human, kind, self-denyin', and I think this makes better
+men, as a rule, than head-larnin'; tho' I don't despise that, neither.
+But you don't suppose head-citizens would fight for their country like
+men with wives and children behind 'em; why they don't even at home work
+for daily food like a man with wife and babies to provide for!
+
+The stonemason was above his class--one of those shrewd men that “the
+people called Methodists” get hold of, and use among the lower orders,
+under the name of “local preachers;” men who learn to think and speak
+better than their fellows. The Philosopher testified some admiration by
+listening attentively, and was about to reply, but the Chorus was tired,
+and the women would not hear him.
+
+CHORUS. Best get out o' this. We don't want any o' yer filhosophy. Go
+and get childer' of yer own, &c., &c.
+
+The Philosopher and his friend departed, carrying with them unsolved the
+problem they had brought.
+
+
+
+
+VIII.--The Baby's First Translation.
+
+The stonemason had been the hero of the moment; now attention centred
+on our own hero. Ginx hurried off again, but as the crowd opened
+before him, he was met, and his mad career stayed, by a slight figure,
+feminine, draped in black to the feet, wearing a curiously framed
+white-winged hood above her pale face, and a large cross suspended from
+her girdle. He could not run her down.
+
+NUN. Stop, MAN! Are you mad? Give me the child.
+
+He placed the little bundle in her arms. She uncovered the queer, ruby
+face, and kissed it. Ginx had not looked at the face before, but after
+seeing it, and the act of this woman, he could not have touched a hair
+of his child's head. His purpose died from that moment, though his
+perplexity was still alive.
+
+NUN. Let me have it. I will take it to the Sisters' Home, and it shall
+live there. Your wife may come and nurse it. We will take charge of it.
+
+GINX. And you won't send it back again? You'll take it for good and all?
+
+NUN. O, yes.
+
+GINX. Good. Give us yer hand.
+
+A little white hand came out from under her burthen, and was at once
+half-crushed in Ginx's elephantine grasp.
+
+GINX. Done. Thank'ee, missus. Come, mates, I'll stand a drink.
+
+A few minutes after, the woman of the cross, who had been up to comfort
+the poor mother, fluttered with her white wings down Rosemary Street,
+carrying in her arms Ginx's Baby.
+
+
+
+
+PART II. WHAT CHARITY AND THE CHURCHES DID WITH HIM.
+
+
+
+
+I.--The Milk of Human Kindness, Mother's Milk, and the Milk of the Word.
+
+The early days of his residence at the Home of the Sisters of Misery,
+in Winkle Street, was the Eden of Ginx's Baby's existence. Themselves
+innocent of a mother's experiences, the sisters were free to give
+play to their affections in a novel direction, and to assume a sort of
+spiritual maternity that was lucky for the changeling. He was nestled
+in kind serge-covered arms: kisses rained upon him from chaste lips. A
+slight scandal thrilled the convent upon the discovery of his sex, which
+had of course been a pure matter of conjecture to Sister Pudicitia
+when she rescued him; but enthusiasm can overcome anything. The awkward
+questions foreshadowed in the discovery were left to be considered when
+their growing importance should demand upon them the judgment of the
+archbishop. Visions of an unusual sanctity to be fostered in the pure
+regions of the convent, and to be sent on a mission into the world
+to attest the power of their spiritual discipline, began to haunt the
+brains of the sequestered nuns. Might not this infant be an embryo
+saint, destined for a great work in the heretical wilderness out of
+which he had come? How little healthy food the brains must have had
+wherein these insane dreams were excited by our innocent baby! Hardly
+did the sacred spinsters forecast what was in store for them when he
+should be teething.
+
+But Ginx's Baby was in a religious atmosphere, and that is always
+surcharged with electricity. His lot must have been above that of any
+other human being if he could long have remained in such a climate
+unvisited by thunder. The mother had been permitted to attend at the
+Home with the same regularity as the milkman, to discharge her maternal
+duties. Then with the rise of the visionary projects just mentioned the
+gravest doubts began to agitate the fertile and casuistic mind of the
+Lady Superior. The holier her ideal St. Ginx of the future, the more to
+be deplored was any heretical taint in the present. Holy mother! Was
+it not perhaps eminently perilous to his spiritual purity that an
+unbeliever like Mrs. Ginx should bring unconsecrated milk into the
+convent to be administered to this suckling of the Church! In her
+uneasiness she appealed to Father Certificatus, the conventual
+confessor. He gave his opinion in the following letter:--
+
+“DEAR SISTER SUSPICIOSA,
+
+“The very grave question you have put to me has given me
+much anxiety. It could not but do so since it occupied, I knew, so
+fully your own holy reflections. I pondered it during the night while
+I repeated one hundred Aves on my knees, and I think the Blessed Virgin
+has vouchsafed her assistance.
+
+“I understood you to say you thought that the physical health of the
+infant, so singularly and miraculously thrown upon your care,
+required the offices of his heretic mother, and yet that you felt how
+inconsistent it was with the noble future we contemplate for him, that
+he should receive unorthodox lacteal sustentation. In this you are but
+following the usage of the Church in all ages, for She has ever enjoined
+the advantage of infusing Her doctrines into Her children with the
+mother's milk.
+
+“Three courses only appear to me to be open to us. First, we may try to
+work upon the mother's feelings, and on behalf of her child induce her
+to avail herself of the inestimable privileges of the Church in which
+he is fostered. Secondly, should she repel us--and these lower class
+heretics are even brutally refractory--we might at least allure her to
+allow us to make with holy water the sign of the Cross upon the natural
+reservoirs of infant nourishment each time before she approaches the
+infant. This, besides overcoming the immediate difficulty and securing
+for the child a supply of sanctified food, might open the way for the
+entrance into her own bosom of the milk of the word. Thirdly, should she
+reject these proposals, I see nothing for it but to forbid her to
+have access to her infant, and, commending him to the care of the Holy
+Mother, to feed him with pap or other suitable nourishment, previously
+consecrated by me in its crude state, and prepared by the most holy
+hands of your community. Thus we may hope to shield the young soul in
+its present freshness from contact with carnal elements.
+
+ “Your loving Father in, &c.,
+ “CERTIFICATUS.”
+
+
+On receiving this letter the Superioress conferred not with flesh and
+blood, but sent for Mrs. Ginx. That worthy woman was not enchanted with
+her child's position. I have hinted that her faith was simple, but in
+proportion to its simplicity it was strongly-rooted in her nature. 'Tis
+not infrequent to find it so. Lengthy creeds and confessions of faith
+are apt to extend the strength and fervor of belief over too wide a
+surface. In the close frame of some single article will be concentrated
+the whole energy of the soul. The first formula, “Repent and believe
+in the Lord Jesus Christ,” was maintained with a heat that became less
+intense, though more distributed, in the insertion of an Athanasian
+creed. Mrs. Ginx's creed was succinct.
+
+Mrs. GINX'S PRIMARY CREED.
+
+ I believe in God, giver of bread, meat, money, and health.
+
+This she maintained, with indifferent ritual and devotional observances.
+But there was to Mrs. Ginx's faith a corollary or secondary creed, only
+needed to meet special emergencies.
+
+Mrs. GINX'S SECONDARY CREED.
+
+ 1. I believe in the Church of England.
+ 2. I believe in Heaven and Hell.
+ 3. (A negative article) I hate Popery, priests, and the Devil.
+
+
+When her husband made his fatal gift to the nun, this third article of
+his wife's belief, or unbelief, stirred up and waxed aggressive.
+
+Said the Lady Superior, “My good woman, your child thrives under the
+care of Holy Mother Church.”
+
+“Yes'm, he thrives well,” replies Mrs. Ginx, repeating no more of Sister
+Suspiciosa's sentence, “an' I've 'ad more milk than ever for the darlin'
+this time, thank God.”
+
+“And the Holy Virgin.”
+
+“I dunno about her,” cries Mrs. Ginx emphatically, perhaps not seeing
+congruity between a virgin and the subject of thankfulness.
+
+“And the Holy Virgin,” repeated the nun, “who interests herself in all
+mothers. She has thus blessed you that your child may be made strong for
+the work of the Church. Do you not see a miracle is worked within you to
+prove Her goodness? This, no doubt, is an evidence to you of Her wish to
+bless you and take you for Her own. I beseech you listen to Her voice,
+and come and enter Her fold.”
+
+“If you mean the Virgin Mary, mum, I ain't a idolater, beggin' yer
+parding,” says Mrs. Ginx; “an' tho' I wouldn't for the world offend
+them as has been so kind to my child, an' saved it from that deer little
+creetur bein' thrown over Wauxhall Bridge--an' Ginx ought to be ashamed
+of hisself, so he ought--I ain't Papish, mum, and I ain't dispoged, with
+twelve on 'em there at home all Protestant to the back bone, to turn
+Papish now, an' so I 'ope an' pray, mum,” says Mrs. Ginx, roaring and
+crying, “you ain't agoin' to make Papish of my flesh an' blood. O dear!
+O dear!”
+
+The Lady Superior shut her ears; she had raised a familiar spirit and
+could not lay it. She temporized.
+
+“You know your husband has given the child to us. It will be called the
+infant Ambrosius.”
+
+“Dear, dear!” sighed Mrs. Ginx, “what a name!”
+
+“We wish him to be kept from any worldly taint, and by-and-by his
+saintliness may gain you forgiveness in spite of your heretical
+perversity. I cannot permit you to give him unconsecrated milk, and as
+we wish to treat you kindly, the holy Father Certificatus has allowed me
+to make an arrangement with you, to which you can have no objection--I
+mean, that you should let me make the sign of the cross upon your
+breasts morning and evening before you suckle your infant. You will
+permit me to do that, won't you?”
+
+Conceive of Mrs. Ginx's reply, clothed in choice Westminster English:
+it asserted her readiness to cut off her right hand, her feet, to be
+hanged, drowned, burned, torn to pieces, in fact to withstand all the
+torments ascribed by vulgar tradition to Roman Catholic ingenuity,
+and to see her baby “a dead corpse” into the bargain, before she would
+submit her Protestant bosom to such an indignity.
+
+“No, mum!” she said; “I couldn't sleep with that on my breast;” and
+cried hysterically.
+
+This lower class heretic WAS “brutally refractory.” So thought the
+Superioress, and so gave Mrs. Ginx notice to come no more. She went home
+rather jubilant--she was a martyr.
+
+
+
+
+II.--The Protestant Detectoral Association.
+
+Ginx's baby was now fed on consecrated pap. But his mother was not a
+woman to be silent under her wrongs. From her husband she hid them,
+because the subject was forbidden. She poured out her complaint to Mrs.
+Spittal and other Protestant matrons. Thus it came to pass that one
+day, in Ginx's absence, the good woman was surprised by a visit from a
+“gentleman.” He was small, sharp, rapid, dressed in black. He opened his
+business at once.
+
+“Mrs. Ginx? Ah! I am the agent of the Protestant Detectoral
+Association.”
+
+Mrs. Ginx wiped her best chair and set it for him.
+
+“By great good fortune the secretary received only half an hour ago
+intelligence of the shocking instance of Papal aggression of which you
+have been the victim.”
+
+To hear her case put so grandly was honey to Mrs. Ginx.
+
+“Well now,” continued the little man, “we are ready to render you every
+assistance to save your child from the claws of the Great Dragon. I wish
+to know the exact circumstances--let me see--(opening a large pocket
+book) I have this memorandum: the child was carried off from his
+mother's bedside in broad daylight by a nun accompanied by two priests
+and a large body of Irish: is that a correct version?”
+
+“Law, no, sir, it warn't quite like that,” said Mrs. Ginx. “We've 'ad
+so many on 'em that Ginx was for drownin' the thirteenth”----The little
+man opened his eyes----
+
+“An' he went and gave it away, sir,” said she crying, “to a nun,
+sir--ah! ah! ah!--they won't let me see the darlin' now, sir--ah! ah!
+ah! because I won't let Missis Spishyosir mark me with the cross, sir,
+an' me with as fine a breast o' milk as ever was for 'im, sir--ah! ah!
+ah!”
+
+“Hem!” said the little man, “that's different from what I understood.”
+
+He was quite honest, but who does not know how disappointing it is to
+find a wrong you wish to redress is not so bad as you had hoped?
+
+However, it looked bad enough, and might be made worse. It was the very
+case for the Protestant Detectoral Association.
+
+“Would Mr. Ginx not join in an effort to recover his child?”
+
+“No, sir; I should think not: he went an' gave it away.”
+
+“I know; but he is a Protestant?”
+
+“I don't think he be much o' anything, sir. I know he hate priests like
+pison, but he don't care about these things as I do.”
+
+“Oh! I see.” Writes in his memorandum book--husband indifferent.
+
+
+“But don't you think he would help you to get the child back again?”
+
+“No, sir. I wouldn't speak of it to him for the world. He'd knock any
+one down if they was to mention the child to him.”
+
+The little man mentally determined not to see Ginx.
+
+“Well; would you like to have your child back?”
+
+“You see, I couldn't bring it 'ere, sir. Ginx won't 'ave it; but I'd
+like to see it took away from them nunnerys.”
+
+“Ha! very well then. We can perhaps manage it for you. You would be
+content to hand it over to some Protestant Home, where it would be taken
+care of and you could see it when you liked?”
+
+“O yes, sir,” cries Mrs. Ginx, brightening.
+
+“Then we'll have an affidavit and apply for a Habeas Corpus.”
+
+It was impossible not to be satisfied with such words as these, whatever
+they meant and Mrs. Ginx was cheered, while the little man went on his
+way.
+
+
+
+
+III.--The Sacrament of Baptism.
+
+Mother, or “Mrs.” Suspiciosa, fed Ginx's Baby with holy pap. It seemed
+proper now that he should be christened and formally received into
+the Church. No small stir was made by this ceremony, for which all the
+resources of the convent were called into action. The day selected was
+that sacred to St. Ambrosius. The chapel was decorated with flowers.
+Mass was celebrated, candles flamed upon the altar surrounding a figure
+of the Infant Jesus, incense was burning around the baby, sisters and
+novices knelt in serried rows of virginity
+
+ “like doves
+ Sunning their milky bosoms on the thatch.”
+
+Mother Suspiciosa carried the infant, clothed in a pure white robe,
+with a red cross embroidered on its front. In the absence of the natural
+parent a wax figure of St. Ambrosius did duty for him, and another wax
+figure stood godfather: but I dare not enter into details of matters
+that may be looked at as awfully profane, or awfully solemn, by
+different spectators. These things are a mystery.
+
+I have no hesitation about describing the impious behavior of little
+Ginx. Whatever swaddled infant could do in the way of opposition, with
+hands, and legs, and voice, was done by that embryo saint. The incense
+made him cough and sputter; the lights and singing raised the very devil
+within him. His cries drowned the prayers. He frightened his conductress
+by the redness of his face. He ruined the red cross with ejected matter.
+You would have taken him for an infant demoniac. Mother Suspiciosa,
+though annoyed, was encouraged. She looked upon this as an evident
+testimony to little Ginx's value. The devil and St. Michael were
+contending for his body. At length he was baptized, and carried out.
+Credat Judaeus. He instantly sank into a deep sleep. It was a miracle:
+Satan had yielded to the sign of the cross!
+
+
+
+
+IV.--Law on Behalf of Gospel.
+
+In the moment of Sister Suspiciosa's triumph, the enemy was laying his
+train against her. The little man made his report to the secretary of
+the Protestant Detectoral Association. This gentleman was well-born
+and well-bred; moved to work in this “cause” by an honest hatred of
+superstition, priestcraft, and lies; now giving all his energies to the
+ambitious design of pulling down the strongholds of Satan. In any other
+matter he could act coolly, and with deliberation; in this he was an
+enthusiast. He had a keen Roman nose. He could scent a priest
+anywhere in the United Kingdom. He could smell Jesuitry in the Queen's
+drawing-room, a cabinet council or convocation, though he had never
+been at either. His eye was beyond a falcon's; he saw things that
+were invisible. It penetrated through all disguises. He knew a secret
+emissary of the Pope by the cock of his hat, or the color of his
+stockings. At least, he thought so, and thousands of persons acted on
+his estimate of himself.
+
+“This case,” said he to the little man, when he had concluded his
+report, “though not in its first incidents so grave as we were led to
+expect, is, in another point of view, very serious. Here is a man, as
+you have expressed it, 'indifferent' to his child's life--animal and
+spiritual. The mother, with a true Protestant heart, and a fine breast
+of milk, is longing to nurture her child, and to deliver it from the
+toils of the Papacy. But the husband, what's his name?.... Ginx--Ginx? a
+very bad name for a case, by the way--GINX'S CASE!--this Ginx has given
+up his child to the Sisters of Misery. How are we to get it away again,
+without his cooperation?.... Well, we must try.”
+
+The solicitor of the Association was forthwith summoned. When the matter
+had been laid before him, he expressed doubts, offered and withdrew
+courses of action, and ended by suggesting that he should take the
+opinion of counsel.
+
+“Mr. Stigma, I suppose?” said he to the secretary.
+
+“Oh, yes, Sir Adolphus Stigma is one of our principal supporters, and
+his son's heart is thoroughly with us.”
+
+Messrs. Roundhead, Roundhead and Lollard, drew up a case to be submitted
+to Mr. Stigma. I will only transcribe the latter paragraphs:--
+
+
+Mr. Ginx being indifferent, and Mrs. Ginx being ready to assist in
+regaining the custody of her child, to be conveyed to a Protestant Home,
+
+ “YOU ARE REQUESTED TO ADVISE:
+
+“1. Whether a summons should be taken out before a magistrate against
+the Lady Superior of the convent, for enticing away or detaining the
+infant, under the 56th sect. of 24 and 25 Vict., c. 100 Or,
+
+“2. Whether the proper remedy is by a writ of Habeas Corpus? and, if
+so, whether it is necessary that the father should be joined in the
+proceedings or his leave obtained to prosecute them? Or, failing these,
+
+“3. Whether counsel is of opinion that this is a case within Talfourd's
+Act, and an application might not be made to the Lord Chancellor, or
+the Master of the Rolls, on the mother's behalf for the custody of her
+child? And,
+
+“4. To advise generally on behalf of the infant.”
+
+
+Mr. Adolphus Stigma took ten days to consider. Meanwhile, the infant
+Ambrosius continued to thrive on conventual pap. Then Mr. Stigma wrote
+his opinion. It was a model for a barrister. You took the advice at your
+own peril--not his. Therefore I transcribe it.
+
+ “OPINION.
+
+“I have given to this case my most careful attention; and it is one of
+great difficulty. Having regard to the questions put to me, I think--
+
+“1. Section 56 of the Act of 24 and 25 Vict., c. 100, appears at first
+sight to be directed against the stealing and abduction of children for
+marriage, or other improper purposes. It provides that 'Whosoever shall
+UNLAWFULLY, either by force or fraud, lead or take away, or decoy,
+or entice away, or detain any child, &c., with intent to deprive ANY
+parent, &c., of the possession of such child'--shall be guilty of
+felony. It is perfectly clear, that in the case before me, the infant
+was not, 'by force or fraud, led or taken away, or decoyed, or enticed
+away.' The statute, however, uses the word 'detain;' and this, it
+appears to me, has much the same force and intention as the previous
+words. It is to be noted, however, that it is separated from them by
+the disjunctive 'or;' and, therefore, it might be argued with some
+plausibility that any act of forceful or fraudulent detention, after
+notice, by persons who have originally acquired a child's custody in
+a lawful way, came within the section. The point is new, and of great
+importance; and if the Protestant Detectoral Association feel disposed
+to try it, they would do so under favorable circumstances in the present
+case. Should they decide to do so, a written demand should be served
+upon the authorities of the convent, by the mother, or some one acting
+on her behalf, to give up the infant.
+
+“2. The second question is also involved in difficulty. Were the father
+to be joined in the proceedings, the writ of Habeas Corpus would be
+the correct remedy. But his probable refusal necessitates the inquiry
+whether the mother can alone apply for the writ. The general rule of law
+is, that the father is entitled to the custody and disposition of his
+children. In Cartlidge and Cartlidge, 31, L. J., P. M. & D. 85, it was
+held that this rule would not be generally departed from by the Divorce
+Court; but in Barnes v. Barnes, L. R. I, P. & D. 463, the court made
+an order, giving the custody of two infant children to the mother,
+respondent in a suit for a dissolution of marriage, on the ground that
+the mother's health was suffering from being deprived of their society,
+and that they were living with a stranger, and not with the father.
+These cases were, however, in the Divorce Court, and do not apply. But,
+as there seems to be much ground in the peculiar circumstances here,
+for arguing that the mother should have the custody of the child, or,
+at least, that it should not be left to that of persons of a different
+religion from both parents, an application might be made to the Queen's
+Bench to try the question.
+
+“3. Should the common law remedies fail, resort may perhaps be had to
+the powers in Chancery under Talfourd's Act, but on this point I should
+like to confer with an equity counsel before giving a decided opinion.
+It has been decided under this Act that the court has power to give the
+custody of children under seven to the mother. (Shillito v. Collett, 8,
+W. R. 683-696.) As this infant is but six weeks old it comes within that
+case.
+
+“4. I have no general advice to give on behalf of the infant.
+
+ “ADOLPHUS STIGMA,
+ “9, Plumtree Court.”
+
+
+If none of the courses suggested by Mr. Stigma was very decided, Messrs.
+Roundhead, Roundhead and Lollard were not sorry to have three strings to
+their bow. The Detectoral Association were good clients; most of their
+funds went into their lawyers' pockets. It was part of their policy
+to be litigious. Thereby the world was kept alive to the existence of
+Papacy within its bosom. Who shall say the Association were wrong?
+Some healthy daylight was occasionally let in upon the mysteries of
+Jesuitism, and there are people who think that worth while at the risk
+of a chance injustice. Though the Devil should not get his due, few
+would give him any sympathy.
+
+The solicitor at once instructed Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q.C., to apply with
+Mr. Stigma to a magistrate for a summons. Mr. Bailey, Q.C., was not
+chosen for his partialities. In religious matters he was a perfect
+Gallio; but he was like St. Paul in one particular, he could be all
+things to all men.
+
+
+
+
+V.--Magistrate's Law.
+
+The personnel of the magistrate to whom Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q. C., (with
+him Mr. Adolphus Stigma), applied in the case of re an infant,
+exparte Ginx, is not material to this history. He was like his fellow
+stipendiaries--mild as to humor, vigilant in his duties, opinionated
+in his views, resenting the troublesome intrusion into his court of
+a barrister, apt to treat him with about one-eighth of the courtesy
+extended to the humblest junior by the Queen's Bench, and curiously
+unequal both with himself and his brother magistrates in adjusting
+punishment. It will be most convenient to insert the report of the Daily
+Electric Meteor:--
+
+ “WESTMINSTER.
+
+“Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q.C., (with whom was Mr. Adolphus Stigma), applied
+for a summons against Mary Dens, commonly called Sister Suspiciosa, of
+the convent of the Sisters of Misery, in Winkle Street, for abducting
+and detaining a male child of John Ginx and Mary his wife.
+
+“Mr. D'ACERBITY. On whose behalf do you apply?
+
+“The learned counsel stated that he was instructed by the Protestant
+Detectoral Association to apply on behalf of the mother. The case
+was also watched by the solicitors of the Society for Preventing the
+Suppression of Women and Children.
+
+“Mr. D'ACERBITY. Does the father join in the application?
+
+“Mr. BAILEY. No, sir.
+
+“Mr. D'ACERBITY. Why? He ought to be joined if living.
+
+“Mr. BAILEY. Perhaps you will allow me, sir, to state the case. The
+circumstances are peculiar. The fact is----
+
+“Mr. D'ACERBITY. I cannot understand why the father should not be
+represented if the child has been abducted. Where was it taken from?
+
+“Mr. Bailey proceeded to state that the child had been taken by a nun
+from No. 5, Rosemary Street, without the mother's consent, and was now
+imprisoned in the convent. The father appeared to be indifferent, or
+to have given a sort of general acquiescence. This was Mrs. Ginx's
+thirteenth child, around whom gathered the concentrated affections
+
+“Mr. D'ACERBITY (interrupting the learned gentleman). We have no time
+for sentiment here, Mr. Bailey. If the father consented, can you call it
+abduction? It looks like reduction. (Laughter.)
+
+“Mr. Bailey called attention to the consolidated statutes of criminal
+law, and said he was going for illegal detention rather than abduction,
+and argued at great length from section 56. At the conclusion of the
+argument, after refusing to hear Mr. Stigma,
+
+“Mr. D'Acerbity said that the case clearly did not come within the
+section, and he was afraid the learned counsel knew it. The father had
+been a consenting party, on the counsel's own statement, to the child's
+removal, and no suggestion had been made that he had withdrawn his
+consent. He should refuse a summons.
+
+“Mr. Bailey endeavored to address the magistrate but was stopped.
+
+“Mr. D'ACERBITY. I have no more to say. You can apply to the Queen's
+Bench. I have no sympathy with you whatever.”
+
+Mr. D'Acerbity's law was good, but--what has justice to do with
+“sympathies?” Surely the day after this report appeared the magistrate
+must have had a letter from the Home Secretary?
+
+
+
+
+VI-Popery and Protestantism in the Queen's Bench.
+
+The application to the magistrate was far from satisfactory. There had
+not even been an exposure, and the Windmill Bulletin gayly bantered the
+Detectoral Association. Meanwhile had happened the grand christening,
+of which a circumstantial account was in the hands of the council of the
+Detectoral Association shortly after the ceremony had been performed.
+Here was a monstrous indignity to a Protestant child! The account was at
+once printed, together with a verbatim report of the application to the
+magistrate as well as one of “a conversation held with the mother by
+an agent of the Association.” Board-men paraded the great thoroughfares
+carrying this appeal:--
+
+PROTESTANT DETECTORAL ASSOCIATION.
+
+ NO POPERY!
+ Abduction Of an Infant!
+ Assault on the Liberty of the Subject!
+ Mysterious and Awful Proceedings!
+ Baptism of a Protestant Child in a Convent!
+
+ OUTRAGE
+ Upon the Nation by Foreign Mercenaries!
+ Every Father and Mother is Invited to Co-operate in
+ Maintaining the
+ PROTESTANT RELIGION,
+ The Sanctity of Home, and the Inviolability of
+ BRITISH FREEDOM!
+
+ NO SURRENDER!
+
+
+If there was no coherency in this production, it should be noted how
+little that is of the essence of popular appeal. The metropolis was in
+an uproar. Meetings were held, subscriptions poured in, dangerous crowds
+collected in Winkle Street. When Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q. C., went down to
+Westminster, to move the Court of Queen's Bench, multitudes besieged it.
+Protestant champions and Papal ecclesiastics vied in their efforts to
+get seats. The writ had gone from judge's chambers returnable to
+the full court. Sister Suspiciosa, bearing the infant Ambrosius, and
+supported by two novices and Father Certificatus, had been smuggled into
+court through mysterious passages in its rear. Mrs. Ginx also, brought
+from Rosemary Street by the little man who provided her with a bonnet
+trimmed with orange-colored ribbons, sat staring with red eyes at her
+child, now enveloped in a robe that was embroidered with little crosses.
+
+Why need I tell you, how dead silence fell upon the Court after the stir
+caused by the entrance of the judges; how everybody knew what was coming
+when a master beneath the bench rose, and called out, “Re Ginx,
+an infant, Exparte Mary Ginx!” How the Chief Justice, fresh and
+rosy-looking, then blew his nose in a delicate mauve-colored silk
+handkerchief: how he tried and discarded half-a-dozen pens, amid
+breathless silence; how in his blandest manner he said: “Who appears
+for the Respondent?” and Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q. C., and Mr. Octavius
+Ernestus, Q. C., rose together to say that Mr. Ernestus did!
+
+Mr. Ernestus was a Catholic. He was assisted by half-a-dozen counsel.
+He riddled the affidavits on the other side, and read voluminous ones on
+his own; bitterly animadverted upon the absence of an affidavit by the
+father; held up to the scorn of a civilized world the course pursued
+towards his meek and gentle clients by the “fanatical zealots of the
+Protestant Detectoral Association;” in moving tones referred to the
+shrinking of “quiet recluses, from the gaze of a rude, unsympathizing
+world;” cited cases from the time of Magna Charta, down; called upon the
+Court to vindicate Protestant justice, ending his peroration with the
+aphorism of Lord Mansfield, Fiat justitia ruat caelum.
+
+One cannot do Justice to Mr. Dignam Bailey's argument, when after lunch
+he rose to reply. He was logical and passionate, vindictive and pathetic
+by turns. He inveighed against the Lady Superior, against her attorneys,
+against Father Certificatus, against Ginx,--“craven to his heaven-born
+rights of political and religious freedom,”--against the Roman Catholic
+religion, the Pope, the Archbishop of Westminster, the Virgin Mary. The
+Court knew, and every one else knew, that this was pure pyrotechny,
+and Mr. Bailey knew that best of all; but, though the Bench is swift to
+speak, slow to hear, it felt obliged, in a case of this public interest,
+to sit by, and be witnesses of the exhibition. Mr. Bailey concluded by a
+play on the aphorism cited by his learned friend. “He would say that if
+such justice were to be done, as his friend had urged, the Kingdom of
+Heaven in England would rush to its fall.”
+
+The Court at once decided that, as the father had confided the custody
+of the infant to the Sisters of Misery, and did not appear to desire
+that it should be withdrawn, they, disregarding the religious clouds in
+which the subject had been too carefully involved on both sides, gave
+judgment for the defendant, with costs.
+
+As they passed out of Court, Mr. Stigma said to his clients, “Quite as I
+anticipated; you remember I told you so in my Opinion.”
+
+
+
+
+VII.--A Protestor, but not a Protestant.
+
+The infant Ambrosius and his conductors could scarcely reach the convent
+in safety. The building showed few windows to the street, but they were
+all broken. What might have happened in a few days, but that Ginx's Baby
+took the matter into his own hands, none can say.
+
+The treatment to which the little saint was subjected soured his temper.
+His kind nurses had choked him twice a day with incense, and now he had
+inhaled for seven hours the air of the Queen's Bench. On his return to
+the convent he was hastily fed, and carried to the chapel to give thanks
+for the victory of the day. Wrapped in a handsome chasuble, they laid
+him on the steps of the altar. In the most solemn part of the service
+he coughed, and grew sick. The chasuble was bespattered. When the
+officiating priest, to save that garment, took the child in his arms, he
+nefariously polluted the sacerdotal vestments and the altar steps. Then
+he kicked toward the altar itself, roared lustily, and finally went
+into convulsions in Sister Suspiciosa's arms. Like most women, the Lady
+Superior required her enthusiasm to be fed with success. She began
+to think that she had been cozened: Ginx's Baby was too evidently a
+spiritual miscarriage. He must, like the rest of his family, be, indeed,
+“Protestant to the backbone.” Father Certificatus agreed with her. His
+robes and best chasuble were befouled.
+
+“Let us not risk a repetition of this conduct,” said he; “let the child
+be given up. He is baptized, and cannot be severed from the Church. He
+will return after many days.”
+
+Next morning the solicitors of the Protestant Detectoral Association
+received a letter from their opponents. In this they said
+that--presuming Messrs. Roundhead, Roundhead, and Lollard, intended to
+apply to the Master of the Rolls, the authorities of the convent had
+decided, after having vindicated themselves in the Queen's Bench, to
+give up the child, which would be, for twenty-four hours, at the order
+and disposal of the Association, and afterwards of his parents. “We are
+instructed by our clients,” they added, “to ask you to bear in mind that
+the child has been admitted, and is a member of the Catholic Church,
+owing allegiance to the Holy Father at Rome, a bond from which only the
+Papal excommunication can absolve him.”
+
+
+
+
+VIII.--“See how these Christians love one another.”
+
+A mass-meeting of Protestants had been summoned for three o'clock on the
+day designated in the letter of the Papist attorneys, to be held in the
+Philopragmon Hall. That was the favorite centre of countless movements,
+both well-meant and well-executed, and of others as futile as they were
+foolish. Yet one could not say that a larger proportion of the latter
+were connected with the Hall than existed in as many other human
+enterprises of any sort. The concession of the Romanists at first dashed
+the managers of the demonstration. Their grievance was gone. Still there
+remained topics for a meeting: they would rejoice over victory, and
+consult about the future of the Protestant Baby.
+
+The Secretary was an old hand at these meetings. He planned to import
+into this one a sensation. Ginx's Baby, brought from the convent,
+stripped of his papal swathings and enveloped in a handsome outfit
+presented by an amiable Protestant Duchess, was placed in a cradle with
+his head resting on a Bible. I am afraid he was quite as uncomfortable
+as he had ever been at the convent. When, at the conclusion of the
+chairman's speech, in which he informed the audience of their triumph,
+this exhibition was deftly introduced upon the platform, the huzzas, and
+clappings, and waving of handkerchiefs were such as even that place had
+never seen. The child was astounded into quietness.
+
+Mr. Trumpeter took the chair--believed by many to be, next to the Queen,
+the most powerful defender of the faith in the three kingdoms. I never
+could understand why the newspapers reported his speeches--I cannot.
+
+When he had done, Lord Evergood, “a popular, practical peer, of sound
+Protestant principles,” as the Daily Banner alliteratively termed him
+next morning, rose to move the first resolution, already cut and dried
+by the committee--
+
+“That the infant so happily rescued from the incubus of a delusive
+superstition, should be remitted to the care of the Church Widows' and
+Orphans' Augmentation Society, and should be supported by voluntary
+contributions.”
+
+Before Lord Evergood could say a word murmurs arose in every part of
+the hall. He was a mild, gentlemanly Christian, without guile, and the
+opposition both surprised and frightened him. He uttered a few sentences
+in approval of his proposition and sat down.
+
+An individual in the gallery shouted--“Sir! I rise to move an
+amendment!”
+
+Cheers, and cries of “Order! order! Sit down!” &c.
+
+The Chairman, with great blandness, said: “The gentleman is out of
+order; the resolution has not yet been seconded. I call upon the Rev.
+Mr. Valpy to second the resolution.”
+
+Mr. Valpy, incumbent of St. Swithin's-within, insisted on speaking, but
+what he said was known only to himself. When he had finished there was
+an extraordinary commotion. On the platform many ministers and laymen
+jumped to their feet; in the hall at least a hundred aspirants for a
+hearing raised themselves on benches or the convenient backs of friends.
+
+The Chairman shouted, “Order! ORDER, gentlemen! This is a great
+occasion; let us show unanimity!”
+
+There seemed to be an unanimous desire to speak. Amid cheers, cries
+for order, and Kentish fire, you could hear the Rev. Mark Slowboy,
+Independent, the Rev. Hugh Quickly, Wesleyan, the Rev. Bereciah Calvin,
+Presbyterian, the Rev. Ezekiel Cutwater, Baptist, calling to the chair.
+
+A lull ensued, of which advantage was taken by Mr. Stentor, a well-known
+Hyde Park orator, who bellowed from a friend's shoulders in the pit,
+“Mr. Chairman, hear ME!” an appeal that was followed by roars of
+laughter.
+
+What was the matter? Why the proposal to hand over the baby to an
+Anglican refuge stirred up the blood of every Dissenter present. It was
+lifting the infant out of the frying-pan and dexterously dropping him
+into the fire. But the chairman was accustomed to these scenes.
+He stayed the tumult by proposing that a representative from each
+denomination should give his opinion to the audience. “Whom would they
+have first?”
+
+The loudest cries were for Mr. Cutwater, who stood forth--a weak,
+stooping, half-halting, little man, with a limp necktie, and trousers
+puffy at the knees--but with honest use of them, let me say. It is quite
+credible that if Dr. Watts's assertion be true that--
+
+ “Satan trembles when he sees
+ The weakest saint upon his knees,”
+
+that arch-enemy was unusually perturbed when Ezekiel Cutwater was upon
+his. On these he had borne manly contests with evil. Two things--yea,
+three--were rigid in Ezekiel's creed; fire would never have burned
+them out of him: hatred of Popery, contempt of Anglican priestcraft and
+apostolic succession, and adhesion to the dogma of adult baptism and
+total immersion. Whoso should not join with him in these let him be
+Anathema Maranatha.
+
+His eye kindled as he looked at the seething audience. “Sir,” said he,
+“I beg to move an amendment to the motion of the noble lord. (Cheers.)
+That motion proposes to transfer to the care of the Established Church
+this tender and unconscious infant (bending over Ginx's baby), just
+snatched from the toils of a kindred superstition. (Oh, oh, hisses and
+cheers.) I withdraw the expression; I did not mean to be offensive.
+(Hear.) This is a grand representative meeting--not of the English
+Church, not of the Baptist Church, not of the Wesleyan Church--but of
+Protestantism. (Cheers and Kentish fire.) In such an assembly is it
+right to propose any singular disposition of a representative infant?
+This is now the adopted child, not of one, but of all denominations.
+(Cheers.) Around his, or her--I am not sure which--cherubic head
+circle the white-winged angels of various Churches, and on her or him,
+whichever it may be----”
+
+The Chairman said that he might as well say that he had authentic
+information that it was HIM.
+
+“Him then--concentrate the sympathies of every Protestant heart. Let us
+not despoil the occasion of its greatness by exhibiting a narrow bigotry
+in one direction! Let us bring into this infantile focus the rays of
+Catholic unity. (Loud cheering and Kentish fire.) To me, for one, it
+would be eminently painful to think--what doubtless would occur if the
+motion is adopted--that within a week of his entrance into the asylum of
+the society named in it, this diminutive and unknowing sinner should
+go through the farce of a supposititious admission into the Church of
+Christ. (Oh!) Yes! I say a farce, whether you regard the age of the
+acolyte or the indifferent proportion of water with which it would be
+performed. (Uproar, oh, oh! and some cheering from the Baptist section.)
+But I will not now further enter into these things,” said Mr. Cutwater,
+who knew his cue perfectly well, “I can hold these opinions and still
+love my brethren of other denominations. I move, as an amendment, that a
+committee, consisting of one minister and one layman to be selected
+from each of the Churches, be appointed to take charge of the physical
+well-being and mental and spiritual training of the infant.”
+
+By this proposition, which was received with enthusiasm, Ginx's Baby was
+to be incontinently pitched into an arena of polemical warfare.
+Every one was willing that a committee should fight out the question
+vicariously; and, therefore, when Mr. Slowboy seconded the amendment, it
+was carried with loud acclamations.
+
+But they were not yet out of the wood. On proceeding to nominate members
+of the committee, the Unitarians and Quakers claimed to be represented.
+The platform and the meeting were by the ears again. It was fiercely
+contended that only Evangelical Christians could have a place in such
+a work, and many of the nominees declared that they would not sit on a
+committee with--well, some curious epithets were used. The Unitarians
+and Quakers took their stand on the Catholic principles embodied in the
+amendment, and on the fact that Ginx's Baby had now “become national
+Protestant property.” Mr. Cutwater and a few others, moved by the
+scandal of the dispute, interfered, and the committee was at length
+constituted to the satisfaction of all parties. It was to be called “The
+Branch Committee of the Protestant Detectoral Union for promoting the
+Physical and Spiritual Well-being of Ginx's Baby.”
+
+A fourth resolution was adopted, “That the subject should be treated in
+the Metropolitan pulpits on the next Sabbath, and a collection taken up
+in the various churches for the benefit of the infant.” This promised
+well for Master Ginx's future.
+
+The meeting had lasted five hours, and while they were discussing him
+the child grew hungry. In the tumult every one had forgotten the subject
+of it, and now it was over, they dispersed without thought of him.
+But he would not allow those near him at all events to overlook his
+presence.
+
+Some, foreseeing that awkwardness was impending, slipped away; while
+three or four stayed to ask what was to be done with him.
+
+“Hand him over to the custody of the Chairman,” said a Mr. Dove.
+
+“I should be most happy,” said he, smoothly, “but Mrs. Trumpeter is out
+of town. Could your dear wife take him, Mr. Dove?”
+
+Mr. Dove's wife was otherwise engaged.
+
+The Secretary was unmarried--chambers at Nincome's Inn.
+
+In the midst of their distress a woman who had been hanging about the
+hall near the platform, came forward and offered to take charge of him,
+“for the sake of the cause.” Every one was relieved. After her name and
+address had been hastily noted, the Protestant baby was placed in her
+arms. My Lord Evergood, the Chairman, the clergy, the Secretary, and the
+mob went home rejoicing. Some hours after, Ginx's Baby, stripped of the
+duchess's beautiful robes, was found by a policeman, lying on a
+doorstep in one of the narrow streets, not a hundred yards behind the
+Philopragmon. By an ironical chance he was wrapped in a copy of the
+largest daily paper in the world.
+
+
+
+
+IX.--Good Samaritans, and Good-Samaritan Twopences.
+
+At every breakfast-table in town next morning the report of the great
+Protestant meeting was read, and a further report, in leaded type,
+of the discovery of Ginx's Baby at a later period of the evening by a
+policeman. A pretty comment on the proceedings! The Good Samaritan put
+his patient on his ass and carried him to an inn; while the priest and
+the Levite, though the latter looked at him, at least let him alone. To
+have called a public meeting to discuss his fate before deserting him,
+would have been a refinement of inhumanity. The committee were rather
+ashamed when they met. Instant measures were taken to recover the child
+and place him in good hands. The duchess again provided baby-clothes.
+The next Sunday sermons were preached on his behalf in a score of
+chapels. The collections amounted to L 800, a sum increased by donations
+and subscriptions to the handsome total of L 1360 10s. 3 1/2d.
+
+It will be seen hereafter what the committee did with the baby, but I
+happen to have an account of what became of the funds. They were
+spent as follows, according to a balance sheet never submitted to the
+subscribers:--
+
+ Pounds s. d.
+ Committee-rooms............. 45 0 0
+ 2 Secretaries employed by the
+ Committee................ 120 0 0
+ Agents, canvassing, &c.......... 88 6 2
+ Printing Notices, Placards,
+ Pamphlets, a “Daily Bulletin of
+ Health,” “Life of Ginx's Baby,”
+ “Protestant Babyhood, a Tale,”
+ “The Cradle of an Infant Martyr,”
+ “A Snatched Brand,” and other
+ Works issued by the Committee...... 596 13 5
+ Advertisements of Meetings,
+ Sermons, &c............... 261 1 1
+ Legal Expenses............... 77 6 8
+ Stationery................ 35 10 0
+ Postage, Firing, and Sundries....... 27 19 2
+ ----------------
+ Total Pounds 1251 16 6
+
+
+This left L 108 13s. 9 1/2d. for the baby's keep. No child could have
+been more thoroughly discussed, preached and written about, advertised,
+or advised by counsel; but his resources dwindled in proportion to these
+advantages. Benevolent subscribers too seldom examine the financial
+items of a report: had any who contributed to this fund seen the balance
+sheet they might have grudged that so little of their bounty went to
+make flesh, bone, and comfort for the object of it. A cynic would tell
+them that to look sharply after the disposal of their guerdon was half
+the gift. Their indifference was akin to that satirized by the poet--
+
+ “Prodigus et stultus dedit quae spernit et odit.”
+
+In an age of luxury we are grown so luxurious as to be content to pay
+agents to do our good deeds for us; but they charge us three hundred per
+cent. for the privilege.
+
+
+
+
+X.--The Force--and a Specimen of its Weakness.
+
+Ginx's baby had been discovered by a policeman swaddled in a penny
+paper, distressingly familiar to metropolitan travellers by rail.
+To omit the details of his treatment at the hands of that great
+institution, “The Force,” would be invidious. The member thereof who
+fell in with him was walking a back street, sighting doors with his
+bull's-eye. He was provided with massive boots, so that a thief
+could hear him coming a hundred yards off; he was personally tall and
+unwieldy, and a dexterous commissioner had invented a dress designed to
+enhance these qualities--a heavy coat, a cart-horse belt, and a round
+cape. He had been carefully drilled not to walk more than three miles an
+hour. He was not a little startled when the rays of his lamp fell upon
+a struggling newspaper, out of which, as from a shell, came mysterious
+cries. He took up a corner of the paper and peeped in upon the face
+of Ginx's Baby; then he occupied a quarter of an hour in embarrassing
+reflections. A nearly naked child crying in the cold ought to be housed
+as soon as possible, but X 99 was ON HIS BEAT, and those magic words
+chained him to certain limits. This, of course, was the rule under a
+former commissioner, and every one knows that such absurd strategy
+has been abolished in the existing regime. At that time, however, each
+watchman had his beat, to leave which was neglect of duty, except with
+a prisoner, and then it was neglect of all the householders within the
+magic compass. Had X 99 heard the baby crying across the street, which
+was part of the beat of X 101, he would have passed on with a cheery
+heart, for the case would have been beyond his jurisdiction. Unhappily
+the baby was on his beat, and he was delivered from the temptation of
+transferring it to the other by the appearance of X 101's bull's-eye not
+far off. What was he to do? The station was a mile away--the inspector
+would not arrive for an hour--and it would be awkward, if not
+undignified, to carry on his rounds a shouting baby wrapped in the
+largest daily paper. If he left it where it was, and it perished, he
+might be charged with murder. He was at his wits' end--but having got
+there, he resolved on the simplest process, namely to carry it to
+the station. No provision was made by the regulations of the force to
+protect a beat casually deserted even for a proper purpose. Hence, while
+X 99 was absent on his errand of mercy, the valuable shop of Messrs.
+Trinkett and Blouse, ecclesiastical tailors, was broken into, and
+several stoles, chasubles, altar-cloths and other decorative tapestries
+were appropriated to profane uses.
+
+At the station the baby was disposed of according to rule. Due entry
+was first made in the night-book by the superintendent of all the
+particulars of his discovery. Some cold milk was then procured and
+poured down the child's throat. Afterwards, wrapped in a constable's
+cape, he was placed in a cell where, when the door was locked, he could
+not disturb the guardians of the peace.
+
+The same night, in the next cell, an innocent gentleman, seized with
+an apoplexy in the street but entered in the charge-sheet as drunk and
+incapable, died like a dog.
+
+
+
+
+XI.--The Unity of the Spirit and the Bond of Peace.
+
+When the committee met, every one discovered his incongruity with the
+rest. Each was disposed to treat Ginx's Baby in a different way--in
+other words, each wished to reflect the views of his particular sect
+on the object of their charity. They were a new “Evangelical Alliance,”
+ agreed only in hatred to Popery.
+
+Finding at their first meeting that the discussion needed to be brought
+into a focus, the committee appointed three of their number to draw up
+a minute of the matters to be argued. This committee reported that there
+arose, respecting the child, the following questions:--
+
+ “I. As touching the body:
+
+ a. Wherewithal he should be fed and clothed?
+
+ b. In what manner and fashion that should be done?
+
+ II. As touching the mind and spirit:
+
+ a. Whether he should be educated? If so,
+
+ b. What were to be the subjects of instruction?
+
+ c. What creed, if any, should be primarily taught?
+
+ d. Should he be further baptized? If so,
+
+ 1. Into what communion?
+
+ 2. By what ceremonial?”
+
+
+This programme, it appeared to its concoctors, embraced everything that
+concerned Ginx's Baby except his death by the act of God or the Queen's
+enemies. No sooner was the report made than adopted. Then a member,
+eager for the fray, moved the postponement of the first division of
+questions until the others had been determined. Why should apostles of
+truth trouble themselves to serve tables? These were very subordinate
+questions to them--though, I think, of first importance to Ginx's Baby.
+It was decided to discuss little Ginx's future before considering his
+present.
+
+The ball was opened by the Venerable Archdeacon Hotten, who, amid much
+excitement, contended that from the earliest buddings of thought in
+an infant mind religion should be engrafted upon it; there could be no
+education worth the name that was not religious. That with the A should
+be taught the origin, and with the Z the final destiny and destruction,
+of evil. To separate education from religion was to clip the wings of
+the heavenly dove. He asserted that the committee ought at once to have
+the child baptized in Westminster Abbey, though he was rather of opinion
+that the previous baptism was canonically valid; that he should be
+taught the truths of our most holy faith, and since there could be
+no faith without a creed, and the only national creed was that of the
+Church of England, the baby should be handed over to the care of a
+clergyman, and then be sent to a proper religious school. He need not
+say that he excluded Rugby under its then profane management.
+
+The Church was, however, divided against itself, for the Dean of Triston
+said he would give more latitude than his very reverend brother. You
+ought not to define in an infant mind a rigid outline of creed. In fact,
+he did not acknowledge any creed, he was not obliged to by law and was
+disinclined to by his reason. He would rather allow the inner seeds of
+natural light--the glorious all-pervading efflorescence of the Deity
+in all men's hearts, to grow within the young spirit. The Dean was
+assuredly vague and far less earnest than his brother cleric.
+
+The “Rev.” Mr. Bumpus, Unitarian, met the suggestions of the
+Archdeacon with the scorn they merited. It was impossible to apply to
+a representative child of an enlightened age theories so long exploded.
+The Dean had certainly come nearer the truth with that broad sympathy
+for which he was noted. He himself proposed that the child should be
+made a model nursling of the liberalism of a new era. Old things were
+passing away;--all things had become new. Creeds were the discarded
+banners of a mediaeval past, fit only to be hung up in the churches, and
+looked at as historic monuments; never more to be flaunted in the front
+of battle! The education of the day was that which taught a man the
+introspection whereby he recognized the Divine within himself--under
+any aspect, under any tuition, whether of Brahma, Confucius, or Christ.
+Truth was kaleidoscopic, and varied with the media through which it
+was viewed. As for the child, every aspect of truth and error should be
+allowed to play upon his mind. Let him acquire ordinary school learning
+for fifteen years, and then send him to the London University.
+
+Here the Chairman, and half-a-dozen members of the committee, protested
+that the said University was a school of the devil, and several
+interchanges of discourtesy took place.
+
+Mr. Shortt, M. P., begged to suggest, as a matter of business, that for
+the present the child was not capable of receiving any ideas whatever,
+and might die, or prove to be dumb, or an idiot, and so require no
+education. Ought they not to postpone this discussion until the subject
+was old enough to be worth consideration?
+
+It was Mr. Shortt's habit to show his practical vein by business-like
+obstructions of this kind. He had been able a score of times to
+demonstrate to the House of Commons how silly it was to consider
+probabilities. In fact, he was opposed heart and soul to prophetic
+legislation; he would live, legislatively, from hand to mouth.
+
+But the committee would not allow Mr. Shortt to run away with the bone
+of contention.
+
+The Rev. Dr. M'Gregor Lucas, of the National Caledonian Believers, had
+been silent too long to contain himself further. This man needs some
+particular description whenever his name is made public. Nay, for this
+he lives, and by it, some think. At all events, he appears to be
+equally eager for rebuke and applause; they both involve notoriety, and
+notoriety is sure to pay. Few absurdities had been overlooked by his
+shallow ingenuity. Simply to have invested his limited mental endowments
+in trying to make the world believe him a genius, would have been only
+so like what many thousands are doing as to have absolved him from too
+harsh a judgment; but he traded in perilous stuff. Cheap prophecy was
+his staple. It was his wont to give out about once in five years, that
+the world would shortly come to an end, and, like Mr. Zadkiel, he
+found people who thought their inevitable disappointment a proof of his
+inspiration. Had you heard the honeyed words dropping from his lips, you
+would have taken him for a Scotch angel, and, consequently, a rarity.
+Could such lips utter harsh sayings, or distil vanities? Show him a
+priest, and you would hear! The Pope was his particular born foe; Popery
+his enemies' country--so he said. It was safe for him to stand and throw
+his darts. No one could say whether they hit or did not; while most
+spectators had the good will to hope that they did. How he would
+have lived if Daniel and St. John had dreamed no dreams, one cannot
+conjecture. As it was, they provided the doctor with endless openings
+for his fancy. Since no one could solve the riddle of their prophecies,
+it was certain that no one could disprove his solutions. Yet these came
+so often to their own disproof by lapse of time, that I can only think
+that the good doctor hoped to die before his critical periods came, or
+was so clever as to trust the infallibility of human weakness.
+
+I describe Dr. Lucas at so great a length, because it will be easier
+and more edifying to the reader to conceive what he said, than for me to
+recount it. He showed the Baby to be one of seven mysteries. He was in
+favor of teaching him at once to hate idolatry, music, crosses, masses,
+nuns, priests, bishops, and cardinals. The “humanities,” the Shorter
+Catechism, the Confession of Faith, and “The whole Duty of Man,” would,
+in his opinion, be the books to lay the groundwork in the child's mind
+of a Christian character of the highest type.
+
+Mr. Ogle, M. P., here vigorously intervened. Said he:--
+
+“I can't, with all deference, agree to any of these suggestions. They
+involve hand-to-hand fighting over this baby's body. No one of us is
+entitled to take charge of him. Else why did we all unite to rescue him
+from the nunnery? He will be torn to pieces among contending divines!
+I think a purely secular education is all that as a committee we should
+aim at. We have, but just withdrawn the child from the shadow of a
+single ecclesiastical influence--would you transfer it to another? Every
+Protestant denomination is contributing to his support, how can you
+devote their gifts to rearing him for one? You would have no peace;
+better at once treat him as the man of Benjamin treated his wife, cut
+him up into enough pieces to send to all the tribes of Israel, summoning
+them to the fight. I say we have nothing to do with this just now; let
+him be educated in a secular academy, and let each sect be free to send
+its agents to instruct him out of school hours as they please.”
+
+The Rev. Theodoret Verity, M.A., rose in anger.
+
+“Surely, sir, you cannot seriously propound such a scheme! Would you
+leave this precious waif to be buffeted between the contending waves
+of truth and error, in the vague hope that by some lucky wind he might
+finally be cast upon a rock of safety? I protest against all these
+educational heresies--they are redolent of brimstone. Truth is truth,
+or there is none at all. If there be any, it is our duty to impart it to
+this immortal at the outset of his existence. Secular education! What do
+you mean by it? Who shall sever one question from another, and call one
+secular and the other religious? Is not every relation and every truth
+in some way or other connected with religion?” &c. &c. Mr. Verity has
+been saying the same thing any time these forty years.
+
+“Forgive me,” replied Mr. Ogle, “if I say that this is very vague
+talking. I have not proposed to sever one question from another. I only
+propose to do in a different way that which is being done now by the
+most rigid of Mr. Verity's friends. It is impossible to comprehend what
+is meant by such a statement as that every truth is somehow connected
+with religion. It may be that the notion--if it really is not, as I
+suspect it to be, mere verbiage and clap-trap, used by certain fools
+to mislead others--means that there is some such coherency between all
+truths as there is, for instance, between the elements of the body. I
+would admit that, but is not blood a different and perfectly severable
+thing from bone? Each has its place, office, relation. But who would say
+that one could not be regarded by a physicist in the largest variety of
+its aspects apart from the other? Yet the physicist comes back again
+to consider with respect to each its relations to all the rest! The
+separate study has rather prepared him for more profound insight into
+those relations. Thus it is with the body of truth. In spite of Mr.
+Verity I affirm that there are truths that have not in themselves any
+element of religion whatever. The forty-seventh proposition of Euclid
+will be taught by a Jesuit precisely as it is taught in the London
+University; geography will affirm certain principles and designate
+places, rivers, mountains--that no faith can remove and cast into
+unknown seas. These subjects and others are taught in our most bigoted
+schools in separate hours and relations from religion. What then do
+you mean by affirming that there can be no secular education of this
+child--apart from religious teaching? We are not likely to agree, if
+I may judge from what I have seen, on any one method of religious
+instruction for it, therefore I wish first to fix common bounds within
+which our common benevolence may work. Well, we all go to the Bible.
+We agree that between its covers lies religious truth somewhere. If you
+like let him have that--and let him have some kindly and holy influences
+about him in the way of practice and example, such as many of our sects
+can supply many instances of. Give him no catechism--let him read a
+creed in our daily life. The articles of faith strongest in his soul
+will be those which have crystallized there from the combined action
+of truth and experience, and not as it were been pasted on its walls by
+ecclesiastical bill-posters. 'What is truth?' he must ask and answer for
+himself, as we all must do before God. Don't mistake me; I hope I am not
+more indifferent to religion than any here present--but I differ from
+them on the best method of imbuing the mind and heart with it. Surely
+we need not, we cannot--it would be an exquisite absurdity--pass a
+resolution in this committee that the child is to be a Calvinist! Who
+then would agree to secure him from any taint of Arminian heresy in
+years to come? Dare you even resolve that he shall be a Christian and a
+Protestant! I would not insure the risk. But, with so many of Christ's
+followers about me, surely, surely without providing any ecclesiastical
+mechanism, there will be testified to him simply how he may be saved.
+Your prayers, your visits, your kindly moral influence and talk,
+your living example of a goodness derived not from dogmas but from
+affectionate following of a holy pattern and trust in revealed mercies,
+your pointing to that pattern and showing the daily passage of these
+mercies will prompt his search after the truth that has made you what
+you are. Let some good woman do for him a mother's part, but choose
+her for her general goodness and not for the dogmas of her church. The
+simpler her piety the better for him I should say!”
+
+This straightforward speech fell like a new apple of discord in the
+midst of the committee. Angry knots were formed, and the noble chairman
+found that he could not restore order. An adjournment was agreed to.
+Luckily for the body of Ginx's Baby, he had been meanwhile sent to a
+home where Protestant money secured to him for the time good living,
+while his benefactors were discussing what to do with his soul.
+
+*****
+
+Surely, it were no impertinence to interrupt this history and advert to
+the fact, that, in the discussion just related, every one was to some
+extent right and to some extent agreed.
+
+That religious teaching was due to an immortal spirit--some notion
+and evidence of the Divine and the Great Hereafter to be conveyed to
+it--scarce was disputed. Nor was there collision over the necessity
+of what is called intellectual cultivation. The boy must be taught
+something of the world in which he was to live; nay, this latter
+knowledge seemed to be most immediately practical. As each disputant
+fixed his eye on one or the other aim that end appeared to him to be the
+most important. Hence, by a natural lapse, they came to treat subjects
+as antagonistic which were, in fact, parallel and quite consistent. The
+one called the others godless--the others threw back the aspersion
+of bigotry. Then came complication. What was “religion?” Intellectual
+culture they could agree about--it embraced well-known areas; but this
+religion divided itself into many disputable fields. These brother
+Protestants were like country neighbors who must encounter each other at
+fairs, markets, meets, and balls, and smile and greet, though each, at
+heart, is looking savagely at the other's landmarks, and most are very
+likely fighting bitter lawsuits all the while. It was because religion
+meant CREED to most members of the committee, and because it so implies
+to the vast bodies they represented, that they could not come to terms
+about Ginx's Baby or any other infantile immortal. Not always, perhaps,
+but often, they fought for futile distinctions. Had Mahomet's creed
+consisted of but one article, There is one God, the blood of many
+nations might never have given testimony against the creed they resented
+when to it he tacked and Mahomet is His prophet. Could Protestants but
+consent to agree in their agreement and peacefully differ in their petty
+differences, how would the aggregated impulse of a simple faith roll
+down before it all the impediments of error!
+
+When Ginx's Baby had grown to a discretionary age, and was at all able
+to know truth from error--supposing that to be knowable--there were
+in the country fifty thousand reverend gentlemen of every tincture of
+religious opinion who might ply him with their various theories, yet few
+of these would be contented unless they could seize him while his young
+nature was plastic, and try to imprint on immortal clay the trade-mark
+of some human invention.
+
+
+
+
+XII.--No Funds--no Faith, no Works.
+
+The Committee of the Protestant Detectoral Union on Ginx's Baby held
+twenty-three meetings. They were then as far from unity of purpose as
+when they set out. Variety was given to the meetings by the changing
+combinations of members in attendance. The finances were little
+heeded in the intensity of their zeal for truth. These at length fell
+altogether into the hands of the association's secretary, and we have
+seen involved large items of expense. The twenty-three meetings
+extended over a year. At the end of that time the secretary startled the
+committee by laying on the table a demand for the board and keep of the
+Protestant baby for three months, amounting to L 36; and adding that the
+sum in hand was L 1, 4s. 4 1/2d. In his report he said: “No effort has
+been spared by means of advertisements, pamphlets, tales, leaders
+and paragraphs in newspapers and religious journals, together with
+occasional sermons, to maintain the public interest in this child; but
+attention has been diverted from him by the great Roman Spozzi case,
+and the anxiety created throughout the Protestant world by the recent
+discovery made by Dr. Gooddee, of a solitary survivor of the ancient
+Church of the Vieuxbois Protestants in a secluded valley of the
+Pyrenees.”
+
+The secretary asked the committee to provide the money to discharge the
+baby's liabilities; but they instantly adjourned, and no effort could
+afterwards get a quorum together. When the persons who had charge of the
+Protestant foundling discovered the state of affairs they began to dun
+the secretary and to neglect the child, now about thirteen months
+old and preparing to walk. Since no money appeared they sold whatever
+clothes had been provided for him, and absconded from the place where
+they had been farming him for Protestantism. The secretary, by chance
+hearing of this, was discreet enough to make no inquiries. Ginx's Baby,
+“as a Protestant question,” vanished from the world. I never heard that
+any one was asked what had been done with the funds; but I have already
+furnished the account that ought to have been rendered.
+
+
+
+
+XIII.--In transitu.
+
+One night, near twelve o'clock, a shrewd tradesman, looking out of his
+shopdoor before he turned into bed, heard a cry which proceeded from a
+bundle on the pavement. This he discovered to be an infant wrapt in a
+potato-sack. He was quick enough to observe that it had been deftly laid
+over a line chiselled across the pavement to the corner of his house,
+which line he knew to be the boundary between his own parish of St.
+Simon Magus and the adjacent parish of St. Bartimeus. He took note,
+being a business man, of the exact position of the child's body in
+relation to this line, and then conveyed it to the workhouse of the
+other parish.
+
+
+
+
+PART III. WHAT THE PARISH DID WITH HIM.
+
+
+
+
+I.--Parochial Knots--to be untied without prejudice.
+
+The infant borne to the workhouse of St. Bartimeus was Ginx's Baby. When
+he had been placed on the floor of the matron's room, and examined by
+the master, that official turned to the unwelcome bearer of the burden.
+
+“Did you find this child?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Where?”
+
+“Lying opposite my shop in Nether Place.”
+
+“What's your name?”
+
+“Doll.”
+
+“Oh! you're the cheesemonger. Your shop's on the other side of the
+boundary, in the other parish. The child ought not to come here; it
+doesn't belong to us.”
+
+“Yes it does: it wasn't on my side of the line.”
+
+“But it was in front of your house?”
+
+“Well, the line runs crossways: it don't follow the child was in our
+parish.”
+
+“Oh, nonsense! there's no doubt about it! We can't take the child in.
+You must carry it away again.”
+
+Mr. Snigger turned to leave the room.
+
+“Wait a bit, sir,” said Mr. Doll; “I shall leave the child here, and you
+can do as you like with it. It ain't mine, at all events. I say it lay
+in your parish; and if you don't look after it you may be the worse of
+it. The coroner's sure to try to earn his fees. Good-night.”
+
+He hurried from the room.
+
+“Stop!” shouted the master, “I say: I don't accept the child. You
+leave it here at your own risk. We keep it without prejudice,
+remember--without prejudice, sir!--without----”
+
+Mr. Doll was in the street and out of hearing.
+
+
+
+
+II.--A Board of Guardians.
+
+The Guardians of St. Bartimeus met the day after Mr. Doll's clever
+stratagem. Among other business was a report from the master of the
+workhouse that a child, name unknown, found by Mr. Doll, cheesemonger,
+of Nether Place, in the Parish of St. Simon Magus, opposite his shop,
+and, as he alleged, on the nearer side of the parish boundary, had been
+left at the workhouse, and was now in the custody of the matron. The
+Guardians were not accustomed to restrain themselves, and did not
+withhold the expression of their indignation upon this announcement. As
+Mr. Doll had himself been a guardian of St. Simon Magus, it was clear
+to their impartial minds that he was trying by a trick to foist a
+bastard--perhaps his own--on the wrong parish.
+
+Mr. Cheekey, a licensed victualler, moved that the master's report be
+put under the table.
+
+Mr. Slinkum, draper, seconded the motion.
+
+Mr. Edge, ironmonger, pointed out that there was no parliamentary
+precedent for such a disposition of the report, and, further, that such
+action did not dispose of the baby.
+
+“Well,” said Mr. Cheekey, turning painfully red, “no matter how ye put
+it, I move to get rid of the brat. What's the best form of motion?”
+
+A churchwarden, who happened to be a gentleman, explained that the Board
+could not dismiss the question in so summary a way. “He could foresee
+that there might be a nice point of law in the case. They would have to
+take some legal means of ascertaining their liabilities, and of forcing
+the other parish to take the child if they ought to do so. They must
+consult their solicitor.” This gentleman was sent for post haste.
+Meanwhile the baby was ordered to be brought in for inspection. The
+matron had handed him over to a sort of half-witted inmate of the house,
+whose wits, however, were strangely about him at the wrong time,
+to nurse and amuse him. This person brought Ginx's Baby into the
+Board-room, and placed him on the table. The Board of Guardians took a
+good look at him. He was not then in fair condition. He was limp, he
+was dirty, hollow in the cheeks, white, stiff in his limbs, and
+half-naked--(to be regardless of gender)--
+
+ “Pallidula, rigida, nudula.”
+
+
+“Hum!” said Mr. Stink, who was a dog-breeder--“What's his pedigree?”
+
+This brutal joke was well received by some of the Guardians.
+
+“His pedigree,” answered the half-wit, gravely, “goes back for three
+hundred years. Parients unknown by name, but got by Misery out o'
+Starvashun. The line began with Poverty out o' Laziness in Queen
+Elizabeth's time. The breed has been a large 'un wotever you thinks of
+the quality.”
+
+This pleasantry was less acceptable to the Board.
+
+“Well,” said Mr. Scoop, grocer, a great stickler for parliamentary modes
+of procedure, “I move it be committed.”
+
+“Committed! Where?” said Mr. Stink.
+
+“To Newgate I s'pose,” said the half-wit, his eyes twinkling.
+
+“Nonsense, sir,--for consideration. Send that man out,” exclaimed
+Scoop--“clear the room for consultation.”
+
+Davus was expelled, and the baby was then formally consigned to the care
+of a committee. By this time the legal adviser came in. The facts having
+been stated to him, he said:
+
+“Gentlemen, as at present advised I am of opinion that the parish in
+which the child was found is bound to maintain him. If Mr. Doll (a
+highly respectable person, my own cheesemonger) found the child beyond
+the boundaries of St. Simon Magus--and he will of course swear that he
+did--you cannot refuse to take it in. However, I had better ascertain
+the facts from Mr. Doll and take the opinion of counsel. Meanwhile we
+must beware not to compromise ourselves by admitting anything, or doing
+anything equivalent to an admission. Let me see--Ah!--yes--a notice to
+be served on the other parish repudiating the infant; another notice
+to Mr. Doll to take it away, and that it remains here at his risk and
+expense--you see, gentlemen, we could hardly venture to return it to
+Mr. Doll; we should create an unhappy impression in the minds of the
+public--”
+
+“D--n the public!” said Mr. Stink.
+
+“Quite so, my dear sir,” said Mr. Phillpotts, smiling, “quite so, but
+that is not a legal or in fact practicable mode of discarding them; we
+must act with public opinion, I fear. Then, to resume, thirdly and to be
+strictly safe, we must serve a notice on the infant and all whom it may
+concern. I think I'll draft it at once.”
+
+In a few minutes the committee in charge pinned to the only garment of
+Ginx's Baby a paper in the following form:--
+
+
+PARISH OF ST. BARTIMEUS.
+
+To ---- ---- (name unknown), a Foundling, and all other persons
+interested in the said Foundling.
+
+TAKE NOTICE
+
+That you, or either of you, have no just or lawful claim to have you
+or the said infant chargeable on the said Parish. And this is to notify
+that you, the said infant, are retained in the workhouse of the said
+Parish under protest, and that whatsoever is or may be done or provided
+for you is at the proper charge of you, and all such persons as are and
+were by law bound to maintain and keep the same.
+
+ WINKLE & PHILLPOTTS,
+ Solicitors for the Board.
+
+
+
+
+III.--“The World is my Parish.”
+
+When Mr. Phillpotts called upon Doll, the cheesemonger, the latter
+straightway gave him the facts as they had occurred. He pointed out
+the exact spot on which the bundle had lain; he gave an estimate of the
+number of inches on each side of the line occupied by it, and declared
+that the head and shoulders of the infant lay in the parish of the
+solicitor's clients. Ginx's Baby, under the title “Re a Foundling,” was
+once more submitted for the opinion of counsel. They advised the Board
+that as the child was in both parishes when found, but had been taken
+up by a ratepayer of St. Simon Magus, the latter parish was bound to
+support him. Whereupon the Guardians of St. Bartimeus at their next
+meeting resolved that the Vestry of the other parish should have a
+written notice to remove the child, failing which application should be
+made to the Queen's Bench for a mandamus to compel them to do it.
+
+On receiving the challenge the Guardians of St. Simon Magus also took
+counsel's opinion. They were advised that as the greater part, and
+especially the head of the infant, was when discovered in the parish
+of St. Bartimeus, the latter was clearly chargeable. Both parties
+then proceeded to swear affidavits. The Attorney-General and
+Solicitor-General, the two great law-officers of the crown, were
+retained on opposite sides, and took fees--not for an Imperial
+prosecution, but as petty Queen's Counsel in an inter-parochial
+squabble.
+
+
+
+
+IV.--Without prejudice to any one but the Guardians.
+
+The Court of Queen's Bench, after hearing an elaborate statement from
+the Attorney-General, granted a rule nisi for a mandamus. This rule was
+entered for argument in a paper called “The Special Paper,” and, the
+list being a heavy one, nearly a year elapsed before it was reached. It
+was then again postponed several times “for the convenience of counsel.”
+
+The Board of St. Bartimeus chafed under the law's delay. They became
+morbidly sensitive to the incubus of Ginx's Baby, especially as
+the press had been reviewing some of their recent acts with great
+bitterness. The Guardians were defiant. Having served their notices,
+they were induced by Mr. Stink to resolve not to maintain the infant.
+The poor child was threatened with dissolution. Thus, no doubt, many
+difficulties in parochial administration are solved--the subject
+vanishes away. The baby was kept provisionally in a room at the
+workhouse. On the outside of the door was a notice in fair round-hand:--
+
+NOTICE.
+
+
+DOLL'S FOUNDLING.
+
+Pending the legal inquiry into the facts concerning the above infant,
+and a decision as to its settlement, all officials, assistants, and
+servants of the workhouse are forbidden to enter the room in which it
+is deposited, or to render it any service or assistance, on pain of
+dismissal. No food is to be supplied to it from the workhouse kitchen.
+
+N.B. This is not intended to prevent persons other than officials, &c.,
+from having access to the infant, or assisting it.
+
+BY ORDER OF THE BOARD.
+
+
+That any body of human beings, other than Patagonians, could have
+coolly contemplated such a result as must have followed upon the strict
+performance of this order, would be incredible except in the instance of
+the Guardians of St. Bartimeus. There was nothing they could not do--or
+leave undone. Fortunately for Ginx's Baby, the order was disobeyed.
+Occasionally lady visitors went to look at him and give him some
+food--he was toddling about the room on unsteady legs--but charity
+seemed to be appalled by the official questions hanging about this
+child. The master, Snigger, whose business it was every day to ascertain
+whether the cause of the great parochial quarrel was in, or out of,
+existence, became a traitor to the Board. When the child grew hungry and
+dangerously thin, he brought bottles of pap prepared by Mrs. Snigger,
+and administered it to him. No conclusions to the disfavor of the Board
+were to be drawn from this conduct, for Snigger was particular to say to
+the boy in a loud voice, each time he fed him:--
+
+“Now, youngster, this is without prejudice, remember! I give you due
+notice--without prejudice.”
+
+Who, in Master Ginx's situation, would have had any prejudices to such
+action, or have expressed them even if they were entertained? He took no
+objection as he took the pap; while Snigger was glad to be able to do an
+unusual kindness without compromising the parish.
+
+Thus things had gone on for many months, when one day an eye of that
+Argus monster, the Public, was set upon Ginx's Baby. A well-known
+nobleman, calling at the workhouse to see a little girl whom he had
+saved from infamy, as he passed down a corridor was arrested by the
+notice on the door of our hero's room. Curiosity took him in, and horror
+chained him there for some time. Had he not entered, Ginx's Baby, spite
+of Snigger, would in twenty-four hours have ceased to supply facts
+to history. He was suffering from low fever, and his condition was as
+sensationally shocking as any reporter could have wished. Out rushed
+the peer for a doctor, took a cab to a magistrate and detailed the whole
+case, to be repeated in next morning's papers. Penny-a-liners ran to the
+spot, wrote vivid descriptions of the baby and the room, and transcribed
+the notice. The Guardians were drubbed in trenchant leaders and
+indignant letters. They, instead of bending to the storm, strove to
+confront it, and passed angry resolutions of a childish and grotesque
+character. The few of them who possessed any sense of propriety were
+railed at in the meetings till they ceased to attend. The uproar outside
+increased. Why did not the President of the Poor-Law Board interfere? At
+last he did interfere: that is, instead of visiting the scene himself,
+and satisfying his own eyes as to the truth of what his ears had heard,
+a process that would have taken a couple of hours, he appointed a
+gentleman to hold an inquiry. The Guardians became furious. The reports
+of their proceedings read like the vagaries of a lunatic asylum or the
+deliberations of the American Senate. They discharged Snigger for breach
+of orders, substituting a relative of Mr. Stink. They put a lock on the
+door, and passed food to the Baby by a stick. A committee was appointed
+to see him fed, and they forwarded a memorial to the Poor-Law Board,
+stating that “he daily had more food than he could possibly eat, and
+was in admirable condition.” They refused to allow any doctor but one
+employed by themselves to see him. They procured from him a certificate
+that the noble busybody and his physician had made a mistake, and that
+all the functions of life in the infant appeared to be in perfect order.
+Then came the gentleman, and the inquiry, and his report, and a letter
+from the Poor-Law Board, and further discussions and more letters, until
+the bewildered public gnashed its teeth at the Minister, the Guardians,
+and the law, and wished them all at Land's End or beyond it.
+
+
+
+
+V.-An Ungodly Jungle.
+
+The case of the Guardians of St. Bartimeus against the Guardians of St.
+Simon Magus was at length reached. The argument lasted for two days.
+There is a grim work, the short title whereof is “Burns's Justice,” in
+five fat volumes, from which the legal Dryasdust turns aghast. In one of
+these portentous books, title “Poor,” pp. 1200, the inquisitive may
+find a code unrivalled by the most malignant ingenuity of former or
+contemporary nations: a code wherein, by gradual accretion, has been
+framed a system of relief to poverty and distress so impolitic, so
+unprincipled, that none but the driest, mustiest, most petrified
+parish official could be expected to lift up his voice to defend it;
+so complicated that no man under heaven knows its length or breadth
+or height or depth; yet it stands to this hour a monument of English
+stolidity--a marvel of lazy or ignorant statesmanship. Imagine, if you
+please, a Lord Chief Justice and three Puisnes, all keen, practical men,
+alive to public policy and the common weal, eager to extricate the truth
+and do the right, plunging into this “ungodly jungle,” thwarted at
+every turn, in search of justice for Ginx's Baby. With all his patient
+industry and lightning quickness of apprehension, the Chief Justice
+found it hard to reconcile past and present, or evolve from the vast
+confusion anything consistent with his moral instincts.--Clear the
+board, gentlemen. True regenerative legislation will begin by drawing
+away the rubbish. Reform means more than repair. Mend, patch, take down
+a little here, prop up some tottering nuisance there, fill in gaping
+chinks with patent legislative cement, coat old facades with bright
+paint, hide decay beneath a gloze of novelty, titivate, decorate,
+furbish--and after all your house is not a new one, but a whited
+sepulchre shaking to decay. Repair? There is a Repair party,
+intermediating between Tories and Reformers--Radicals or Rooters let us
+call these latter if you like--who cling to “vested interests” and all
+other sorts of antique nuisances, yet say they are willing to improve
+them. REFORM, which means, Pull down with bold statesman's hand, and
+with like hand REBUILD, is no darling of your political Repairer. Call
+the party and the men by their right names: and give me for utility in
+legislation or administrative action an Old Tory and Obstructive party
+rather than this middling, meddling, muddling Repairer--
+
+ “Eager to change yet fearful to destroy.”
+
+Just now all Social Reformation, in its noblest aims and attempts,
+is fettered by the Repair party. What is termed Sanitary Reform is
+enfeebled, and the vigor withdrawn from it, by this party. “Vested
+rights,” “the Liberty of the people,” “Interference with personal
+freedom,” “EXPENSE,”--these are the watchwords of the Repairer in
+opposition to him who, pointing to the pallor and fever of a hundred
+neighborhoods, calls upon a ministry to cleanse them with imperial
+force.
+
+A comprehensive scheme of National Education is seized and
+half-throttled by the Repair party. “Oh! utilize what there is; improve
+on and tack to the denominational system; avail yourself of the jealousy
+of sects; see what a grand building that has already erected! True, it
+is not large enough; true, it is badly built; but repair that, and add
+wings. It will cost you ever so much to rebuild--Repair!”
+
+The methods of relief to the Poor are old, cumbrous, unequal, as stupid
+as those who administer them. Forth steps the Reformer, and cries
+out--“Clear this wrack away! Get rid of your antiquated Bumbledom, your
+parochial and non-parochial distinctions, your complicated map of local
+authorities; re-distribute the kingdom on some more practical system,
+redress the injustice of unequal rating, improve the machinery and
+spirit of relief, and so on.” You have the Repair party shouting its Non
+possumus as loudly as any other arch-obstructive: “Heaven forbid! Queen
+Elizabeth and the Poor Laws for ever! To the rescue of Local Government
+and Vested Interests! Repair!”
+
+Some one with a long head and a divinely-warmed heart, searching vainly
+for help to thousands in the packed alleys of his English Home, sends
+his quick glance across seas to rich lands that daily cry to heaven for
+strong arms that wield the plough and spade. “Ho!” he shouts, “Labor
+to Land--starvation to production--death unto life!” and he calls
+upon every statesman and patriot to help the good work, and give their
+energies to frame an Emigration Scheme. Then the Repair party foams:
+“Send away the Labor, the source of our wealth? No. Mend the
+condition of the laborer; give him the sop of political rights--free
+breakfasts--the ballot. Give State funds to alter social conditions? No.
+Improve the methods of local assistance to Emigration; it is a temporary
+remedy--Repair!”
+
+Thus, according to the gospel of this party, everything must be subject
+of restoration only. Like antiquarians, they utter groans over the
+abolition of anything, however ugly it may be, however unfitted for
+human uses, and with however so elegant a piece of artistry you desire
+to displace it. For them a Gilbert-Scott politician, reverential
+restorer of bygone styles, enthusiastic to conserve and amend the
+grotesque Gothic policies of the past, rather than some Brunel or
+Stephenson statesman, engineering in novel mastery of circumstances--not
+fearful to face and conquer even the antique impediments of Nature. Give
+me a trenchant statesman, or I pray you leave legislation alone. Better
+things as they are than patched to distraction.
+
+At length, by means of some delicate legal adjustments, the judges
+saw their way to affirming that Ginx's Baby's parish was that of St.
+Bartimeus, and refused the rule for a mandamus.
+
+
+
+
+VI.--Parochial Benevolence--and another translation.
+
+The authorities of St. Bartimeus did not take kindly to the charge
+imposed upon them by the Queen's Bench. Some of the Guardians privately
+hinted to the master that it was unnecessary to overfeed the infant.
+They did not burthen him with much clothing, and what he had was shared
+with many lively companions. When you, good matron, look at your little
+pink-cheeked daughter, so clean and so cosy in her pretty cot, waking
+to see the well-faced nurse, or you, still sweeter to her eyes, watching
+above her dreams, perhaps you ought to stop a moment to contrast the
+scene with the sad tableaux you may get sight of not far away.
+
+*****
+
+Ginx's Baby was not an ill-favored child. He had inherited his father's
+frame and strength: these helped him through the changes we are
+relating. What if these capacities had, by simple nourishing food,
+cleanly care-taking, and brighter, kindlier associations, been trained
+into full working order? Left alone or ill-tended they were daily
+dwindling, and the depreciation was going on not solely at the expense
+of little Ginx, but of the whole community. To reduce his strength
+one-half was to reduce one-half his chances of independence, and to
+multiply the prospects of his continuous application for STATE AID.
+
+The money spent in stopping a hole in a Dutch dyke is doubtless better
+invested than if it were to be retained until a vast breach had laid
+half a kingdom under water. Surely your Hollander would agree to be
+mulcted in one-third of his fortune rather than run the hazard!
+
+Every day through this wealthy country there are men and women busy
+marring the little images of God, that are by-and-by to be part of its
+public-shadowing young spirits, repressing their energy, sapping
+their vigor or failing to make it up, corrupting their nature by foul
+associations, moral and physical. Some are doing it by special license
+of the devil, others by Act of Parliament, others by negligence or
+niggardliness. Could you teach or force these people--many unconsciously
+engaged in the vile work--to run together, as men alarmed by sudden
+danger, and throw around a helpless generation influences and a care
+more akin to your own home ideal, would you not transfigure the next
+epoch--would not your labor and sacrifice be a GOD-WORK, reaching out
+weighty, fruit-laden branches far into the grateful future? 'Tis by
+feeling and enjoining everywhere the need of such a movement as this
+that you, O all-powerful woman! can carry your will into the play of
+a great economic and social reform. Society that recognizes not a
+root-truth like that is sowing the wind--God knows what it will reap.
+
+So the Guardians, keeping carefully within the law, neglected nothing
+that could sap little Ginx's vitality, deaden his happiest instincts,
+derange moral action, cause hope to die within his infant breast almost
+as soon as it were born. Good God!
+
+The items the Board were really entitled to charge the rate-payers as
+supplied to our hero were--
+
+Dirt,
+
+Fleas,
+
+Foul air,
+
+Chances of catching skin diseases, fevers, &c.,
+
+Vile company,
+
+Neglect,
+
+Occasional cruelty, and
+
+A small supply of bad food and clothing.
+
+Every pauper was to them an obnoxious charge by any and every means to
+be reduced to a minimum or nil. Ginx's Baby was reduced to a minimum.
+His constitution enabled him to protest against reduction to nil. But,
+just after the bills of costs had been taxed, mulcting the rate-payers
+of St. Bartimeus in a sum of more than L 1,600, the Guardians were made
+aware of the name and origin of their charge. One of the persons who
+had deserted him was arrested for theft, and among other articles in
+her possession were some of the Baby's clothes. She confessed the whole
+story, and declared that the child left in Nether Place was no other
+than the Protestant Baby, son of Ginx, about whom so much stir had been
+made two years before. The Guardians were not long in tracing Ginx, and,
+at his quarters in Rosemary Street, the hapless changeling was one day
+delivered by a deputy relieving-officer, with the benediction, by me
+sadly recorded--
+
+“There he is, d--n him!”
+
+I am sure if the Guardians had been there they would have said:
+
+“Amen.”
+
+
+
+
+PART IV. WHAT THE CLUBS AND POLITICIANS DID WITH HIM.
+
+
+
+
+I.--Moved on.
+
+Ginx's Baby's brothers and sisters would have nothing to say to him.
+Mrs. Ginx declared she could see in him no likeness to her own dear lost
+one; and her husband swore that the brat never was his. The couple had
+latterly been pinching themselves and their children to save enough
+to emigrate. For this purpose aid and counsel were given to them by a
+neighboring curate, whose name, were my pages destined to immortality,
+should be printed here in golden letters. Rich and full will be his
+sheaves when many a statesman reaps tares. Finding that a thirteenth
+child was imposed on them by so superior a force as the law of England
+the Ginxes hastened their departure.
+
+Their last night in London, towards the small hours, Ginx, carrying our
+hero, went along Birdcage Walk. He scarcely knew where he was going, or
+how he was about to dispose of his burden, but he meant to get rid of
+it. On he went, here and there met by shadowy creatures who came towards
+his footsteps in the uncertain darkness, and when they could see that he
+was no quarry for them flitted away again into the night.
+
+He passed the dingy houses, since replaced by the Foreign Office, across
+the open space before the Horse Guards, near the house of a popular
+Prime Minister, and up the broad steps till he stood under the York
+Column. The shadow of this was an inviting place, but a policeman
+turning his lantern suspiciously on the man walking about at that silent
+hour with a child in his arms frustrated his wish. Slowly Ginx tramped
+along Pall Mall, with only one other creature stirring, as it seemed
+for the moment--a gentleman who turned up the steps of a large building.
+Seating the child on the bottom step and telling him not to cry, Ginx
+instantly crossed the road, turned into St. James's Square, passed by
+the rails, and stealing from corner to corner through the mazes of
+that locality, reached home by way of Piccadilly and Grosvenor Place.
+Henceforth this history shall know him no more.
+
+
+
+
+II.-Club Ideas.
+
+Scarcely had the shadow of his parent vanished in the gloom before
+Ginx's Baby piped forth a lusty protest: the street rang again. Ere long
+the doors at the top of the steps swung back, and a portly form stood in
+the light.
+
+“Halloo! what's the matter?” (This was a general observation into
+space.) “Why, bless my heart, here's a child crying on the steps!”
+
+Another form appeared.
+
+“Is there nobody with it? Halloo! any one there?”
+
+No answer came save from poor little Ginx, but his was decided. The two
+servants descended the steps and looked at the miserable boy without
+touching him. Then they peered into the darkness in hope that they might
+get a glimpse of his mother or a policeman. A rapid step sounded on the
+pavement and a gentleman came up to the group.
+
+“What have we here?” he said gently.
+
+“It's a child, Sir Charles, I found crying on the steps. I expect it's
+a trick to get rid of him. We are looking for a policeman to take him
+away.”
+
+“Poor little fellow,” said Sir Charles, stooping to take a fair look
+at Ginx's Baby, “for you and such as you the policeman or the parish
+officers are the national guardians, and the prison or the poor-house
+the home..... Bring him into the Club, Smirke.”
+
+The men hesitated a moment before executing so unwonted a demand,
+but Sir Charles Sterling was a man not safely to be thwarted--a late
+minister and a member of the committee. The child being carried into the
+magnificent hall of the Club, stood on its mosaic floor. From above the
+radiance of the gas “sunlight” streamed down over the marble pillars,
+and glanced on gilded cornices and panels of scagliola. A statue of the
+Queen looked upon him from the niche that opened to the dining-room;
+another of the great Puritan soldier, statesman, and ruler, with
+his stern massive front; and yet another, with the strong yet gentle
+features of the champion Free-Trader, seemed to regard him from their
+several corners. On the walls around were portraits of men who had
+striven for the deliverance of the people from ancient yokes and
+fetters. Of course Ginx's Baby did not see all this. He, poor boy,
+dazed, stood with a knuckle in his eye, while the porter, lackeys,
+Sir Charles Sterling, and others who strolled out of the reading-room,
+curiously regarded him. But any one observing the scene apart might have
+contrasted the place with the child--the principles and the professions
+whereof this grandeur was the monument and consecrated tabernacle, with
+this solitary atomic specimen of the material whereon they were to work.
+What social utility had resulted from the great movements initiated by
+them who erected and frequented this place? Ought they to have had, and
+did they still need a complement? While wonderful political changes had
+been wrought, and benefits not to be exaggerated won for many classes,
+WHAT HAD BEEN DONE FOR GINX'S BABY?
+
+The query would not have been very ridiculous. He was an unit of the
+British Empire--nothing could blot out that fact before heaven! Had
+anything been left undone that ought to have been done, or done that had
+well been left undone, or were better to be undone now? Of a truth that
+was worth a thought.
+
+“What's all this?” said a big Member of Parliament, a minister renowned
+for economy in matters financial and intellectual. “What are you doing
+with this youngster? I never saw such an irregularity in a Club in my
+life.”
+
+“If you saw it oftener you would think more about it,” said Sir Charles
+Sterling. “We found him on the steps. I think he was asking for you,
+Glibton.”
+
+This sally turned a laugh against the minister.
+
+“Well,” said another, “he has come to the wrong quarter if he wants
+money.”
+
+“I shouldn't wonder,” said a third, “if he were one of the new
+messengers at the Office of Popular Edifices. Glibton is reducing their
+staff.”
+
+“If that's the case I think you have reached the minimum here, Glibton,”
+ cried Sir Charles.
+
+“Can't the country afford a livery?”
+
+“Bother you all,” replied the Secretary, who was secretly pleased to be
+quizzed for his peculiarities--“tell us what this means. Whose 'lark' is
+it?”
+
+“No lark at all,” said Sterling. “Here is a problem for you and all
+of us to solve. This forlorn object is representative, and stands here
+to-night preaching us a serious sermon. He was deserted on the Club
+steps--left there, perhaps, as a piece of clever irony; he might be son
+to some of us. What's your name, my boy?”
+
+Ginx's Baby managed to say “Dunno!”
+
+“Ask him if he has any name?” said an Irish ex-member, with a grave
+face.
+
+Ginx's Baby to this question responded distinctly “No.”
+
+“No name,” said the humorist; “then the author of his being must be
+Wilkie Collins.”
+
+Everybody laughed at this indifferent pleasantry but our hero. His bosom
+began to heave ominously.
+
+“What's to be done with him?”
+
+“Send him to the workhouse.”
+
+“Send him to the d----” (there may be brutality among the gods and
+goddesses).
+
+“Give him to the porter.”
+
+“No thank you, sir,” said he, promptly.
+
+The gentlemen were turning away, when Sir Charles stopped them.
+
+“Look here!” he said, taking the boy's arm and baring it, “this boy can
+hardly be called a human being. See what a thin arm he has--how flaccid
+and colorless the flesh seems--what an old face!--and I can scarcely
+feel any pulse. Good heavens, get him some wine! A few hours will send
+him to the d---- sure enough.... What are we to do for him, Glibton? I
+say again, he is only part of a great problem. There must be hundreds
+of thousands growing up like this child; and what a generation to
+contemplate in all its relations and effects!”
+
+The gentlemen were dashed by his earnestness.
+
+“Oh, you're exaggerating,” said Glibton; “there can't be such widespread
+misery. Why, if there were, the people would be wrecking our houses.”
+
+“Ah!” replied the other, sadly, “will you wait to be convinced by that
+sort of thing before you believe in their misery? I assure you what
+I say is true. I could bring you a hundred clergymen to testify to it
+to-morrow morning.”
+
+“God forbid!” said Glibton. “Good-night.”
+
+The right honorable gentleman extinguished the subject in his own little
+brain with his big hat; but everywhere else the sparks are still aglow,
+and he, with all like him, may wake up suddenly, as frightened women in
+the night; to find themselves environed in the red glare of a popular
+conflagration. Well for them then if they are not in charge of the
+State machinery. What an hour will that be for hurrying to and fro
+with water-pipes and buckets, when proper forethought, diligence, and
+sacrifice would have made the building fireproof.
+
+
+
+
+III.--A thorough-paced Reformer--if not a Revolutionary.
+
+By the kindness and influence of Sir Charles Sterling, Ginx's Baby that
+night, and long after, found shelter in the Radical Club. He gave
+rise to a discussion in the smoking-room next evening that ought to be
+chronicled. Several members of the committee supported his benefactor
+in urging that the child should be adopted by the Club, as a pledge
+of their resolve to make the questions of which he seemed to be the
+embodied emblem subjects of legislative action. Others said that those
+questions being, in their view, social and not political, were
+not proper ones to give impulse to a party movement, and that
+the entertainment in the Club of this foundling would be a gross
+irregularity: they did not want samples of the material respecting
+which they were theorizing. To some of the latter Sir Charles had been
+insisting that, whether they kept the child or not, they could not
+stifle the questions excited by his condition.
+
+“You may delay, but you cannot dissipate them. We are filling up our
+sessions with party struggles, theoretic discussions, squabbles about
+foreign politics, debates on political machinery, while year by year the
+condition of the people is becoming more invidious and full of peril.
+Social and political reform ought to be linked; the people on whom
+you confer new political rights cannot enjoy them without health and
+well-being.”
+
+“But all our legislation is directed to that!” exclaimed Mr. Joshua
+Hale. “Reform, Free Trade, Free Corn--have these not enhanced the wealth
+of the people?”
+
+“Partially; yet there are classes unregenerated by their reviving
+influences. Free trade cannot insure work, nor can free corn provide
+food for every citizen.”
+
+“Nor any other legislation: let us be practical. I own there is much to
+be done. I have often stated my 'platform.' We must clip the enormous
+expenditure on soldiers and ships; reduce our overweening army of
+diplomatic spies and busybodies; abstain from meddling in everybody's
+quarrels; redeem from taxation the workman's necessaries--a free
+breakfast-table; peremptorily legislate against the custom of
+primogeniture; encourage the distribution and transfer of land; and,
+under the aegis of the ballot, protect from the tyranny of the landlord
+and employer their tenants and workmen.”
+
+“Very good, perhaps, all of them,” replied Sir Charles, “but some not at
+the moment possible, and all together are not exhaustive. Why do you
+not go to the bottom of social needs? You say nothing about Health
+legislation--are you indifferent to the sanitary condition of the
+people? You have not hinted at Education--Waste Lands--Emigration--”
+
+“Oh! I am opposed to that altogether.”
+
+“I forgot, you are a manufacturer; yet the last man of whom I should
+believe that selfishness had warped the judgment. You have done and
+endured more than any living statesman for the advantage of your
+fellow-citizens, so that I will not cast at you the aspersion of
+class-blindness. Still, I can scarcely think you have looked at this
+matter in the pure light of patriotism, and not within the narrow scope
+of trade interests.”
+
+“Quite unjust. Our best economists reprehend the policy of depleting our
+labor-market. Emigration is a timely remedy for adversity and to be very
+sparingly used. Labor is our richest vein--”
+
+“We may have too much of it. Take it as a fact that you now have more
+than you can use, and the unemployed part is starving; what will you do
+with them?”
+
+“That is a mere temporary and casual depression, to which all classes
+are liable.”
+
+“But,” said Sir Charles, “which none can so ill bear. Nay--what if it is
+permanent? You look to increased trade. Do you suppose we are to retain
+our manufacturing pre-eminence when every country, new and old, is
+competing with us? Can our trade, I ask you honestly to consider,
+increase at the rate of our population? Besides, for heaven's sake, look
+at the thing as a man. Grant that we have a hundred thousand men out of
+work, and hundreds of thousands more dependent on them--do you think
+it no small thing that the vast mass should be left for one, two, three
+years seething in sorrow and distress, while they are waiting for trade!
+By the time that comes they may have gone beyond the hope of rescue.
+Ah! if an elastic trade comes back to-morrow, you can never make those
+people what they were; ought we not to have forecast that they should
+not be what they are? But I contend that depression has become chronic,
+the poverty more wide-spread and persistent--how then shall we, who
+represent these classes among the rest, face the prospect?”
+
+Here interposed a gentleman high in office, a pure, keen, rigid
+economist of the highest intellectual and political rank.
+
+“My dear Sterling, pardon me if I say you are talking wildly. Perhaps
+you don't see that you are verging on rank communism. The working of
+economic laws can be as infallibly projected as a solar eclipse. You can
+secure no class from periodic calamity, and so regulate laws of supply
+and demand by guiding-wheels of legislation and taxation as to save
+every man from penury. You wish us to send away our bone and sinew
+because we have no present employment for it, and next year, or the
+year after, under a recovered trade you will be wringing your hands and
+cursing the folly that prompted you to do it.”
+
+“I should be too glad of the opportunity,” replied Sir Charles,
+sturdily, “but in truth there is an incubus of excessive numbers that
+no revival of trade will provide for, even if it is beyond our extremest
+hopes, and I for one will not be guilty of the inhumanity of keeping
+fellow-creatures in misery till we can find a use for them. You have
+forgotten that there are other economic laws besides those you glance
+at. Several millions of acres of unoccupied land belonging in a sense
+to the people of this country are to be kept untilled in defiance of the
+plainest policy that nature and God have indicated to us, namely, that
+labor should come in contact with land! For want of this conjunction our
+colonies are to be checked, while at home miserable millions are gaping
+for work and food.”
+
+“Oh! let them take themselves out. There are too many going already.
+They will follow natural laws, and where labor is required thither the
+stream will flow.”
+
+“Mere surface talk, my clever friend,” replied the other, “the men who
+are trooping out at their own expense are our most sober, careful, and
+energetic workmen. Else they could not go. They go because here so many
+indifferent ones are weighing down their shoulders. And where do most of
+them go to? Not to strengthen and develop our colonies, but the United
+States--a not always friendly people, and just now your free-trader's
+bugbear!”
+
+“Well, well,” said the minister, “drop that question. It's utterly
+impracticable at this time. We couldn't entertain the demand for
+State-help for an instant. I tell you again you're a Fourierite. You
+virtually propose to put your hand in the pocket of the upper classes to
+pay all sorts of expenses for the lower.”
+
+“You may call me a communist if you please,” replied Sir Charles
+Sterling; “I do not shrink from shadows. Perhaps I am in favor of
+something nearer to communism than our present form of society. One
+thing I am clear about: no state of society is healthy wherein every
+man does not own himself to be the guardian of the interests of the
+community as well as his own--does not see that he is bound, morally
+and as a matter of public policy, to add to his neighbor's well-being
+as well as his own. Does not society, by its protection and aggregation,
+make it possible for the rich to grow rich, the genius and the ambitious
+man to pursue their aims, the merchant to gather his vails, the noble to
+enjoy his lands? For these privileges there is more or less to pay, and
+it may be that the proper proportion which the capable classes should
+be called upon to contribute to the common weal has never been correctly
+adjusted. The first fruit of practical Christianity was community of
+goods, and but for human selfishness we might hope for an Eutopian
+era--when, while it should be ruled that if a man would not work neither
+should he eat, there should also be brought home to every man the care
+of his poorer, or weaker, or less competent brother. I never expect
+to see that. I do hope to see the men of greatest ability pay more
+generously for the privileges they enjoy. The best policy for them
+too. The better the condition of the general community the better for
+themselves. You cannot alarm me with epithets. But these views are
+happily not essential to the support of the Emigration policy.”
+
+“O dear! O dear! mad as a March hare!” cried the minister, as he stumped
+from the room.
+
+“Sterling is a good fellow,” said he to a colleague with whom he walked
+down Pall Mall, “and a thorough-paced Liberal. Besides, he carries great
+weight in the House. But he is an enthusiast, and, therefore, not always
+quite practical.”
+
+By PRACTICAL the minister meant, not that which might well and to
+advantage be done if good and able men would resolve to do it, spite of
+all hindrances, but that which, upon a cunning review of party balances
+and a judicious probing of public opinion, seemed to be a policy fit
+for his party to pursue. The first, original and masterly statesmen are
+needed to initiate and perform--the other is simply the art of a genius
+who knows how most adroitly to manipulate people and circumstances.
+
+
+
+
+IV.--Very Broad Views.
+
+Sir Charles Sterling, Mr. Joshua Hale, and others continued the
+conversation interrupted by the minister's exit. What was to be done
+with Ginx's Baby? In the great dissected map of society what niches were
+cut out for him and all like him to fill? Most of the politicians were
+for leaving that to himself to find out. The term “law of supply and
+demand” was freely bandied between them, as it is in many journals
+nowadays, with little object save to shut up avenues of discussion by a
+high-sounding phrase.
+
+Then of these “statesmen,” most clung, if not to self-interest, to
+personal crotchets. What is more darling to a man than the child of his
+intellect or fancy? How the poor poetaster hugs his tawdry verses as if
+they were the imperial ornaments of genius! Just in the same way does
+the politician love the policies himself hath devised, pressing them
+forward at all hazards, while he is blind to the utility of others.
+This is the basis of that aspect of selfishness which often mars in the
+approbation of a country a really honest statesmanship--an egotistic
+tenacity of one's own creature as the best, which yet is not the
+criminal selfishness of ambition. Still that egotism is not seldom
+disastrous to the people's interests. While these statesmen nursed their
+own bantlings and held them up to national notice, they were apt to
+avoid or too lightly regard the views of men as able as themselves. For
+instance, Joshua Hale--who is far above these remarks generally--had
+put forth a scheme for the solution of the St. Helena property
+question--very likely a good one, albeit revolutionary, and nothing
+would convince him that any other could succeed. He wished every man
+in St. Helena--a turbulent adjunct of the British Empire--to be a
+landowner, and I do think, neither desired nor hoped that any man in
+that island should be happy until he was one. Yet there were other men
+ready to offer simpler remedies, and to prove that if every man in St.
+Helena became a landowner it would become a very hell upon earth,
+and more unmanageable than it was before. If these gentlemen do not
+sacrifice their pet fancies for the sake of a settlement, what will
+become of St. Helena?
+
+Just now they were discussing Ginx's Baby. One thought that repeal of
+the Poor-Laws and a new system of relief would reach his case; another
+saw the root of the Baby's sorrow in Trades' Unions; a third propounded
+cooperative manufactures; a fourth suggested that a vast source of
+income lay untouched in the seas about the kingdom, which swarmed with
+porpoises, and showed how certain parts of these animals were available
+for food, others for leather, others for a delicious oil that would be
+sweeter and more pleasant than butter; a fifth desired a law to repress
+the tendency of Scotch peers to evict tenants and convert arable lands
+into sheep-walks and deer-forests; a sixth maintained that there were
+waste lands in the kingdom of capacity to support hungry millions. In
+fact earth, heaven, and seas were to be regenerated by Act of Parliament
+for the benefit of Ginx's Baby and the people of England. Sir Charles
+listened impatiently, and at last burst forth again.
+
+He said: “When you consider it, what we are all trying to do nowadays
+is--vulgarly--to improve the breed; but we go to work in a round-about
+way. At the outset we are met by the depreciated state of part of the
+existing generation; and one problem is to prevent these depreciated
+people from increasing, or to get them to increase healthily. No one
+seems to have gone directly to such a problem as that. The difficulties
+to be faced are tremendous. Your dirtiest British youngster is hedged
+round with principles of an inviolable liberty and rights of Habeas
+Corpus. You let his father and mother, or any one who will save you the
+trouble of looking after him, mould him in his years of tenderness as
+they please. If they happen to leave him a walking invalid, you take him
+into the poorhouse; if they bring him up a thief, you whip him and
+keep him at high cost at Millbank or Dartmoor; if his passions, never
+controlled, break out into murder and rape, you may hang him, unless his
+crime has been so atrocious as to attract the benevolent interest of
+the Home Secretary; if he commit suicide, you hold a coroner's inquest,
+which also costs money; and however he dies you give him a deal coffin
+and bury him. Yet I may prove to you that this being, whom you treat
+like a dog at a fair, never had a day's--no, nor an hour's--contact
+with goodness, purity, truth, or even human kindness; never had an
+opportunity of learning anything better. What right have you then to
+hunt him like a wild beast, and kick him and whip him, and fetter him
+and hang him by expensive complicated machinery, when you have done
+nothing to teach him any of the duties of a citizen?”
+
+“Stop, stop, Sir Charles! you are too virulent. There are endless means
+of improving your lad--charities without number----”
+
+“Yes, that will never reach him.”
+
+“Never mind, they may, you know. Industrial schools, reformatories,
+asylums, hospitals, Peabody-buildings, poor-laws. Everybody is working
+to improve the condition of the poor man. Sanitary administration goes
+to his house and makes it habitable.”
+
+“Very,” interjected Sir Charles Sterling, dryly.
+
+“Factory laws protect and educate factory children----”
+
+“They don't educate in one case out of ten. They don't feed them, clothe
+them, give them amusement and cultivation, do they?”
+
+“Certainly not--that would be ridiculous.”
+
+“Why, the question is whether that would be ridiculous!” replied Sir
+Charles. “I do not say it can be done, but in order to transform the
+next generation, what we should aim at is to provide substitutes for
+bad homes, evil training, unhealthy air, food and dulness, and terrible
+ignorance, in happier scenes, better teaching, proper conditions of
+physical life, sane amusements, and a higher cultivation. I dare say you
+would think me a lunatic if I proposed that Government should establish
+music-halls and gymnasia all over the country; but you, Mr. Fissure,
+voted for the Baths and Washhouses.”
+
+“Who's to pay for all this?” asked Mr. Fissure, pertinently.
+
+“The State, which means society, the whole of which is directly
+interested. I tell you a million of children are crying to us to set
+them free from the despotism of a crime and ignorance protected by law.”
+
+“That is striking; but you are treading on delicate ground. The liberty
+of the subject----”
+
+“Exactly what I expected you to say. These words can be used in defence
+of almost any injustice and tyranny. Such terms as 'political economy,'
+'communism,' 'socialism,' are bandied about in the same way. Yet
+propositions coming fairly within these terms are often mentioned with
+approval by the very persons who cast them at you. In a report of a
+recent Royal Commission I find that one of the Commissioners is quite
+as revolutionary as I am. He says it is right by law to secure that no
+child shall be cruelly treated or mentally neglected, over-worked or
+under-educated. Some people would call that communism, I fancy. But
+I think him to be correct as a political economist in that broad
+proposition. Why? Because a child's relation to the State is wider, more
+permanent, and more important than his relation to his parents. If he
+is in danger of being depreciated and damned for good citizenship, the
+State must rescue him.”
+
+“A paternal and maternal government together!” cries Lord Namby--“a
+government of nurses. You know I should like to stop the production of
+children among the lower orders. Your propositions are far in advance
+of my radicalism. The State must sometimes interfere between parent and
+child; for instance, in education or protection from cruelty. But, if
+I understand you, you actually contemplate a general refining and
+elevation of the working class by legislative means.”
+
+“Assuredly: I should aim to cultivate their morals, refine their tastes,
+manners, habits. I wish to lift from them that ever-depressing sense of
+hopelessness which keeps them in the dust.”
+
+“So do most men; but you must do that by personal and private
+influences, not by State enactments. How would you do it?”
+
+“How? I think I could draw up a programme. For instance: Expatriate a
+million to reduce the competition that keeps poor devils on half-rations
+or sends them to the poorhouse; Take all the sick, maimed, old, and
+incapable poor into workhouses managed by humane men and not by ghouls;
+Forbid such people to marry and propagate weakness; Legislate for
+compulsory improvements of workmen's dwellings, and, if needful, lend
+the money to execute it; Extend and enforce the health laws; Open free
+libraries and places of rational amusement with an imperial bounty
+through the country; Instead of spending thousands on dilettanti
+sycophants at one end of the metropolis, distribute your art and
+amusement to the kingdom at large; The rich have their museums,
+libraries, and clubs, provide them for the poor; Establish temporary
+homes for lying-in women; Multiply your baths and washhouses till there
+is no excuse for a dirty person; Educate; Provide day schools for every
+proper child, and industrial or reformatory schools for every improper
+one; Open advanced High Schools for the best pupils, and found
+Scholarships to the Universities; Erect other schools for technical
+training; Offer to teach trades and agriculture to all comers for
+nothing--you would soon neutralize your bugbear of trades-unionism;
+Teach morals, teach science, teach art, teach them to amuse themselves
+like men and not like brutes. In a land so wealthy the programme is not
+impracticable, though severe. As the end to be attained is the welfare
+of future generations, no good reason could be urged why they should not
+contribute towards the cost of it--a better debt to leave to posterity
+than the incubus of an irrational war.”
+
+Will any sane political practitioner wonder to be told that at the end
+of this harangue the smoking-room party broke up, and that some, as they
+laughed good-humoredly over Sterling's egregia, recalled the number of
+glasses of inspirited seltzer swallowed by the orator? He was so far
+in advance of the most radical reformer that there was no hope of
+overtaking him for an era or two: so they determined to fancy they had
+left him behind.
+
+
+
+
+V.--Party Tactics--and Political Obstructions to Social Reform.
+
+In the Club our hero revelled awhile under the protection of Sir Charles
+Sterling, and the petting of peers, Members of Parliament, and loungers
+who swarm therein. Certain gentlemen of Stock Exchange mannerism and
+dressiness gave the protege the go-by, and even sneered at those who
+noticed him with kindness. But then these are of the men with whom every
+question is checked by money, and is balanced on the pivot of profit and
+loss. I dare say some of them thought the worse of Judas only because
+he had made so small a gain out of his celebrated transaction. To foster
+Ginx's Baby in the Club, as a recognition of the important questions
+surrounding him, though these questions involved hundreds of thousands
+of other cases, was to them ridiculous. Of far greater consequence was
+it in their eyes to settle a dispute between two extravagant fools
+at Constantinople and Cairo, and quicken the sluggishness of Turkish
+consols or Egyptian 9 per cents. I do not cast stones at them; every man
+must look at a thing with his own eyes.
+
+But it was curious to note how the Baby's fortunes shifted in the Club.
+There were times--when he was a pet chucked under chin by the elder
+stagers, favored with a smile from a Cabinet Minister, and now and then
+blessed with a nod from Mr. Joshua Hale. Then, again, every one seemed
+to forget him, and he was for months left unnoticed to the chance
+kindness of the menials until some case similar to his own happening to
+evoke discussion in the press, there would be a general inquiry for
+him. The porter, Mr. Smirke, had succeeded, by means of a detective,
+in discovering the boy's name, but his parents were then half-way to
+Canada.
+
+The members of the Fogey Club opposite, hearing that so interesting a
+foundling was being cherished by their opponents, politely asked leave
+to examine him, and he occasionally visited them. They treated him
+kindly and discussed his condition with earnestness. The leaders of the
+party debated whether he might not with advantage be taken out of their
+opponents' hands. Some thought that a judicious use of him might win
+popularity; but others objected that it would be perilous for them to
+mix themselves up with so doleful an interest. In the result the Fogies
+tipped young Ginx, but did not commit themselves for or against him.
+Thus a long time elapsed, and our hero had grown old enough to be a
+page. He had received food, clothing, and goodwill, but no one had
+thought of giving him an education. Sometimes he became obstreperous. He
+played tricks with the Club cutlery, and diverted its silver to improper
+uses; he laid traps for upsetting aged and infirm legislators; he tried
+the coolness of the youngest and best-natured Members of Parliament
+by popping up in strange places and exhibiting unseemly attitudes. At
+length, by unanimous consent, he was decreed to be a nuisance, and a few
+days would have revoked his license at the Club.
+
+No sooner did the Fogies get wind of this than they manoeuvred to get
+Ginx's Baby under their own management. They instructed their “organs,”
+ as they called them, to pipe to popular feeling on the disgraceful
+apathy of the Radicals in regard to the foundling. They had him waylaid
+and treated to confectionery by their emissaries; and once or twice
+succeeded in abducting him and sending him down to the country with
+their party's candidates, for exhibition at elections.
+
+The Radicals resented this conduct extremely. Ginx's Baby was brought
+back to the Club and restored to favor. The Government papers were
+instructed to detail how much he was petted and talked about by the
+party; to declare how needless was the popular excitement on his behalf;
+and to prove that he must, without any special legislation, be benefited
+by the extraordinary organic changes then being made in the constitution
+of the country.
+
+Sir Charles Sterling resumed his interest in the boy. He had been
+gallantly aiding his party in other questions. There was the Timbuctoo
+question. A miserable desert chief had shut up a wandering Englishman,
+not possessed of wit enough to keep his head out of danger. There was
+a general impression that English honor was at stake, and the previous
+Fogey Government had ordered an expedition to cross the desert and
+punish the sheikh. You would never believe what it cost if you had
+not seen the bill. Ten millions sterling was as good as buried in the
+desert, when one-tenth of it would have saved a hundred thousand people
+from starvation at home, and one-hundredth part of it would have taken
+the fetters off the hapless prisoner's feet.
+
+There was the St. Helena question always brooding over Parliament.
+St. Helena was a constituent part of the British Empire. Every patriot
+agreed that the Empire without it would be incomplete; and was so far
+right that its subtraction would have left the Empire by so much less.
+Most of its inhabitants were aboriginal--a mercurial race, full of fire,
+quick-witted, and gifted with the exuberant eloquence of savages, but
+deficient in dignity and self-control. Before any one else had been
+given them by Providence to fight, they slaughtered and ravaged one
+another. Our intrusive British ancestors stepped upon the island, and,
+being strong men, mowed down the islanders like wheat, and appropriated
+the lands their swords had cleared. Still the aborigines held out
+in corners, and defied the conquerors. The latter ground them down,
+confiscated the property of their half-dozen chiefs, and distributed it
+among themselves. By way of showing their imperial imperiousness, they
+built over some ruins left by their devastations a great church, in
+which they ordered all the islanders to worship. This was at first
+abomination to the islanders, who fought like devils whenever they
+could, and ended by accepting the religion of their foes. But the
+conquerors, afterwards choosing to change their own faith, resolved
+that the islanders should do so too. Forthwith they confiscated the big
+church and burying-ground, and, distributing part of the land and spoils
+among their most prominent scamps, erected a new edifice of quite a
+different character, in which the natives swore they could neither see
+nor hear, and their own clerics warned them they would certainly be
+damned. To make the complications more intricate, these clerics owed
+allegiance to an ancient woman in a distant country, who had all the
+meddlesomeness and petty jealousy of her sex, and was, besides, much
+attached to some clever wooers of hers, wily sinners who covered their
+aims under the semblance of ultra-extreme passion for her. The prominent
+scamps died, to be succeeded by their children, or other of the hated
+conquerors, from generation to generation. The islanders went on
+increasing and protesting. T hey starved upon the lands, and shot the
+landlords when a few gave them the chance, for most lived away in their
+own country, and left the property to be administered by agents. The
+Home Government had again and again been obliged to assist these people
+with soldiers, to provide an armed police, to shoot down mobs, to catch
+a ringleader here or there and send him to Fernando Po, or to deprive
+whole villages of ordinary civil rights. Then the yam crop failed, and
+nearly half the people left the island and crossed the seas, where they
+continued to hate and to plot against those whose misfortune it had been
+to get a legacy of the island from their fathers. It would be wearisome
+to recount the absurdities on both sides: the stupidity or criminal
+absence of tact from time to time shown by the Home Government--the
+resolve never to be quiet exhibited by the natives, under the prompting
+of their clerics. Upon
+
+ “--that common stage of novelty--”
+
+there were ever springing up fresh difficulties. Secret clubs were
+formed for murder and reprisal. A body called the “Yellows” had bound
+themselves by private oaths to keep up the memory of the religious
+victories of their predecessors, and to worry the clerical party in
+every possible way. Their pleasure was to go about insanely blowing
+rams'-horns, carrying flags and bearing oranges in their hands. The
+islanders hated oranges, and at every opportunity cracked the skulls of
+the orange-bearers with brutal weapons peculiar to the island. These,
+in return, cracked native skulls. The whole island was in a state of
+perpetual commotion. Still, its general condition improved, its
+farms grew prosperous, and a joint-stock company had built a mill
+for converting cocoanut fibre into horse-cloths, which yielded large
+profits. The memory of past events might well have been buried; but the
+clerics, in the interest of the old woman, fanned the embers, and the
+infamous bidding for popularity of parties at home served to keep alive
+passions that would naturally have died out. Besides, latterly folly had
+been too organized on both sides to suffer oblivion. Everybody was tired
+of the squabbles of St. Helena. At length there was a general movement
+in the interests of peace, and to pacify the islanders Parliament was
+asked to pull down the wings of the old church edifice, remove some of
+the graves, and cut off a large piece of the graveyard. Some were
+in favor also of dividing all the farms in the country among the
+aborigines, but the difficulty was to know how at the same time to
+satisfy the present occupiers. These schemes were topics of high debate,
+upon them the fortunes of Government rose and fell, and while they were
+agitated Ginx's Baby could have no chance of a parliamentary hearing.
+Many other matters of singular indifference had eaten up the legislative
+time; but at last the increasing number of wretched infants throughout
+the country began to alarm the people, and Sir Charles Sterling thought
+the time had come to move on behalf of Ginx's Baby and his fellows.
+
+
+
+
+VI.--Amateur Debating in a High Legislative Body.
+
+While Sir Charles was trying to get the Government to “give him a night”
+ to debate the Ginx's Baby case, and while associations were being formed
+in the metropolis for disposing of him by expatriation or otherwise, a
+busy peer without notice to anybody, suddenly brought the subject before
+the House of Lords. As he had never seen the Baby, and knew nothing or
+very little about him, I need scarcely report the elaborate speech in
+which he asked for aristocratic sympathy on his behalf. He proposed to
+send him to the Antipodes at the expense of the nation.
+
+The Minister for the Accidental Accompaniments of the Empire was a
+clever man--keen, genial, subtle, two-edged, a gentlemanly and not
+thorough disciple of Machiavel; able to lead parliamentary forlorn
+hopes and plant flags on breaches, or to cover retreats with brilliant
+skirmishing; deft, but never deep; much moved too by the opinions of his
+permanent staff. These on the night in question had plied him well
+with hackneyed objections; but to see him get up and relieve himself of
+them--the air of originality, the really original air he threw around
+them; the absurd light which he turned full on the weaknesses of his
+noble friend's propositions, was as beautiful to an indifferent critic
+as it as saddening to the man who had at heart the sorrows of his kind.
+If that minister lived long he would be forced to adopt and advocate
+in as pretty a manner the policy he was dissecting. Lord Munnibagge, a
+great authority in economic matters, said that a weaker case had never
+been presented to Parliament. To send away Ginx's Baby to a colony
+at imperial expense was at once to rob the pockets of the rich and to
+decrease our labor-power. There was no necessity for it. Ginx's Baby
+could not starve in a country like this. He (Lord Munnibagge) had
+never heard of a case of a baby starving. There was no such wide-spread
+distress as was represented by the noble lord. There were occasional
+periods of stagnation in trade, and no doubt in these periods the poorer
+classes would suffer; but trade was elastic; and even if it were granted
+that the present was a period when employment had failed, the time was
+not far off when trade would recuperate. (Cheers.) Ginx's Baby and all
+other babies would not then wish to go away. People were always making
+exaggerated statements about the condition of the poor. He (Lord
+Munnibagge) did not credit them. He believed the country, though
+temporarily depressed by financial collapses, to be in a most healthy
+state. (Hear, hear.) It was absurd to say otherwise, when it was shown
+by the Board of Trade returns that we were growing richer every day.
+(Cheers.) Of course Ginx's Baby must be growing richer with the rest.
+Was not that a complete answer to the noble lord's plaintive outcries?
+(Cheers and laughter.) That the population of a country was a great
+fraction of its wealth was an elementary principle of political economy.
+He thought, from the high rates of wages, that there were not too
+many but too few laborers in the country. He should oppose the motion.
+(Cheers.)
+
+Two or three noble lords repeated similar platitudes, guarding
+themselves as carefully from any reference to facts, or to the question
+whether high rates of wages might not be the concomitants simply of high
+prices of necessaries, or to the yet wider question whether colonial
+development might not have something to do with progress at home. The
+noble lord who had rushed unprepared into the arena was unequal to the
+forces marshalled against him, and withdrew his motion. Thus the great
+debate collapsed. The Lords were relieved that an awkward question had
+so easily been shifted. The newspapers on the ministerial side declared
+that this debate had proved the futility of the Ginx's Baby Expatriation
+question. “So able an authority as Lord Munnibagge had established that
+there was no necessity for the interference of Government in the case
+of Ginx's Baby or any other babies or persons. The lucid and decisive
+statement of the Secretary for the Accidental Accompaniments of the
+Empire had shown how impossible it was for the Imperial Government to
+take part in a great scheme of Expatriation; how impolitic to endeavor
+to affect the ordinary laws of free movement to the Colonies.” Surely
+after this the Expatriation people hid their lights under a bushel! The
+Government refused to find a night for Sir Charles Sterling, and after
+the Lords' debate he did not see his way to force a motion in the Lower
+House. Meanwhile Ginx's Baby once more decided a turn in his own
+fate. Tired of the slow life of the Club, and shivering amid the chill
+indifference of his patrons, he borrowed without leave some clothes
+from an inmate's room, with a few silver forks and spoons, and decamped.
+Whether the baronet and the Club were bashful of public ridicule or glad
+to be rid of the charge, I know not, but no attempt was made to recover
+him.
+
+
+
+
+PART V. WHAT GINX'S BABY DID WITH HIMSELF.
+
+ A full-formed Horse will, in any market, bring from twenty
+ to as high as two hundred Friedrichs d'or: such is his worth
+ to the world. A full-formed Man is not only worth nothing
+ to the world, but the world could afford him a round sum
+ would he simply engage to go and hang himself.--SARTOR
+ RESARTUS.
+
+
+
+
+The Last Chapter.
+
+Our hero was nearly fifteen years old when he left the Club to plunge
+into the world. He was not long in converting his spoils into money, and
+a very short time in spending it. Then he had to pit his wits against
+starvation, and some of his throws were desperate. Wherever he went
+the world seemed terribly full. If he answered an advertisement for an
+errand-boy, there were a score kicking their heels at the rendezvous
+before him. Did he try to learn a useful trade, thousands of adepts
+were not only ready to underbid him, but to knock him on the head for an
+interloper. Even the thieves, to whom he gravitated, were jealous of
+his accession, because there were too many competitors already in
+their department. Through his career of penury, of honest and dishonest
+callings, of 'scapes and captures, imprisonments and other punishments,
+a year's reading of Metropolitan Police Reports would furnish the exact
+counterpart.
+
+*****
+
+I don't know how many years after his flight from Pall Mall, one dim
+midnight, I, returning from Richmond, lounged over Vauxhall Bridge,
+listening to the low lapping of the current beneath the arches--looking
+above to the stars and along the dark polished surface that reflected a
+thousand lights in its undulations,--feeling the awfulness of the dense,
+suppressed life that was wrapt within the gloom and calm of the hour. I
+suddenly saw a shadow, a human shadow, that at the sound of my footstep
+quickly crossed my dreamy vision--quickly, noiselessly came and
+went before my eyes until it stood up high and outlined against the
+strangely-mingled haze. It looked like the ghost of a slight-formed man,
+hatless and coatless, and for a moment I saw at its upper extremity the
+dull flash as of a human face in the gloom, before the shadow leaped out
+far into the night. Splash! When my startled eyes looked down upon the
+glancing, waving ebony, I thought I could trace a white coruscation of
+foam spreading out into the darkness, instantly to dissipate and be lost
+for ever. I did not then know what form it was that swilled down below
+the glistening current. Had I known that it was Ginx's Baby I should
+perhaps have thought “Society, which, in the sacred names of Law and
+Charity, forbad the father to throw his child over Vauxhall Bridge, at a
+time when he was alike unconscious of life and death, has at last itself
+driven him over the parapet into the greedy waters”----
+
+Philosophers, Philanthropists, Politicians, Papists and Protestants,
+Poor-Law Ministers and Parish Officers--while you have been theorizing
+and discussing, debating, wrangling, legislating and administering--Good
+God! gentlemen, between you all, where has Ginx's Baby gone to?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ginx's Baby, by Edward Jenkins
+
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+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Ginx's Baby, by Edward Jenkins
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ginx's Baby, by Edward Jenkins
+
+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: Ginx's Baby
+
+Author: Edward Jenkins
+
+Release Date: November 26, 2009 [EBook #581]
+Last Updated: March 15, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GINX'S BABY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Keller, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ GINX'S BABY
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ His Birth and other Misfortunes
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ A SATIRE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Edward Jenkins
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE.
+ </h2>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ CRITIC.&mdash;I never read a more improbable story in my life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUTHOR.&mdash;Notwithstanding, it may be true.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PART1"> <b>PART I. WHAT GINX DID WITH HIM.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> I.&mdash;Ab initio. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> II.&mdash;Home, sweet Home! </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> III.&mdash;Work and Ideas. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> IV.&mdash;Digressive, and may be skipped
+ without mutilating the History. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> V.&mdash;Reasons and Resolves. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> VI.&mdash;The Antagonism of Law and Necessity.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> VII.&mdash;Malthus and Man. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> VIII.&mdash;The Baby's First Translation. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PART2"> <b>PART II. WHAT CHARITY AND THE CHURCHES DID
+ WITH HIM.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> I.&mdash;The Milk of Human Kindness, Mother's
+ Milk, and the Milk of the Word. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> II.&mdash;The Protestant Detectoral
+ Association. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> III.&mdash;The Sacrament of Baptism. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> IV.&mdash;Law on Behalf of Gospel. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> V.&mdash;Magistrate's Law. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> VI&mdash;Popery and Protestantism in the
+ Queen's Bench. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> VII.&mdash;A Protestor, but not a Protestant.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> VIII.&mdash;&ldquo;See how these Christians love one
+ another.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> IX.&mdash;Good Samaritans, and Good-Samaritan
+ Twopences. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> X.&mdash;The Force&mdash;and a Specimen of its
+ Weakness. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> XI.&mdash;The Unity of the Spirit and the Bond
+ of Peace. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> XII.&mdash;No Funds&mdash;no Faith, no Works.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> XIII.&mdash;In transitu. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PART3"> <b>PART III. WHAT THE PARISH DID WITH HIM.</b>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> I.&mdash;Parochial Knots&mdash;to be untied
+ without prejudice. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> II.&mdash;A Board of Guardians. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> III.&mdash;&ldquo;The World is my Parish.&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> IV.&mdash;Without prejudice to any one but the
+ Guardians. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> V.&mdash;An Ungodly Jungle. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> VI.&mdash;Parochial Benevolence&mdash;and
+ another translation. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PART4"> <b>PART IV. WHAT THE CLUBS AND POLITICIANS DID
+ WITH HIM.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> I.&mdash;Moved on. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> II.&mdash;Club Ideas. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> III.&mdash;A thorough-paced Reformer&mdash;if
+ not a Revolutionary. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> IV.&mdash;Very Broad Views. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> V.&mdash;Party Tactics&mdash;and Political
+ Obstructions to Social Reform. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> VI.&mdash;Amateur Debating in a High
+ Legislative Body. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PART5"> <b>PART V. WHAT GINX'S BABY DID WITH HIMSELF.</b>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> The Last Chapter. </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PART1" id="link2H_PART1">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PART I. WHAT GINX DID WITH HIM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I.&mdash;Ab initio.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The name of the father of Ginx's Baby was Ginx. By a not unexceptional
+ coincidence, its mother was Mrs. Ginx. The gender of Ginx's Baby was
+ masculine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the day when our hero was born, Mr. and Mrs. Ginx were living at Number
+ Five, Rosemary Street, in the City of Westminster. The being then and
+ there brought into the world was not the only human entity to which the
+ title of &ldquo;Ginx's Baby&rdquo; was or had been appropriate. Ginx had been married
+ to Betsy Hicks at St. John's, Westminster, on the twenty-fifth day of
+ October, 18&mdash;, as appears from the &ldquo;marriage lines&rdquo; retained by Betsy
+ Ginx, and carefully collated by me with the original register. Our hero
+ was their thirteenth child. Patient inquiry has enabled me to verify the
+ following history of their propagations. On July the twenty-fifth, the
+ year after their marriage, Mrs. Ginx was safely delivered of a girl. No
+ announcement of this appeared in the newspapers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the tenth of April following, the whole neighborhood, including Great
+ Smith Street, Marsham Street, Great and Little Peter Streets, Regent
+ Street, Horseferry Road, and Strutton Ground, was convulsed by the report
+ that a woman named Ginx had given birth to &ldquo;a triplet,&rdquo; consisting of two
+ girls and a boy. The news penetrated to Dean's Yard and the ancient school
+ of Westminster. The Dean, who accepted nothing on trust, sent to verify
+ the report, his messenger bearing a bundle of baby-clothes from the Dean's
+ wife, who thought that the mother could scarcely have provided for so
+ large an addition to her family. The schoolboys, on their way to the
+ play-ground at Vincent Square, slyly diverged to have a look at the
+ curiosity, paying sixpence a head to Mrs. Ginx's friend and crony, Mrs.
+ Spittal, who pocketed the money, and said nothing about it to the sick
+ woman. THIS birth was announced in all the newspapers throughout the
+ kingdom, with the further news that Her Majesty the Queen had been
+ graciously pleased to forward to Mrs. Ginx the sum of three pounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What could have possessed the woman I can't say, but about a twelvemonth
+ after, Mrs. Ginx, with the assistance of two doctors hastily fetched from
+ the hospital by her frightened husband, nearly perished in a fresh effort
+ of maternity. This time two sons and two daughters fell to the lot of the
+ happy pair. Her Majesty sent four pounds. But whatever peace there was at
+ home, broils disturbed the street. The neighbors, who had sent for the
+ police on the occasion, were angered by a notoriety which was becoming
+ uncomfortable to them, and began to testify their feelings in various
+ rough ways. Ginx removed his family to Rosemary Street, where, up to a
+ year before the time when Ginx's Baby was born, his wife had continued to
+ add to her offspring until the tale reached one dozen. It was then that
+ Ginx affectionately but firmly begged that his wife would consider her
+ family ways, since, in all conscience, he had fairly earned the
+ blessedness of the man who hath his quiver full of them; and frankly gave
+ her notice that, as his utmost efforts could scarcely maintain their
+ existing family, if she ventured to present him with any more, either
+ single, or twins, or triplets, or otherwise, he would most assuredly drown
+ him, or her, or them in the water-butt, and take the consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II.&mdash;Home, sweet Home!
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The day on which Ginx uttered his awful threat was that next to the one
+ wherein number twelve had drawn his first breath. His wife lay on the bed
+ which, at the outset of wedded life, they had purchased secondhand in
+ Strutton Ground for the sum of nine shillings and sixpence. SECOND-HAND!
+ It had passed through, at least, as many hands as there were afterwards
+ babies born upon it. Twelfth or thirteenth hand, a vagabond, botched
+ bedstead, type of all the furniture in Ginx's rooms, and in numberless
+ houses through the vast city. Its dimensions were 4 feet 6 inches by 6
+ feet. When Ginx, who was a stout navvy, and Mrs. Ginx, who was, you may
+ conceive, a matronly woman, were in it, there was little vacant space
+ about them. Yet, as they were forced to find resting-places for all the
+ children, it not seldom happened that at least one infant was perilously
+ wedged between the parental bodies; and latterly they had been so pressed
+ for room in the household that two younglings were nestled at the foot of
+ the bed. Without foot-board or pillows, the lodgment of these infants was
+ precarious, since any fatuous movement of Ginx's legs was likely to expel
+ them head-first. However they were safe, for they were sure to fall on one
+ or other of their brothers or sisters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall be as particular as a valuer, and describe what I have seen. The
+ family sleeping-room measured 13 feet 6 inches by 14 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opening out of this, and again on the landing of the third-floor, was
+ their kitchen and sitting-room; it was not quite so large as the other.
+ This room contained a press, an old chest of drawers, a wooden box once
+ used for navvy's tools, three chairs, a stool, and some cooking utensils.
+ When, therefore, one little Ginx had curled himself up under a blanket on
+ the box, and three more had slipped beneath a tattered piece of carpet
+ under the table, there still remained five little bodies to be bedded. For
+ them an old straw mattress, limp enough to be rolled up and thrust under
+ the bed, was at night extended on the floor. With this, and a patchwork
+ quilt, the five were left to pack themselves together as best they could.
+ So that, if Ginx, in some vision of the night, happened to be angered, and
+ struck out his legs in navvy fashion, it sometimes came to pass that a
+ couple of children tumbled upon the mass of infantile humanity below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not to be described are the dinginess of the walls, the smokiness of the
+ ceilings, the grimy windows, the heavy, ever-murky atmosphere of these
+ rooms. They were 8 feet 6 inches in height, and any curious statist can
+ calculate the number of cubic feet of air which they afforded to each
+ person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other side of the street was 14 feet distant. Behind, the backs of
+ similar tenements came up black and cowering over the little yard of
+ Number Five. As rare, in the well thus formed, was the circulation of air
+ as that of coin in the pockets of the inhabitants. I have seen the yard;
+ let me warn you, if you are fastidious, not to enter it. Such of the filth
+ of the house as could not, at night, be thrown out of the front windows,
+ was there collected, and seldom, if ever, removed. What became of it? What
+ becomes of countless such accretions in like places? Are a large
+ proportion of these filthy atoms absorbed by human creatures living and
+ dying, instead of being carried away by scavengers and inspectors? The
+ forty-five big and little lodgers in the house were provided with a single
+ office in the corner of the yard. It had once been capped by a cistern,
+ long since rotted away&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ The street was at one time the prey of the gas company; at another, of the
+ drainage contractors. They seemed to delight in turning up the fetid soil,
+ cutting deep trenches through various strata of filth, and piling up for
+ days or weeks matter that reeked with vegetable and animal decay. One
+ needs not affirm that Rosemary Street was not so called from its
+ fragrance. If the Ginxes and their neighbors preserved any semblance of
+ health in this place, the most popular guardian on the board must own it a
+ miracle. They, poor people, knew nothing of &ldquo;sanitary reform,&rdquo; &ldquo;sanitary
+ precautions,&rdquo; &ldquo;zymotics,&rdquo; &ldquo;endemics,&rdquo; &ldquo;epidemics,&rdquo; &ldquo;deodorizers,&rdquo; or
+ &ldquo;disinfectants.&rdquo; They regarded disease with the apathy of creatures who
+ felt it to be inseparable from humanity, and with the fatalism of despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gin was their cardinal prescription, not for cure, but for oblivion: &ldquo;Sold
+ everywhere.&rdquo; A score of palaces flourished within call of each other in
+ that dismal district&mdash;garish, rich-looking dens, drawing to the
+ support of their vulgar glory the means, the lives, the eternal destinies
+ of the wrecked masses about them. Veritable wreckers they who construct
+ these haunts, viler than the wretches who place false beacons and plunder
+ bodies on the beach. Bring down the real owners of these places, and show
+ them their deadly work! Some of them leading Philanthropists, eloquent at
+ Missionary meetings and Bible Societies, paying tribute to the Lord out of
+ the pockets of dying drunkards, fighting glorious battles for slaves, and
+ manfully upholding popular rights. My rich publican&mdash;forgive the pun&mdash;before
+ you pay tithes of mint and cummin, much more before you claim to be a
+ disciple of a certain Nazarene, take a lesson from one who restored
+ fourfold the money he had wrung from honest toil, or reflect on the case
+ of the man to whom it was said, &ldquo;Go sell all thou hast, and give to the
+ poor.&rdquo; The lips from which that counsel dropped offered some unpleasant
+ alternatives, leaving out one, however, which nowadays may yet reach you&mdash;the
+ contempt of your kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III.&mdash;Work and Ideas.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I return again to Ginx's menace to his wife, who was suckling her infant
+ at the time on the bed. For her he had an animal affection that preserved
+ her from unkindness, even in his cups. His hand had never unmanned itself
+ by striking her, and rarely indeed did it injure any one else. He wrestled
+ not against flesh and blood, or powers, or principalities, or wicked
+ spirits in high places. He struggled with clods and stones, and primeval
+ chaos. His hands were horny with the fight, and his nature had perhaps
+ caught some of the dull ruggedness of the things wherewith he battled.
+ Hard and with a will had he worked through the years of wedded life, and,
+ to speak him fair, he had acted honestly, within the limits of his
+ knowledge and means, for the good of his family. How narrow were those
+ limits! Every week he threw into the lap of Mrs. Ginx the eighteen or
+ twenty shillings which his strength and temperance enabled him
+ continuously to earn, less sixpence reserved for the public-house, whither
+ he retreated on Sundays after the family dinner. A dozen children
+ overrunning the space in his rooms was then a strain beyond the endurance
+ of Ginx. Nor had he the heart to try the common plan, and turn his
+ children out of doors on the chance of their being picked up in a raid of
+ Sunday School teachers. So he turned out himself to talk with the humbler
+ spirits of the &ldquo;Dragon,&rdquo; or listen sleepily while alehouse demagogues
+ prescribed remedies for State abuses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our friend was nearly as guiltless of knowledge as if Eve had never rifled
+ the tree whereon it grew. Vacant of policies were his thoughts; innocent
+ he of ideas of state-craft. He knew there was a Queen; he had seen her.
+ Lords and Commons were to him vague deities possessing strange powers.
+ Indeed, he had been present when some of his better-informed companions
+ had recognized with cheers certain gentlemen,&mdash;of whom Ginx's
+ estimate was expressed by a reference to his test of superiority to
+ himself in that which he felt to be greatest within him&mdash;&ldquo;I could
+ lick 'em with my little finger&rdquo;&mdash;as the Chancellor of the Exchequer
+ and the Prime Minister. Little recked he of their uses or abuses. The
+ functions of Government were to him Asian mysteries. He only felt that it
+ ought to have a strong arm, like the brawny member wherewith he preserved
+ order in his domestic kingdom, and therefore generally associated
+ Government with the Police. In his view these were to clear away
+ evil-doers and leave every one else alone. The higher objects of
+ Government were, if at all, outlined in the shadowiest form in his
+ imagination. Government imposed taxes&mdash;that he was obliged to know.
+ Government maintained the parks; for that he thanked it. Government made
+ laws, but what they were, or with what aim or effects made, he knew not,
+ save only that by them something was done to raise or depress the prices
+ of bread, tea, sugar, and other necessaries. Why they should do so he
+ never conceived&mdash;I am not sure that he cared. Legislation sometimes
+ pinched him, but darkness so hid from him the persons and objects of the
+ legislators that he could not criticise the theories which those powerful
+ beings were subjecting to experiment at his cost. I must, at any risk, say
+ something about this in a separate chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV.&mdash;Digressive, and may be skipped without mutilating the History.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I stop here to address any of the following characters, should he
+ perchance read these memoirs:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ You, Mr. Statesman&mdash;if there be such;
+ Mr. Pseudo-Statesman, Placeman, Party Leader, Wirepuller;
+ Mr. Amateur Statesman, Dilettante Lord, Civil Servant;
+ Mr. Clubman, Litterateur, Newspaper Scribe;
+ Mr. People's Candidate, Demagogue, Fenian Spouter;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ or whoever you may be, professing to know aught or do anything in matters
+ of policy, consider, what I am sure you have never fairly weighed, the
+ condition of a man whose clearest notion of Government is derived from the
+ Police! Imagine one who had never seen a polyp trying to construct an
+ ideal of the animal, from a single tentacle swinging out from the tangle
+ of weed in which the rest was wrapped! How then any more can you fancy
+ that a man to whose sight and knowledge the only part of government
+ practically exposed is the strong process of police, shall form a proper
+ conception of the functions, reasons, operations, and relations of
+ Government; or even build up an ideal of anything but a haughty,
+ unreasonable, antagonistic, tax-imposing FORCE! And how can you rule such
+ a being except as you rule a dog, by that which alone he understands&mdash;the
+ dog-whip of the constable! Given in a country a majority of creatures like
+ these, and surely despotism is its properest complement. But when they
+ exist, as they exist in England to-day, in hundreds of thousands, in town
+ and country, think what a complication they introduce into your theoretic
+ free system of government. Acts of Parliament passed by a &ldquo;freely-elected&rdquo;
+ House of Commons, and an hereditary House of Lords under the threats of
+ freely-electing citizens, however pure in intention and correct in
+ principle, will not seem to him to be the resultants of every wish in the
+ community so much as dictations by superior strength. To these the
+ obedience he will render will not be the loving assent of his heart, but a
+ begrudged concession to circumstance. Your awe-invested legislature is not
+ viewed as his friend and brother-helper, but his tyrant. Therefore the
+ most natural bent of his workman-statesmanship&mdash;a rough, bungling
+ affair&mdash;will be to tame you&mdash;you who ought to be his Counsellor
+ and Friend. When he finds that your legislative action exerts upon him a
+ repressive and restraining force he will curse you as its author, because
+ he sees not the springs you are working. Should he even be a little more
+ advanced in knowledge than our friend Ginx, and learn that he helps to
+ elect the Parliament to make laws on behalf of himself and his
+ fellow-citizens, he will scarce trust the assembly which is supposed to
+ represent him. Will he, like a good citizen and a politic, accept with
+ dignity and self-control the decision of a majority against his
+ prejudices: or will he not regard the whole Wittenagemote with suspicion,
+ contempt, or even hatred? See him rush madly to Trafalgar Square meetings,
+ Hyde Park demonstrations, perhaps to Lord George Gordon Riots, as if there
+ were no less perilous means of publishing his opinions! There wily men may
+ lead his unconscious intellect, and stir his passions, and direct his
+ forces against his own&mdash;and his children's good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did it ever occur to you, or any of you, how many voters cannot read, and
+ how many more, though they can read, are unable to apprehend reasons of
+ statesmanship?&mdash;that even newspapers cannot inform them, since they
+ have not the elementary knowledge needed for the comprehension of those
+ things which are discussed in them; nay, that for want of understanding
+ the same they may terribly distort political aims and consequences?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Might it not be worth while for you, gentlemen&mdash;may it not be your
+ duty to devise ways and means for conveying such elementary instruction by
+ good street-preachers on politics and economy, or even political
+ bible-women or colporteurs, and so to make clear to the understanding of
+ every voter what are the reasons and aims of every act of Legislation,
+ Home Administration, and Foreign Policy? If you do not find out some way
+ to do this he may turn round upon you&mdash;I hope he may&mdash;and insist
+ on annually-elected parliaments, and thus oblige ambitious state-mongers,
+ in the rivalry of place, to come to him and declare more often their
+ wishes and objects. Other attractions may be found in that solution: such
+ as the untying of some knots of electoral difficulty, and removing
+ incitements to corruption. Ten thousand pounds for one year's power were a
+ high price even to a contractor. Think then whether at any cost some
+ general political education must not be attempted, since there is a spirit
+ breathing on the waters, and how it shall convulse them is no indifferent
+ matter to you or to me. Everywhere around us are unhewn rocks stirred with
+ a strange motion. Leave these chaotic fragments of humanity to be hewn
+ into rough shape by coarse artists seeking only a petty profit, unhandy,
+ immeasurably impudent; or dress them by your teaching&mdash;teaching which
+ is the highest, noblest, purest, most efficient function of Government,
+ which ought to be the most lofty ambition of statesmanship&mdash;to be
+ civic corner-stones polished after the similitude of a palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V.&mdash;Reasons and Resolves.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Ginx has been waiting through three chapters to explain his truculence
+ upon the birth of his twelfth child. Much explanation is not necessary.
+ When he looked round his nest and saw the many open mouths about him, he
+ might well be appalled to have another added to them. His children were
+ not chameleons, yet they were already forced to be content with a
+ proportion of air for their food. And even the air was bad. They were
+ pallid and pinched. How they were clad will ever be a mystery, save to the
+ poor woman who strung the limp rags together and Him who watched the noble
+ patience and sacrifice of a daily heroism. Of her own unsatisfied
+ cravings, and the dense motherly horrors that sometimes brooded over her
+ while she nursed these infants, let me refrain from speaking, since if as
+ vividly depicted as they were real, you, Madam, could not endure to read
+ of them. Her poor, unintelligent mind clung tenaciously to the
+ controverted aphorism, &ldquo;Where God sends mouths he sends food to fill
+ them.&rdquo; Believing that there was a God, and that He must be kind, she
+ trusted in this as a truth, and perhaps an all-seeing eye reading some
+ quaint characters on her simple heart, viewed them not too nearly, but had
+ regard to their general import, for, as she expressed it, &ldquo;Thank God! they
+ had always been able to get along.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the rush and tumult of the world it is likely that the summum bonum of
+ nine-tenths of mankind is embraced in that purely negative happiness&mdash;to
+ get along. Not to perish: to open eyes, however wearily, on a new morning:
+ to satisfy with something, no matter what, a craving appetite: to close
+ eyes at night under some shadow or shelter: or, it may be, in certain
+ ranks to walk another day free from bankruptcy or arrest: Thank Heaven,
+ they are just able to get along!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Convinced that another infant straw would break his back, Ginx calmly
+ proposed to disconcert physical, moral, and legal relations by drowning
+ the straw Mrs. Ginx clinging to Number Twelve listened aghast. If a mother
+ can forget her sucking child she was not that mother. The stream of her
+ affections, though divided into twelve rills, would not have been
+ exhausted in twenty-four, and her soul, forecasting its sorrow, yearned
+ after that nonentity Number Thirteen. She pictured to herself the hapless
+ strangeling borne away from her bosom by those strong arms, and&mdash;in
+ fact she sobbed so that Ginx grew ashamed, and sought to comfort her by
+ the suggestion that she could not have any more. But she knew better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI.&mdash;The Antagonism of Law and Necessity.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In eighteen months, notwithstanding resolves, menaces, and prophecies,
+ GINX'S BABY was born. The mother hid the impending event long, from the
+ father. When he came to know it, he fixed his determination by much
+ thought and a little extra drinking. He argued thus: &ldquo;He wouldn't go on
+ the parish. He couldn't keep another youngster to save his life. He had
+ never taken charity and never would. There was nothink to do with it but
+ drown it!&rdquo; Female friends of Mrs. Ginx bruited his intentions about the
+ neighborhood, so that her &ldquo;time&rdquo; was watched for with interest. At last it
+ came. One afternoon Ginx, lounging home, saw signs of excitement around
+ his door in Rosemary Street. A knot of women and children awaited his
+ coming. Passing through them he soon learned what had happened. Poor Mrs.
+ Ginx! Without staying to think or argue, he took up the little stranger
+ and bore it from the room&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, O, O, Ginx! Ginx!!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She would have risen, but a strong power called weakness pulled her back.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ The man meanwhile had reached the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here he comes! There's the baby! He's going to do it, sure enough!&rdquo;
+ shrieked the women. The children stood agape. He stopped to consider. It
+ is very well to talk about drowning your baby, but to do it you need two
+ things, water and opportunity. Vauxhall Bridge was the nearest way to the
+ former, and towards it Ginx turned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Murder!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take the child from him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crowd grew larger, and impeded the man's progress. Some of his
+ fellow-workmen stood by regarding the fun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Leave us aloan, naabors,&rdquo; shouted Ginx; &ldquo;this is my own baby, and I'll do
+ wot I likes with it. I kent keep it; an' if I've got anythin' I kent keep,
+ it's best to get rid of it, ain't it? This child's goin' over Wauxhall
+ Bridge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the women clung to his arms and coattails.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hallo! What's all this about?&rdquo; said a sharp, strong man, well-dressed,
+ and in good condition, coming up to the crowd; &ldquo;another foundling!
+ Confound the place, the very stones produce babies. Where was it found?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHORUS (recognizing a deputy-relieving officer). It warn't found at all;
+ it's Ginx's baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OFFICER. Ginx's baby? Who's Ginx?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. I am.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OFFICER. Well?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. Well!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHORUS. He's goin' to drown it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OFFICER. Going to drown it? Nonsense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. I am.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OFFICER. But, bless my heart, that's murder!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. No 'tain't. I've twelve already at home. Starvashon's sure to kill
+ this 'un. Best save it the trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHORUS. Take it away, Mr. Smug, he'll kill it if you don't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OFFICER. Stuff and nonsense! Quite contrary to law! Why, man, you're bound
+ to support your child. You can't throw it off in that way;&mdash;nor on
+ the parish neither. Give me your name. I must get a magistrate's order.
+ The act of parliament is as clear as daylight. I had a man up under it
+ last week. &ldquo;Whosoever shall unlawfully abandon or expose any child, being
+ under the age of two years whereby the life of such child shall be
+ endangered or the health of such child shall have been or shall be likely
+ to be permanently injured (drowning comes under that I think) shall be
+ GUILTY OF a MISDEMEANOR and being convicted thereof shall be liable at the
+ discretion of the court to be KEPT IN PENAL SERVITUDE for the term of
+ three years or to be imprisoned for any term not exceeding two years with
+ or without hard labor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Smug, the officer, rolled out this section in a sonorous monotone,
+ without stops, like a clerk of the court. It was his pride to know by
+ heart all the acts relating to his department, and to bring them down upon
+ any obstinate head that he wished to crush. Ginx's head, however, was
+ impervious to an act of parliament. In his then temper, the Commination
+ Service or St. Ernulphus's curse would have been feathers to him. The only
+ feeling aroused in his mind by the words of the legislature was one of
+ resentment. To him they seemed unjust, because they were hard and fast,
+ and made no allowance for circumstances. So he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. D&mdash;&mdash; the act of parliament! What's the use of saying I
+ shan't abandon the child, when I can't keep it alive?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OFFICER. But you're bound by law to keep it alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. Bound to keep it alive? How am I to do it? There's the rest on 'em
+ there (nodding towards his house) little better nor alive now. If that's
+ an act of Parleyment, why don't the act of Parleyment provide for 'em? You
+ know what wages is, and I can't get more than is going.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHORUS. Yes. Why don't Parleyment provide for 'em? You take the child, Mr.
+ Smug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OFFICER (regardless of grammar). ME take the child! The parish has enough
+ to do to take care of foundlings and children whose parents can't or don't
+ work. You don't suppose we will look after the children of those who can?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. Jest so. You'll bring up bastards and beggars' pups, but you won't
+ help an honest man to keep his head above water. This child's head is
+ goin' under water anyhow!&mdash;and he prepared to bolt, amid fresh
+ screams from the Chorus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII.&mdash;Malthus and Man.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Two gentlemen, who had been observing the excitement, here came forward.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ FIRST GENTLEMAN. This is our problem again, Mr. Philosopher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. PHILOSOPHER (to Ginx). You don't know what to do with your infant, my
+ friend, and you think the State ought to provide for it? I understand you
+ to say this is your thirteenth child. How came you to have so many?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This question, though put with profound and even melancholy gravity,
+ disconcerted Ginx, Officer, and Chorus, who united in a hearty outburst of
+ laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. Haw, Haw, Haw! How came I to have so many? Why my old woman's a good
+ un and&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, after searching his mind for some clever way of putting a comical
+ rejoinder, Ginx laughed boisterously. There are two aspects of a question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PHILOSOPHER. I am serious, my friend. Did it never occur to you that you
+ had no right to bring children into the world unless you could feed and
+ clothe and educate them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHORUS. Laws a' mercy!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. I'd like to know how I could help it, naabor. I'm a married man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PHILOSOPHER. Well, I will go further and say you ought not to have married
+ without a fair prospect of being able to provide for any contingent
+ increase of family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHORUS. Laws a' mercy!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PHILOSOPHER (waxing warm). What right had you to marry a poor woman, and
+ then both of you, with as little forethought as two&mdash;a&mdash;dogs, or
+ other brutes&mdash;to produce between you such a multitudinous progeny&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. Civil words, naabor; don't call my family hard names.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PHILOSOPHER. Then let me say, such a monstrous number of children as
+ thirteen? You knew, as you said just now, that wages were wages and did
+ not vary much. And yet you have gone on subdividing your resources by the
+ increase of what must become a degenerate offspring. (To the Chorus) All
+ you workpeople are doing it. Is it not time to think about these things
+ and stop the indiscriminate production of human beings, whose lives you
+ cannot properly maintain? Ought you not to act more like reflective
+ creatures and less like brutes? As if breeding were the whole object of
+ life! How much better for you, my friend, if you had never married at all,
+ than to have had the worry of a wife and children all these years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The philosopher had gone too far. There were some angry murmurs among the
+ women and Ginx's face grew dark. He was thinking of &ldquo;all those years&rdquo; and
+ the poor creature that from morning to night and Sunday to Sunday, in calm
+ and storm, had clung to his rough affections: and the bright eyes, and the
+ winding arms so often trellised over his tremendous form, and the coy
+ tricks and laughter that had cheered so many tired hours. He may have been
+ much of a brute, but he felt that, after all, that sort of thing was
+ denied to dogs and pigs. Before he could translate his thoughts into words
+ or acts a shrewd-looking, curly-haired stonemason, who stood by with his
+ tin on his arm, cut into the discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STONEMASON. Your doctrines won't go down here, Mr. Philosopher. I've 'eard
+ of them before. I'd just like to ask you what a man's to do and what a
+ woman's to do if they don't marry: and if they do, how can you honestly
+ hinder them from having any children?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stonemason had rudely struck out the cardinal issues of the question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PHILOSOPHER. Well, to take the last point first, there are physical and
+ ethical questions involved in it, which it is hard to discuss before such
+ an audience as this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STONEMASON. But you must discuss 'em, if you wish us to change our ways,
+ and stop breeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PHILOSOPHER. Very well: perhaps you are right. But, again, I should first
+ have to establish a basis for my arguments, by showing that the conception
+ of marriage entertained by you all is a low one. It is not simply a
+ breeding matter. The beauty and value of the relation lies in its
+ educational effects&mdash;the cultivation of mutual sentiments and
+ refinements of great importance to a community.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STONEMASON. Ay! Very beautiful and refining to Mr. and Mrs. Philosopher,
+ but I'd like to know where the country would have been if our fathers had
+ held to that view of matrimony? Why, ain't it in natur' for all beings to
+ pair, and have young? an' you say we ain't to do it! I think a statesman
+ ought to make something out of what's nateral to human beings, and not try
+ to change their naturs. Besides, ain't there good of another kind to be
+ got out of the relation of parents and children? Did you ever have a child
+ yourself?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX (contemplating the Philosopher's physique). HE have a youngster! He
+ couldn't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHORUS. Ha! Ha! Ha!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STONEMASON. I don't believe in yer humbuggin' notions. They lead to lust
+ and crime;&mdash;I'm told they do in France. If you yourself haven't the
+ human natur in you to know it, I'll tell you, and we can all tell you that
+ as a rule if the healthy desires of natur ain't satisfied in a honest way,
+ they will be in another. You can't stop eating by passin' an act of
+ Parleyment to stop it. And as for yer eddication and cultivation, that
+ makes no difference. We know something here about yer eddicated men;&mdash;more
+ than they think. Who is it we meet about the streets late at night, goin'
+ to the gay houses? Some of 'em stand near as high as you, but that don't
+ alter their natur. They have their passions like other men; and eddication
+ don't keep 'em down. Well, if that's the case, how can you ask people of
+ our sort to put on the curb, or make us do it? Are we to live more like
+ beasts than we are now, or do what's worse than murder? I don't see no
+ other way. Among us I tell you, sir, three-fourths of our eddication, is
+ eddication of the heart. We have to learn to be human, kind, self-denyin',
+ and I think this makes better men, as a rule, than head-larnin'; tho' I
+ don't despise that, neither. But you don't suppose head-citizens would
+ fight for their country like men with wives and children behind 'em; why
+ they don't even at home work for daily food like a man with wife and
+ babies to provide for!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stonemason was above his class&mdash;one of those shrewd men that &ldquo;the
+ people called Methodists&rdquo; get hold of, and use among the lower orders,
+ under the name of &ldquo;local preachers;&rdquo; men who learn to think and speak
+ better than their fellows. The Philosopher testified some admiration by
+ listening attentively, and was about to reply, but the Chorus was tired,
+ and the women would not hear him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHORUS. Best get out o' this. We don't want any o' yer filhosophy. Go and
+ get childer' of yer own, &amp;c., &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Philosopher and his friend departed, carrying with them unsolved the
+ problem they had brought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII.&mdash;The Baby's First Translation.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The stonemason had been the hero of the moment; now attention centred on
+ our own hero. Ginx hurried off again, but as the crowd opened before him,
+ he was met, and his mad career stayed, by a slight figure, feminine,
+ draped in black to the feet, wearing a curiously framed white-winged hood
+ above her pale face, and a large cross suspended from her girdle. He could
+ not run her down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NUN. Stop, MAN! Are you mad? Give me the child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He placed the little bundle in her arms. She uncovered the queer, ruby
+ face, and kissed it. Ginx had not looked at the face before, but after
+ seeing it, and the act of this woman, he could not have touched a hair of
+ his child's head. His purpose died from that moment, though his perplexity
+ was still alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NUN. Let me have it. I will take it to the Sisters' Home, and it shall
+ live there. Your wife may come and nurse it. We will take charge of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. And you won't send it back again? You'll take it for good and all?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NUN. O, yes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. Good. Give us yer hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little white hand came out from under her burthen, and was at once
+ half-crushed in Ginx's elephantine grasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GINX. Done. Thank'ee, missus. Come, mates, I'll stand a drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes after, the woman of the cross, who had been up to comfort
+ the poor mother, fluttered with her white wings down Rosemary Street,
+ carrying in her arms Ginx's Baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PART2" id="link2H_PART2">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PART II. WHAT CHARITY AND THE CHURCHES DID WITH HIM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I.&mdash;The Milk of Human Kindness, Mother's Milk, and the Milk of the
+ Word.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The early days of his residence at the Home of the Sisters of Misery, in
+ Winkle Street, was the Eden of Ginx's Baby's existence. Themselves
+ innocent of a mother's experiences, the sisters were free to give play to
+ their affections in a novel direction, and to assume a sort of spiritual
+ maternity that was lucky for the changeling. He was nestled in kind
+ serge-covered arms: kisses rained upon him from chaste lips. A slight
+ scandal thrilled the convent upon the discovery of his sex, which had of
+ course been a pure matter of conjecture to Sister Pudicitia when she
+ rescued him; but enthusiasm can overcome anything. The awkward questions
+ foreshadowed in the discovery were left to be considered when their
+ growing importance should demand upon them the judgment of the archbishop.
+ Visions of an unusual sanctity to be fostered in the pure regions of the
+ convent, and to be sent on a mission into the world to attest the power of
+ their spiritual discipline, began to haunt the brains of the sequestered
+ nuns. Might not this infant be an embryo saint, destined for a great work
+ in the heretical wilderness out of which he had come? How little healthy
+ food the brains must have had wherein these insane dreams were excited by
+ our innocent baby! Hardly did the sacred spinsters forecast what was in
+ store for them when he should be teething.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Ginx's Baby was in a religious atmosphere, and that is always
+ surcharged with electricity. His lot must have been above that of any
+ other human being if he could long have remained in such a climate
+ unvisited by thunder. The mother had been permitted to attend at the Home
+ with the same regularity as the milkman, to discharge her maternal duties.
+ Then with the rise of the visionary projects just mentioned the gravest
+ doubts began to agitate the fertile and casuistic mind of the Lady
+ Superior. The holier her ideal St. Ginx of the future, the more to be
+ deplored was any heretical taint in the present. Holy mother! Was it not
+ perhaps eminently perilous to his spiritual purity that an unbeliever like
+ Mrs. Ginx should bring unconsecrated milk into the convent to be
+ administered to this suckling of the Church! In her uneasiness she
+ appealed to Father Certificatus, the conventual confessor. He gave his
+ opinion in the following letter:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;DEAR SISTER SUSPICIOSA,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The very grave question you have put to me has given me much anxiety. It
+ could not but do so since it occupied, I knew, so fully your own holy
+ reflections. I pondered it during the night while I repeated one hundred
+ Aves on my knees, and I think the Blessed Virgin has vouchsafed her
+ assistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understood you to say you thought that the physical health of the
+ infant, so singularly and miraculously thrown upon your care, required the
+ offices of his heretic mother, and yet that you felt how inconsistent it
+ was with the noble future we contemplate for him, that he should receive
+ unorthodox lacteal sustentation. In this you are but following the usage
+ of the Church in all ages, for She has ever enjoined the advantage of
+ infusing Her doctrines into Her children with the mother's milk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three courses only appear to me to be open to us. First, we may try to
+ work upon the mother's feelings, and on behalf of her child induce her to
+ avail herself of the inestimable privileges of the Church in which he is
+ fostered. Secondly, should she repel us&mdash;and these lower class
+ heretics are even brutally refractory&mdash;we might at least allure her
+ to allow us to make with holy water the sign of the Cross upon the natural
+ reservoirs of infant nourishment each time before she approaches the
+ infant. This, besides overcoming the immediate difficulty and securing for
+ the child a supply of sanctified food, might open the way for the entrance
+ into her own bosom of the milk of the word. Thirdly, should she reject
+ these proposals, I see nothing for it but to forbid her to have access to
+ her infant, and, commending him to the care of the Holy Mother, to feed
+ him with pap or other suitable nourishment, previously consecrated by me
+ in its crude state, and prepared by the most holy hands of your community.
+ Thus we may hope to shield the young soul in its present freshness from
+ contact with carnal elements.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Your loving Father in, &amp;c.,
+ &ldquo;CERTIFICATUS.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ On receiving this letter the Superioress conferred not with flesh and
+ blood, but sent for Mrs. Ginx. That worthy woman was not enchanted with
+ her child's position. I have hinted that her faith was simple, but in
+ proportion to its simplicity it was strongly-rooted in her nature. 'Tis
+ not infrequent to find it so. Lengthy creeds and confessions of faith are
+ apt to extend the strength and fervor of belief over too wide a surface.
+ In the close frame of some single article will be concentrated the whole
+ energy of the soul. The first formula, &ldquo;Repent and believe in the Lord
+ Jesus Christ,&rdquo; was maintained with a heat that became less intense, though
+ more distributed, in the insertion of an Athanasian creed. Mrs. Ginx's
+ creed was succinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. GINX'S PRIMARY CREED.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I believe in God, giver of bread, meat, money, and health.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This she maintained, with indifferent ritual and devotional observances.
+ But there was to Mrs. Ginx's faith a corollary or secondary creed, only
+ needed to meet special emergencies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. GINX'S SECONDARY CREED.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 1. I believe in the Church of England.
+ 2. I believe in Heaven and Hell.
+ 3. (A negative article) I hate Popery, priests, and the Devil.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When her husband made his fatal gift to the nun, this third article of his
+ wife's belief, or unbelief, stirred up and waxed aggressive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Said the Lady Superior, &ldquo;My good woman, your child thrives under the care
+ of Holy Mother Church.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes'm, he thrives well,&rdquo; replies Mrs. Ginx, repeating no more of Sister
+ Suspiciosa's sentence, &ldquo;an' I've 'ad more milk than ever for the darlin'
+ this time, thank God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the Holy Virgin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dunno about her,&rdquo; cries Mrs. Ginx emphatically, perhaps not seeing
+ congruity between a virgin and the subject of thankfulness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the Holy Virgin,&rdquo; repeated the nun, &ldquo;who interests herself in all
+ mothers. She has thus blessed you that your child may be made strong for
+ the work of the Church. Do you not see a miracle is worked within you to
+ prove Her goodness? This, no doubt, is an evidence to you of Her wish to
+ bless you and take you for Her own. I beseech you listen to Her voice, and
+ come and enter Her fold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you mean the Virgin Mary, mum, I ain't a idolater, beggin' yer
+ parding,&rdquo; says Mrs. Ginx; &ldquo;an' tho' I wouldn't for the world offend them
+ as has been so kind to my child, an' saved it from that deer little
+ creetur bein' thrown over Wauxhall Bridge&mdash;an' Ginx ought to be
+ ashamed of hisself, so he ought&mdash;I ain't Papish, mum, and I ain't
+ dispoged, with twelve on 'em there at home all Protestant to the back
+ bone, to turn Papish now, an' so I 'ope an' pray, mum,&rdquo; says Mrs. Ginx,
+ roaring and crying, &ldquo;you ain't agoin' to make Papish of my flesh an'
+ blood. O dear! O dear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lady Superior shut her ears; she had raised a familiar spirit and
+ could not lay it. She temporized.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know your husband has given the child to us. It will be called the
+ infant Ambrosius.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear, dear!&rdquo; sighed Mrs. Ginx, &ldquo;what a name!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We wish him to be kept from any worldly taint, and by-and-by his
+ saintliness may gain you forgiveness in spite of your heretical
+ perversity. I cannot permit you to give him unconsecrated milk, and as we
+ wish to treat you kindly, the holy Father Certificatus has allowed me to
+ make an arrangement with you, to which you can have no objection&mdash;I
+ mean, that you should let me make the sign of the cross upon your breasts
+ morning and evening before you suckle your infant. You will permit me to
+ do that, won't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conceive of Mrs. Ginx's reply, clothed in choice Westminster English: it
+ asserted her readiness to cut off her right hand, her feet, to be hanged,
+ drowned, burned, torn to pieces, in fact to withstand all the torments
+ ascribed by vulgar tradition to Roman Catholic ingenuity, and to see her
+ baby &ldquo;a dead corpse&rdquo; into the bargain, before she would submit her
+ Protestant bosom to such an indignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, mum!&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;I couldn't sleep with that on my breast;&rdquo; and cried
+ hysterically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This lower class heretic WAS &ldquo;brutally refractory.&rdquo; So thought the
+ Superioress, and so gave Mrs. Ginx notice to come no more. She went home
+ rather jubilant&mdash;she was a martyr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II.&mdash;The Protestant Detectoral Association.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Ginx's baby was now fed on consecrated pap. But his mother was not a woman
+ to be silent under her wrongs. From her husband she hid them, because the
+ subject was forbidden. She poured out her complaint to Mrs. Spittal and
+ other Protestant matrons. Thus it came to pass that one day, in Ginx's
+ absence, the good woman was surprised by a visit from a &ldquo;gentleman.&rdquo; He
+ was small, sharp, rapid, dressed in black. He opened his business at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Ginx? Ah! I am the agent of the Protestant Detectoral Association.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Ginx wiped her best chair and set it for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By great good fortune the secretary received only half an hour ago
+ intelligence of the shocking instance of Papal aggression of which you
+ have been the victim.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To hear her case put so grandly was honey to Mrs. Ginx.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well now,&rdquo; continued the little man, &ldquo;we are ready to render you every
+ assistance to save your child from the claws of the Great Dragon. I wish
+ to know the exact circumstances&mdash;let me see&mdash;(opening a large
+ pocket book) I have this memorandum: the child was carried off from his
+ mother's bedside in broad daylight by a nun accompanied by two priests and
+ a large body of Irish: is that a correct version?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Law, no, sir, it warn't quite like that,&rdquo; said Mrs. Ginx. &ldquo;We've 'ad so
+ many on 'em that Ginx was for drownin' the thirteenth&rdquo;&mdash;&mdash;The
+ little man opened his eyes&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An' he went and gave it away, sir,&rdquo; said she crying, &ldquo;to a nun, sir&mdash;ah!
+ ah! ah!&mdash;they won't let me see the darlin' now, sir&mdash;ah! ah! ah!
+ because I won't let Missis Spishyosir mark me with the cross, sir, an' me
+ with as fine a breast o' milk as ever was for 'im, sir&mdash;ah! ah! ah!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; said the little man, &ldquo;that's different from what I understood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was quite honest, but who does not know how disappointing it is to find
+ a wrong you wish to redress is not so bad as you had hoped?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, it looked bad enough, and might be made worse. It was the very
+ case for the Protestant Detectoral Association.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would Mr. Ginx not join in an effort to recover his child?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir; I should think not: he went an' gave it away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know; but he is a Protestant?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't think he be much o' anything, sir. I know he hate priests like
+ pison, but he don't care about these things as I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! I see.&rdquo; Writes in his memorandum book&mdash;husband indifferent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But don't you think he would help you to get the child back again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir. I wouldn't speak of it to him for the world. He'd knock any one
+ down if they was to mention the child to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little man mentally determined not to see Ginx.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well; would you like to have your child back?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see, I couldn't bring it 'ere, sir. Ginx won't 'ave it; but I'd like
+ to see it took away from them nunnerys.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! very well then. We can perhaps manage it for you. You would be
+ content to hand it over to some Protestant Home, where it would be taken
+ care of and you could see it when you liked?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O yes, sir,&rdquo; cries Mrs. Ginx, brightening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we'll have an affidavit and apply for a Habeas Corpus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was impossible not to be satisfied with such words as these, whatever
+ they meant and Mrs. Ginx was cheered, while the little man went on his
+ way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III.&mdash;The Sacrament of Baptism.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mother, or &ldquo;Mrs.&rdquo; Suspiciosa, fed Ginx's Baby with holy pap. It seemed
+ proper now that he should be christened and formally received into the
+ Church. No small stir was made by this ceremony, for which all the
+ resources of the convent were called into action. The day selected was
+ that sacred to St. Ambrosius. The chapel was decorated with flowers. Mass
+ was celebrated, candles flamed upon the altar surrounding a figure of the
+ Infant Jesus, incense was burning around the baby, sisters and novices
+ knelt in serried rows of virginity
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;like doves
+ Sunning their milky bosoms on the thatch.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Mother Suspiciosa carried the infant, clothed in a pure white robe, with a
+ red cross embroidered on its front. In the absence of the natural parent a
+ wax figure of St. Ambrosius did duty for him, and another wax figure stood
+ godfather: but I dare not enter into details of matters that may be looked
+ at as awfully profane, or awfully solemn, by different spectators. These
+ things are a mystery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have no hesitation about describing the impious behavior of little Ginx.
+ Whatever swaddled infant could do in the way of opposition, with hands,
+ and legs, and voice, was done by that embryo saint. The incense made him
+ cough and sputter; the lights and singing raised the very devil within
+ him. His cries drowned the prayers. He frightened his conductress by the
+ redness of his face. He ruined the red cross with ejected matter. You
+ would have taken him for an infant demoniac. Mother Suspiciosa, though
+ annoyed, was encouraged. She looked upon this as an evident testimony to
+ little Ginx's value. The devil and St. Michael were contending for his
+ body. At length he was baptized, and carried out. Credat Judaeus. He
+ instantly sank into a deep sleep. It was a miracle: Satan had yielded to
+ the sign of the cross!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV.&mdash;Law on Behalf of Gospel.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the moment of Sister Suspiciosa's triumph, the enemy was laying his
+ train against her. The little man made his report to the secretary of the
+ Protestant Detectoral Association. This gentleman was well-born and
+ well-bred; moved to work in this &ldquo;cause&rdquo; by an honest hatred of
+ superstition, priestcraft, and lies; now giving all his energies to the
+ ambitious design of pulling down the strongholds of Satan. In any other
+ matter he could act coolly, and with deliberation; in this he was an
+ enthusiast. He had a keen Roman nose. He could scent a priest anywhere in
+ the United Kingdom. He could smell Jesuitry in the Queen's drawing-room, a
+ cabinet council or convocation, though he had never been at either. His
+ eye was beyond a falcon's; he saw things that were invisible. It
+ penetrated through all disguises. He knew a secret emissary of the Pope by
+ the cock of his hat, or the color of his stockings. At least, he thought
+ so, and thousands of persons acted on his estimate of himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This case,&rdquo; said he to the little man, when he had concluded his report,
+ &ldquo;though not in its first incidents so grave as we were led to expect, is,
+ in another point of view, very serious. Here is a man, as you have
+ expressed it, 'indifferent' to his child's life&mdash;animal and
+ spiritual. The mother, with a true Protestant heart, and a fine breast of
+ milk, is longing to nurture her child, and to deliver it from the toils of
+ the Papacy. But the husband, what's his name?.... Ginx&mdash;Ginx? a very
+ bad name for a case, by the way&mdash;GINX'S CASE!&mdash;this Ginx has
+ given up his child to the Sisters of Misery. How are we to get it away
+ again, without his cooperation?.... Well, we must try.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The solicitor of the Association was forthwith summoned. When the matter
+ had been laid before him, he expressed doubts, offered and withdrew
+ courses of action, and ended by suggesting that he should take the opinion
+ of counsel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Stigma, I suppose?&rdquo; said he to the secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes, Sir Adolphus Stigma is one of our principal supporters, and his
+ son's heart is thoroughly with us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Messrs. Roundhead, Roundhead and Lollard, drew up a case to be submitted
+ to Mr. Stigma. I will only transcribe the latter paragraphs:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Ginx being indifferent, and Mrs. Ginx being ready to assist in
+ regaining the custody of her child, to be conveyed to a Protestant Home,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;YOU ARE REQUESTED TO ADVISE:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;1. Whether a summons should be taken out before a magistrate against the
+ Lady Superior of the convent, for enticing away or detaining the infant,
+ under the 56th sect. of 24 and 25 Vict., c. 100 Or,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;2. Whether the proper remedy is by a writ of Habeas Corpus? and, if so,
+ whether it is necessary that the father should be joined in the
+ proceedings or his leave obtained to prosecute them? Or, failing these,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;3. Whether counsel is of opinion that this is a case within Talfourd's
+ Act, and an application might not be made to the Lord Chancellor, or the
+ Master of the Rolls, on the mother's behalf for the custody of her child?
+ And,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;4. To advise generally on behalf of the infant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Adolphus Stigma took ten days to consider. Meanwhile, the infant
+ Ambrosius continued to thrive on conventual pap. Then Mr. Stigma wrote his
+ opinion. It was a model for a barrister. You took the advice at your own
+ peril&mdash;not his. Therefore I transcribe it.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;OPINION.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have given to this case my most careful attention; and it is one of
+ great difficulty. Having regard to the questions put to me, I think&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;1. Section 56 of the Act of 24 and 25 Vict., c. 100, appears at first
+ sight to be directed against the stealing and abduction of children for
+ marriage, or other improper purposes. It provides that 'Whosoever shall
+ UNLAWFULLY, either by force or fraud, lead or take away, or decoy, or
+ entice away, or detain any child, &amp;c., with intent to deprive ANY
+ parent, &amp;c., of the possession of such child'&mdash;shall be guilty of
+ felony. It is perfectly clear, that in the case before me, the infant was
+ not, 'by force or fraud, led or taken away, or decoyed, or enticed away.'
+ The statute, however, uses the word 'detain;' and this, it appears to me,
+ has much the same force and intention as the previous words. It is to be
+ noted, however, that it is separated from them by the disjunctive 'or;'
+ and, therefore, it might be argued with some plausibility that any act of
+ forceful or fraudulent detention, after notice, by persons who have
+ originally acquired a child's custody in a lawful way, came within the
+ section. The point is new, and of great importance; and if the Protestant
+ Detectoral Association feel disposed to try it, they would do so under
+ favorable circumstances in the present case. Should they decide to do so,
+ a written demand should be served upon the authorities of the convent, by
+ the mother, or some one acting on her behalf, to give up the infant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;2. The second question is also involved in difficulty. Were the father to
+ be joined in the proceedings, the writ of Habeas Corpus would be the
+ correct remedy. But his probable refusal necessitates the inquiry whether
+ the mother can alone apply for the writ. The general rule of law is, that
+ the father is entitled to the custody and disposition of his children. In
+ Cartlidge and Cartlidge, 31, L. J., P. M. &amp; D. 85, it was held that
+ this rule would not be generally departed from by the Divorce Court; but
+ in Barnes v. Barnes, L. R. I, P. &amp; D. 463, the court made an order,
+ giving the custody of two infant children to the mother, respondent in a
+ suit for a dissolution of marriage, on the ground that the mother's health
+ was suffering from being deprived of their society, and that they were
+ living with a stranger, and not with the father. These cases were,
+ however, in the Divorce Court, and do not apply. But, as there seems to be
+ much ground in the peculiar circumstances here, for arguing that the
+ mother should have the custody of the child, or, at least, that it should
+ not be left to that of persons of a different religion from both parents,
+ an application might be made to the Queen's Bench to try the question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;3. Should the common law remedies fail, resort may perhaps be had to the
+ powers in Chancery under Talfourd's Act, but on this point I should like
+ to confer with an equity counsel before giving a decided opinion. It has
+ been decided under this Act that the court has power to give the custody
+ of children under seven to the mother. (Shillito v. Collett, 8, W. R.
+ 683-696.) As this infant is but six weeks old it comes within that case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;4. I have no general advice to give on behalf of the infant.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;ADOLPHUS STIGMA,
+ &ldquo;9, Plumtree Court.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ If none of the courses suggested by Mr. Stigma was very decided, Messrs.
+ Roundhead, Roundhead and Lollard were not sorry to have three strings to
+ their bow. The Detectoral Association were good clients; most of their
+ funds went into their lawyers' pockets. It was part of their policy to be
+ litigious. Thereby the world was kept alive to the existence of Papacy
+ within its bosom. Who shall say the Association were wrong? Some healthy
+ daylight was occasionally let in upon the mysteries of Jesuitism, and
+ there are people who think that worth while at the risk of a chance
+ injustice. Though the Devil should not get his due, few would give him any
+ sympathy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The solicitor at once instructed Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q.C., to apply with
+ Mr. Stigma to a magistrate for a summons. Mr. Bailey, Q.C., was not chosen
+ for his partialities. In religious matters he was a perfect Gallio; but he
+ was like St. Paul in one particular, he could be all things to all men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V.&mdash;Magistrate's Law.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The personnel of the magistrate to whom Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q. C., (with
+ him Mr. Adolphus Stigma), applied in the case of re an infant, exparte
+ Ginx, is not material to this history. He was like his fellow
+ stipendiaries&mdash;mild as to humor, vigilant in his duties, opinionated
+ in his views, resenting the troublesome intrusion into his court of a
+ barrister, apt to treat him with about one-eighth of the courtesy extended
+ to the humblest junior by the Queen's Bench, and curiously unequal both
+ with himself and his brother magistrates in adjusting punishment. It will
+ be most convenient to insert the report of the Daily Electric Meteor:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;WESTMINSTER.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q.C., (with whom was Mr. Adolphus Stigma), applied for
+ a summons against Mary Dens, commonly called Sister Suspiciosa, of the
+ convent of the Sisters of Misery, in Winkle Street, for abducting and
+ detaining a male child of John Ginx and Mary his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. D'ACERBITY. On whose behalf do you apply?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The learned counsel stated that he was instructed by the Protestant
+ Detectoral Association to apply on behalf of the mother. The case was also
+ watched by the solicitors of the Society for Preventing the Suppression of
+ Women and Children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. D'ACERBITY. Does the father join in the application?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. BAILEY. No, sir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. D'ACERBITY. Why? He ought to be joined if living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. BAILEY. Perhaps you will allow me, sir, to state the case. The
+ circumstances are peculiar. The fact is&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. D'ACERBITY. I cannot understand why the father should not be
+ represented if the child has been abducted. Where was it taken from?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Bailey proceeded to state that the child had been taken by a nun from
+ No. 5, Rosemary Street, without the mother's consent, and was now
+ imprisoned in the convent. The father appeared to be indifferent, or to
+ have given a sort of general acquiescence. This was Mrs. Ginx's thirteenth
+ child, around whom gathered the concentrated affections
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. D'ACERBITY (interrupting the learned gentleman). We have no time for
+ sentiment here, Mr. Bailey. If the father consented, can you call it
+ abduction? It looks like reduction. (Laughter.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Bailey called attention to the consolidated statutes of criminal law,
+ and said he was going for illegal detention rather than abduction, and
+ argued at great length from section 56. At the conclusion of the argument,
+ after refusing to hear Mr. Stigma,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. D'Acerbity said that the case clearly did not come within the
+ section, and he was afraid the learned counsel knew it. The father had
+ been a consenting party, on the counsel's own statement, to the child's
+ removal, and no suggestion had been made that he had withdrawn his
+ consent. He should refuse a summons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Bailey endeavored to address the magistrate but was stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. D'ACERBITY. I have no more to say. You can apply to the Queen's
+ Bench. I have no sympathy with you whatever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. D'Acerbity's law was good, but&mdash;what has justice to do with
+ &ldquo;sympathies?&rdquo; Surely the day after this report appeared the magistrate
+ must have had a letter from the Home Secretary?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI-Popery and Protestantism in the Queen's Bench.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The application to the magistrate was far from satisfactory. There had not
+ even been an exposure, and the Windmill Bulletin gayly bantered the
+ Detectoral Association. Meanwhile had happened the grand christening, of
+ which a circumstantial account was in the hands of the council of the
+ Detectoral Association shortly after the ceremony had been performed. Here
+ was a monstrous indignity to a Protestant child! The account was at once
+ printed, together with a verbatim report of the application to the
+ magistrate as well as one of &ldquo;a conversation held with the mother by an
+ agent of the Association.&rdquo; Board-men paraded the great thoroughfares
+ carrying this appeal:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PROTESTANT DETECTORAL ASSOCIATION.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ NO POPERY!
+ Abduction Of an Infant!
+ Assault on the Liberty of the Subject!
+ Mysterious and Awful Proceedings!
+ Baptism of a Protestant Child in a Convent!
+
+ OUTRAGE
+ Upon the Nation by Foreign Mercenaries!
+ Every Father and Mother is Invited to Co-operate in
+ Maintaining the
+ PROTESTANT RELIGION,
+ The Sanctity of Home, and the Inviolability of
+ BRITISH FREEDOM!
+
+ NO SURRENDER!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If there was no coherency in this production, it should be noted how
+ little that is of the essence of popular appeal. The metropolis was in an
+ uproar. Meetings were held, subscriptions poured in, dangerous crowds
+ collected in Winkle Street. When Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q. C., went down to
+ Westminster, to move the Court of Queen's Bench, multitudes besieged it.
+ Protestant champions and Papal ecclesiastics vied in their efforts to get
+ seats. The writ had gone from judge's chambers returnable to the full
+ court. Sister Suspiciosa, bearing the infant Ambrosius, and supported by
+ two novices and Father Certificatus, had been smuggled into court through
+ mysterious passages in its rear. Mrs. Ginx also, brought from Rosemary
+ Street by the little man who provided her with a bonnet trimmed with
+ orange-colored ribbons, sat staring with red eyes at her child, now
+ enveloped in a robe that was embroidered with little crosses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why need I tell you, how dead silence fell upon the Court after the stir
+ caused by the entrance of the judges; how everybody knew what was coming
+ when a master beneath the bench rose, and called out, &ldquo;Re Ginx, an infant,
+ Exparte Mary Ginx!&rdquo; How the Chief Justice, fresh and rosy-looking, then
+ blew his nose in a delicate mauve-colored silk handkerchief: how he tried
+ and discarded half-a-dozen pens, amid breathless silence; how in his
+ blandest manner he said: &ldquo;Who appears for the Respondent?&rdquo; and Mr. Dignam
+ Bailey, Q. C., and Mr. Octavius Ernestus, Q. C., rose together to say that
+ Mr. Ernestus did!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Ernestus was a Catholic. He was assisted by half-a-dozen counsel. He
+ riddled the affidavits on the other side, and read voluminous ones on his
+ own; bitterly animadverted upon the absence of an affidavit by the father;
+ held up to the scorn of a civilized world the course pursued towards his
+ meek and gentle clients by the &ldquo;fanatical zealots of the Protestant
+ Detectoral Association;&rdquo; in moving tones referred to the shrinking of
+ &ldquo;quiet recluses, from the gaze of a rude, unsympathizing world;&rdquo; cited
+ cases from the time of Magna Charta, down; called upon the Court to
+ vindicate Protestant justice, ending his peroration with the aphorism of
+ Lord Mansfield, Fiat justitia ruat caelum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One cannot do Justice to Mr. Dignam Bailey's argument, when after lunch he
+ rose to reply. He was logical and passionate, vindictive and pathetic by
+ turns. He inveighed against the Lady Superior, against her attorneys,
+ against Father Certificatus, against Ginx,&mdash;&ldquo;craven to his
+ heaven-born rights of political and religious freedom,&rdquo;&mdash;against the
+ Roman Catholic religion, the Pope, the Archbishop of Westminster, the
+ Virgin Mary. The Court knew, and every one else knew, that this was pure
+ pyrotechny, and Mr. Bailey knew that best of all; but, though the Bench is
+ swift to speak, slow to hear, it felt obliged, in a case of this public
+ interest, to sit by, and be witnesses of the exhibition. Mr. Bailey
+ concluded by a play on the aphorism cited by his learned friend. &ldquo;He would
+ say that if such justice were to be done, as his friend had urged, the
+ Kingdom of Heaven in England would rush to its fall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Court at once decided that, as the father had confided the custody of
+ the infant to the Sisters of Misery, and did not appear to desire that it
+ should be withdrawn, they, disregarding the religious clouds in which the
+ subject had been too carefully involved on both sides, gave judgment for
+ the defendant, with costs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they passed out of Court, Mr. Stigma said to his clients, &ldquo;Quite as I
+ anticipated; you remember I told you so in my Opinion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII.&mdash;A Protestor, but not a Protestant.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The infant Ambrosius and his conductors could scarcely reach the convent
+ in safety. The building showed few windows to the street, but they were
+ all broken. What might have happened in a few days, but that Ginx's Baby
+ took the matter into his own hands, none can say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The treatment to which the little saint was subjected soured his temper.
+ His kind nurses had choked him twice a day with incense, and now he had
+ inhaled for seven hours the air of the Queen's Bench. On his return to the
+ convent he was hastily fed, and carried to the chapel to give thanks for
+ the victory of the day. Wrapped in a handsome chasuble, they laid him on
+ the steps of the altar. In the most solemn part of the service he coughed,
+ and grew sick. The chasuble was bespattered. When the officiating priest,
+ to save that garment, took the child in his arms, he nefariously polluted
+ the sacerdotal vestments and the altar steps. Then he kicked toward the
+ altar itself, roared lustily, and finally went into convulsions in Sister
+ Suspiciosa's arms. Like most women, the Lady Superior required her
+ enthusiasm to be fed with success. She began to think that she had been
+ cozened: Ginx's Baby was too evidently a spiritual miscarriage. He must,
+ like the rest of his family, be, indeed, &ldquo;Protestant to the backbone.&rdquo;
+ Father Certificatus agreed with her. His robes and best chasuble were
+ befouled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us not risk a repetition of this conduct,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;let the child be
+ given up. He is baptized, and cannot be severed from the Church. He will
+ return after many days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning the solicitors of the Protestant Detectoral Association
+ received a letter from their opponents. In this they said that&mdash;presuming
+ Messrs. Roundhead, Roundhead, and Lollard, intended to apply to the Master
+ of the Rolls, the authorities of the convent had decided, after having
+ vindicated themselves in the Queen's Bench, to give up the child, which
+ would be, for twenty-four hours, at the order and disposal of the
+ Association, and afterwards of his parents. &ldquo;We are instructed by our
+ clients,&rdquo; they added, &ldquo;to ask you to bear in mind that the child has been
+ admitted, and is a member of the Catholic Church, owing allegiance to the
+ Holy Father at Rome, a bond from which only the Papal excommunication can
+ absolve him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII.&mdash;&ldquo;See how these Christians love one another.&rdquo;
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A mass-meeting of Protestants had been summoned for three o'clock on the
+ day designated in the letter of the Papist attorneys, to be held in the
+ Philopragmon Hall. That was the favorite centre of countless movements,
+ both well-meant and well-executed, and of others as futile as they were
+ foolish. Yet one could not say that a larger proportion of the latter were
+ connected with the Hall than existed in as many other human enterprises of
+ any sort. The concession of the Romanists at first dashed the managers of
+ the demonstration. Their grievance was gone. Still there remained topics
+ for a meeting: they would rejoice over victory, and consult about the
+ future of the Protestant Baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Secretary was an old hand at these meetings. He planned to import into
+ this one a sensation. Ginx's Baby, brought from the convent, stripped of
+ his papal swathings and enveloped in a handsome outfit presented by an
+ amiable Protestant Duchess, was placed in a cradle with his head resting
+ on a Bible. I am afraid he was quite as uncomfortable as he had ever been
+ at the convent. When, at the conclusion of the chairman's speech, in which
+ he informed the audience of their triumph, this exhibition was deftly
+ introduced upon the platform, the huzzas, and clappings, and waving of
+ handkerchiefs were such as even that place had never seen. The child was
+ astounded into quietness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Trumpeter took the chair&mdash;believed by many to be, next to the
+ Queen, the most powerful defender of the faith in the three kingdoms. I
+ never could understand why the newspapers reported his speeches&mdash;I
+ cannot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had done, Lord Evergood, &ldquo;a popular, practical peer, of sound
+ Protestant principles,&rdquo; as the Daily Banner alliteratively termed him next
+ morning, rose to move the first resolution, already cut and dried by the
+ committee&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That the infant so happily rescued from the incubus of a delusive
+ superstition, should be remitted to the care of the Church Widows' and
+ Orphans' Augmentation Society, and should be supported by voluntary
+ contributions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Lord Evergood could say a word murmurs arose in every part of the
+ hall. He was a mild, gentlemanly Christian, without guile, and the
+ opposition both surprised and frightened him. He uttered a few sentences
+ in approval of his proposition and sat down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An individual in the gallery shouted&mdash;&ldquo;Sir! I rise to move an
+ amendment!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cheers, and cries of &ldquo;Order! order! Sit down!&rdquo; &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chairman, with great blandness, said: &ldquo;The gentleman is out of order;
+ the resolution has not yet been seconded. I call upon the Rev. Mr. Valpy
+ to second the resolution.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Valpy, incumbent of St. Swithin's-within, insisted on speaking, but
+ what he said was known only to himself. When he had finished there was an
+ extraordinary commotion. On the platform many ministers and laymen jumped
+ to their feet; in the hall at least a hundred aspirants for a hearing
+ raised themselves on benches or the convenient backs of friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chairman shouted, &ldquo;Order! ORDER, gentlemen! This is a great occasion;
+ let us show unanimity!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There seemed to be an unanimous desire to speak. Amid cheers, cries for
+ order, and Kentish fire, you could hear the Rev. Mark Slowboy,
+ Independent, the Rev. Hugh Quickly, Wesleyan, the Rev. Bereciah Calvin,
+ Presbyterian, the Rev. Ezekiel Cutwater, Baptist, calling to the chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A lull ensued, of which advantage was taken by Mr. Stentor, a well-known
+ Hyde Park orator, who bellowed from a friend's shoulders in the pit, &ldquo;Mr.
+ Chairman, hear ME!&rdquo; an appeal that was followed by roars of laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was the matter? Why the proposal to hand over the baby to an Anglican
+ refuge stirred up the blood of every Dissenter present. It was lifting the
+ infant out of the frying-pan and dexterously dropping him into the fire.
+ But the chairman was accustomed to these scenes. He stayed the tumult by
+ proposing that a representative from each denomination should give his
+ opinion to the audience. &ldquo;Whom would they have first?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loudest cries were for Mr. Cutwater, who stood forth&mdash;a weak,
+ stooping, half-halting, little man, with a limp necktie, and trousers
+ puffy at the knees&mdash;but with honest use of them, let me say. It is
+ quite credible that if Dr. Watts's assertion be true that&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Satan trembles when he sees
+ The weakest saint upon his knees,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ that arch-enemy was unusually perturbed when Ezekiel Cutwater was upon
+ his. On these he had borne manly contests with evil. Two things&mdash;yea,
+ three&mdash;were rigid in Ezekiel's creed; fire would never have burned
+ them out of him: hatred of Popery, contempt of Anglican priestcraft and
+ apostolic succession, and adhesion to the dogma of adult baptism and total
+ immersion. Whoso should not join with him in these let him be Anathema
+ Maranatha.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His eye kindled as he looked at the seething audience. &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I
+ beg to move an amendment to the motion of the noble lord. (Cheers.) That
+ motion proposes to transfer to the care of the Established Church this
+ tender and unconscious infant (bending over Ginx's baby), just snatched
+ from the toils of a kindred superstition. (Oh, oh, hisses and cheers.) I
+ withdraw the expression; I did not mean to be offensive. (Hear.) This is a
+ grand representative meeting&mdash;not of the English Church, not of the
+ Baptist Church, not of the Wesleyan Church&mdash;but of Protestantism.
+ (Cheers and Kentish fire.) In such an assembly is it right to propose any
+ singular disposition of a representative infant? This is now the adopted
+ child, not of one, but of all denominations. (Cheers.) Around his, or her&mdash;I
+ am not sure which&mdash;cherubic head circle the white-winged angels of
+ various Churches, and on her or him, whichever it may be&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chairman said that he might as well say that he had authentic
+ information that it was HIM.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Him then&mdash;concentrate the sympathies of every Protestant heart. Let
+ us not despoil the occasion of its greatness by exhibiting a narrow
+ bigotry in one direction! Let us bring into this infantile focus the rays
+ of Catholic unity. (Loud cheering and Kentish fire.) To me, for one, it
+ would be eminently painful to think&mdash;what doubtless would occur if
+ the motion is adopted&mdash;that within a week of his entrance into the
+ asylum of the society named in it, this diminutive and unknowing sinner
+ should go through the farce of a supposititious admission into the Church
+ of Christ. (Oh!) Yes! I say a farce, whether you regard the age of the
+ acolyte or the indifferent proportion of water with which it would be
+ performed. (Uproar, oh, oh! and some cheering from the Baptist section.)
+ But I will not now further enter into these things,&rdquo; said Mr. Cutwater,
+ who knew his cue perfectly well, &ldquo;I can hold these opinions and still love
+ my brethren of other denominations. I move, as an amendment, that a
+ committee, consisting of one minister and one layman to be selected from
+ each of the Churches, be appointed to take charge of the physical
+ well-being and mental and spiritual training of the infant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this proposition, which was received with enthusiasm, Ginx's Baby was
+ to be incontinently pitched into an arena of polemical warfare. Every one
+ was willing that a committee should fight out the question vicariously;
+ and, therefore, when Mr. Slowboy seconded the amendment, it was carried
+ with loud acclamations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they were not yet out of the wood. On proceeding to nominate members
+ of the committee, the Unitarians and Quakers claimed to be represented.
+ The platform and the meeting were by the ears again. It was fiercely
+ contended that only Evangelical Christians could have a place in such a
+ work, and many of the nominees declared that they would not sit on a
+ committee with&mdash;well, some curious epithets were used. The Unitarians
+ and Quakers took their stand on the Catholic principles embodied in the
+ amendment, and on the fact that Ginx's Baby had now &ldquo;become national
+ Protestant property.&rdquo; Mr. Cutwater and a few others, moved by the scandal
+ of the dispute, interfered, and the committee was at length constituted to
+ the satisfaction of all parties. It was to be called &ldquo;The Branch Committee
+ of the Protestant Detectoral Union for promoting the Physical and
+ Spiritual Well-being of Ginx's Baby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fourth resolution was adopted, &ldquo;That the subject should be treated in
+ the Metropolitan pulpits on the next Sabbath, and a collection taken up in
+ the various churches for the benefit of the infant.&rdquo; This promised well
+ for Master Ginx's future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meeting had lasted five hours, and while they were discussing him the
+ child grew hungry. In the tumult every one had forgotten the subject of
+ it, and now it was over, they dispersed without thought of him. But he
+ would not allow those near him at all events to overlook his presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some, foreseeing that awkwardness was impending, slipped away; while three
+ or four stayed to ask what was to be done with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hand him over to the custody of the Chairman,&rdquo; said a Mr. Dove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should be most happy,&rdquo; said he, smoothly, &ldquo;but Mrs. Trumpeter is out of
+ town. Could your dear wife take him, Mr. Dove?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Dove's wife was otherwise engaged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Secretary was unmarried&mdash;chambers at Nincome's Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of their distress a woman who had been hanging about the hall
+ near the platform, came forward and offered to take charge of him, &ldquo;for
+ the sake of the cause.&rdquo; Every one was relieved. After her name and address
+ had been hastily noted, the Protestant baby was placed in her arms. My
+ Lord Evergood, the Chairman, the clergy, the Secretary, and the mob went
+ home rejoicing. Some hours after, Ginx's Baby, stripped of the duchess's
+ beautiful robes, was found by a policeman, lying on a doorstep in one of
+ the narrow streets, not a hundred yards behind the Philopragmon. By an
+ ironical chance he was wrapped in a copy of the largest daily paper in the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX.&mdash;Good Samaritans, and Good-Samaritan Twopences.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At every breakfast-table in town next morning the report of the great
+ Protestant meeting was read, and a further report, in leaded type, of the
+ discovery of Ginx's Baby at a later period of the evening by a policeman.
+ A pretty comment on the proceedings! The Good Samaritan put his patient on
+ his ass and carried him to an inn; while the priest and the Levite, though
+ the latter looked at him, at least let him alone. To have called a public
+ meeting to discuss his fate before deserting him, would have been a
+ refinement of inhumanity. The committee were rather ashamed when they met.
+ Instant measures were taken to recover the child and place him in good
+ hands. The duchess again provided baby-clothes. The next Sunday sermons
+ were preached on his behalf in a score of chapels. The collections
+ amounted to L 800, a sum increased by donations and subscriptions to the
+ handsome total of L 1360 10s. 3 1/2d.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be seen hereafter what the committee did with the baby, but I
+ happen to have an account of what became of the funds. They were spent as
+ follows, according to a balance sheet never submitted to the subscribers:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Pounds s. d.
+ Committee-rooms............. 45 0 0
+ 2 Secretaries employed by the
+ Committee................ 120 0 0
+ Agents, canvassing, &amp;c.......... 88 6 2
+ Printing Notices, Placards,
+ Pamphlets, a &ldquo;Daily Bulletin of
+ Health,&rdquo; &ldquo;Life of Ginx's Baby,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Protestant Babyhood, a Tale,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;The Cradle of an Infant Martyr,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;A Snatched Brand,&rdquo; and other
+ Works issued by the Committee...... 596 13 5
+ Advertisements of Meetings,
+ Sermons, &amp;c............... 261 1 1
+ Legal Expenses............... 77 6 8
+ Stationery................ 35 10 0
+ Postage, Firing, and Sundries....... 27 19 2
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ Total Pounds 1251 16 6
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This left L 108 13s. 9 1/2d. for the baby's keep. No child could have been
+ more thoroughly discussed, preached and written about, advertised, or
+ advised by counsel; but his resources dwindled in proportion to these
+ advantages. Benevolent subscribers too seldom examine the financial items
+ of a report: had any who contributed to this fund seen the balance sheet
+ they might have grudged that so little of their bounty went to make flesh,
+ bone, and comfort for the object of it. A cynic would tell them that to
+ look sharply after the disposal of their guerdon was half the gift. Their
+ indifference was akin to that satirized by the poet&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Prodigus et stultus dedit quae spernit et odit.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ In an age of luxury we are grown so luxurious as to be content to pay
+ agents to do our good deeds for us; but they charge us three hundred per
+ cent. for the privilege.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X.&mdash;The Force&mdash;and a Specimen of its Weakness.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Ginx's baby had been discovered by a policeman swaddled in a penny paper,
+ distressingly familiar to metropolitan travellers by rail. To omit the
+ details of his treatment at the hands of that great institution, &ldquo;The
+ Force,&rdquo; would be invidious. The member thereof who fell in with him was
+ walking a back street, sighting doors with his bull's-eye. He was provided
+ with massive boots, so that a thief could hear him coming a hundred yards
+ off; he was personally tall and unwieldy, and a dexterous commissioner had
+ invented a dress designed to enhance these qualities&mdash;a heavy coat, a
+ cart-horse belt, and a round cape. He had been carefully drilled not to
+ walk more than three miles an hour. He was not a little startled when the
+ rays of his lamp fell upon a struggling newspaper, out of which, as from a
+ shell, came mysterious cries. He took up a corner of the paper and peeped
+ in upon the face of Ginx's Baby; then he occupied a quarter of an hour in
+ embarrassing reflections. A nearly naked child crying in the cold ought to
+ be housed as soon as possible, but X 99 was ON HIS BEAT, and those magic
+ words chained him to certain limits. This, of course, was the rule under a
+ former commissioner, and every one knows that such absurd strategy has
+ been abolished in the existing regime. At that time, however, each
+ watchman had his beat, to leave which was neglect of duty, except with a
+ prisoner, and then it was neglect of all the householders within the magic
+ compass. Had X 99 heard the baby crying across the street, which was part
+ of the beat of X 101, he would have passed on with a cheery heart, for the
+ case would have been beyond his jurisdiction. Unhappily the baby was on
+ his beat, and he was delivered from the temptation of transferring it to
+ the other by the appearance of X 101's bull's-eye not far off. What was he
+ to do? The station was a mile away&mdash;the inspector would not arrive
+ for an hour&mdash;and it would be awkward, if not undignified, to carry on
+ his rounds a shouting baby wrapped in the largest daily paper. If he left
+ it where it was, and it perished, he might be charged with murder. He was
+ at his wits' end&mdash;but having got there, he resolved on the simplest
+ process, namely to carry it to the station. No provision was made by the
+ regulations of the force to protect a beat casually deserted even for a
+ proper purpose. Hence, while X 99 was absent on his errand of mercy, the
+ valuable shop of Messrs. Trinkett and Blouse, ecclesiastical tailors, was
+ broken into, and several stoles, chasubles, altar-cloths and other
+ decorative tapestries were appropriated to profane uses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the station the baby was disposed of according to rule. Due entry was
+ first made in the night-book by the superintendent of all the particulars
+ of his discovery. Some cold milk was then procured and poured down the
+ child's throat. Afterwards, wrapped in a constable's cape, he was placed
+ in a cell where, when the door was locked, he could not disturb the
+ guardians of the peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same night, in the next cell, an innocent gentleman, seized with an
+ apoplexy in the street but entered in the charge-sheet as drunk and
+ incapable, died like a dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI.&mdash;The Unity of the Spirit and the Bond of Peace.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When the committee met, every one discovered his incongruity with the
+ rest. Each was disposed to treat Ginx's Baby in a different way&mdash;in
+ other words, each wished to reflect the views of his particular sect on
+ the object of their charity. They were a new &ldquo;Evangelical Alliance,&rdquo;
+ agreed only in hatred to Popery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding at their first meeting that the discussion needed to be brought
+ into a focus, the committee appointed three of their number to draw up a
+ minute of the matters to be argued. This committee reported that there
+ arose, respecting the child, the following questions:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I. As touching the body:
+
+ a. Wherewithal he should be fed and clothed?
+
+ b. In what manner and fashion that should be done?
+
+ II. As touching the mind and spirit:
+
+ a. Whether he should be educated? If so,
+
+ b. What were to be the subjects of instruction?
+
+ c. What creed, if any, should be primarily taught?
+
+ d. Should he be further baptized? If so,
+
+ 1. Into what communion?
+
+ 2. By what ceremonial?&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ This programme, it appeared to its concoctors, embraced everything that
+ concerned Ginx's Baby except his death by the act of God or the Queen's
+ enemies. No sooner was the report made than adopted. Then a member, eager
+ for the fray, moved the postponement of the first division of questions
+ until the others had been determined. Why should apostles of truth trouble
+ themselves to serve tables? These were very subordinate questions to them&mdash;though,
+ I think, of first importance to Ginx's Baby. It was decided to discuss
+ little Ginx's future before considering his present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ball was opened by the Venerable Archdeacon Hotten, who, amid much
+ excitement, contended that from the earliest buddings of thought in an
+ infant mind religion should be engrafted upon it; there could be no
+ education worth the name that was not religious. That with the A should be
+ taught the origin, and with the Z the final destiny and destruction, of
+ evil. To separate education from religion was to clip the wings of the
+ heavenly dove. He asserted that the committee ought at once to have the
+ child baptized in Westminster Abbey, though he was rather of opinion that
+ the previous baptism was canonically valid; that he should be taught the
+ truths of our most holy faith, and since there could be no faith without a
+ creed, and the only national creed was that of the Church of England, the
+ baby should be handed over to the care of a clergyman, and then be sent to
+ a proper religious school. He need not say that he excluded Rugby under
+ its then profane management.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Church was, however, divided against itself, for the Dean of Triston
+ said he would give more latitude than his very reverend brother. You ought
+ not to define in an infant mind a rigid outline of creed. In fact, he did
+ not acknowledge any creed, he was not obliged to by law and was
+ disinclined to by his reason. He would rather allow the inner seeds of
+ natural light&mdash;the glorious all-pervading efflorescence of the Deity
+ in all men's hearts, to grow within the young spirit. The Dean was
+ assuredly vague and far less earnest than his brother cleric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The &ldquo;Rev.&rdquo; Mr. Bumpus, Unitarian, met the suggestions of the Archdeacon
+ with the scorn they merited. It was impossible to apply to a
+ representative child of an enlightened age theories so long exploded. The
+ Dean had certainly come nearer the truth with that broad sympathy for
+ which he was noted. He himself proposed that the child should be made a
+ model nursling of the liberalism of a new era. Old things were passing
+ away;&mdash;all things had become new. Creeds were the discarded banners
+ of a mediaeval past, fit only to be hung up in the churches, and looked at
+ as historic monuments; never more to be flaunted in the front of battle!
+ The education of the day was that which taught a man the introspection
+ whereby he recognized the Divine within himself&mdash;under any aspect,
+ under any tuition, whether of Brahma, Confucius, or Christ. Truth was
+ kaleidoscopic, and varied with the media through which it was viewed. As
+ for the child, every aspect of truth and error should be allowed to play
+ upon his mind. Let him acquire ordinary school learning for fifteen years,
+ and then send him to the London University.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Chairman, and half-a-dozen members of the committee, protested
+ that the said University was a school of the devil, and several
+ interchanges of discourtesy took place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Shortt, M. P., begged to suggest, as a matter of business, that for
+ the present the child was not capable of receiving any ideas whatever, and
+ might die, or prove to be dumb, or an idiot, and so require no education.
+ Ought they not to postpone this discussion until the subject was old
+ enough to be worth consideration?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Mr. Shortt's habit to show his practical vein by business-like
+ obstructions of this kind. He had been able a score of times to
+ demonstrate to the House of Commons how silly it was to consider
+ probabilities. In fact, he was opposed heart and soul to prophetic
+ legislation; he would live, legislatively, from hand to mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the committee would not allow Mr. Shortt to run away with the bone of
+ contention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. Dr. M'Gregor Lucas, of the National Caledonian Believers, had
+ been silent too long to contain himself further. This man needs some
+ particular description whenever his name is made public. Nay, for this he
+ lives, and by it, some think. At all events, he appears to be equally
+ eager for rebuke and applause; they both involve notoriety, and notoriety
+ is sure to pay. Few absurdities had been overlooked by his shallow
+ ingenuity. Simply to have invested his limited mental endowments in trying
+ to make the world believe him a genius, would have been only so like what
+ many thousands are doing as to have absolved him from too harsh a
+ judgment; but he traded in perilous stuff. Cheap prophecy was his staple.
+ It was his wont to give out about once in five years, that the world would
+ shortly come to an end, and, like Mr. Zadkiel, he found people who thought
+ their inevitable disappointment a proof of his inspiration. Had you heard
+ the honeyed words dropping from his lips, you would have taken him for a
+ Scotch angel, and, consequently, a rarity. Could such lips utter harsh
+ sayings, or distil vanities? Show him a priest, and you would hear! The
+ Pope was his particular born foe; Popery his enemies' country&mdash;so he
+ said. It was safe for him to stand and throw his darts. No one could say
+ whether they hit or did not; while most spectators had the good will to
+ hope that they did. How he would have lived if Daniel and St. John had
+ dreamed no dreams, one cannot conjecture. As it was, they provided the
+ doctor with endless openings for his fancy. Since no one could solve the
+ riddle of their prophecies, it was certain that no one could disprove his
+ solutions. Yet these came so often to their own disproof by lapse of time,
+ that I can only think that the good doctor hoped to die before his
+ critical periods came, or was so clever as to trust the infallibility of
+ human weakness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I describe Dr. Lucas at so great a length, because it will be easier and
+ more edifying to the reader to conceive what he said, than for me to
+ recount it. He showed the Baby to be one of seven mysteries. He was in
+ favor of teaching him at once to hate idolatry, music, crosses, masses,
+ nuns, priests, bishops, and cardinals. The &ldquo;humanities,&rdquo; the Shorter
+ Catechism, the Confession of Faith, and &ldquo;The whole Duty of Man,&rdquo; would, in
+ his opinion, be the books to lay the groundwork in the child's mind of a
+ Christian character of the highest type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Ogle, M. P., here vigorously intervened. Said he:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't, with all deference, agree to any of these suggestions. They
+ involve hand-to-hand fighting over this baby's body. No one of us is
+ entitled to take charge of him. Else why did we all unite to rescue him
+ from the nunnery? He will be torn to pieces among contending divines! I
+ think a purely secular education is all that as a committee we should aim
+ at. We have, but just withdrawn the child from the shadow of a single
+ ecclesiastical influence&mdash;would you transfer it to another? Every
+ Protestant denomination is contributing to his support, how can you devote
+ their gifts to rearing him for one? You would have no peace; better at
+ once treat him as the man of Benjamin treated his wife, cut him up into
+ enough pieces to send to all the tribes of Israel, summoning them to the
+ fight. I say we have nothing to do with this just now; let him be educated
+ in a secular academy, and let each sect be free to send its agents to
+ instruct him out of school hours as they please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. Theodoret Verity, M.A., rose in anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely, sir, you cannot seriously propound such a scheme! Would you leave
+ this precious waif to be buffeted between the contending waves of truth
+ and error, in the vague hope that by some lucky wind he might finally be
+ cast upon a rock of safety? I protest against all these educational
+ heresies&mdash;they are redolent of brimstone. Truth is truth, or there is
+ none at all. If there be any, it is our duty to impart it to this immortal
+ at the outset of his existence. Secular education! What do you mean by it?
+ Who shall sever one question from another, and call one secular and the
+ other religious? Is not every relation and every truth in some way or
+ other connected with religion?&rdquo; &amp;c. &amp;c. Mr. Verity has been saying
+ the same thing any time these forty years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive me,&rdquo; replied Mr. Ogle, &ldquo;if I say that this is very vague talking.
+ I have not proposed to sever one question from another. I only propose to
+ do in a different way that which is being done now by the most rigid of
+ Mr. Verity's friends. It is impossible to comprehend what is meant by such
+ a statement as that every truth is somehow connected with religion. It may
+ be that the notion&mdash;if it really is not, as I suspect it to be, mere
+ verbiage and clap-trap, used by certain fools to mislead others&mdash;means
+ that there is some such coherency between all truths as there is, for
+ instance, between the elements of the body. I would admit that, but is not
+ blood a different and perfectly severable thing from bone? Each has its
+ place, office, relation. But who would say that one could not be regarded
+ by a physicist in the largest variety of its aspects apart from the other?
+ Yet the physicist comes back again to consider with respect to each its
+ relations to all the rest! The separate study has rather prepared him for
+ more profound insight into those relations. Thus it is with the body of
+ truth. In spite of Mr. Verity I affirm that there are truths that have not
+ in themselves any element of religion whatever. The forty-seventh
+ proposition of Euclid will be taught by a Jesuit precisely as it is taught
+ in the London University; geography will affirm certain principles and
+ designate places, rivers, mountains&mdash;that no faith can remove and
+ cast into unknown seas. These subjects and others are taught in our most
+ bigoted schools in separate hours and relations from religion. What then
+ do you mean by affirming that there can be no secular education of this
+ child&mdash;apart from religious teaching? We are not likely to agree, if
+ I may judge from what I have seen, on any one method of religious
+ instruction for it, therefore I wish first to fix common bounds within
+ which our common benevolence may work. Well, we all go to the Bible. We
+ agree that between its covers lies religious truth somewhere. If you like
+ let him have that&mdash;and let him have some kindly and holy influences
+ about him in the way of practice and example, such as many of our sects
+ can supply many instances of. Give him no catechism&mdash;let him read a
+ creed in our daily life. The articles of faith strongest in his soul will
+ be those which have crystallized there from the combined action of truth
+ and experience, and not as it were been pasted on its walls by
+ ecclesiastical bill-posters. 'What is truth?' he must ask and answer for
+ himself, as we all must do before God. Don't mistake me; I hope I am not
+ more indifferent to religion than any here present&mdash;but I differ from
+ them on the best method of imbuing the mind and heart with it. Surely we
+ need not, we cannot&mdash;it would be an exquisite absurdity&mdash;pass a
+ resolution in this committee that the child is to be a Calvinist! Who then
+ would agree to secure him from any taint of Arminian heresy in years to
+ come? Dare you even resolve that he shall be a Christian and a Protestant!
+ I would not insure the risk. But, with so many of Christ's followers about
+ me, surely, surely without providing any ecclesiastical mechanism, there
+ will be testified to him simply how he may be saved. Your prayers, your
+ visits, your kindly moral influence and talk, your living example of a
+ goodness derived not from dogmas but from affectionate following of a holy
+ pattern and trust in revealed mercies, your pointing to that pattern and
+ showing the daily passage of these mercies will prompt his search after
+ the truth that has made you what you are. Let some good woman do for him a
+ mother's part, but choose her for her general goodness and not for the
+ dogmas of her church. The simpler her piety the better for him I should
+ say!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This straightforward speech fell like a new apple of discord in the midst
+ of the committee. Angry knots were formed, and the noble chairman found
+ that he could not restore order. An adjournment was agreed to. Luckily for
+ the body of Ginx's Baby, he had been meanwhile sent to a home where
+ Protestant money secured to him for the time good living, while his
+ benefactors were discussing what to do with his soul.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ Surely, it were no impertinence to interrupt this history and advert to
+ the fact, that, in the discussion just related, every one was to some
+ extent right and to some extent agreed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That religious teaching was due to an immortal spirit&mdash;some notion
+ and evidence of the Divine and the Great Hereafter to be conveyed to it&mdash;scarce
+ was disputed. Nor was there collision over the necessity of what is called
+ intellectual cultivation. The boy must be taught something of the world in
+ which he was to live; nay, this latter knowledge seemed to be most
+ immediately practical. As each disputant fixed his eye on one or the other
+ aim that end appeared to him to be the most important. Hence, by a natural
+ lapse, they came to treat subjects as antagonistic which were, in fact,
+ parallel and quite consistent. The one called the others godless&mdash;the
+ others threw back the aspersion of bigotry. Then came complication. What
+ was &ldquo;religion?&rdquo; Intellectual culture they could agree about&mdash;it
+ embraced well-known areas; but this religion divided itself into many
+ disputable fields. These brother Protestants were like country neighbors
+ who must encounter each other at fairs, markets, meets, and balls, and
+ smile and greet, though each, at heart, is looking savagely at the other's
+ landmarks, and most are very likely fighting bitter lawsuits all the
+ while. It was because religion meant CREED to most members of the
+ committee, and because it so implies to the vast bodies they represented,
+ that they could not come to terms about Ginx's Baby or any other infantile
+ immortal. Not always, perhaps, but often, they fought for futile
+ distinctions. Had Mahomet's creed consisted of but one article, There is
+ one God, the blood of many nations might never have given testimony
+ against the creed they resented when to it he tacked and Mahomet is His
+ prophet. Could Protestants but consent to agree in their agreement and
+ peacefully differ in their petty differences, how would the aggregated
+ impulse of a simple faith roll down before it all the impediments of
+ error!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ginx's Baby had grown to a discretionary age, and was at all able to
+ know truth from error&mdash;supposing that to be knowable&mdash;there were
+ in the country fifty thousand reverend gentlemen of every tincture of
+ religious opinion who might ply him with their various theories, yet few
+ of these would be contented unless they could seize him while his young
+ nature was plastic, and try to imprint on immortal clay the trade-mark of
+ some human invention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII.&mdash;No Funds&mdash;no Faith, no Works.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Committee of the Protestant Detectoral Union on Ginx's Baby held
+ twenty-three meetings. They were then as far from unity of purpose as when
+ they set out. Variety was given to the meetings by the changing
+ combinations of members in attendance. The finances were little heeded in
+ the intensity of their zeal for truth. These at length fell altogether
+ into the hands of the association's secretary, and we have seen involved
+ large items of expense. The twenty-three meetings extended over a year. At
+ the end of that time the secretary startled the committee by laying on the
+ table a demand for the board and keep of the Protestant baby for three
+ months, amounting to L 36; and adding that the sum in hand was L 1, 4s. 4
+ 1/2d. In his report he said: &ldquo;No effort has been spared by means of
+ advertisements, pamphlets, tales, leaders and paragraphs in newspapers and
+ religious journals, together with occasional sermons, to maintain the
+ public interest in this child; but attention has been diverted from him by
+ the great Roman Spozzi case, and the anxiety created throughout the
+ Protestant world by the recent discovery made by Dr. Gooddee, of a
+ solitary survivor of the ancient Church of the Vieuxbois Protestants in a
+ secluded valley of the Pyrenees.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secretary asked the committee to provide the money to discharge the
+ baby's liabilities; but they instantly adjourned, and no effort could
+ afterwards get a quorum together. When the persons who had charge of the
+ Protestant foundling discovered the state of affairs they began to dun the
+ secretary and to neglect the child, now about thirteen months old and
+ preparing to walk. Since no money appeared they sold whatever clothes had
+ been provided for him, and absconded from the place where they had been
+ farming him for Protestantism. The secretary, by chance hearing of this,
+ was discreet enough to make no inquiries. Ginx's Baby, &ldquo;as a Protestant
+ question,&rdquo; vanished from the world. I never heard that any one was asked
+ what had been done with the funds; but I have already furnished the
+ account that ought to have been rendered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII.&mdash;In transitu.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One night, near twelve o'clock, a shrewd tradesman, looking out of his
+ shopdoor before he turned into bed, heard a cry which proceeded from a
+ bundle on the pavement. This he discovered to be an infant wrapt in a
+ potato-sack. He was quick enough to observe that it had been deftly laid
+ over a line chiselled across the pavement to the corner of his house,
+ which line he knew to be the boundary between his own parish of St. Simon
+ Magus and the adjacent parish of St. Bartimeus. He took note, being a
+ business man, of the exact position of the child's body in relation to
+ this line, and then conveyed it to the workhouse of the other parish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PART3" id="link2H_PART3">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PART III. WHAT THE PARISH DID WITH HIM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I.&mdash;Parochial Knots&mdash;to be untied without prejudice.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The infant borne to the workhouse of St. Bartimeus was Ginx's Baby. When
+ he had been placed on the floor of the matron's room, and examined by the
+ master, that official turned to the unwelcome bearer of the burden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you find this child?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lying opposite my shop in Nether Place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's your name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doll.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! you're the cheesemonger. Your shop's on the other side of the
+ boundary, in the other parish. The child ought not to come here; it
+ doesn't belong to us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes it does: it wasn't on my side of the line.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it was in front of your house?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, the line runs crossways: it don't follow the child was in our
+ parish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, nonsense! there's no doubt about it! We can't take the child in. You
+ must carry it away again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Snigger turned to leave the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait a bit, sir,&rdquo; said Mr. Doll; &ldquo;I shall leave the child here, and you
+ can do as you like with it. It ain't mine, at all events. I say it lay in
+ your parish; and if you don't look after it you may be the worse of it.
+ The coroner's sure to try to earn his fees. Good-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hurried from the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; shouted the master, &ldquo;I say: I don't accept the child. You leave it
+ here at your own risk. We keep it without prejudice, remember&mdash;without
+ prejudice, sir!&mdash;without&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Doll was in the street and out of hearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II.&mdash;A Board of Guardians.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Guardians of St. Bartimeus met the day after Mr. Doll's clever
+ stratagem. Among other business was a report from the master of the
+ workhouse that a child, name unknown, found by Mr. Doll, cheesemonger, of
+ Nether Place, in the Parish of St. Simon Magus, opposite his shop, and, as
+ he alleged, on the nearer side of the parish boundary, had been left at
+ the workhouse, and was now in the custody of the matron. The Guardians
+ were not accustomed to restrain themselves, and did not withhold the
+ expression of their indignation upon this announcement. As Mr. Doll had
+ himself been a guardian of St. Simon Magus, it was clear to their
+ impartial minds that he was trying by a trick to foist a bastard&mdash;perhaps
+ his own&mdash;on the wrong parish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Cheekey, a licensed victualler, moved that the master's report be put
+ under the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Slinkum, draper, seconded the motion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Edge, ironmonger, pointed out that there was no parliamentary
+ precedent for such a disposition of the report, and, further, that such
+ action did not dispose of the baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Cheekey, turning painfully red, &ldquo;no matter how ye put it,
+ I move to get rid of the brat. What's the best form of motion?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A churchwarden, who happened to be a gentleman, explained that the Board
+ could not dismiss the question in so summary a way. &ldquo;He could foresee that
+ there might be a nice point of law in the case. They would have to take
+ some legal means of ascertaining their liabilities, and of forcing the
+ other parish to take the child if they ought to do so. They must consult
+ their solicitor.&rdquo; This gentleman was sent for post haste. Meanwhile the
+ baby was ordered to be brought in for inspection. The matron had handed
+ him over to a sort of half-witted inmate of the house, whose wits,
+ however, were strangely about him at the wrong time, to nurse and amuse
+ him. This person brought Ginx's Baby into the Board-room, and placed him
+ on the table. The Board of Guardians took a good look at him. He was not
+ then in fair condition. He was limp, he was dirty, hollow in the cheeks,
+ white, stiff in his limbs, and half-naked&mdash;(to be regardless of
+ gender)&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Pallidula, rigida, nudula.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hum!&rdquo; said Mr. Stink, who was a dog-breeder&mdash;&ldquo;What's his pedigree?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This brutal joke was well received by some of the Guardians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His pedigree,&rdquo; answered the half-wit, gravely, &ldquo;goes back for three
+ hundred years. Parients unknown by name, but got by Misery out o'
+ Starvashun. The line began with Poverty out o' Laziness in Queen
+ Elizabeth's time. The breed has been a large 'un wotever you thinks of the
+ quality.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This pleasantry was less acceptable to the Board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Scoop, grocer, a great stickler for parliamentary modes
+ of procedure, &ldquo;I move it be committed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Committed! Where?&rdquo; said Mr. Stink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Newgate I s'pose,&rdquo; said the half-wit, his eyes twinkling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense, sir,&mdash;for consideration. Send that man out,&rdquo; exclaimed
+ Scoop&mdash;&ldquo;clear the room for consultation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Davus was expelled, and the baby was then formally consigned to the care
+ of a committee. By this time the legal adviser came in. The facts having
+ been stated to him, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen, as at present advised I am of opinion that the parish in which
+ the child was found is bound to maintain him. If Mr. Doll (a highly
+ respectable person, my own cheesemonger) found the child beyond the
+ boundaries of St. Simon Magus&mdash;and he will of course swear that he
+ did&mdash;you cannot refuse to take it in. However, I had better ascertain
+ the facts from Mr. Doll and take the opinion of counsel. Meanwhile we must
+ beware not to compromise ourselves by admitting anything, or doing
+ anything equivalent to an admission. Let me see&mdash;Ah!&mdash;yes&mdash;a
+ notice to be served on the other parish repudiating the infant; another
+ notice to Mr. Doll to take it away, and that it remains here at his risk
+ and expense&mdash;you see, gentlemen, we could hardly venture to return it
+ to Mr. Doll; we should create an unhappy impression in the minds of the
+ public&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;D&mdash;n the public!&rdquo; said Mr. Stink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite so, my dear sir,&rdquo; said Mr. Phillpotts, smiling, &ldquo;quite so, but that
+ is not a legal or in fact practicable mode of discarding them; we must act
+ with public opinion, I fear. Then, to resume, thirdly and to be strictly
+ safe, we must serve a notice on the infant and all whom it may concern. I
+ think I'll draft it at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes the committee in charge pinned to the only garment of
+ Ginx's Baby a paper in the following form:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PARISH OF ST. BARTIMEUS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; (name unknown), a Foundling, and all
+ other persons interested in the said Foundling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TAKE NOTICE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That you, or either of you, have no just or lawful claim to have you or
+ the said infant chargeable on the said Parish. And this is to notify that
+ you, the said infant, are retained in the workhouse of the said Parish
+ under protest, and that whatsoever is or may be done or provided for you
+ is at the proper charge of you, and all such persons as are and were by
+ law bound to maintain and keep the same.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ WINKLE &amp; PHILLPOTTS,
+ Solicitors for the Board.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III.&mdash;&ldquo;The World is my Parish.&rdquo;
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Mr. Phillpotts called upon Doll, the cheesemonger, the latter
+ straightway gave him the facts as they had occurred. He pointed out the
+ exact spot on which the bundle had lain; he gave an estimate of the number
+ of inches on each side of the line occupied by it, and declared that the
+ head and shoulders of the infant lay in the parish of the solicitor's
+ clients. Ginx's Baby, under the title &ldquo;Re a Foundling,&rdquo; was once more
+ submitted for the opinion of counsel. They advised the Board that as the
+ child was in both parishes when found, but had been taken up by a
+ ratepayer of St. Simon Magus, the latter parish was bound to support him.
+ Whereupon the Guardians of St. Bartimeus at their next meeting resolved
+ that the Vestry of the other parish should have a written notice to remove
+ the child, failing which application should be made to the Queen's Bench
+ for a mandamus to compel them to do it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On receiving the challenge the Guardians of St. Simon Magus also took
+ counsel's opinion. They were advised that as the greater part, and
+ especially the head of the infant, was when discovered in the parish of
+ St. Bartimeus, the latter was clearly chargeable. Both parties then
+ proceeded to swear affidavits. The Attorney-General and Solicitor-General,
+ the two great law-officers of the crown, were retained on opposite sides,
+ and took fees&mdash;not for an Imperial prosecution, but as petty Queen's
+ Counsel in an inter-parochial squabble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV.&mdash;Without prejudice to any one but the Guardians.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Court of Queen's Bench, after hearing an elaborate statement from the
+ Attorney-General, granted a rule nisi for a mandamus. This rule was
+ entered for argument in a paper called &ldquo;The Special Paper,&rdquo; and, the list
+ being a heavy one, nearly a year elapsed before it was reached. It was
+ then again postponed several times &ldquo;for the convenience of counsel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Board of St. Bartimeus chafed under the law's delay. They became
+ morbidly sensitive to the incubus of Ginx's Baby, especially as the press
+ had been reviewing some of their recent acts with great bitterness. The
+ Guardians were defiant. Having served their notices, they were induced by
+ Mr. Stink to resolve not to maintain the infant. The poor child was
+ threatened with dissolution. Thus, no doubt, many difficulties in
+ parochial administration are solved&mdash;the subject vanishes away. The
+ baby was kept provisionally in a room at the workhouse. On the outside of
+ the door was a notice in fair round-hand:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NOTICE. DOLL'S FOUNDLING.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pending the legal inquiry into the facts concerning the above infant, and
+ a decision as to its settlement, all officials, assistants, and servants
+ of the workhouse are forbidden to enter the room in which it is deposited,
+ or to render it any service or assistance, on pain of dismissal. No food
+ is to be supplied to it from the workhouse kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ N.B. This is not intended to prevent persons other than officials, &amp;c.,
+ from having access to the infant, or assisting it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BY ORDER OF THE BOARD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That any body of human beings, other than Patagonians, could have coolly
+ contemplated such a result as must have followed upon the strict
+ performance of this order, would be incredible except in the instance of
+ the Guardians of St. Bartimeus. There was nothing they could not do&mdash;or
+ leave undone. Fortunately for Ginx's Baby, the order was disobeyed.
+ Occasionally lady visitors went to look at him and give him some food&mdash;he
+ was toddling about the room on unsteady legs&mdash;but charity seemed to
+ be appalled by the official questions hanging about this child. The
+ master, Snigger, whose business it was every day to ascertain whether the
+ cause of the great parochial quarrel was in, or out of, existence, became
+ a traitor to the Board. When the child grew hungry and dangerously thin,
+ he brought bottles of pap prepared by Mrs. Snigger, and administered it to
+ him. No conclusions to the disfavor of the Board were to be drawn from
+ this conduct, for Snigger was particular to say to the boy in a loud
+ voice, each time he fed him:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, youngster, this is without prejudice, remember! I give you due
+ notice&mdash;without prejudice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who, in Master Ginx's situation, would have had any prejudices to such
+ action, or have expressed them even if they were entertained? He took no
+ objection as he took the pap; while Snigger was glad to be able to do an
+ unusual kindness without compromising the parish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus things had gone on for many months, when one day an eye of that Argus
+ monster, the Public, was set upon Ginx's Baby. A well-known nobleman,
+ calling at the workhouse to see a little girl whom he had saved from
+ infamy, as he passed down a corridor was arrested by the notice on the
+ door of our hero's room. Curiosity took him in, and horror chained him
+ there for some time. Had he not entered, Ginx's Baby, spite of Snigger,
+ would in twenty-four hours have ceased to supply facts to history. He was
+ suffering from low fever, and his condition was as sensationally shocking
+ as any reporter could have wished. Out rushed the peer for a doctor, took
+ a cab to a magistrate and detailed the whole case, to be repeated in next
+ morning's papers. Penny-a-liners ran to the spot, wrote vivid descriptions
+ of the baby and the room, and transcribed the notice. The Guardians were
+ drubbed in trenchant leaders and indignant letters. They, instead of
+ bending to the storm, strove to confront it, and passed angry resolutions
+ of a childish and grotesque character. The few of them who possessed any
+ sense of propriety were railed at in the meetings till they ceased to
+ attend. The uproar outside increased. Why did not the President of the
+ Poor-Law Board interfere? At last he did interfere: that is, instead of
+ visiting the scene himself, and satisfying his own eyes as to the truth of
+ what his ears had heard, a process that would have taken a couple of
+ hours, he appointed a gentleman to hold an inquiry. The Guardians became
+ furious. The reports of their proceedings read like the vagaries of a
+ lunatic asylum or the deliberations of the American Senate. They
+ discharged Snigger for breach of orders, substituting a relative of Mr.
+ Stink. They put a lock on the door, and passed food to the Baby by a
+ stick. A committee was appointed to see him fed, and they forwarded a
+ memorial to the Poor-Law Board, stating that &ldquo;he daily had more food than
+ he could possibly eat, and was in admirable condition.&rdquo; They refused to
+ allow any doctor but one employed by themselves to see him. They procured
+ from him a certificate that the noble busybody and his physician had made
+ a mistake, and that all the functions of life in the infant appeared to be
+ in perfect order. Then came the gentleman, and the inquiry, and his
+ report, and a letter from the Poor-Law Board, and further discussions and
+ more letters, until the bewildered public gnashed its teeth at the
+ Minister, the Guardians, and the law, and wished them all at Land's End or
+ beyond it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V.-An Ungodly Jungle.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The case of the Guardians of St. Bartimeus against the Guardians of St.
+ Simon Magus was at length reached. The argument lasted for two days. There
+ is a grim work, the short title whereof is &ldquo;Burns's Justice,&rdquo; in five fat
+ volumes, from which the legal Dryasdust turns aghast. In one of these
+ portentous books, title &ldquo;Poor,&rdquo; pp. 1200, the inquisitive may find a code
+ unrivalled by the most malignant ingenuity of former or contemporary
+ nations: a code wherein, by gradual accretion, has been framed a system of
+ relief to poverty and distress so impolitic, so unprincipled, that none
+ but the driest, mustiest, most petrified parish official could be expected
+ to lift up his voice to defend it; so complicated that no man under heaven
+ knows its length or breadth or height or depth; yet it stands to this hour
+ a monument of English stolidity&mdash;a marvel of lazy or ignorant
+ statesmanship. Imagine, if you please, a Lord Chief Justice and three
+ Puisnes, all keen, practical men, alive to public policy and the common
+ weal, eager to extricate the truth and do the right, plunging into this
+ &ldquo;ungodly jungle,&rdquo; thwarted at every turn, in search of justice for Ginx's
+ Baby. With all his patient industry and lightning quickness of
+ apprehension, the Chief Justice found it hard to reconcile past and
+ present, or evolve from the vast confusion anything consistent with his
+ moral instincts.&mdash;Clear the board, gentlemen. True regenerative
+ legislation will begin by drawing away the rubbish. Reform means more than
+ repair. Mend, patch, take down a little here, prop up some tottering
+ nuisance there, fill in gaping chinks with patent legislative cement, coat
+ old facades with bright paint, hide decay beneath a gloze of novelty,
+ titivate, decorate, furbish&mdash;and after all your house is not a new
+ one, but a whited sepulchre shaking to decay. Repair? There is a Repair
+ party, intermediating between Tories and Reformers&mdash;Radicals or
+ Rooters let us call these latter if you like&mdash;who cling to &ldquo;vested
+ interests&rdquo; and all other sorts of antique nuisances, yet say they are
+ willing to improve them. REFORM, which means, Pull down with bold
+ statesman's hand, and with like hand REBUILD, is no darling of your
+ political Repairer. Call the party and the men by their right names: and
+ give me for utility in legislation or administrative action an Old Tory
+ and Obstructive party rather than this middling, meddling, muddling
+ Repairer&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Eager to change yet fearful to destroy.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Just now all Social Reformation, in its noblest aims and attempts, is
+ fettered by the Repair party. What is termed Sanitary Reform is enfeebled,
+ and the vigor withdrawn from it, by this party. &ldquo;Vested rights,&rdquo; &ldquo;the
+ Liberty of the people,&rdquo; &ldquo;Interference with personal freedom,&rdquo; &ldquo;EXPENSE,&rdquo;&mdash;these
+ are the watchwords of the Repairer in opposition to him who, pointing to
+ the pallor and fever of a hundred neighborhoods, calls upon a ministry to
+ cleanse them with imperial force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A comprehensive scheme of National Education is seized and half-throttled
+ by the Repair party. &ldquo;Oh! utilize what there is; improve on and tack to
+ the denominational system; avail yourself of the jealousy of sects; see
+ what a grand building that has already erected! True, it is not large
+ enough; true, it is badly built; but repair that, and add wings. It will
+ cost you ever so much to rebuild&mdash;Repair!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The methods of relief to the Poor are old, cumbrous, unequal, as stupid as
+ those who administer them. Forth steps the Reformer, and cries out&mdash;&ldquo;Clear
+ this wrack away! Get rid of your antiquated Bumbledom, your parochial and
+ non-parochial distinctions, your complicated map of local authorities;
+ re-distribute the kingdom on some more practical system, redress the
+ injustice of unequal rating, improve the machinery and spirit of relief,
+ and so on.&rdquo; You have the Repair party shouting its Non possumus as loudly
+ as any other arch-obstructive: &ldquo;Heaven forbid! Queen Elizabeth and the
+ Poor Laws for ever! To the rescue of Local Government and Vested
+ Interests! Repair!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some one with a long head and a divinely-warmed heart, searching vainly
+ for help to thousands in the packed alleys of his English Home, sends his
+ quick glance across seas to rich lands that daily cry to heaven for strong
+ arms that wield the plough and spade. &ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; he shouts, &ldquo;Labor to Land&mdash;starvation
+ to production&mdash;death unto life!&rdquo; and he calls upon every statesman
+ and patriot to help the good work, and give their energies to frame an
+ Emigration Scheme. Then the Repair party foams: &ldquo;Send away the Labor, the
+ source of our wealth? No. Mend the condition of the laborer; give him the
+ sop of political rights&mdash;free breakfasts&mdash;the ballot. Give State
+ funds to alter social conditions? No. Improve the methods of local
+ assistance to Emigration; it is a temporary remedy&mdash;Repair!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, according to the gospel of this party, everything must be subject of
+ restoration only. Like antiquarians, they utter groans over the abolition
+ of anything, however ugly it may be, however unfitted for human uses, and
+ with however so elegant a piece of artistry you desire to displace it. For
+ them a Gilbert-Scott politician, reverential restorer of bygone styles,
+ enthusiastic to conserve and amend the grotesque Gothic policies of the
+ past, rather than some Brunel or Stephenson statesman, engineering in
+ novel mastery of circumstances&mdash;not fearful to face and conquer even
+ the antique impediments of Nature. Give me a trenchant statesman, or I
+ pray you leave legislation alone. Better things as they are than patched
+ to distraction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, by means of some delicate legal adjustments, the judges saw
+ their way to affirming that Ginx's Baby's parish was that of St.
+ Bartimeus, and refused the rule for a mandamus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI.&mdash;Parochial Benevolence&mdash;and another translation.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The authorities of St. Bartimeus did not take kindly to the charge imposed
+ upon them by the Queen's Bench. Some of the Guardians privately hinted to
+ the master that it was unnecessary to overfeed the infant. They did not
+ burthen him with much clothing, and what he had was shared with many
+ lively companions. When you, good matron, look at your little pink-cheeked
+ daughter, so clean and so cosy in her pretty cot, waking to see the
+ well-faced nurse, or you, still sweeter to her eyes, watching above her
+ dreams, perhaps you ought to stop a moment to contrast the scene with the
+ sad tableaux you may get sight of not far away.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ Ginx's Baby was not an ill-favored child. He had inherited his father's
+ frame and strength: these helped him through the changes we are relating.
+ What if these capacities had, by simple nourishing food, cleanly
+ care-taking, and brighter, kindlier associations, been trained into full
+ working order? Left alone or ill-tended they were daily dwindling, and the
+ depreciation was going on not solely at the expense of little Ginx, but of
+ the whole community. To reduce his strength one-half was to reduce
+ one-half his chances of independence, and to multiply the prospects of his
+ continuous application for STATE AID.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The money spent in stopping a hole in a Dutch dyke is doubtless better
+ invested than if it were to be retained until a vast breach had laid half
+ a kingdom under water. Surely your Hollander would agree to be mulcted in
+ one-third of his fortune rather than run the hazard!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every day through this wealthy country there are men and women busy
+ marring the little images of God, that are by-and-by to be part of its
+ public-shadowing young spirits, repressing their energy, sapping their
+ vigor or failing to make it up, corrupting their nature by foul
+ associations, moral and physical. Some are doing it by special license of
+ the devil, others by Act of Parliament, others by negligence or
+ niggardliness. Could you teach or force these people&mdash;many
+ unconsciously engaged in the vile work&mdash;to run together, as men
+ alarmed by sudden danger, and throw around a helpless generation
+ influences and a care more akin to your own home ideal, would you not
+ transfigure the next epoch&mdash;would not your labor and sacrifice be a
+ GOD-WORK, reaching out weighty, fruit-laden branches far into the grateful
+ future? 'Tis by feeling and enjoining everywhere the need of such a
+ movement as this that you, O all-powerful woman! can carry your will into
+ the play of a great economic and social reform. Society that recognizes
+ not a root-truth like that is sowing the wind&mdash;God knows what it will
+ reap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the Guardians, keeping carefully within the law, neglected nothing that
+ could sap little Ginx's vitality, deaden his happiest instincts, derange
+ moral action, cause hope to die within his infant breast almost as soon as
+ it were born. Good God!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The items the Board were really entitled to charge the rate-payers as
+ supplied to our hero were&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dirt,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fleas,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Foul air,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chances of catching skin diseases, fevers, &amp;c.,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vile company,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neglect,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Occasional cruelty, and
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A small supply of bad food and clothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every pauper was to them an obnoxious charge by any and every means to be
+ reduced to a minimum or nil. Ginx's Baby was reduced to a minimum. His
+ constitution enabled him to protest against reduction to nil. But, just
+ after the bills of costs had been taxed, mulcting the rate-payers of St.
+ Bartimeus in a sum of more than L 1,600, the Guardians were made aware of
+ the name and origin of their charge. One of the persons who had deserted
+ him was arrested for theft, and among other articles in her possession
+ were some of the Baby's clothes. She confessed the whole story, and
+ declared that the child left in Nether Place was no other than the
+ Protestant Baby, son of Ginx, about whom so much stir had been made two
+ years before. The Guardians were not long in tracing Ginx, and, at his
+ quarters in Rosemary Street, the hapless changeling was one day delivered
+ by a deputy relieving-officer, with the benediction, by me sadly recorded&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There he is, d&mdash;n him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am sure if the Guardians had been there they would have said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PART4" id="link2H_PART4">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PART IV. WHAT THE CLUBS AND POLITICIANS DID WITH HIM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I.&mdash;Moved on.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Ginx's Baby's brothers and sisters would have nothing to say to him. Mrs.
+ Ginx declared she could see in him no likeness to her own dear lost one;
+ and her husband swore that the brat never was his. The couple had latterly
+ been pinching themselves and their children to save enough to emigrate.
+ For this purpose aid and counsel were given to them by a neighboring
+ curate, whose name, were my pages destined to immortality, should be
+ printed here in golden letters. Rich and full will be his sheaves when
+ many a statesman reaps tares. Finding that a thirteenth child was imposed
+ on them by so superior a force as the law of England the Ginxes hastened
+ their departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their last night in London, towards the small hours, Ginx, carrying our
+ hero, went along Birdcage Walk. He scarcely knew where he was going, or
+ how he was about to dispose of his burden, but he meant to get rid of it.
+ On he went, here and there met by shadowy creatures who came towards his
+ footsteps in the uncertain darkness, and when they could see that he was
+ no quarry for them flitted away again into the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He passed the dingy houses, since replaced by the Foreign Office, across
+ the open space before the Horse Guards, near the house of a popular Prime
+ Minister, and up the broad steps till he stood under the York Column. The
+ shadow of this was an inviting place, but a policeman turning his lantern
+ suspiciously on the man walking about at that silent hour with a child in
+ his arms frustrated his wish. Slowly Ginx tramped along Pall Mall, with
+ only one other creature stirring, as it seemed for the moment&mdash;a
+ gentleman who turned up the steps of a large building. Seating the child
+ on the bottom step and telling him not to cry, Ginx instantly crossed the
+ road, turned into St. James's Square, passed by the rails, and stealing
+ from corner to corner through the mazes of that locality, reached home by
+ way of Piccadilly and Grosvenor Place. Henceforth this history shall know
+ him no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II.-Club Ideas.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely had the shadow of his parent vanished in the gloom before Ginx's
+ Baby piped forth a lusty protest: the street rang again. Ere long the
+ doors at the top of the steps swung back, and a portly form stood in the
+ light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Halloo! what's the matter?&rdquo; (This was a general observation into space.)
+ &ldquo;Why, bless my heart, here's a child crying on the steps!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another form appeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there nobody with it? Halloo! any one there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No answer came save from poor little Ginx, but his was decided. The two
+ servants descended the steps and looked at the miserable boy without
+ touching him. Then they peered into the darkness in hope that they might
+ get a glimpse of his mother or a policeman. A rapid step sounded on the
+ pavement and a gentleman came up to the group.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What have we here?&rdquo; he said gently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a child, Sir Charles, I found crying on the steps. I expect it's a
+ trick to get rid of him. We are looking for a policeman to take him away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor little fellow,&rdquo; said Sir Charles, stooping to take a fair look at
+ Ginx's Baby, &ldquo;for you and such as you the policeman or the parish officers
+ are the national guardians, and the prison or the poor-house the home.....
+ Bring him into the Club, Smirke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men hesitated a moment before executing so unwonted a demand, but Sir
+ Charles Sterling was a man not safely to be thwarted&mdash;a late minister
+ and a member of the committee. The child being carried into the
+ magnificent hall of the Club, stood on its mosaic floor. From above the
+ radiance of the gas &ldquo;sunlight&rdquo; streamed down over the marble pillars, and
+ glanced on gilded cornices and panels of scagliola. A statue of the Queen
+ looked upon him from the niche that opened to the dining-room; another of
+ the great Puritan soldier, statesman, and ruler, with his stern massive
+ front; and yet another, with the strong yet gentle features of the
+ champion Free-Trader, seemed to regard him from their several corners. On
+ the walls around were portraits of men who had striven for the deliverance
+ of the people from ancient yokes and fetters. Of course Ginx's Baby did
+ not see all this. He, poor boy, dazed, stood with a knuckle in his eye,
+ while the porter, lackeys, Sir Charles Sterling, and others who strolled
+ out of the reading-room, curiously regarded him. But any one observing the
+ scene apart might have contrasted the place with the child&mdash;the
+ principles and the professions whereof this grandeur was the monument and
+ consecrated tabernacle, with this solitary atomic specimen of the material
+ whereon they were to work. What social utility had resulted from the great
+ movements initiated by them who erected and frequented this place? Ought
+ they to have had, and did they still need a complement? While wonderful
+ political changes had been wrought, and benefits not to be exaggerated won
+ for many classes, WHAT HAD BEEN DONE FOR GINX'S BABY?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The query would not have been very ridiculous. He was an unit of the
+ British Empire&mdash;nothing could blot out that fact before heaven! Had
+ anything been left undone that ought to have been done, or done that had
+ well been left undone, or were better to be undone now? Of a truth that
+ was worth a thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's all this?&rdquo; said a big Member of Parliament, a minister renowned
+ for economy in matters financial and intellectual. &ldquo;What are you doing
+ with this youngster? I never saw such an irregularity in a Club in my
+ life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you saw it oftener you would think more about it,&rdquo; said Sir Charles
+ Sterling. &ldquo;We found him on the steps. I think he was asking for you,
+ Glibton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This sally turned a laugh against the minister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said another, &ldquo;he has come to the wrong quarter if he wants
+ money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shouldn't wonder,&rdquo; said a third, &ldquo;if he were one of the new messengers
+ at the Office of Popular Edifices. Glibton is reducing their staff.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If that's the case I think you have reached the minimum here, Glibton,&rdquo;
+ cried Sir Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can't the country afford a livery?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bother you all,&rdquo; replied the Secretary, who was secretly pleased to be
+ quizzed for his peculiarities&mdash;&ldquo;tell us what this means. Whose 'lark'
+ is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No lark at all,&rdquo; said Sterling. &ldquo;Here is a problem for you and all of us
+ to solve. This forlorn object is representative, and stands here to-night
+ preaching us a serious sermon. He was deserted on the Club steps&mdash;left
+ there, perhaps, as a piece of clever irony; he might be son to some of us.
+ What's your name, my boy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ginx's Baby managed to say &ldquo;Dunno!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ask him if he has any name?&rdquo; said an Irish ex-member, with a grave face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ginx's Baby to this question responded distinctly &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No name,&rdquo; said the humorist; &ldquo;then the author of his being must be Wilkie
+ Collins.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everybody laughed at this indifferent pleasantry but our hero. His bosom
+ began to heave ominously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's to be done with him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Send him to the workhouse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Send him to the d&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; (there may be brutality among the gods
+ and goddesses).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give him to the porter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No thank you, sir,&rdquo; said he, promptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentlemen were turning away, when Sir Charles stopped them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here!&rdquo; he said, taking the boy's arm and baring it, &ldquo;this boy can
+ hardly be called a human being. See what a thin arm he has&mdash;how
+ flaccid and colorless the flesh seems&mdash;what an old face!&mdash;and I
+ can scarcely feel any pulse. Good heavens, get him some wine! A few hours
+ will send him to the d&mdash;&mdash; sure enough.... What are we to do for
+ him, Glibton? I say again, he is only part of a great problem. There must
+ be hundreds of thousands growing up like this child; and what a generation
+ to contemplate in all its relations and effects!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentlemen were dashed by his earnestness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you're exaggerating,&rdquo; said Glibton; &ldquo;there can't be such widespread
+ misery. Why, if there were, the people would be wrecking our houses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; replied the other, sadly, &ldquo;will you wait to be convinced by that
+ sort of thing before you believe in their misery? I assure you what I say
+ is true. I could bring you a hundred clergymen to testify to it to-morrow
+ morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God forbid!&rdquo; said Glibton. &ldquo;Good-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The right honorable gentleman extinguished the subject in his own little
+ brain with his big hat; but everywhere else the sparks are still aglow,
+ and he, with all like him, may wake up suddenly, as frightened women in
+ the night; to find themselves environed in the red glare of a popular
+ conflagration. Well for them then if they are not in charge of the State
+ machinery. What an hour will that be for hurrying to and fro with
+ water-pipes and buckets, when proper forethought, diligence, and sacrifice
+ would have made the building fireproof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III.&mdash;A thorough-paced Reformer&mdash;if not a Revolutionary.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ By the kindness and influence of Sir Charles Sterling, Ginx's Baby that
+ night, and long after, found shelter in the Radical Club. He gave rise to
+ a discussion in the smoking-room next evening that ought to be chronicled.
+ Several members of the committee supported his benefactor in urging that
+ the child should be adopted by the Club, as a pledge of their resolve to
+ make the questions of which he seemed to be the embodied emblem subjects
+ of legislative action. Others said that those questions being, in their
+ view, social and not political, were not proper ones to give impulse to a
+ party movement, and that the entertainment in the Club of this foundling
+ would be a gross irregularity: they did not want samples of the material
+ respecting which they were theorizing. To some of the latter Sir Charles
+ had been insisting that, whether they kept the child or not, they could
+ not stifle the questions excited by his condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may delay, but you cannot dissipate them. We are filling up our
+ sessions with party struggles, theoretic discussions, squabbles about
+ foreign politics, debates on political machinery, while year by year the
+ condition of the people is becoming more invidious and full of peril.
+ Social and political reform ought to be linked; the people on whom you
+ confer new political rights cannot enjoy them without health and
+ well-being.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But all our legislation is directed to that!&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Joshua Hale.
+ &ldquo;Reform, Free Trade, Free Corn&mdash;have these not enhanced the wealth of
+ the people?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Partially; yet there are classes unregenerated by their reviving
+ influences. Free trade cannot insure work, nor can free corn provide food
+ for every citizen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor any other legislation: let us be practical. I own there is much to be
+ done. I have often stated my 'platform.' We must clip the enormous
+ expenditure on soldiers and ships; reduce our overweening army of
+ diplomatic spies and busybodies; abstain from meddling in everybody's
+ quarrels; redeem from taxation the workman's necessaries&mdash;a free
+ breakfast-table; peremptorily legislate against the custom of
+ primogeniture; encourage the distribution and transfer of land; and, under
+ the aegis of the ballot, protect from the tyranny of the landlord and
+ employer their tenants and workmen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very good, perhaps, all of them,&rdquo; replied Sir Charles, &ldquo;but some not at
+ the moment possible, and all together are not exhaustive. Why do you not
+ go to the bottom of social needs? You say nothing about Health legislation&mdash;are
+ you indifferent to the sanitary condition of the people? You have not
+ hinted at Education&mdash;Waste Lands&mdash;Emigration&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! I am opposed to that altogether.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I forgot, you are a manufacturer; yet the last man of whom I should
+ believe that selfishness had warped the judgment. You have done and
+ endured more than any living statesman for the advantage of your
+ fellow-citizens, so that I will not cast at you the aspersion of
+ class-blindness. Still, I can scarcely think you have looked at this
+ matter in the pure light of patriotism, and not within the narrow scope of
+ trade interests.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite unjust. Our best economists reprehend the policy of depleting our
+ labor-market. Emigration is a timely remedy for adversity and to be very
+ sparingly used. Labor is our richest vein&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We may have too much of it. Take it as a fact that you now have more than
+ you can use, and the unemployed part is starving; what will you do with
+ them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a mere temporary and casual depression, to which all classes are
+ liable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Sir Charles, &ldquo;which none can so ill bear. Nay&mdash;what if it
+ is permanent? You look to increased trade. Do you suppose we are to retain
+ our manufacturing pre-eminence when every country, new and old, is
+ competing with us? Can our trade, I ask you honestly to consider, increase
+ at the rate of our population? Besides, for heaven's sake, look at the
+ thing as a man. Grant that we have a hundred thousand men out of work, and
+ hundreds of thousands more dependent on them&mdash;do you think it no
+ small thing that the vast mass should be left for one, two, three years
+ seething in sorrow and distress, while they are waiting for trade! By the
+ time that comes they may have gone beyond the hope of rescue. Ah! if an
+ elastic trade comes back to-morrow, you can never make those people what
+ they were; ought we not to have forecast that they should not be what they
+ are? But I contend that depression has become chronic, the poverty more
+ wide-spread and persistent&mdash;how then shall we, who represent these
+ classes among the rest, face the prospect?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here interposed a gentleman high in office, a pure, keen, rigid economist
+ of the highest intellectual and political rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Sterling, pardon me if I say you are talking wildly. Perhaps you
+ don't see that you are verging on rank communism. The working of economic
+ laws can be as infallibly projected as a solar eclipse. You can secure no
+ class from periodic calamity, and so regulate laws of supply and demand by
+ guiding-wheels of legislation and taxation as to save every man from
+ penury. You wish us to send away our bone and sinew because we have no
+ present employment for it, and next year, or the year after, under a
+ recovered trade you will be wringing your hands and cursing the folly that
+ prompted you to do it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should be too glad of the opportunity,&rdquo; replied Sir Charles, sturdily,
+ &ldquo;but in truth there is an incubus of excessive numbers that no revival of
+ trade will provide for, even if it is beyond our extremest hopes, and I
+ for one will not be guilty of the inhumanity of keeping fellow-creatures
+ in misery till we can find a use for them. You have forgotten that there
+ are other economic laws besides those you glance at. Several millions of
+ acres of unoccupied land belonging in a sense to the people of this
+ country are to be kept untilled in defiance of the plainest policy that
+ nature and God have indicated to us, namely, that labor should come in
+ contact with land! For want of this conjunction our colonies are to be
+ checked, while at home miserable millions are gaping for work and food.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! let them take themselves out. There are too many going already. They
+ will follow natural laws, and where labor is required thither the stream
+ will flow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mere surface talk, my clever friend,&rdquo; replied the other, &ldquo;the men who are
+ trooping out at their own expense are our most sober, careful, and
+ energetic workmen. Else they could not go. They go because here so many
+ indifferent ones are weighing down their shoulders. And where do most of
+ them go to? Not to strengthen and develop our colonies, but the United
+ States&mdash;a not always friendly people, and just now your free-trader's
+ bugbear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; said the minister, &ldquo;drop that question. It's utterly
+ impracticable at this time. We couldn't entertain the demand for
+ State-help for an instant. I tell you again you're a Fourierite. You
+ virtually propose to put your hand in the pocket of the upper classes to
+ pay all sorts of expenses for the lower.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may call me a communist if you please,&rdquo; replied Sir Charles Sterling;
+ &ldquo;I do not shrink from shadows. Perhaps I am in favor of something nearer
+ to communism than our present form of society. One thing I am clear about:
+ no state of society is healthy wherein every man does not own himself to
+ be the guardian of the interests of the community as well as his own&mdash;does
+ not see that he is bound, morally and as a matter of public policy, to add
+ to his neighbor's well-being as well as his own. Does not society, by its
+ protection and aggregation, make it possible for the rich to grow rich,
+ the genius and the ambitious man to pursue their aims, the merchant to
+ gather his vails, the noble to enjoy his lands? For these privileges there
+ is more or less to pay, and it may be that the proper proportion which the
+ capable classes should be called upon to contribute to the common weal has
+ never been correctly adjusted. The first fruit of practical Christianity
+ was community of goods, and but for human selfishness we might hope for an
+ Eutopian era&mdash;when, while it should be ruled that if a man would not
+ work neither should he eat, there should also be brought home to every man
+ the care of his poorer, or weaker, or less competent brother. I never
+ expect to see that. I do hope to see the men of greatest ability pay more
+ generously for the privileges they enjoy. The best policy for them too.
+ The better the condition of the general community the better for
+ themselves. You cannot alarm me with epithets. But these views are happily
+ not essential to the support of the Emigration policy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O dear! O dear! mad as a March hare!&rdquo; cried the minister, as he stumped
+ from the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sterling is a good fellow,&rdquo; said he to a colleague with whom he walked
+ down Pall Mall, &ldquo;and a thorough-paced Liberal. Besides, he carries great
+ weight in the House. But he is an enthusiast, and, therefore, not always
+ quite practical.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By PRACTICAL the minister meant, not that which might well and to
+ advantage be done if good and able men would resolve to do it, spite of
+ all hindrances, but that which, upon a cunning review of party balances
+ and a judicious probing of public opinion, seemed to be a policy fit for
+ his party to pursue. The first, original and masterly statesmen are needed
+ to initiate and perform&mdash;the other is simply the art of a genius who
+ knows how most adroitly to manipulate people and circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV.&mdash;Very Broad Views.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles Sterling, Mr. Joshua Hale, and others continued the
+ conversation interrupted by the minister's exit. What was to be done with
+ Ginx's Baby? In the great dissected map of society what niches were cut
+ out for him and all like him to fill? Most of the politicians were for
+ leaving that to himself to find out. The term &ldquo;law of supply and demand&rdquo;
+ was freely bandied between them, as it is in many journals nowadays, with
+ little object save to shut up avenues of discussion by a high-sounding
+ phrase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then of these &ldquo;statesmen,&rdquo; most clung, if not to self-interest, to
+ personal crotchets. What is more darling to a man than the child of his
+ intellect or fancy? How the poor poetaster hugs his tawdry verses as if
+ they were the imperial ornaments of genius! Just in the same way does the
+ politician love the policies himself hath devised, pressing them forward
+ at all hazards, while he is blind to the utility of others. This is the
+ basis of that aspect of selfishness which often mars in the approbation of
+ a country a really honest statesmanship&mdash;an egotistic tenacity of
+ one's own creature as the best, which yet is not the criminal selfishness
+ of ambition. Still that egotism is not seldom disastrous to the people's
+ interests. While these statesmen nursed their own bantlings and held them
+ up to national notice, they were apt to avoid or too lightly regard the
+ views of men as able as themselves. For instance, Joshua Hale&mdash;who is
+ far above these remarks generally&mdash;had put forth a scheme for the
+ solution of the St. Helena property question&mdash;very likely a good one,
+ albeit revolutionary, and nothing would convince him that any other could
+ succeed. He wished every man in St. Helena&mdash;a turbulent adjunct of
+ the British Empire&mdash;to be a landowner, and I do think, neither
+ desired nor hoped that any man in that island should be happy until he was
+ one. Yet there were other men ready to offer simpler remedies, and to
+ prove that if every man in St. Helena became a landowner it would become a
+ very hell upon earth, and more unmanageable than it was before. If these
+ gentlemen do not sacrifice their pet fancies for the sake of a settlement,
+ what will become of St. Helena?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just now they were discussing Ginx's Baby. One thought that repeal of the
+ Poor-Laws and a new system of relief would reach his case; another saw the
+ root of the Baby's sorrow in Trades' Unions; a third propounded
+ cooperative manufactures; a fourth suggested that a vast source of income
+ lay untouched in the seas about the kingdom, which swarmed with porpoises,
+ and showed how certain parts of these animals were available for food,
+ others for leather, others for a delicious oil that would be sweeter and
+ more pleasant than butter; a fifth desired a law to repress the tendency
+ of Scotch peers to evict tenants and convert arable lands into sheep-walks
+ and deer-forests; a sixth maintained that there were waste lands in the
+ kingdom of capacity to support hungry millions. In fact earth, heaven, and
+ seas were to be regenerated by Act of Parliament for the benefit of Ginx's
+ Baby and the people of England. Sir Charles listened impatiently, and at
+ last burst forth again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said: &ldquo;When you consider it, what we are all trying to do nowadays is&mdash;vulgarly&mdash;to
+ improve the breed; but we go to work in a round-about way. At the outset
+ we are met by the depreciated state of part of the existing generation;
+ and one problem is to prevent these depreciated people from increasing, or
+ to get them to increase healthily. No one seems to have gone directly to
+ such a problem as that. The difficulties to be faced are tremendous. Your
+ dirtiest British youngster is hedged round with principles of an
+ inviolable liberty and rights of Habeas Corpus. You let his father and
+ mother, or any one who will save you the trouble of looking after him,
+ mould him in his years of tenderness as they please. If they happen to
+ leave him a walking invalid, you take him into the poorhouse; if they
+ bring him up a thief, you whip him and keep him at high cost at Millbank
+ or Dartmoor; if his passions, never controlled, break out into murder and
+ rape, you may hang him, unless his crime has been so atrocious as to
+ attract the benevolent interest of the Home Secretary; if he commit
+ suicide, you hold a coroner's inquest, which also costs money; and however
+ he dies you give him a deal coffin and bury him. Yet I may prove to you
+ that this being, whom you treat like a dog at a fair, never had a day's&mdash;no,
+ nor an hour's&mdash;contact with goodness, purity, truth, or even human
+ kindness; never had an opportunity of learning anything better. What right
+ have you then to hunt him like a wild beast, and kick him and whip him,
+ and fetter him and hang him by expensive complicated machinery, when you
+ have done nothing to teach him any of the duties of a citizen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop, stop, Sir Charles! you are too virulent. There are endless means of
+ improving your lad&mdash;charities without number&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, that will never reach him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, they may, you know. Industrial schools, reformatories,
+ asylums, hospitals, Peabody-buildings, poor-laws. Everybody is working to
+ improve the condition of the poor man. Sanitary administration goes to his
+ house and makes it habitable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very,&rdquo; interjected Sir Charles Sterling, dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Factory laws protect and educate factory children&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They don't educate in one case out of ten. They don't feed them, clothe
+ them, give them amusement and cultivation, do they?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not&mdash;that would be ridiculous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the question is whether that would be ridiculous!&rdquo; replied Sir
+ Charles. &ldquo;I do not say it can be done, but in order to transform the next
+ generation, what we should aim at is to provide substitutes for bad homes,
+ evil training, unhealthy air, food and dulness, and terrible ignorance, in
+ happier scenes, better teaching, proper conditions of physical life, sane
+ amusements, and a higher cultivation. I dare say you would think me a
+ lunatic if I proposed that Government should establish music-halls and
+ gymnasia all over the country; but you, Mr. Fissure, voted for the Baths
+ and Washhouses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who's to pay for all this?&rdquo; asked Mr. Fissure, pertinently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The State, which means society, the whole of which is directly
+ interested. I tell you a million of children are crying to us to set them
+ free from the despotism of a crime and ignorance protected by law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is striking; but you are treading on delicate ground. The liberty of
+ the subject&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Exactly what I expected you to say. These words can be used in defence of
+ almost any injustice and tyranny. Such terms as 'political economy,'
+ 'communism,' 'socialism,' are bandied about in the same way. Yet
+ propositions coming fairly within these terms are often mentioned with
+ approval by the very persons who cast them at you. In a report of a recent
+ Royal Commission I find that one of the Commissioners is quite as
+ revolutionary as I am. He says it is right by law to secure that no child
+ shall be cruelly treated or mentally neglected, over-worked or
+ under-educated. Some people would call that communism, I fancy. But I
+ think him to be correct as a political economist in that broad
+ proposition. Why? Because a child's relation to the State is wider, more
+ permanent, and more important than his relation to his parents. If he is
+ in danger of being depreciated and damned for good citizenship, the State
+ must rescue him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A paternal and maternal government together!&rdquo; cries Lord Namby&mdash;&ldquo;a
+ government of nurses. You know I should like to stop the production of
+ children among the lower orders. Your propositions are far in advance of
+ my radicalism. The State must sometimes interfere between parent and
+ child; for instance, in education or protection from cruelty. But, if I
+ understand you, you actually contemplate a general refining and elevation
+ of the working class by legislative means.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuredly: I should aim to cultivate their morals, refine their tastes,
+ manners, habits. I wish to lift from them that ever-depressing sense of
+ hopelessness which keeps them in the dust.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So do most men; but you must do that by personal and private influences,
+ not by State enactments. How would you do it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How? I think I could draw up a programme. For instance: Expatriate a
+ million to reduce the competition that keeps poor devils on half-rations
+ or sends them to the poorhouse; Take all the sick, maimed, old, and
+ incapable poor into workhouses managed by humane men and not by ghouls;
+ Forbid such people to marry and propagate weakness; Legislate for
+ compulsory improvements of workmen's dwellings, and, if needful, lend the
+ money to execute it; Extend and enforce the health laws; Open free
+ libraries and places of rational amusement with an imperial bounty through
+ the country; Instead of spending thousands on dilettanti sycophants at one
+ end of the metropolis, distribute your art and amusement to the kingdom at
+ large; The rich have their museums, libraries, and clubs, provide them for
+ the poor; Establish temporary homes for lying-in women; Multiply your
+ baths and washhouses till there is no excuse for a dirty person; Educate;
+ Provide day schools for every proper child, and industrial or reformatory
+ schools for every improper one; Open advanced High Schools for the best
+ pupils, and found Scholarships to the Universities; Erect other schools
+ for technical training; Offer to teach trades and agriculture to all
+ comers for nothing&mdash;you would soon neutralize your bugbear of
+ trades-unionism; Teach morals, teach science, teach art, teach them to
+ amuse themselves like men and not like brutes. In a land so wealthy the
+ programme is not impracticable, though severe. As the end to be attained
+ is the welfare of future generations, no good reason could be urged why
+ they should not contribute towards the cost of it&mdash;a better debt to
+ leave to posterity than the incubus of an irrational war.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will any sane political practitioner wonder to be told that at the end of
+ this harangue the smoking-room party broke up, and that some, as they
+ laughed good-humoredly over Sterling's egregia, recalled the number of
+ glasses of inspirited seltzer swallowed by the orator? He was so far in
+ advance of the most radical reformer that there was no hope of overtaking
+ him for an era or two: so they determined to fancy they had left him
+ behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V.&mdash;Party Tactics&mdash;and Political Obstructions to Social Reform.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the Club our hero revelled awhile under the protection of Sir Charles
+ Sterling, and the petting of peers, Members of Parliament, and loungers
+ who swarm therein. Certain gentlemen of Stock Exchange mannerism and
+ dressiness gave the protege the go-by, and even sneered at those who
+ noticed him with kindness. But then these are of the men with whom every
+ question is checked by money, and is balanced on the pivot of profit and
+ loss. I dare say some of them thought the worse of Judas only because he
+ had made so small a gain out of his celebrated transaction. To foster
+ Ginx's Baby in the Club, as a recognition of the important questions
+ surrounding him, though these questions involved hundreds of thousands of
+ other cases, was to them ridiculous. Of far greater consequence was it in
+ their eyes to settle a dispute between two extravagant fools at
+ Constantinople and Cairo, and quicken the sluggishness of Turkish consols
+ or Egyptian 9 per cents. I do not cast stones at them; every man must look
+ at a thing with his own eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was curious to note how the Baby's fortunes shifted in the Club.
+ There were times&mdash;when he was a pet chucked under chin by the elder
+ stagers, favored with a smile from a Cabinet Minister, and now and then
+ blessed with a nod from Mr. Joshua Hale. Then, again, every one seemed to
+ forget him, and he was for months left unnoticed to the chance kindness of
+ the menials until some case similar to his own happening to evoke
+ discussion in the press, there would be a general inquiry for him. The
+ porter, Mr. Smirke, had succeeded, by means of a detective, in discovering
+ the boy's name, but his parents were then half-way to Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The members of the Fogey Club opposite, hearing that so interesting a
+ foundling was being cherished by their opponents, politely asked leave to
+ examine him, and he occasionally visited them. They treated him kindly and
+ discussed his condition with earnestness. The leaders of the party debated
+ whether he might not with advantage be taken out of their opponents'
+ hands. Some thought that a judicious use of him might win popularity; but
+ others objected that it would be perilous for them to mix themselves up
+ with so doleful an interest. In the result the Fogies tipped young Ginx,
+ but did not commit themselves for or against him. Thus a long time
+ elapsed, and our hero had grown old enough to be a page. He had received
+ food, clothing, and goodwill, but no one had thought of giving him an
+ education. Sometimes he became obstreperous. He played tricks with the
+ Club cutlery, and diverted its silver to improper uses; he laid traps for
+ upsetting aged and infirm legislators; he tried the coolness of the
+ youngest and best-natured Members of Parliament by popping up in strange
+ places and exhibiting unseemly attitudes. At length, by unanimous consent,
+ he was decreed to be a nuisance, and a few days would have revoked his
+ license at the Club.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner did the Fogies get wind of this than they manoeuvred to get
+ Ginx's Baby under their own management. They instructed their &ldquo;organs,&rdquo; as
+ they called them, to pipe to popular feeling on the disgraceful apathy of
+ the Radicals in regard to the foundling. They had him waylaid and treated
+ to confectionery by their emissaries; and once or twice succeeded in
+ abducting him and sending him down to the country with their party's
+ candidates, for exhibition at elections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Radicals resented this conduct extremely. Ginx's Baby was brought back
+ to the Club and restored to favor. The Government papers were instructed
+ to detail how much he was petted and talked about by the party; to declare
+ how needless was the popular excitement on his behalf; and to prove that
+ he must, without any special legislation, be benefited by the
+ extraordinary organic changes then being made in the constitution of the
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles Sterling resumed his interest in the boy. He had been
+ gallantly aiding his party in other questions. There was the Timbuctoo
+ question. A miserable desert chief had shut up a wandering Englishman, not
+ possessed of wit enough to keep his head out of danger. There was a
+ general impression that English honor was at stake, and the previous Fogey
+ Government had ordered an expedition to cross the desert and punish the
+ sheikh. You would never believe what it cost if you had not seen the bill.
+ Ten millions sterling was as good as buried in the desert, when one-tenth
+ of it would have saved a hundred thousand people from starvation at home,
+ and one-hundredth part of it would have taken the fetters off the hapless
+ prisoner's feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was the St. Helena question always brooding over Parliament. St.
+ Helena was a constituent part of the British Empire. Every patriot agreed
+ that the Empire without it would be incomplete; and was so far right that
+ its subtraction would have left the Empire by so much less. Most of its
+ inhabitants were aboriginal&mdash;a mercurial race, full of fire,
+ quick-witted, and gifted with the exuberant eloquence of savages, but
+ deficient in dignity and self-control. Before any one else had been given
+ them by Providence to fight, they slaughtered and ravaged one another. Our
+ intrusive British ancestors stepped upon the island, and, being strong
+ men, mowed down the islanders like wheat, and appropriated the lands their
+ swords had cleared. Still the aborigines held out in corners, and defied
+ the conquerors. The latter ground them down, confiscated the property of
+ their half-dozen chiefs, and distributed it among themselves. By way of
+ showing their imperial imperiousness, they built over some ruins left by
+ their devastations a great church, in which they ordered all the islanders
+ to worship. This was at first abomination to the islanders, who fought
+ like devils whenever they could, and ended by accepting the religion of
+ their foes. But the conquerors, afterwards choosing to change their own
+ faith, resolved that the islanders should do so too. Forthwith they
+ confiscated the big church and burying-ground, and, distributing part of
+ the land and spoils among their most prominent scamps, erected a new
+ edifice of quite a different character, in which the natives swore they
+ could neither see nor hear, and their own clerics warned them they would
+ certainly be damned. To make the complications more intricate, these
+ clerics owed allegiance to an ancient woman in a distant country, who had
+ all the meddlesomeness and petty jealousy of her sex, and was, besides,
+ much attached to some clever wooers of hers, wily sinners who covered
+ their aims under the semblance of ultra-extreme passion for her. The
+ prominent scamps died, to be succeeded by their children, or other of the
+ hated conquerors, from generation to generation. The islanders went on
+ increasing and protesting. T hey starved upon the lands, and shot the
+ landlords when a few gave them the chance, for most lived away in their
+ own country, and left the property to be administered by agents. The Home
+ Government had again and again been obliged to assist these people with
+ soldiers, to provide an armed police, to shoot down mobs, to catch a
+ ringleader here or there and send him to Fernando Po, or to deprive whole
+ villages of ordinary civil rights. Then the yam crop failed, and nearly
+ half the people left the island and crossed the seas, where they continued
+ to hate and to plot against those whose misfortune it had been to get a
+ legacy of the island from their fathers. It would be wearisome to recount
+ the absurdities on both sides: the stupidity or criminal absence of tact
+ from time to time shown by the Home Government&mdash;the resolve never to
+ be quiet exhibited by the natives, under the prompting of their clerics.
+ Upon
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&mdash;that common stage of novelty&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ there were ever springing up fresh difficulties. Secret clubs were formed
+ for murder and reprisal. A body called the &ldquo;Yellows&rdquo; had bound themselves
+ by private oaths to keep up the memory of the religious victories of their
+ predecessors, and to worry the clerical party in every possible way. Their
+ pleasure was to go about insanely blowing rams'-horns, carrying flags and
+ bearing oranges in their hands. The islanders hated oranges, and at every
+ opportunity cracked the skulls of the orange-bearers with brutal weapons
+ peculiar to the island. These, in return, cracked native skulls. The whole
+ island was in a state of perpetual commotion. Still, its general condition
+ improved, its farms grew prosperous, and a joint-stock company had built a
+ mill for converting cocoanut fibre into horse-cloths, which yielded large
+ profits. The memory of past events might well have been buried; but the
+ clerics, in the interest of the old woman, fanned the embers, and the
+ infamous bidding for popularity of parties at home served to keep alive
+ passions that would naturally have died out. Besides, latterly folly had
+ been too organized on both sides to suffer oblivion. Everybody was tired
+ of the squabbles of St. Helena. At length there was a general movement in
+ the interests of peace, and to pacify the islanders Parliament was asked
+ to pull down the wings of the old church edifice, remove some of the
+ graves, and cut off a large piece of the graveyard. Some were in favor
+ also of dividing all the farms in the country among the aborigines, but
+ the difficulty was to know how at the same time to satisfy the present
+ occupiers. These schemes were topics of high debate, upon them the
+ fortunes of Government rose and fell, and while they were agitated Ginx's
+ Baby could have no chance of a parliamentary hearing. Many other matters
+ of singular indifference had eaten up the legislative time; but at last
+ the increasing number of wretched infants throughout the country began to
+ alarm the people, and Sir Charles Sterling thought the time had come to
+ move on behalf of Ginx's Baby and his fellows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI.&mdash;Amateur Debating in a High Legislative Body.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While Sir Charles was trying to get the Government to &ldquo;give him a night&rdquo;
+ to debate the Ginx's Baby case, and while associations were being formed
+ in the metropolis for disposing of him by expatriation or otherwise, a
+ busy peer without notice to anybody, suddenly brought the subject before
+ the House of Lords. As he had never seen the Baby, and knew nothing or
+ very little about him, I need scarcely report the elaborate speech in
+ which he asked for aristocratic sympathy on his behalf. He proposed to
+ send him to the Antipodes at the expense of the nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Minister for the Accidental Accompaniments of the Empire was a clever
+ man&mdash;keen, genial, subtle, two-edged, a gentlemanly and not thorough
+ disciple of Machiavel; able to lead parliamentary forlorn hopes and plant
+ flags on breaches, or to cover retreats with brilliant skirmishing; deft,
+ but never deep; much moved too by the opinions of his permanent staff.
+ These on the night in question had plied him well with hackneyed
+ objections; but to see him get up and relieve himself of them&mdash;the
+ air of originality, the really original air he threw around them; the
+ absurd light which he turned full on the weaknesses of his noble friend's
+ propositions, was as beautiful to an indifferent critic as it as saddening
+ to the man who had at heart the sorrows of his kind. If that minister
+ lived long he would be forced to adopt and advocate in as pretty a manner
+ the policy he was dissecting. Lord Munnibagge, a great authority in
+ economic matters, said that a weaker case had never been presented to
+ Parliament. To send away Ginx's Baby to a colony at imperial expense was
+ at once to rob the pockets of the rich and to decrease our labor-power.
+ There was no necessity for it. Ginx's Baby could not starve in a country
+ like this. He (Lord Munnibagge) had never heard of a case of a baby
+ starving. There was no such wide-spread distress as was represented by the
+ noble lord. There were occasional periods of stagnation in trade, and no
+ doubt in these periods the poorer classes would suffer; but trade was
+ elastic; and even if it were granted that the present was a period when
+ employment had failed, the time was not far off when trade would
+ recuperate. (Cheers.) Ginx's Baby and all other babies would not then wish
+ to go away. People were always making exaggerated statements about the
+ condition of the poor. He (Lord Munnibagge) did not credit them. He
+ believed the country, though temporarily depressed by financial collapses,
+ to be in a most healthy state. (Hear, hear.) It was absurd to say
+ otherwise, when it was shown by the Board of Trade returns that we were
+ growing richer every day. (Cheers.) Of course Ginx's Baby must be growing
+ richer with the rest. Was not that a complete answer to the noble lord's
+ plaintive outcries? (Cheers and laughter.) That the population of a
+ country was a great fraction of its wealth was an elementary principle of
+ political economy. He thought, from the high rates of wages, that there
+ were not too many but too few laborers in the country. He should oppose
+ the motion. (Cheers.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two or three noble lords repeated similar platitudes, guarding themselves
+ as carefully from any reference to facts, or to the question whether high
+ rates of wages might not be the concomitants simply of high prices of
+ necessaries, or to the yet wider question whether colonial development
+ might not have something to do with progress at home. The noble lord who
+ had rushed unprepared into the arena was unequal to the forces marshalled
+ against him, and withdrew his motion. Thus the great debate collapsed. The
+ Lords were relieved that an awkward question had so easily been shifted.
+ The newspapers on the ministerial side declared that this debate had
+ proved the futility of the Ginx's Baby Expatriation question. &ldquo;So able an
+ authority as Lord Munnibagge had established that there was no necessity
+ for the interference of Government in the case of Ginx's Baby or any other
+ babies or persons. The lucid and decisive statement of the Secretary for
+ the Accidental Accompaniments of the Empire had shown how impossible it
+ was for the Imperial Government to take part in a great scheme of
+ Expatriation; how impolitic to endeavor to affect the ordinary laws of
+ free movement to the Colonies.&rdquo; Surely after this the Expatriation people
+ hid their lights under a bushel! The Government refused to find a night
+ for Sir Charles Sterling, and after the Lords' debate he did not see his
+ way to force a motion in the Lower House. Meanwhile Ginx's Baby once more
+ decided a turn in his own fate. Tired of the slow life of the Club, and
+ shivering amid the chill indifference of his patrons, he borrowed without
+ leave some clothes from an inmate's room, with a few silver forks and
+ spoons, and decamped. Whether the baronet and the Club were bashful of
+ public ridicule or glad to be rid of the charge, I know not, but no
+ attempt was made to recover him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PART5" id="link2H_PART5">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PART V. WHAT GINX'S BABY DID WITH HIMSELF.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A full-formed Horse will, in any market, bring from twenty
+ to as high as two hundred Friedrichs d'or: such is his worth
+ to the world. A full-formed Man is not only worth nothing
+ to the world, but the world could afford him a round sum
+ would he simply engage to go and hang himself.&mdash;SARTOR
+ RESARTUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ The Last Chapter.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Our hero was nearly fifteen years old when he left the Club to plunge into
+ the world. He was not long in converting his spoils into money, and a very
+ short time in spending it. Then he had to pit his wits against starvation,
+ and some of his throws were desperate. Wherever he went the world seemed
+ terribly full. If he answered an advertisement for an errand-boy, there
+ were a score kicking their heels at the rendezvous before him. Did he try
+ to learn a useful trade, thousands of adepts were not only ready to
+ underbid him, but to knock him on the head for an interloper. Even the
+ thieves, to whom he gravitated, were jealous of his accession, because
+ there were too many competitors already in their department. Through his
+ career of penury, of honest and dishonest callings, of 'scapes and
+ captures, imprisonments and other punishments, a year's reading of
+ Metropolitan Police Reports would furnish the exact counterpart.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ I don't know how many years after his flight from Pall Mall, one dim
+ midnight, I, returning from Richmond, lounged over Vauxhall Bridge,
+ listening to the low lapping of the current beneath the arches&mdash;looking
+ above to the stars and along the dark polished surface that reflected a
+ thousand lights in its undulations,&mdash;feeling the awfulness of the
+ dense, suppressed life that was wrapt within the gloom and calm of the
+ hour. I suddenly saw a shadow, a human shadow, that at the sound of my
+ footstep quickly crossed my dreamy vision&mdash;quickly, noiselessly came
+ and went before my eyes until it stood up high and outlined against the
+ strangely-mingled haze. It looked like the ghost of a slight-formed man,
+ hatless and coatless, and for a moment I saw at its upper extremity the
+ dull flash as of a human face in the gloom, before the shadow leaped out
+ far into the night. Splash! When my startled eyes looked down upon the
+ glancing, waving ebony, I thought I could trace a white coruscation of
+ foam spreading out into the darkness, instantly to dissipate and be lost
+ for ever. I did not then know what form it was that swilled down below the
+ glistening current. Had I known that it was Ginx's Baby I should perhaps
+ have thought &ldquo;Society, which, in the sacred names of Law and Charity,
+ forbad the father to throw his child over Vauxhall Bridge, at a time when
+ he was alike unconscious of life and death, has at last itself driven him
+ over the parapet into the greedy waters&rdquo;&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philosophers, Philanthropists, Politicians, Papists and Protestants,
+ Poor-Law Ministers and Parish Officers&mdash;while you have been
+ theorizing and discussing, debating, wrangling, legislating and
+ administering&mdash;Good God! gentlemen, between you all, where has Ginx's
+ Baby gone to?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ginx's Baby, by Edward Jenkins
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ginx's Baby, by Edward Jenkins
+
+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: Ginx's Baby
+
+Author: Edward Jenkins
+
+Release Date: July, 1996 [Etext #581]
+Posting Date: November 26, 2009
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GINX'S BABY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Keller
+
+
+
+
+
+GINX'S BABY
+
+His Birth and other Misfortunes
+
+A SATIRE
+
+
+By Edward Jenkins
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+CRITIC.--I never read a more improbable story in my life.
+
+AUTHOR.--Notwithstanding, it may be true.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ PART I. WHAT GINX DID WITH HIM.
+ I. Ab initio
+ II. Home, sweet Home!
+ III. Work and Ideas
+ IV. Digressive, and may be skipped without mutilating the History
+ V. Reasons and Resolves
+ VI. The Antagonism of Law and Necessity
+ VII. Malthus and Man
+ VIII. The Baby's First Translation
+
+ PART II. WHAT CHARITY AND THE CHURCHES DID WITH HIM.
+ I. The Milk of Human Kindness, Mother's Milk, and the Milk of
+ the Word
+ II. The Protestant Detectoral Association
+ III. The Sacrament of Baptism
+ IV. Law on Behalf of Gospel
+ V. Magistrate's Law
+ VI. Popery and Protestantism in the Queen's Bench
+ VII. A Protestor, but not a Protestant
+ VIII. "See how these Christians love one another"
+ IX. Good Samaritans, and Good-Samaritan Twopences
+ X. The Force--and a Specimen of its Weakness
+ XI. The Unity of the Spirit and the Bond of Peace
+ XII. No Funds--no Faith, no Works
+ XIII. In transitu
+
+ PART III. WHAT THE PARISH DID WITH HIM.
+ I. Parochial Knots--to be untied without Prejudice
+ II. A Board of Guardians
+ III. "The World is my Parish"
+ IV. Without Prejudice to any one but the Guardians
+ V. An Ungodly Jungle
+ VI. Parochial Benevolence--and another Translation
+
+ PART IV. WHAT THE CLUBS AND POLITICIANS DID WITH HIM.
+ I. Moved on
+ II. Club Ideas
+ III. A thorough-paced Reformer--if not a Revolutionary
+ IV. Very Broad Views
+ V. Party Tactics--and Political Obstructions to Social Reform
+ VI. Amateur Debating in a High Legislative Body
+
+ PART V. WHAT GINX'S BABY DID WITH HIMSELF.
+ The Last Chapter
+
+
+
+
+PART I. WHAT GINX DID WITH HIM.
+
+
+
+
+I.--Ab initio.
+
+The name of the father of Ginx's Baby was Ginx. By a not unexceptional
+coincidence, its mother was Mrs. Ginx. The gender of Ginx's Baby was
+masculine.
+
+On the day when our hero was born, Mr. and Mrs. Ginx were living at
+Number Five, Rosemary Street, in the City of Westminster. The being then
+and there brought into the world was not the only human entity to which
+the title of "Ginx's Baby" was or had been appropriate. Ginx had been
+married to Betsy Hicks at St. John's, Westminster, on the twenty-fifth
+day of October, 18--, as appears from the "marriage lines" retained by
+Betsy Ginx, and carefully collated by me with the original register.
+Our hero was their thirteenth child. Patient inquiry has enabled me
+to verify the following history of their propagations. On July the
+twenty-fifth, the year after their marriage, Mrs. Ginx was safely
+delivered of a girl. No announcement of this appeared in the newspapers.
+
+On the tenth of April following, the whole neighborhood, including Great
+Smith Street, Marsham Street, Great and Little Peter Streets, Regent
+Street, Horseferry Road, and Strutton Ground, was convulsed by
+the report that a woman named Ginx had given birth to "a triplet,"
+consisting of two girls and a boy. The news penetrated to Dean's Yard
+and the ancient school of Westminster. The Dean, who accepted nothing
+on trust, sent to verify the report, his messenger bearing a bundle of
+baby-clothes from the Dean's wife, who thought that the mother could
+scarcely have provided for so large an addition to her family. The
+schoolboys, on their way to the play-ground at Vincent Square, slyly
+diverged to have a look at the curiosity, paying sixpence a head to Mrs.
+Ginx's friend and crony, Mrs. Spittal, who pocketed the money, and said
+nothing about it to the sick woman. THIS birth was announced in all
+the newspapers throughout the kingdom, with the further news that Her
+Majesty the Queen had been graciously pleased to forward to Mrs. Ginx
+the sum of three pounds.
+
+What could have possessed the woman I can't say, but about a twelvemonth
+after, Mrs. Ginx, with the assistance of two doctors hastily fetched
+from the hospital by her frightened husband, nearly perished in a fresh
+effort of maternity. This time two sons and two daughters fell to the
+lot of the happy pair. Her Majesty sent four pounds. But whatever peace
+there was at home, broils disturbed the street. The neighbors, who had
+sent for the police on the occasion, were angered by a notoriety which
+was becoming uncomfortable to them, and began to testify their feelings
+in various rough ways. Ginx removed his family to Rosemary Street,
+where, up to a year before the time when Ginx's Baby was born, his wife
+had continued to add to her offspring until the tale reached one dozen.
+It was then that Ginx affectionately but firmly begged that his wife
+would consider her family ways, since, in all conscience, he had fairly
+earned the blessedness of the man who hath his quiver full of them;
+and frankly gave her notice that, as his utmost efforts could scarcely
+maintain their existing family, if she ventured to present him with any
+more, either single, or twins, or triplets, or otherwise, he would most
+assuredly drown him, or her, or them in the water-butt, and take the
+consequences.
+
+
+
+
+II.--Home, sweet Home!
+
+The day on which Ginx uttered his awful threat was that next to the one
+wherein number twelve had drawn his first breath. His wife lay on the
+bed which, at the outset of wedded life, they had purchased secondhand
+in Strutton Ground for the sum of nine shillings and sixpence.
+SECOND-HAND! It had passed through, at least, as many hands as there
+were afterwards babies born upon it. Twelfth or thirteenth hand, a
+vagabond, botched bedstead, type of all the furniture in Ginx's rooms,
+and in numberless houses through the vast city. Its dimensions were
+4 feet 6 inches by 6 feet. When Ginx, who was a stout navvy, and Mrs.
+Ginx, who was, you may conceive, a matronly woman, were in it, there
+was little vacant space about them. Yet, as they were forced to find
+resting-places for all the children, it not seldom happened that at
+least one infant was perilously wedged between the parental bodies; and
+latterly they had been so pressed for room in the household that two
+younglings were nestled at the foot of the bed. Without foot-board or
+pillows, the lodgment of these infants was precarious, since any fatuous
+movement of Ginx's legs was likely to expel them head-first. However
+they were safe, for they were sure to fall on one or other of their
+brothers or sisters.
+
+I shall be as particular as a valuer, and describe what I have seen. The
+family sleeping-room measured 13 feet 6 inches by 14 feet.
+
+Opening out of this, and again on the landing of the third-floor, was
+their kitchen and sitting-room; it was not quite so large as the other.
+This room contained a press, an old chest of drawers, a wooden box
+once used for navvy's tools, three chairs, a stool, and some cooking
+utensils. When, therefore, one little Ginx had curled himself up under a
+blanket on the box, and three more had slipped beneath a tattered piece
+of carpet under the table, there still remained five little bodies to be
+bedded. For them an old straw mattress, limp enough to be rolled up and
+thrust under the bed, was at night extended on the floor. With this,
+and a patchwork quilt, the five were left to pack themselves together as
+best they could. So that, if Ginx, in some vision of the night, happened
+to be angered, and struck out his legs in navvy fashion, it sometimes
+came to pass that a couple of children tumbled upon the mass of
+infantile humanity below.
+
+Not to be described are the dinginess of the walls, the smokiness of the
+ceilings, the grimy windows, the heavy, ever-murky atmosphere of these
+rooms. They were 8 feet 6 inches in height, and any curious statist can
+calculate the number of cubic feet of air which they afforded to each
+person.
+
+The other side of the street was 14 feet distant. Behind, the backs of
+similar tenements came up black and cowering over the little yard of
+Number Five. As rare, in the well thus formed, was the circulation of
+air as that of coin in the pockets of the inhabitants. I have seen the
+yard; let me warn you, if you are fastidious, not to enter it. Such
+of the filth of the house as could not, at night, be thrown out of the
+front windows, was there collected, and seldom, if ever, removed. What
+became of it? What becomes of countless such accretions in like places?
+Are a large proportion of these filthy atoms absorbed by human creatures
+living and dying, instead of being carried away by scavengers and
+inspectors? The forty-five big and little lodgers in the house were
+provided with a single office in the corner of the yard. It had once
+been capped by a cistern, long since rotted away--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The street was at one time the prey of the gas company; at
+another, of the drainage contractors. They seemed to delight in turning
+up the fetid soil, cutting deep trenches through various strata of
+filth, and piling up for days or weeks matter that reeked with vegetable
+and animal decay. One needs not affirm that Rosemary Street was not so
+called from its fragrance. If the Ginxes and their neighbors preserved
+any semblance of health in this place, the most popular guardian on
+the board must own it a miracle. They, poor people, knew nothing of
+"sanitary reform," "sanitary precautions," "zymotics," "endemics,"
+"epidemics," "deodorizers," or "disinfectants." They regarded disease
+with the apathy of creatures who felt it to be inseparable from
+humanity, and with the fatalism of despair.
+
+Gin was their cardinal prescription, not for cure, but for oblivion:
+"Sold everywhere." A score of palaces flourished within call of each
+other in that dismal district--garish, rich-looking dens, drawing to
+the support of their vulgar glory the means, the lives, the eternal
+destinies of the wrecked masses about them. Veritable wreckers they who
+construct these haunts, viler than the wretches who place false beacons
+and plunder bodies on the beach. Bring down the real owners of
+these places, and show them their deadly work! Some of them leading
+Philanthropists, eloquent at Missionary meetings and Bible Societies,
+paying tribute to the Lord out of the pockets of dying drunkards,
+fighting glorious battles for slaves, and manfully upholding popular
+rights. My rich publican--forgive the pun--before you pay tithes of mint
+and cummin, much more before you claim to be a disciple of a certain
+Nazarene, take a lesson from one who restored fourfold the money he had
+wrung from honest toil, or reflect on the case of the man to whom it was
+said, "Go sell all thou hast, and give to the poor." The lips from which
+that counsel dropped offered some unpleasant alternatives, leaving out
+one, however, which nowadays may yet reach you--the contempt of your
+kind.
+
+
+
+
+III.--Work and Ideas.
+
+I return again to Ginx's menace to his wife, who was suckling her
+infant at the time on the bed. For her he had an animal affection that
+preserved her from unkindness, even in his cups. His hand had never
+unmanned itself by striking her, and rarely indeed did it injure any
+one else. He wrestled not against flesh and blood, or powers, or
+principalities, or wicked spirits in high places. He struggled with
+clods and stones, and primeval chaos. His hands were horny with the
+fight, and his nature had perhaps caught some of the dull ruggedness
+of the things wherewith he battled. Hard and with a will had he worked
+through the years of wedded life, and, to speak him fair, he had acted
+honestly, within the limits of his knowledge and means, for the good of
+his family. How narrow were those limits! Every week he threw into the
+lap of Mrs. Ginx the eighteen or twenty shillings which his strength and
+temperance enabled him continuously to earn, less sixpence reserved
+for the public-house, whither he retreated on Sundays after the family
+dinner. A dozen children overrunning the space in his rooms was then
+a strain beyond the endurance of Ginx. Nor had he the heart to try the
+common plan, and turn his children out of doors on the chance of their
+being picked up in a raid of Sunday School teachers. So he turned out
+himself to talk with the humbler spirits of the "Dragon," or listen
+sleepily while alehouse demagogues prescribed remedies for State abuses.
+
+Our friend was nearly as guiltless of knowledge as if Eve had never
+rifled the tree whereon it grew. Vacant of policies were his thoughts;
+innocent he of ideas of state-craft. He knew there was a Queen; he had
+seen her. Lords and Commons were to him vague deities possessing strange
+powers. Indeed, he had been present when some of his better-informed
+companions had recognized with cheers certain gentlemen,--of whom Ginx's
+estimate was expressed by a reference to his test of superiority to
+himself in that which he felt to be greatest within him--"I could lick
+'em with my little finger"--as the Chancellor of the Exchequer and the
+Prime Minister. Little recked he of their uses or abuses. The functions
+of Government were to him Asian mysteries. He only felt that it ought to
+have a strong arm, like the brawny member wherewith he preserved order
+in his domestic kingdom, and therefore generally associated Government
+with the Police. In his view these were to clear away evil-doers and
+leave every one else alone. The higher objects of Government were, if
+at all, outlined in the shadowiest form in his imagination. Government
+imposed taxes--that he was obliged to know. Government maintained the
+parks; for that he thanked it. Government made laws, but what they were,
+or with what aim or effects made, he knew not, save only that by them
+something was done to raise or depress the prices of bread, tea, sugar,
+and other necessaries. Why they should do so he never conceived--I am
+not sure that he cared. Legislation sometimes pinched him, but darkness
+so hid from him the persons and objects of the legislators that he could
+not criticise the theories which those powerful beings were subjecting
+to experiment at his cost. I must, at any risk, say something about this
+in a separate chapter.
+
+
+
+
+IV.--Digressive, and may be skipped without mutilating the History.
+
+I stop here to address any of the following characters, should he
+perchance read these memoirs:
+
+ You, Mr. Statesman--if there be such;
+ Mr. Pseudo-Statesman, Placeman, Party Leader, Wirepuller;
+ Mr. Amateur Statesman, Dilettante Lord, Civil Servant;
+ Mr. Clubman, Litterateur, Newspaper Scribe;
+ Mr. People's Candidate, Demagogue, Fenian Spouter;
+
+or whoever you may be, professing to know aught or do anything in
+matters of policy, consider, what I am sure you have never fairly
+weighed, the condition of a man whose clearest notion of Government is
+derived from the Police! Imagine one who had never seen a polyp trying
+to construct an ideal of the animal, from a single tentacle swinging out
+from the tangle of weed in which the rest was wrapped! How then any more
+can you fancy that a man to whose sight and knowledge the only part of
+government practically exposed is the strong process of police, shall
+form a proper conception of the functions, reasons, operations, and
+relations of Government; or even build up an ideal of anything but a
+haughty, unreasonable, antagonistic, tax-imposing FORCE! And how can
+you rule such a being except as you rule a dog, by that which alone
+he understands--the dog-whip of the constable! Given in a country a
+majority of creatures like these, and surely despotism is its properest
+complement. But when they exist, as they exist in England to-day, in
+hundreds of thousands, in town and country, think what a complication
+they introduce into your theoretic free system of government. Acts
+of Parliament passed by a "freely-elected" House of Commons, and an
+hereditary House of Lords under the threats of freely-electing citizens,
+however pure in intention and correct in principle, will not seem to
+him to be the resultants of every wish in the community so much as
+dictations by superior strength. To these the obedience he will render
+will not be the loving assent of his heart, but a begrudged concession
+to circumstance. Your awe-invested legislature is not viewed as his
+friend and brother-helper, but his tyrant. Therefore the most natural
+bent of his workman-statesmanship--a rough, bungling affair--will be to
+tame you--you who ought to be his Counsellor and Friend. When he
+finds that your legislative action exerts upon him a repressive and
+restraining force he will curse you as its author, because he sees not
+the springs you are working. Should he even be a little more advanced
+in knowledge than our friend Ginx, and learn that he helps to elect the
+Parliament to make laws on behalf of himself and his fellow-citizens, he
+will scarce trust the assembly which is supposed to represent him.
+Will he, like a good citizen and a politic, accept with dignity and
+self-control the decision of a majority against his prejudices: or will
+he not regard the whole Wittenagemote with suspicion, contempt, or
+even hatred? See him rush madly to Trafalgar Square meetings, Hyde Park
+demonstrations, perhaps to Lord George Gordon Riots, as if there were no
+less perilous means of publishing his opinions! There wily men may lead
+his unconscious intellect, and stir his passions, and direct his forces
+against his own--and his children's good.
+
+Did it ever occur to you, or any of you, how many voters cannot read,
+and how many more, though they can read, are unable to apprehend reasons
+of statesmanship?--that even newspapers cannot inform them, since they
+have not the elementary knowledge needed for the comprehension of those
+things which are discussed in them; nay, that for want of understanding
+the same they may terribly distort political aims and consequences?
+
+Might it not be worth while for you, gentlemen--may it not be your duty
+to devise ways and means for conveying such elementary instruction
+by good street-preachers on politics and economy, or even political
+bible-women or colporteurs, and so to make clear to the understanding of
+every voter what are the reasons and aims of every act of Legislation,
+Home Administration, and Foreign Policy? If you do not find out some
+way to do this he may turn round upon you--I hope he may--and insist on
+annually-elected parliaments, and thus oblige ambitious state-mongers,
+in the rivalry of place, to come to him and declare more often their
+wishes and objects. Other attractions may be found in that solution:
+such as the untying of some knots of electoral difficulty, and removing
+incitements to corruption. Ten thousand pounds for one year's power were
+a high price even to a contractor. Think then whether at any cost some
+general political education must not be attempted, since there is a
+spirit breathing on the waters, and how it shall convulse them is no
+indifferent matter to you or to me. Everywhere around us are unhewn
+rocks stirred with a strange motion. Leave these chaotic fragments of
+humanity to be hewn into rough shape by coarse artists seeking only
+a petty profit, unhandy, immeasurably impudent; or dress them by your
+teaching--teaching which is the highest, noblest, purest, most efficient
+function of Government, which ought to be the most lofty ambition of
+statesmanship--to be civic corner-stones polished after the similitude
+of a palace.
+
+
+
+
+V.--Reasons and Resolves.
+
+Ginx has been waiting through three chapters to explain his truculence
+upon the birth of his twelfth child. Much explanation is not necessary.
+When he looked round his nest and saw the many open mouths about him, he
+might well be appalled to have another added to them. His children
+were not chameleons, yet they were already forced to be content with a
+proportion of air for their food. And even the air was bad. They were
+pallid and pinched. How they were clad will ever be a mystery, save to
+the poor woman who strung the limp rags together and Him who watched the
+noble patience and sacrifice of a daily heroism. Of her own unsatisfied
+cravings, and the dense motherly horrors that sometimes brooded over her
+while she nursed these infants, let me refrain from speaking, since if
+as vividly depicted as they were real, you, Madam, could not endure
+to read of them. Her poor, unintelligent mind clung tenaciously to the
+controverted aphorism, "Where God sends mouths he sends food to fill
+them." Believing that there was a God, and that He must be kind, she
+trusted in this as a truth, and perhaps an all-seeing eye reading some
+quaint characters on her simple heart, viewed them not too nearly, but
+had regard to their general import, for, as she expressed it, "Thank
+God! they had always been able to get along."
+
+In the rush and tumult of the world it is likely that the summum
+bonum of nine-tenths of mankind is embraced in that purely negative
+happiness--to get along. Not to perish: to open eyes, however wearily,
+on a new morning: to satisfy with something, no matter what, a craving
+appetite: to close eyes at night under some shadow or shelter: or, it
+may be, in certain ranks to walk another day free from bankruptcy or
+arrest: Thank Heaven, they are just able to get along!
+
+Convinced that another infant straw would break his back, Ginx calmly
+proposed to disconcert physical, moral, and legal relations by drowning
+the straw Mrs. Ginx clinging to Number Twelve listened aghast. If a
+mother can forget her sucking child she was not that mother. The stream
+of her affections, though divided into twelve rills, would not have been
+exhausted in twenty-four, and her soul, forecasting its sorrow, yearned
+after that nonentity Number Thirteen. She pictured to herself the
+hapless strangeling borne away from her bosom by those strong arms,
+and--in fact she sobbed so that Ginx grew ashamed, and sought to comfort
+her by the suggestion that she could not have any more. But she knew
+better.
+
+
+
+
+VI.--The Antagonism of Law and Necessity.
+
+In eighteen months, notwithstanding resolves, menaces, and prophecies,
+GINX'S BABY was born. The mother hid the impending event long, from
+the father. When he came to know it, he fixed his determination by much
+thought and a little extra drinking. He argued thus: "He wouldn't go on
+the parish. He couldn't keep another youngster to save his life. He had
+never taken charity and never would. There was nothink to do with it but
+drown it!" Female friends of Mrs. Ginx bruited his intentions about the
+neighborhood, so that her "time" was watched for with interest. At last
+it came. One afternoon Ginx, lounging home, saw signs of excitement
+around his door in Rosemary Street. A knot of women and children awaited
+his coming. Passing through them he soon learned what had happened.
+Poor Mrs. Ginx! Without staying to think or argue, he took up the little
+stranger and bore it from the room----
+
+"O, O, O, Ginx! Ginx!!"
+
+She would have risen, but a strong power called weakness pulled her
+back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+The man meanwhile had reached the street.
+
+"Here he comes! There's the baby! He's going to do it, sure enough!"
+shrieked the women. The children stood agape. He stopped to consider. It
+is very well to talk about drowning your baby, but to do it you need two
+things, water and opportunity. Vauxhall Bridge was the nearest way to
+the former, and towards it Ginx turned.
+
+"Stop him!"
+
+"Murder!"
+
+"Take the child from him!"
+
+The crowd grew larger, and impeded the man's progress. Some of his
+fellow-workmen stood by regarding the fun.
+
+"Leave us aloan, naabors," shouted Ginx; "this is my own baby, and I'll
+do wot I likes with it. I kent keep it; an' if I've got anythin' I kent
+keep, it's best to get rid of it, ain't it? This child's goin' over
+Wauxhall Bridge."
+
+But the women clung to his arms and coattails.
+
+"Hallo! What's all this about?" said a sharp, strong man, well-dressed,
+and in good condition, coming up to the crowd; "another foundling!
+Confound the place, the very stones produce babies. Where was it found?"
+
+CHORUS (recognizing a deputy-relieving officer). It warn't found at all;
+it's Ginx's baby.
+
+OFFICER. Ginx's baby? Who's Ginx?
+
+GINX. I am.
+
+OFFICER. Well?
+
+GINX. Well!
+
+CHORUS. He's goin' to drown it.
+
+OFFICER. Going to drown it? Nonsense.
+
+GINX. I am.
+
+OFFICER. But, bless my heart, that's murder!
+
+GINX. No 'tain't. I've twelve already at home. Starvashon's sure to kill
+this 'un. Best save it the trouble.
+
+CHORUS. Take it away, Mr. Smug, he'll kill it if you don't.
+
+OFFICER. Stuff and nonsense! Quite contrary to law! Why, man, you're
+bound to support your child. You can't throw it off in that way;--nor on
+the parish neither. Give me your name. I must get a magistrate's order.
+The act of parliament is as clear as daylight. I had a man up under
+it last week. "Whosoever shall unlawfully abandon or expose any child,
+being under the age of two years whereby the life of such child shall
+be endangered or the health of such child shall have been or shall be
+likely to be permanently injured (drowning comes under that I think)
+shall be GUILTY OF a MISDEMEANOR and being convicted thereof shall be
+liable at the discretion of the court to be KEPT IN PENAL SERVITUDE for
+the term of three years or to be imprisoned for any term not exceeding
+two years with or without hard labor."
+
+Mr. Smug, the officer, rolled out this section in a sonorous monotone,
+without stops, like a clerk of the court. It was his pride to know by
+heart all the acts relating to his department, and to bring them down
+upon any obstinate head that he wished to crush. Ginx's head, however,
+was impervious to an act of parliament. In his then temper, the
+Commination Service or St. Ernulphus's curse would have been feathers
+to him. The only feeling aroused in his mind by the words of the
+legislature was one of resentment. To him they seemed unjust, because
+they were hard and fast, and made no allowance for circumstances. So he
+said:
+
+GINX. D---- the act of parliament! What's the use of saying I shan't
+abandon the child, when I can't keep it alive?
+
+OFFICER. But you're bound by law to keep it alive.
+
+GINX. Bound to keep it alive? How am I to do it? There's the rest on 'em
+there (nodding towards his house) little better nor alive now. If that's
+an act of Parleyment, why don't the act of Parleyment provide for 'em?
+You know what wages is, and I can't get more than is going.
+
+CHORUS. Yes. Why don't Parleyment provide for 'em? You take the child,
+Mr. Smug.
+
+OFFICER (regardless of grammar). ME take the child! The parish has
+enough to do to take care of foundlings and children whose parents can't
+or don't work. You don't suppose we will look after the children of
+those who can?
+
+GINX. Jest so. You'll bring up bastards and beggars' pups, but you won't
+help an honest man to keep his head above water. This child's head is
+goin' under water anyhow!--and he prepared to bolt, amid fresh screams
+from the Chorus.
+
+
+
+
+VII.--Malthus and Man.
+
+Two gentlemen, who had been observing the excitement, here came forward.
+
+FIRST GENTLEMAN. This is our problem again, Mr. Philosopher.
+
+Mr. PHILOSOPHER (to Ginx). You don't know what to do with your infant,
+my friend, and you think the State ought to provide for it? I understand
+you to say this is your thirteenth child. How came you to have so many?
+
+This question, though put with profound and even melancholy gravity,
+disconcerted Ginx, Officer, and Chorus, who united in a hearty outburst
+of laughter.
+
+GINX. Haw, Haw, Haw! How came I to have so many? Why my old woman's a
+good un and----
+
+In fact, after searching his mind for some clever way of putting a
+comical rejoinder, Ginx laughed boisterously. There are two aspects of a
+question.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. I am serious, my friend. Did it never occur to you that you
+had no right to bring children into the world unless you could feed and
+clothe and educate them?
+
+CHORUS. Laws a' mercy!
+
+GINX. I'd like to know how I could help it, naabor. I'm a married man.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Well, I will go further and say you ought not to have
+married without a fair prospect of being able to provide for any
+contingent increase of family.
+
+CHORUS. Laws a' mercy!
+
+PHILOSOPHER (waxing warm). What right had you to marry a poor woman, and
+then both of you, with as little forethought as two--a--dogs, or other
+brutes--to produce between you such a multitudinous progeny--
+
+GINX. Civil words, naabor; don't call my family hard names.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Then let me say, such a monstrous number of children as
+thirteen? You knew, as you said just now, that wages were wages and did
+not vary much. And yet you have gone on subdividing your resources by
+the increase of what must become a degenerate offspring. (To the Chorus)
+All you workpeople are doing it. Is it not time to think about these
+things and stop the indiscriminate production of human beings, whose
+lives you cannot properly maintain? Ought you not to act more like
+reflective creatures and less like brutes? As if breeding were the whole
+object of life! How much better for you, my friend, if you had never
+married at all, than to have had the worry of a wife and children all
+these years.
+
+The philosopher had gone too far. There were some angry murmurs among
+the women and Ginx's face grew dark. He was thinking of "all those
+years" and the poor creature that from morning to night and Sunday to
+Sunday, in calm and storm, had clung to his rough affections: and the
+bright eyes, and the winding arms so often trellised over his tremendous
+form, and the coy tricks and laughter that had cheered so many tired
+hours. He may have been much of a brute, but he felt that, after
+all, that sort of thing was denied to dogs and pigs. Before he could
+translate his thoughts into words or acts a shrewd-looking, curly-haired
+stonemason, who stood by with his tin on his arm, cut into the
+discussion.
+
+STONEMASON. Your doctrines won't go down here, Mr. Philosopher. I've
+'eard of them before. I'd just like to ask you what a man's to do and
+what a woman's to do if they don't marry: and if they do, how can you
+honestly hinder them from having any children?
+
+The stonemason had rudely struck out the cardinal issues of the
+question.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Well, to take the last point first, there are physical and
+ethical questions involved in it, which it is hard to discuss before
+such an audience as this.
+
+STONEMASON. But you must discuss 'em, if you wish us to change our ways,
+and stop breeding.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Very well: perhaps you are right. But, again, I should
+first have to establish a basis for my arguments, by showing that the
+conception of marriage entertained by you all is a low one. It is not
+simply a breeding matter. The beauty and value of the relation lies
+in its educational effects--the cultivation of mutual sentiments and
+refinements of great importance to a community.
+
+STONEMASON. Ay! Very beautiful and refining to Mr. and Mrs. Philosopher,
+but I'd like to know where the country would have been if our fathers
+had held to that view of matrimony? Why, ain't it in natur' for all
+beings to pair, and have young? an' you say we ain't to do it! I think a
+statesman ought to make something out of what's nateral to human beings,
+and not try to change their naturs. Besides, ain't there good of another
+kind to be got out of the relation of parents and children? Did you ever
+have a child yourself?
+
+GINX (contemplating the Philosopher's physique). HE have a youngster! He
+couldn't.
+
+CHORUS. Ha! Ha! Ha!
+
+STONEMASON. I don't believe in yer humbuggin' notions. They lead to
+lust and crime;--I'm told they do in France. If you yourself haven't the
+human natur in you to know it, I'll tell you, and we can all tell you
+that as a rule if the healthy desires of natur ain't satisfied in a
+honest way, they will be in another. You can't stop eating by passin' an
+act of Parleyment to stop it. And as for yer eddication and cultivation,
+that makes no difference. We know something here about yer eddicated
+men;--more than they think. Who is it we meet about the streets late at
+night, goin' to the gay houses? Some of 'em stand near as high as you,
+but that don't alter their natur. They have their passions like other
+men; and eddication don't keep 'em down. Well, if that's the case, how
+can you ask people of our sort to put on the curb, or make us do it?
+Are we to live more like beasts than we are now, or do what's worse
+than murder? I don't see no other way. Among us I tell you, sir,
+three-fourths of our eddication, is eddication of the heart. We have
+to learn to be human, kind, self-denyin', and I think this makes better
+men, as a rule, than head-larnin'; tho' I don't despise that, neither.
+But you don't suppose head-citizens would fight for their country like
+men with wives and children behind 'em; why they don't even at home work
+for daily food like a man with wife and babies to provide for!
+
+The stonemason was above his class--one of those shrewd men that "the
+people called Methodists" get hold of, and use among the lower orders,
+under the name of "local preachers;" men who learn to think and speak
+better than their fellows. The Philosopher testified some admiration by
+listening attentively, and was about to reply, but the Chorus was tired,
+and the women would not hear him.
+
+CHORUS. Best get out o' this. We don't want any o' yer filhosophy. Go
+and get childer' of yer own, &c., &c.
+
+The Philosopher and his friend departed, carrying with them unsolved the
+problem they had brought.
+
+
+
+
+VIII.--The Baby's First Translation.
+
+The stonemason had been the hero of the moment; now attention centred
+on our own hero. Ginx hurried off again, but as the crowd opened
+before him, he was met, and his mad career stayed, by a slight figure,
+feminine, draped in black to the feet, wearing a curiously framed
+white-winged hood above her pale face, and a large cross suspended from
+her girdle. He could not run her down.
+
+NUN. Stop, MAN! Are you mad? Give me the child.
+
+He placed the little bundle in her arms. She uncovered the queer, ruby
+face, and kissed it. Ginx had not looked at the face before, but after
+seeing it, and the act of this woman, he could not have touched a hair
+of his child's head. His purpose died from that moment, though his
+perplexity was still alive.
+
+NUN. Let me have it. I will take it to the Sisters' Home, and it shall
+live there. Your wife may come and nurse it. We will take charge of it.
+
+GINX. And you won't send it back again? You'll take it for good and all?
+
+NUN. O, yes.
+
+GINX. Good. Give us yer hand.
+
+A little white hand came out from under her burthen, and was at once
+half-crushed in Ginx's elephantine grasp.
+
+GINX. Done. Thank'ee, missus. Come, mates, I'll stand a drink.
+
+A few minutes after, the woman of the cross, who had been up to comfort
+the poor mother, fluttered with her white wings down Rosemary Street,
+carrying in her arms Ginx's Baby.
+
+
+
+
+PART II. WHAT CHARITY AND THE CHURCHES DID WITH HIM.
+
+
+
+
+I.--The Milk of Human Kindness, Mother's Milk, and the Milk of the Word.
+
+The early days of his residence at the Home of the Sisters of Misery,
+in Winkle Street, was the Eden of Ginx's Baby's existence. Themselves
+innocent of a mother's experiences, the sisters were free to give
+play to their affections in a novel direction, and to assume a sort of
+spiritual maternity that was lucky for the changeling. He was nestled
+in kind serge-covered arms: kisses rained upon him from chaste lips. A
+slight scandal thrilled the convent upon the discovery of his sex, which
+had of course been a pure matter of conjecture to Sister Pudicitia
+when she rescued him; but enthusiasm can overcome anything. The awkward
+questions foreshadowed in the discovery were left to be considered when
+their growing importance should demand upon them the judgment of the
+archbishop. Visions of an unusual sanctity to be fostered in the pure
+regions of the convent, and to be sent on a mission into the world
+to attest the power of their spiritual discipline, began to haunt the
+brains of the sequestered nuns. Might not this infant be an embryo
+saint, destined for a great work in the heretical wilderness out of
+which he had come? How little healthy food the brains must have had
+wherein these insane dreams were excited by our innocent baby! Hardly
+did the sacred spinsters forecast what was in store for them when he
+should be teething.
+
+But Ginx's Baby was in a religious atmosphere, and that is always
+surcharged with electricity. His lot must have been above that of any
+other human being if he could long have remained in such a climate
+unvisited by thunder. The mother had been permitted to attend at the
+Home with the same regularity as the milkman, to discharge her maternal
+duties. Then with the rise of the visionary projects just mentioned the
+gravest doubts began to agitate the fertile and casuistic mind of the
+Lady Superior. The holier her ideal St. Ginx of the future, the more to
+be deplored was any heretical taint in the present. Holy mother! Was
+it not perhaps eminently perilous to his spiritual purity that an
+unbeliever like Mrs. Ginx should bring unconsecrated milk into the
+convent to be administered to this suckling of the Church! In her
+uneasiness she appealed to Father Certificatus, the conventual
+confessor. He gave his opinion in the following letter:--
+
+"DEAR SISTER SUSPICIOSA,
+
+"The very grave question you have put to me has given me
+much anxiety. It could not but do so since it occupied, I knew, so
+fully your own holy reflections. I pondered it during the night while
+I repeated one hundred Aves on my knees, and I think the Blessed Virgin
+has vouchsafed her assistance.
+
+"I understood you to say you thought that the physical health of the
+infant, so singularly and miraculously thrown upon your care,
+required the offices of his heretic mother, and yet that you felt how
+inconsistent it was with the noble future we contemplate for him, that
+he should receive unorthodox lacteal sustentation. In this you are but
+following the usage of the Church in all ages, for She has ever enjoined
+the advantage of infusing Her doctrines into Her children with the
+mother's milk.
+
+"Three courses only appear to me to be open to us. First, we may try to
+work upon the mother's feelings, and on behalf of her child induce her
+to avail herself of the inestimable privileges of the Church in which
+he is fostered. Secondly, should she repel us--and these lower class
+heretics are even brutally refractory--we might at least allure her to
+allow us to make with holy water the sign of the Cross upon the natural
+reservoirs of infant nourishment each time before she approaches the
+infant. This, besides overcoming the immediate difficulty and securing
+for the child a supply of sanctified food, might open the way for the
+entrance into her own bosom of the milk of the word. Thirdly, should she
+reject these proposals, I see nothing for it but to forbid her to
+have access to her infant, and, commending him to the care of the Holy
+Mother, to feed him with pap or other suitable nourishment, previously
+consecrated by me in its crude state, and prepared by the most holy
+hands of your community. Thus we may hope to shield the young soul in
+its present freshness from contact with carnal elements.
+
+ "Your loving Father in, &c.,
+ "CERTIFICATUS."
+
+
+On receiving this letter the Superioress conferred not with flesh and
+blood, but sent for Mrs. Ginx. That worthy woman was not enchanted with
+her child's position. I have hinted that her faith was simple, but in
+proportion to its simplicity it was strongly-rooted in her nature. 'Tis
+not infrequent to find it so. Lengthy creeds and confessions of faith
+are apt to extend the strength and fervor of belief over too wide a
+surface. In the close frame of some single article will be concentrated
+the whole energy of the soul. The first formula, "Repent and believe
+in the Lord Jesus Christ," was maintained with a heat that became less
+intense, though more distributed, in the insertion of an Athanasian
+creed. Mrs. Ginx's creed was succinct.
+
+Mrs. GINX'S PRIMARY CREED.
+
+ I believe in God, giver of bread, meat, money, and health.
+
+This she maintained, with indifferent ritual and devotional observances.
+But there was to Mrs. Ginx's faith a corollary or secondary creed, only
+needed to meet special emergencies.
+
+Mrs. GINX'S SECONDARY CREED.
+
+ 1. I believe in the Church of England.
+ 2. I believe in Heaven and Hell.
+ 3. (A negative article) I hate Popery, priests, and the Devil.
+
+
+When her husband made his fatal gift to the nun, this third article of
+his wife's belief, or unbelief, stirred up and waxed aggressive.
+
+Said the Lady Superior, "My good woman, your child thrives under the
+care of Holy Mother Church."
+
+"Yes'm, he thrives well," replies Mrs. Ginx, repeating no more of Sister
+Suspiciosa's sentence, "an' I've 'ad more milk than ever for the darlin'
+this time, thank God."
+
+"And the Holy Virgin."
+
+"I dunno about her," cries Mrs. Ginx emphatically, perhaps not seeing
+congruity between a virgin and the subject of thankfulness.
+
+"And the Holy Virgin," repeated the nun, "who interests herself in all
+mothers. She has thus blessed you that your child may be made strong for
+the work of the Church. Do you not see a miracle is worked within you to
+prove Her goodness? This, no doubt, is an evidence to you of Her wish to
+bless you and take you for Her own. I beseech you listen to Her voice,
+and come and enter Her fold."
+
+"If you mean the Virgin Mary, mum, I ain't a idolater, beggin' yer
+parding," says Mrs. Ginx; "an' tho' I wouldn't for the world offend
+them as has been so kind to my child, an' saved it from that deer little
+creetur bein' thrown over Wauxhall Bridge--an' Ginx ought to be ashamed
+of hisself, so he ought--I ain't Papish, mum, and I ain't dispoged, with
+twelve on 'em there at home all Protestant to the back bone, to turn
+Papish now, an' so I 'ope an' pray, mum," says Mrs. Ginx, roaring and
+crying, "you ain't agoin' to make Papish of my flesh an' blood. O dear!
+O dear!"
+
+The Lady Superior shut her ears; she had raised a familiar spirit and
+could not lay it. She temporized.
+
+"You know your husband has given the child to us. It will be called the
+infant Ambrosius."
+
+"Dear, dear!" sighed Mrs. Ginx, "what a name!"
+
+"We wish him to be kept from any worldly taint, and by-and-by his
+saintliness may gain you forgiveness in spite of your heretical
+perversity. I cannot permit you to give him unconsecrated milk, and as
+we wish to treat you kindly, the holy Father Certificatus has allowed me
+to make an arrangement with you, to which you can have no objection--I
+mean, that you should let me make the sign of the cross upon your
+breasts morning and evening before you suckle your infant. You will
+permit me to do that, won't you?"
+
+Conceive of Mrs. Ginx's reply, clothed in choice Westminster English:
+it asserted her readiness to cut off her right hand, her feet, to be
+hanged, drowned, burned, torn to pieces, in fact to withstand all the
+torments ascribed by vulgar tradition to Roman Catholic ingenuity,
+and to see her baby "a dead corpse" into the bargain, before she would
+submit her Protestant bosom to such an indignity.
+
+"No, mum!" she said; "I couldn't sleep with that on my breast;" and
+cried hysterically.
+
+This lower class heretic WAS "brutally refractory." So thought the
+Superioress, and so gave Mrs. Ginx notice to come no more. She went home
+rather jubilant--she was a martyr.
+
+
+
+
+II.--The Protestant Detectoral Association.
+
+Ginx's baby was now fed on consecrated pap. But his mother was not a
+woman to be silent under her wrongs. From her husband she hid them,
+because the subject was forbidden. She poured out her complaint to Mrs.
+Spittal and other Protestant matrons. Thus it came to pass that one
+day, in Ginx's absence, the good woman was surprised by a visit from a
+"gentleman." He was small, sharp, rapid, dressed in black. He opened his
+business at once.
+
+"Mrs. Ginx? Ah! I am the agent of the Protestant Detectoral
+Association."
+
+Mrs. Ginx wiped her best chair and set it for him.
+
+"By great good fortune the secretary received only half an hour ago
+intelligence of the shocking instance of Papal aggression of which you
+have been the victim."
+
+To hear her case put so grandly was honey to Mrs. Ginx.
+
+"Well now," continued the little man, "we are ready to render you every
+assistance to save your child from the claws of the Great Dragon. I wish
+to know the exact circumstances--let me see--(opening a large pocket
+book) I have this memorandum: the child was carried off from his
+mother's bedside in broad daylight by a nun accompanied by two priests
+and a large body of Irish: is that a correct version?"
+
+"Law, no, sir, it warn't quite like that," said Mrs. Ginx. "We've 'ad
+so many on 'em that Ginx was for drownin' the thirteenth"----The little
+man opened his eyes----
+
+"An' he went and gave it away, sir," said she crying, "to a nun,
+sir--ah! ah! ah!--they won't let me see the darlin' now, sir--ah! ah!
+ah! because I won't let Missis Spishyosir mark me with the cross, sir,
+an' me with as fine a breast o' milk as ever was for 'im, sir--ah! ah!
+ah!"
+
+"Hem!" said the little man, "that's different from what I understood."
+
+He was quite honest, but who does not know how disappointing it is to
+find a wrong you wish to redress is not so bad as you had hoped?
+
+However, it looked bad enough, and might be made worse. It was the very
+case for the Protestant Detectoral Association.
+
+"Would Mr. Ginx not join in an effort to recover his child?"
+
+"No, sir; I should think not: he went an' gave it away."
+
+"I know; but he is a Protestant?"
+
+"I don't think he be much o' anything, sir. I know he hate priests like
+pison, but he don't care about these things as I do."
+
+"Oh! I see." Writes in his memorandum book--husband indifferent.
+
+
+"But don't you think he would help you to get the child back again?"
+
+"No, sir. I wouldn't speak of it to him for the world. He'd knock any
+one down if they was to mention the child to him."
+
+The little man mentally determined not to see Ginx.
+
+"Well; would you like to have your child back?"
+
+"You see, I couldn't bring it 'ere, sir. Ginx won't 'ave it; but I'd
+like to see it took away from them nunnerys."
+
+"Ha! very well then. We can perhaps manage it for you. You would be
+content to hand it over to some Protestant Home, where it would be taken
+care of and you could see it when you liked?"
+
+"O yes, sir," cries Mrs. Ginx, brightening.
+
+"Then we'll have an affidavit and apply for a Habeas Corpus."
+
+It was impossible not to be satisfied with such words as these, whatever
+they meant and Mrs. Ginx was cheered, while the little man went on his
+way.
+
+
+
+
+III.--The Sacrament of Baptism.
+
+Mother, or "Mrs." Suspiciosa, fed Ginx's Baby with holy pap. It seemed
+proper now that he should be christened and formally received into
+the Church. No small stir was made by this ceremony, for which all the
+resources of the convent were called into action. The day selected was
+that sacred to St. Ambrosius. The chapel was decorated with flowers.
+Mass was celebrated, candles flamed upon the altar surrounding a figure
+of the Infant Jesus, incense was burning around the baby, sisters and
+novices knelt in serried rows of virginity
+
+ "like doves
+ Sunning their milky bosoms on the thatch."
+
+Mother Suspiciosa carried the infant, clothed in a pure white robe,
+with a red cross embroidered on its front. In the absence of the natural
+parent a wax figure of St. Ambrosius did duty for him, and another wax
+figure stood godfather: but I dare not enter into details of matters
+that may be looked at as awfully profane, or awfully solemn, by
+different spectators. These things are a mystery.
+
+I have no hesitation about describing the impious behavior of little
+Ginx. Whatever swaddled infant could do in the way of opposition, with
+hands, and legs, and voice, was done by that embryo saint. The incense
+made him cough and sputter; the lights and singing raised the very devil
+within him. His cries drowned the prayers. He frightened his conductress
+by the redness of his face. He ruined the red cross with ejected matter.
+You would have taken him for an infant demoniac. Mother Suspiciosa,
+though annoyed, was encouraged. She looked upon this as an evident
+testimony to little Ginx's value. The devil and St. Michael were
+contending for his body. At length he was baptized, and carried out.
+Credat Judaeus. He instantly sank into a deep sleep. It was a miracle:
+Satan had yielded to the sign of the cross!
+
+
+
+
+IV.--Law on Behalf of Gospel.
+
+In the moment of Sister Suspiciosa's triumph, the enemy was laying his
+train against her. The little man made his report to the secretary of
+the Protestant Detectoral Association. This gentleman was well-born
+and well-bred; moved to work in this "cause" by an honest hatred of
+superstition, priestcraft, and lies; now giving all his energies to the
+ambitious design of pulling down the strongholds of Satan. In any other
+matter he could act coolly, and with deliberation; in this he was an
+enthusiast. He had a keen Roman nose. He could scent a priest
+anywhere in the United Kingdom. He could smell Jesuitry in the Queen's
+drawing-room, a cabinet council or convocation, though he had never
+been at either. His eye was beyond a falcon's; he saw things that
+were invisible. It penetrated through all disguises. He knew a secret
+emissary of the Pope by the cock of his hat, or the color of his
+stockings. At least, he thought so, and thousands of persons acted on
+his estimate of himself.
+
+"This case," said he to the little man, when he had concluded his
+report, "though not in its first incidents so grave as we were led to
+expect, is, in another point of view, very serious. Here is a man, as
+you have expressed it, 'indifferent' to his child's life--animal and
+spiritual. The mother, with a true Protestant heart, and a fine breast
+of milk, is longing to nurture her child, and to deliver it from the
+toils of the Papacy. But the husband, what's his name?.... Ginx--Ginx? a
+very bad name for a case, by the way--GINX'S CASE!--this Ginx has given
+up his child to the Sisters of Misery. How are we to get it away again,
+without his cooperation?.... Well, we must try."
+
+The solicitor of the Association was forthwith summoned. When the matter
+had been laid before him, he expressed doubts, offered and withdrew
+courses of action, and ended by suggesting that he should take the
+opinion of counsel.
+
+"Mr. Stigma, I suppose?" said he to the secretary.
+
+"Oh, yes, Sir Adolphus Stigma is one of our principal supporters, and
+his son's heart is thoroughly with us."
+
+Messrs. Roundhead, Roundhead and Lollard, drew up a case to be submitted
+to Mr. Stigma. I will only transcribe the latter paragraphs:--
+
+
+Mr. Ginx being indifferent, and Mrs. Ginx being ready to assist in
+regaining the custody of her child, to be conveyed to a Protestant Home,
+
+ "YOU ARE REQUESTED TO ADVISE:
+
+"1. Whether a summons should be taken out before a magistrate against
+the Lady Superior of the convent, for enticing away or detaining the
+infant, under the 56th sect. of 24 and 25 Vict., c. 100 Or,
+
+"2. Whether the proper remedy is by a writ of Habeas Corpus? and, if
+so, whether it is necessary that the father should be joined in the
+proceedings or his leave obtained to prosecute them? Or, failing these,
+
+"3. Whether counsel is of opinion that this is a case within Talfourd's
+Act, and an application might not be made to the Lord Chancellor, or
+the Master of the Rolls, on the mother's behalf for the custody of her
+child? And,
+
+"4. To advise generally on behalf of the infant."
+
+
+Mr. Adolphus Stigma took ten days to consider. Meanwhile, the infant
+Ambrosius continued to thrive on conventual pap. Then Mr. Stigma wrote
+his opinion. It was a model for a barrister. You took the advice at your
+own peril--not his. Therefore I transcribe it.
+
+ "OPINION.
+
+"I have given to this case my most careful attention; and it is one of
+great difficulty. Having regard to the questions put to me, I think--
+
+"1. Section 56 of the Act of 24 and 25 Vict., c. 100, appears at first
+sight to be directed against the stealing and abduction of children for
+marriage, or other improper purposes. It provides that 'Whosoever shall
+UNLAWFULLY, either by force or fraud, lead or take away, or decoy,
+or entice away, or detain any child, &c., with intent to deprive ANY
+parent, &c., of the possession of such child'--shall be guilty of
+felony. It is perfectly clear, that in the case before me, the infant
+was not, 'by force or fraud, led or taken away, or decoyed, or enticed
+away.' The statute, however, uses the word 'detain;' and this, it
+appears to me, has much the same force and intention as the previous
+words. It is to be noted, however, that it is separated from them by
+the disjunctive 'or;' and, therefore, it might be argued with some
+plausibility that any act of forceful or fraudulent detention, after
+notice, by persons who have originally acquired a child's custody in
+a lawful way, came within the section. The point is new, and of great
+importance; and if the Protestant Detectoral Association feel disposed
+to try it, they would do so under favorable circumstances in the present
+case. Should they decide to do so, a written demand should be served
+upon the authorities of the convent, by the mother, or some one acting
+on her behalf, to give up the infant.
+
+"2. The second question is also involved in difficulty. Were the father
+to be joined in the proceedings, the writ of Habeas Corpus would be
+the correct remedy. But his probable refusal necessitates the inquiry
+whether the mother can alone apply for the writ. The general rule of law
+is, that the father is entitled to the custody and disposition of his
+children. In Cartlidge and Cartlidge, 31, L. J., P. M. & D. 85, it was
+held that this rule would not be generally departed from by the Divorce
+Court; but in Barnes v. Barnes, L. R. I, P. & D. 463, the court made
+an order, giving the custody of two infant children to the mother,
+respondent in a suit for a dissolution of marriage, on the ground that
+the mother's health was suffering from being deprived of their society,
+and that they were living with a stranger, and not with the father.
+These cases were, however, in the Divorce Court, and do not apply. But,
+as there seems to be much ground in the peculiar circumstances here,
+for arguing that the mother should have the custody of the child, or,
+at least, that it should not be left to that of persons of a different
+religion from both parents, an application might be made to the Queen's
+Bench to try the question.
+
+"3. Should the common law remedies fail, resort may perhaps be had to
+the powers in Chancery under Talfourd's Act, but on this point I should
+like to confer with an equity counsel before giving a decided opinion.
+It has been decided under this Act that the court has power to give the
+custody of children under seven to the mother. (Shillito v. Collett, 8,
+W. R. 683-696.) As this infant is but six weeks old it comes within that
+case.
+
+"4. I have no general advice to give on behalf of the infant.
+
+ "ADOLPHUS STIGMA,
+ "9, Plumtree Court."
+
+
+If none of the courses suggested by Mr. Stigma was very decided, Messrs.
+Roundhead, Roundhead and Lollard were not sorry to have three strings to
+their bow. The Detectoral Association were good clients; most of their
+funds went into their lawyers' pockets. It was part of their policy
+to be litigious. Thereby the world was kept alive to the existence of
+Papacy within its bosom. Who shall say the Association were wrong?
+Some healthy daylight was occasionally let in upon the mysteries of
+Jesuitism, and there are people who think that worth while at the risk
+of a chance injustice. Though the Devil should not get his due, few
+would give him any sympathy.
+
+The solicitor at once instructed Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q.C., to apply with
+Mr. Stigma to a magistrate for a summons. Mr. Bailey, Q.C., was not
+chosen for his partialities. In religious matters he was a perfect
+Gallio; but he was like St. Paul in one particular, he could be all
+things to all men.
+
+
+
+
+V.--Magistrate's Law.
+
+The personnel of the magistrate to whom Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q. C., (with
+him Mr. Adolphus Stigma), applied in the case of re an infant,
+exparte Ginx, is not material to this history. He was like his fellow
+stipendiaries--mild as to humor, vigilant in his duties, opinionated
+in his views, resenting the troublesome intrusion into his court of
+a barrister, apt to treat him with about one-eighth of the courtesy
+extended to the humblest junior by the Queen's Bench, and curiously
+unequal both with himself and his brother magistrates in adjusting
+punishment. It will be most convenient to insert the report of the Daily
+Electric Meteor:--
+
+ "WESTMINSTER.
+
+"Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q.C., (with whom was Mr. Adolphus Stigma), applied
+for a summons against Mary Dens, commonly called Sister Suspiciosa, of
+the convent of the Sisters of Misery, in Winkle Street, for abducting
+and detaining a male child of John Ginx and Mary his wife.
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY. On whose behalf do you apply?
+
+"The learned counsel stated that he was instructed by the Protestant
+Detectoral Association to apply on behalf of the mother. The case
+was also watched by the solicitors of the Society for Preventing the
+Suppression of Women and Children.
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY. Does the father join in the application?
+
+"Mr. BAILEY. No, sir.
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY. Why? He ought to be joined if living.
+
+"Mr. BAILEY. Perhaps you will allow me, sir, to state the case. The
+circumstances are peculiar. The fact is----
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY. I cannot understand why the father should not be
+represented if the child has been abducted. Where was it taken from?
+
+"Mr. Bailey proceeded to state that the child had been taken by a nun
+from No. 5, Rosemary Street, without the mother's consent, and was now
+imprisoned in the convent. The father appeared to be indifferent, or
+to have given a sort of general acquiescence. This was Mrs. Ginx's
+thirteenth child, around whom gathered the concentrated affections
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY (interrupting the learned gentleman). We have no time
+for sentiment here, Mr. Bailey. If the father consented, can you call it
+abduction? It looks like reduction. (Laughter.)
+
+"Mr. Bailey called attention to the consolidated statutes of criminal
+law, and said he was going for illegal detention rather than abduction,
+and argued at great length from section 56. At the conclusion of the
+argument, after refusing to hear Mr. Stigma,
+
+"Mr. D'Acerbity said that the case clearly did not come within the
+section, and he was afraid the learned counsel knew it. The father had
+been a consenting party, on the counsel's own statement, to the child's
+removal, and no suggestion had been made that he had withdrawn his
+consent. He should refuse a summons.
+
+"Mr. Bailey endeavored to address the magistrate but was stopped.
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY. I have no more to say. You can apply to the Queen's
+Bench. I have no sympathy with you whatever."
+
+Mr. D'Acerbity's law was good, but--what has justice to do with
+"sympathies?" Surely the day after this report appeared the magistrate
+must have had a letter from the Home Secretary?
+
+
+
+
+VI-Popery and Protestantism in the Queen's Bench.
+
+The application to the magistrate was far from satisfactory. There had
+not even been an exposure, and the Windmill Bulletin gayly bantered the
+Detectoral Association. Meanwhile had happened the grand christening,
+of which a circumstantial account was in the hands of the council of the
+Detectoral Association shortly after the ceremony had been performed.
+Here was a monstrous indignity to a Protestant child! The account was at
+once printed, together with a verbatim report of the application to the
+magistrate as well as one of "a conversation held with the mother by
+an agent of the Association." Board-men paraded the great thoroughfares
+carrying this appeal:--
+
+PROTESTANT DETECTORAL ASSOCIATION.
+
+ NO POPERY!
+ Abduction Of an Infant!
+ Assault on the Liberty of the Subject!
+ Mysterious and Awful Proceedings!
+ Baptism of a Protestant Child in a Convent!
+
+ OUTRAGE
+ Upon the Nation by Foreign Mercenaries!
+ Every Father and Mother is Invited to Co-operate in
+ Maintaining the
+ PROTESTANT RELIGION,
+ The Sanctity of Home, and the Inviolability of
+ BRITISH FREEDOM!
+
+ NO SURRENDER!
+
+
+If there was no coherency in this production, it should be noted how
+little that is of the essence of popular appeal. The metropolis was in
+an uproar. Meetings were held, subscriptions poured in, dangerous crowds
+collected in Winkle Street. When Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q. C., went down to
+Westminster, to move the Court of Queen's Bench, multitudes besieged it.
+Protestant champions and Papal ecclesiastics vied in their efforts to
+get seats. The writ had gone from judge's chambers returnable to
+the full court. Sister Suspiciosa, bearing the infant Ambrosius, and
+supported by two novices and Father Certificatus, had been smuggled into
+court through mysterious passages in its rear. Mrs. Ginx also, brought
+from Rosemary Street by the little man who provided her with a bonnet
+trimmed with orange-colored ribbons, sat staring with red eyes at her
+child, now enveloped in a robe that was embroidered with little crosses.
+
+Why need I tell you, how dead silence fell upon the Court after the stir
+caused by the entrance of the judges; how everybody knew what was coming
+when a master beneath the bench rose, and called out, "Re Ginx,
+an infant, Exparte Mary Ginx!" How the Chief Justice, fresh and
+rosy-looking, then blew his nose in a delicate mauve-colored silk
+handkerchief: how he tried and discarded half-a-dozen pens, amid
+breathless silence; how in his blandest manner he said: "Who appears
+for the Respondent?" and Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q. C., and Mr. Octavius
+Ernestus, Q. C., rose together to say that Mr. Ernestus did!
+
+Mr. Ernestus was a Catholic. He was assisted by half-a-dozen counsel.
+He riddled the affidavits on the other side, and read voluminous ones on
+his own; bitterly animadverted upon the absence of an affidavit by the
+father; held up to the scorn of a civilized world the course pursued
+towards his meek and gentle clients by the "fanatical zealots of the
+Protestant Detectoral Association;" in moving tones referred to the
+shrinking of "quiet recluses, from the gaze of a rude, unsympathizing
+world;" cited cases from the time of Magna Charta, down; called upon the
+Court to vindicate Protestant justice, ending his peroration with the
+aphorism of Lord Mansfield, Fiat justitia ruat caelum.
+
+One cannot do Justice to Mr. Dignam Bailey's argument, when after lunch
+he rose to reply. He was logical and passionate, vindictive and pathetic
+by turns. He inveighed against the Lady Superior, against her attorneys,
+against Father Certificatus, against Ginx,--"craven to his heaven-born
+rights of political and religious freedom,"--against the Roman Catholic
+religion, the Pope, the Archbishop of Westminster, the Virgin Mary. The
+Court knew, and every one else knew, that this was pure pyrotechny,
+and Mr. Bailey knew that best of all; but, though the Bench is swift to
+speak, slow to hear, it felt obliged, in a case of this public interest,
+to sit by, and be witnesses of the exhibition. Mr. Bailey concluded by a
+play on the aphorism cited by his learned friend. "He would say that if
+such justice were to be done, as his friend had urged, the Kingdom of
+Heaven in England would rush to its fall."
+
+The Court at once decided that, as the father had confided the custody
+of the infant to the Sisters of Misery, and did not appear to desire
+that it should be withdrawn, they, disregarding the religious clouds in
+which the subject had been too carefully involved on both sides, gave
+judgment for the defendant, with costs.
+
+As they passed out of Court, Mr. Stigma said to his clients, "Quite as I
+anticipated; you remember I told you so in my Opinion."
+
+
+
+
+VII.--A Protestor, but not a Protestant.
+
+The infant Ambrosius and his conductors could scarcely reach the convent
+in safety. The building showed few windows to the street, but they were
+all broken. What might have happened in a few days, but that Ginx's Baby
+took the matter into his own hands, none can say.
+
+The treatment to which the little saint was subjected soured his temper.
+His kind nurses had choked him twice a day with incense, and now he had
+inhaled for seven hours the air of the Queen's Bench. On his return to
+the convent he was hastily fed, and carried to the chapel to give thanks
+for the victory of the day. Wrapped in a handsome chasuble, they laid
+him on the steps of the altar. In the most solemn part of the service
+he coughed, and grew sick. The chasuble was bespattered. When the
+officiating priest, to save that garment, took the child in his arms, he
+nefariously polluted the sacerdotal vestments and the altar steps. Then
+he kicked toward the altar itself, roared lustily, and finally went
+into convulsions in Sister Suspiciosa's arms. Like most women, the Lady
+Superior required her enthusiasm to be fed with success. She began
+to think that she had been cozened: Ginx's Baby was too evidently a
+spiritual miscarriage. He must, like the rest of his family, be, indeed,
+"Protestant to the backbone." Father Certificatus agreed with her. His
+robes and best chasuble were befouled.
+
+"Let us not risk a repetition of this conduct," said he; "let the child
+be given up. He is baptized, and cannot be severed from the Church. He
+will return after many days."
+
+Next morning the solicitors of the Protestant Detectoral Association
+received a letter from their opponents. In this they said
+that--presuming Messrs. Roundhead, Roundhead, and Lollard, intended to
+apply to the Master of the Rolls, the authorities of the convent had
+decided, after having vindicated themselves in the Queen's Bench, to
+give up the child, which would be, for twenty-four hours, at the order
+and disposal of the Association, and afterwards of his parents. "We are
+instructed by our clients," they added, "to ask you to bear in mind that
+the child has been admitted, and is a member of the Catholic Church,
+owing allegiance to the Holy Father at Rome, a bond from which only the
+Papal excommunication can absolve him."
+
+
+
+
+VIII.--"See how these Christians love one another."
+
+A mass-meeting of Protestants had been summoned for three o'clock on the
+day designated in the letter of the Papist attorneys, to be held in the
+Philopragmon Hall. That was the favorite centre of countless movements,
+both well-meant and well-executed, and of others as futile as they were
+foolish. Yet one could not say that a larger proportion of the latter
+were connected with the Hall than existed in as many other human
+enterprises of any sort. The concession of the Romanists at first dashed
+the managers of the demonstration. Their grievance was gone. Still there
+remained topics for a meeting: they would rejoice over victory, and
+consult about the future of the Protestant Baby.
+
+The Secretary was an old hand at these meetings. He planned to import
+into this one a sensation. Ginx's Baby, brought from the convent,
+stripped of his papal swathings and enveloped in a handsome outfit
+presented by an amiable Protestant Duchess, was placed in a cradle with
+his head resting on a Bible. I am afraid he was quite as uncomfortable
+as he had ever been at the convent. When, at the conclusion of the
+chairman's speech, in which he informed the audience of their triumph,
+this exhibition was deftly introduced upon the platform, the huzzas, and
+clappings, and waving of handkerchiefs were such as even that place had
+never seen. The child was astounded into quietness.
+
+Mr. Trumpeter took the chair--believed by many to be, next to the Queen,
+the most powerful defender of the faith in the three kingdoms. I never
+could understand why the newspapers reported his speeches--I cannot.
+
+When he had done, Lord Evergood, "a popular, practical peer, of sound
+Protestant principles," as the Daily Banner alliteratively termed him
+next morning, rose to move the first resolution, already cut and dried
+by the committee--
+
+"That the infant so happily rescued from the incubus of a delusive
+superstition, should be remitted to the care of the Church Widows' and
+Orphans' Augmentation Society, and should be supported by voluntary
+contributions."
+
+Before Lord Evergood could say a word murmurs arose in every part of
+the hall. He was a mild, gentlemanly Christian, without guile, and the
+opposition both surprised and frightened him. He uttered a few sentences
+in approval of his proposition and sat down.
+
+An individual in the gallery shouted--"Sir! I rise to move an
+amendment!"
+
+Cheers, and cries of "Order! order! Sit down!" &c.
+
+The Chairman, with great blandness, said: "The gentleman is out of
+order; the resolution has not yet been seconded. I call upon the Rev.
+Mr. Valpy to second the resolution."
+
+Mr. Valpy, incumbent of St. Swithin's-within, insisted on speaking, but
+what he said was known only to himself. When he had finished there was
+an extraordinary commotion. On the platform many ministers and laymen
+jumped to their feet; in the hall at least a hundred aspirants for a
+hearing raised themselves on benches or the convenient backs of friends.
+
+The Chairman shouted, "Order! ORDER, gentlemen! This is a great
+occasion; let us show unanimity!"
+
+There seemed to be an unanimous desire to speak. Amid cheers, cries
+for order, and Kentish fire, you could hear the Rev. Mark Slowboy,
+Independent, the Rev. Hugh Quickly, Wesleyan, the Rev. Bereciah Calvin,
+Presbyterian, the Rev. Ezekiel Cutwater, Baptist, calling to the chair.
+
+A lull ensued, of which advantage was taken by Mr. Stentor, a well-known
+Hyde Park orator, who bellowed from a friend's shoulders in the pit,
+"Mr. Chairman, hear ME!" an appeal that was followed by roars of
+laughter.
+
+What was the matter? Why the proposal to hand over the baby to an
+Anglican refuge stirred up the blood of every Dissenter present. It was
+lifting the infant out of the frying-pan and dexterously dropping him
+into the fire. But the chairman was accustomed to these scenes.
+He stayed the tumult by proposing that a representative from each
+denomination should give his opinion to the audience. "Whom would they
+have first?"
+
+The loudest cries were for Mr. Cutwater, who stood forth--a weak,
+stooping, half-halting, little man, with a limp necktie, and trousers
+puffy at the knees--but with honest use of them, let me say. It is quite
+credible that if Dr. Watts's assertion be true that--
+
+ "Satan trembles when he sees
+ The weakest saint upon his knees,"
+
+that arch-enemy was unusually perturbed when Ezekiel Cutwater was upon
+his. On these he had borne manly contests with evil. Two things--yea,
+three--were rigid in Ezekiel's creed; fire would never have burned
+them out of him: hatred of Popery, contempt of Anglican priestcraft and
+apostolic succession, and adhesion to the dogma of adult baptism and
+total immersion. Whoso should not join with him in these let him be
+Anathema Maranatha.
+
+His eye kindled as he looked at the seething audience. "Sir," said he,
+"I beg to move an amendment to the motion of the noble lord. (Cheers.)
+That motion proposes to transfer to the care of the Established Church
+this tender and unconscious infant (bending over Ginx's baby), just
+snatched from the toils of a kindred superstition. (Oh, oh, hisses and
+cheers.) I withdraw the expression; I did not mean to be offensive.
+(Hear.) This is a grand representative meeting--not of the English
+Church, not of the Baptist Church, not of the Wesleyan Church--but of
+Protestantism. (Cheers and Kentish fire.) In such an assembly is it
+right to propose any singular disposition of a representative infant?
+This is now the adopted child, not of one, but of all denominations.
+(Cheers.) Around his, or her--I am not sure which--cherubic head
+circle the white-winged angels of various Churches, and on her or him,
+whichever it may be----"
+
+The Chairman said that he might as well say that he had authentic
+information that it was HIM.
+
+"Him then--concentrate the sympathies of every Protestant heart. Let us
+not despoil the occasion of its greatness by exhibiting a narrow bigotry
+in one direction! Let us bring into this infantile focus the rays of
+Catholic unity. (Loud cheering and Kentish fire.) To me, for one, it
+would be eminently painful to think--what doubtless would occur if the
+motion is adopted--that within a week of his entrance into the asylum of
+the society named in it, this diminutive and unknowing sinner should
+go through the farce of a supposititious admission into the Church of
+Christ. (Oh!) Yes! I say a farce, whether you regard the age of the
+acolyte or the indifferent proportion of water with which it would be
+performed. (Uproar, oh, oh! and some cheering from the Baptist section.)
+But I will not now further enter into these things," said Mr. Cutwater,
+who knew his cue perfectly well, "I can hold these opinions and still
+love my brethren of other denominations. I move, as an amendment, that a
+committee, consisting of one minister and one layman to be selected
+from each of the Churches, be appointed to take charge of the physical
+well-being and mental and spiritual training of the infant."
+
+By this proposition, which was received with enthusiasm, Ginx's Baby was
+to be incontinently pitched into an arena of polemical warfare.
+Every one was willing that a committee should fight out the question
+vicariously; and, therefore, when Mr. Slowboy seconded the amendment, it
+was carried with loud acclamations.
+
+But they were not yet out of the wood. On proceeding to nominate members
+of the committee, the Unitarians and Quakers claimed to be represented.
+The platform and the meeting were by the ears again. It was fiercely
+contended that only Evangelical Christians could have a place in such
+a work, and many of the nominees declared that they would not sit on a
+committee with--well, some curious epithets were used. The Unitarians
+and Quakers took their stand on the Catholic principles embodied in the
+amendment, and on the fact that Ginx's Baby had now "become national
+Protestant property." Mr. Cutwater and a few others, moved by the
+scandal of the dispute, interfered, and the committee was at length
+constituted to the satisfaction of all parties. It was to be called "The
+Branch Committee of the Protestant Detectoral Union for promoting the
+Physical and Spiritual Well-being of Ginx's Baby."
+
+A fourth resolution was adopted, "That the subject should be treated in
+the Metropolitan pulpits on the next Sabbath, and a collection taken up
+in the various churches for the benefit of the infant." This promised
+well for Master Ginx's future.
+
+The meeting had lasted five hours, and while they were discussing him
+the child grew hungry. In the tumult every one had forgotten the subject
+of it, and now it was over, they dispersed without thought of him.
+But he would not allow those near him at all events to overlook his
+presence.
+
+Some, foreseeing that awkwardness was impending, slipped away; while
+three or four stayed to ask what was to be done with him.
+
+"Hand him over to the custody of the Chairman," said a Mr. Dove.
+
+"I should be most happy," said he, smoothly, "but Mrs. Trumpeter is out
+of town. Could your dear wife take him, Mr. Dove?"
+
+Mr. Dove's wife was otherwise engaged.
+
+The Secretary was unmarried--chambers at Nincome's Inn.
+
+In the midst of their distress a woman who had been hanging about the
+hall near the platform, came forward and offered to take charge of him,
+"for the sake of the cause." Every one was relieved. After her name and
+address had been hastily noted, the Protestant baby was placed in her
+arms. My Lord Evergood, the Chairman, the clergy, the Secretary, and the
+mob went home rejoicing. Some hours after, Ginx's Baby, stripped of the
+duchess's beautiful robes, was found by a policeman, lying on a
+doorstep in one of the narrow streets, not a hundred yards behind the
+Philopragmon. By an ironical chance he was wrapped in a copy of the
+largest daily paper in the world.
+
+
+
+
+IX.--Good Samaritans, and Good-Samaritan Twopences.
+
+At every breakfast-table in town next morning the report of the great
+Protestant meeting was read, and a further report, in leaded type,
+of the discovery of Ginx's Baby at a later period of the evening by a
+policeman. A pretty comment on the proceedings! The Good Samaritan put
+his patient on his ass and carried him to an inn; while the priest and
+the Levite, though the latter looked at him, at least let him alone. To
+have called a public meeting to discuss his fate before deserting him,
+would have been a refinement of inhumanity. The committee were rather
+ashamed when they met. Instant measures were taken to recover the child
+and place him in good hands. The duchess again provided baby-clothes.
+The next Sunday sermons were preached on his behalf in a score of
+chapels. The collections amounted to L 800, a sum increased by donations
+and subscriptions to the handsome total of L 1360 10s. 3 1/2d.
+
+It will be seen hereafter what the committee did with the baby, but I
+happen to have an account of what became of the funds. They were
+spent as follows, according to a balance sheet never submitted to the
+subscribers:--
+
+ Pounds s. d.
+ Committee-rooms............. 45 0 0
+ 2 Secretaries employed by the
+ Committee................ 120 0 0
+ Agents, canvassing, &c.......... 88 6 2
+ Printing Notices, Placards,
+ Pamphlets, a "Daily Bulletin of
+ Health," "Life of Ginx's Baby,"
+ "Protestant Babyhood, a Tale,"
+ "The Cradle of an Infant Martyr,"
+ "A Snatched Brand," and other
+ Works issued by the Committee...... 596 13 5
+ Advertisements of Meetings,
+ Sermons, &c............... 261 1 1
+ Legal Expenses............... 77 6 8
+ Stationery................ 35 10 0
+ Postage, Firing, and Sundries....... 27 19 2
+ ----------------
+ Total Pounds 1251 16 6
+
+
+This left L 108 13s. 9 1/2d. for the baby's keep. No child could have
+been more thoroughly discussed, preached and written about, advertised,
+or advised by counsel; but his resources dwindled in proportion to these
+advantages. Benevolent subscribers too seldom examine the financial
+items of a report: had any who contributed to this fund seen the balance
+sheet they might have grudged that so little of their bounty went to
+make flesh, bone, and comfort for the object of it. A cynic would tell
+them that to look sharply after the disposal of their guerdon was half
+the gift. Their indifference was akin to that satirized by the poet--
+
+ "Prodigus et stultus dedit quae spernit et odit."
+
+In an age of luxury we are grown so luxurious as to be content to pay
+agents to do our good deeds for us; but they charge us three hundred per
+cent. for the privilege.
+
+
+
+
+X.--The Force--and a Specimen of its Weakness.
+
+Ginx's baby had been discovered by a policeman swaddled in a penny
+paper, distressingly familiar to metropolitan travellers by rail.
+To omit the details of his treatment at the hands of that great
+institution, "The Force," would be invidious. The member thereof who
+fell in with him was walking a back street, sighting doors with his
+bull's-eye. He was provided with massive boots, so that a thief
+could hear him coming a hundred yards off; he was personally tall and
+unwieldy, and a dexterous commissioner had invented a dress designed to
+enhance these qualities--a heavy coat, a cart-horse belt, and a round
+cape. He had been carefully drilled not to walk more than three miles an
+hour. He was not a little startled when the rays of his lamp fell upon
+a struggling newspaper, out of which, as from a shell, came mysterious
+cries. He took up a corner of the paper and peeped in upon the face
+of Ginx's Baby; then he occupied a quarter of an hour in embarrassing
+reflections. A nearly naked child crying in the cold ought to be housed
+as soon as possible, but X 99 was ON HIS BEAT, and those magic words
+chained him to certain limits. This, of course, was the rule under a
+former commissioner, and every one knows that such absurd strategy
+has been abolished in the existing regime. At that time, however, each
+watchman had his beat, to leave which was neglect of duty, except with
+a prisoner, and then it was neglect of all the householders within the
+magic compass. Had X 99 heard the baby crying across the street, which
+was part of the beat of X 101, he would have passed on with a cheery
+heart, for the case would have been beyond his jurisdiction. Unhappily
+the baby was on his beat, and he was delivered from the temptation of
+transferring it to the other by the appearance of X 101's bull's-eye not
+far off. What was he to do? The station was a mile away--the inspector
+would not arrive for an hour--and it would be awkward, if not
+undignified, to carry on his rounds a shouting baby wrapped in the
+largest daily paper. If he left it where it was, and it perished, he
+might be charged with murder. He was at his wits' end--but having got
+there, he resolved on the simplest process, namely to carry it to
+the station. No provision was made by the regulations of the force to
+protect a beat casually deserted even for a proper purpose. Hence, while
+X 99 was absent on his errand of mercy, the valuable shop of Messrs.
+Trinkett and Blouse, ecclesiastical tailors, was broken into, and
+several stoles, chasubles, altar-cloths and other decorative tapestries
+were appropriated to profane uses.
+
+At the station the baby was disposed of according to rule. Due entry
+was first made in the night-book by the superintendent of all the
+particulars of his discovery. Some cold milk was then procured and
+poured down the child's throat. Afterwards, wrapped in a constable's
+cape, he was placed in a cell where, when the door was locked, he could
+not disturb the guardians of the peace.
+
+The same night, in the next cell, an innocent gentleman, seized with
+an apoplexy in the street but entered in the charge-sheet as drunk and
+incapable, died like a dog.
+
+
+
+
+XI.--The Unity of the Spirit and the Bond of Peace.
+
+When the committee met, every one discovered his incongruity with the
+rest. Each was disposed to treat Ginx's Baby in a different way--in
+other words, each wished to reflect the views of his particular sect
+on the object of their charity. They were a new "Evangelical Alliance,"
+agreed only in hatred to Popery.
+
+Finding at their first meeting that the discussion needed to be brought
+into a focus, the committee appointed three of their number to draw up
+a minute of the matters to be argued. This committee reported that there
+arose, respecting the child, the following questions:--
+
+ "I. As touching the body:
+
+ a. Wherewithal he should be fed and clothed?
+
+ b. In what manner and fashion that should be done?
+
+ II. As touching the mind and spirit:
+
+ a. Whether he should be educated? If so,
+
+ b. What were to be the subjects of instruction?
+
+ c. What creed, if any, should be primarily taught?
+
+ d. Should he be further baptized? If so,
+
+ 1. Into what communion?
+
+ 2. By what ceremonial?"
+
+
+This programme, it appeared to its concoctors, embraced everything that
+concerned Ginx's Baby except his death by the act of God or the Queen's
+enemies. No sooner was the report made than adopted. Then a member,
+eager for the fray, moved the postponement of the first division of
+questions until the others had been determined. Why should apostles of
+truth trouble themselves to serve tables? These were very subordinate
+questions to them--though, I think, of first importance to Ginx's Baby.
+It was decided to discuss little Ginx's future before considering his
+present.
+
+The ball was opened by the Venerable Archdeacon Hotten, who, amid much
+excitement, contended that from the earliest buddings of thought in
+an infant mind religion should be engrafted upon it; there could be no
+education worth the name that was not religious. That with the A should
+be taught the origin, and with the Z the final destiny and destruction,
+of evil. To separate education from religion was to clip the wings of
+the heavenly dove. He asserted that the committee ought at once to have
+the child baptized in Westminster Abbey, though he was rather of opinion
+that the previous baptism was canonically valid; that he should be
+taught the truths of our most holy faith, and since there could be
+no faith without a creed, and the only national creed was that of the
+Church of England, the baby should be handed over to the care of a
+clergyman, and then be sent to a proper religious school. He need not
+say that he excluded Rugby under its then profane management.
+
+The Church was, however, divided against itself, for the Dean of Triston
+said he would give more latitude than his very reverend brother. You
+ought not to define in an infant mind a rigid outline of creed. In fact,
+he did not acknowledge any creed, he was not obliged to by law and was
+disinclined to by his reason. He would rather allow the inner seeds of
+natural light--the glorious all-pervading efflorescence of the Deity
+in all men's hearts, to grow within the young spirit. The Dean was
+assuredly vague and far less earnest than his brother cleric.
+
+The "Rev." Mr. Bumpus, Unitarian, met the suggestions of the
+Archdeacon with the scorn they merited. It was impossible to apply to
+a representative child of an enlightened age theories so long exploded.
+The Dean had certainly come nearer the truth with that broad sympathy
+for which he was noted. He himself proposed that the child should be
+made a model nursling of the liberalism of a new era. Old things were
+passing away;--all things had become new. Creeds were the discarded
+banners of a mediaeval past, fit only to be hung up in the churches, and
+looked at as historic monuments; never more to be flaunted in the front
+of battle! The education of the day was that which taught a man the
+introspection whereby he recognized the Divine within himself--under
+any aspect, under any tuition, whether of Brahma, Confucius, or Christ.
+Truth was kaleidoscopic, and varied with the media through which it
+was viewed. As for the child, every aspect of truth and error should be
+allowed to play upon his mind. Let him acquire ordinary school learning
+for fifteen years, and then send him to the London University.
+
+Here the Chairman, and half-a-dozen members of the committee, protested
+that the said University was a school of the devil, and several
+interchanges of discourtesy took place.
+
+Mr. Shortt, M. P., begged to suggest, as a matter of business, that for
+the present the child was not capable of receiving any ideas whatever,
+and might die, or prove to be dumb, or an idiot, and so require no
+education. Ought they not to postpone this discussion until the subject
+was old enough to be worth consideration?
+
+It was Mr. Shortt's habit to show his practical vein by business-like
+obstructions of this kind. He had been able a score of times to
+demonstrate to the House of Commons how silly it was to consider
+probabilities. In fact, he was opposed heart and soul to prophetic
+legislation; he would live, legislatively, from hand to mouth.
+
+But the committee would not allow Mr. Shortt to run away with the bone
+of contention.
+
+The Rev. Dr. M'Gregor Lucas, of the National Caledonian Believers, had
+been silent too long to contain himself further. This man needs some
+particular description whenever his name is made public. Nay, for this
+he lives, and by it, some think. At all events, he appears to be
+equally eager for rebuke and applause; they both involve notoriety, and
+notoriety is sure to pay. Few absurdities had been overlooked by his
+shallow ingenuity. Simply to have invested his limited mental endowments
+in trying to make the world believe him a genius, would have been only
+so like what many thousands are doing as to have absolved him from too
+harsh a judgment; but he traded in perilous stuff. Cheap prophecy was
+his staple. It was his wont to give out about once in five years, that
+the world would shortly come to an end, and, like Mr. Zadkiel, he
+found people who thought their inevitable disappointment a proof of his
+inspiration. Had you heard the honeyed words dropping from his lips, you
+would have taken him for a Scotch angel, and, consequently, a rarity.
+Could such lips utter harsh sayings, or distil vanities? Show him a
+priest, and you would hear! The Pope was his particular born foe; Popery
+his enemies' country--so he said. It was safe for him to stand and throw
+his darts. No one could say whether they hit or did not; while most
+spectators had the good will to hope that they did. How he would
+have lived if Daniel and St. John had dreamed no dreams, one cannot
+conjecture. As it was, they provided the doctor with endless openings
+for his fancy. Since no one could solve the riddle of their prophecies,
+it was certain that no one could disprove his solutions. Yet these came
+so often to their own disproof by lapse of time, that I can only think
+that the good doctor hoped to die before his critical periods came, or
+was so clever as to trust the infallibility of human weakness.
+
+I describe Dr. Lucas at so great a length, because it will be easier
+and more edifying to the reader to conceive what he said, than for me to
+recount it. He showed the Baby to be one of seven mysteries. He was in
+favor of teaching him at once to hate idolatry, music, crosses, masses,
+nuns, priests, bishops, and cardinals. The "humanities," the Shorter
+Catechism, the Confession of Faith, and "The whole Duty of Man," would,
+in his opinion, be the books to lay the groundwork in the child's mind
+of a Christian character of the highest type.
+
+Mr. Ogle, M. P., here vigorously intervened. Said he:--
+
+"I can't, with all deference, agree to any of these suggestions. They
+involve hand-to-hand fighting over this baby's body. No one of us is
+entitled to take charge of him. Else why did we all unite to rescue him
+from the nunnery? He will be torn to pieces among contending divines!
+I think a purely secular education is all that as a committee we should
+aim at. We have, but just withdrawn the child from the shadow of a
+single ecclesiastical influence--would you transfer it to another? Every
+Protestant denomination is contributing to his support, how can you
+devote their gifts to rearing him for one? You would have no peace;
+better at once treat him as the man of Benjamin treated his wife, cut
+him up into enough pieces to send to all the tribes of Israel, summoning
+them to the fight. I say we have nothing to do with this just now; let
+him be educated in a secular academy, and let each sect be free to send
+its agents to instruct him out of school hours as they please."
+
+The Rev. Theodoret Verity, M.A., rose in anger.
+
+"Surely, sir, you cannot seriously propound such a scheme! Would you
+leave this precious waif to be buffeted between the contending waves
+of truth and error, in the vague hope that by some lucky wind he might
+finally be cast upon a rock of safety? I protest against all these
+educational heresies--they are redolent of brimstone. Truth is truth,
+or there is none at all. If there be any, it is our duty to impart it to
+this immortal at the outset of his existence. Secular education! What do
+you mean by it? Who shall sever one question from another, and call one
+secular and the other religious? Is not every relation and every truth
+in some way or other connected with religion?" &c. &c. Mr. Verity has
+been saying the same thing any time these forty years.
+
+"Forgive me," replied Mr. Ogle, "if I say that this is very vague
+talking. I have not proposed to sever one question from another. I only
+propose to do in a different way that which is being done now by the
+most rigid of Mr. Verity's friends. It is impossible to comprehend what
+is meant by such a statement as that every truth is somehow connected
+with religion. It may be that the notion--if it really is not, as I
+suspect it to be, mere verbiage and clap-trap, used by certain fools
+to mislead others--means that there is some such coherency between all
+truths as there is, for instance, between the elements of the body. I
+would admit that, but is not blood a different and perfectly severable
+thing from bone? Each has its place, office, relation. But who would say
+that one could not be regarded by a physicist in the largest variety of
+its aspects apart from the other? Yet the physicist comes back again
+to consider with respect to each its relations to all the rest! The
+separate study has rather prepared him for more profound insight into
+those relations. Thus it is with the body of truth. In spite of Mr.
+Verity I affirm that there are truths that have not in themselves any
+element of religion whatever. The forty-seventh proposition of Euclid
+will be taught by a Jesuit precisely as it is taught in the London
+University; geography will affirm certain principles and designate
+places, rivers, mountains--that no faith can remove and cast into
+unknown seas. These subjects and others are taught in our most bigoted
+schools in separate hours and relations from religion. What then do
+you mean by affirming that there can be no secular education of this
+child--apart from religious teaching? We are not likely to agree, if
+I may judge from what I have seen, on any one method of religious
+instruction for it, therefore I wish first to fix common bounds within
+which our common benevolence may work. Well, we all go to the Bible.
+We agree that between its covers lies religious truth somewhere. If you
+like let him have that--and let him have some kindly and holy influences
+about him in the way of practice and example, such as many of our sects
+can supply many instances of. Give him no catechism--let him read a
+creed in our daily life. The articles of faith strongest in his soul
+will be those which have crystallized there from the combined action
+of truth and experience, and not as it were been pasted on its walls by
+ecclesiastical bill-posters. 'What is truth?' he must ask and answer for
+himself, as we all must do before God. Don't mistake me; I hope I am not
+more indifferent to religion than any here present--but I differ from
+them on the best method of imbuing the mind and heart with it. Surely
+we need not, we cannot--it would be an exquisite absurdity--pass a
+resolution in this committee that the child is to be a Calvinist! Who
+then would agree to secure him from any taint of Arminian heresy in
+years to come? Dare you even resolve that he shall be a Christian and a
+Protestant! I would not insure the risk. But, with so many of Christ's
+followers about me, surely, surely without providing any ecclesiastical
+mechanism, there will be testified to him simply how he may be saved.
+Your prayers, your visits, your kindly moral influence and talk,
+your living example of a goodness derived not from dogmas but from
+affectionate following of a holy pattern and trust in revealed mercies,
+your pointing to that pattern and showing the daily passage of these
+mercies will prompt his search after the truth that has made you what
+you are. Let some good woman do for him a mother's part, but choose
+her for her general goodness and not for the dogmas of her church. The
+simpler her piety the better for him I should say!"
+
+This straightforward speech fell like a new apple of discord in the
+midst of the committee. Angry knots were formed, and the noble chairman
+found that he could not restore order. An adjournment was agreed to.
+Luckily for the body of Ginx's Baby, he had been meanwhile sent to a
+home where Protestant money secured to him for the time good living,
+while his benefactors were discussing what to do with his soul.
+
+*****
+
+Surely, it were no impertinence to interrupt this history and advert to
+the fact, that, in the discussion just related, every one was to some
+extent right and to some extent agreed.
+
+That religious teaching was due to an immortal spirit--some notion
+and evidence of the Divine and the Great Hereafter to be conveyed to
+it--scarce was disputed. Nor was there collision over the necessity
+of what is called intellectual cultivation. The boy must be taught
+something of the world in which he was to live; nay, this latter
+knowledge seemed to be most immediately practical. As each disputant
+fixed his eye on one or the other aim that end appeared to him to be the
+most important. Hence, by a natural lapse, they came to treat subjects
+as antagonistic which were, in fact, parallel and quite consistent. The
+one called the others godless--the others threw back the aspersion
+of bigotry. Then came complication. What was "religion?" Intellectual
+culture they could agree about--it embraced well-known areas; but this
+religion divided itself into many disputable fields. These brother
+Protestants were like country neighbors who must encounter each other at
+fairs, markets, meets, and balls, and smile and greet, though each, at
+heart, is looking savagely at the other's landmarks, and most are very
+likely fighting bitter lawsuits all the while. It was because religion
+meant CREED to most members of the committee, and because it so implies
+to the vast bodies they represented, that they could not come to terms
+about Ginx's Baby or any other infantile immortal. Not always, perhaps,
+but often, they fought for futile distinctions. Had Mahomet's creed
+consisted of but one article, There is one God, the blood of many
+nations might never have given testimony against the creed they resented
+when to it he tacked and Mahomet is His prophet. Could Protestants but
+consent to agree in their agreement and peacefully differ in their petty
+differences, how would the aggregated impulse of a simple faith roll
+down before it all the impediments of error!
+
+When Ginx's Baby had grown to a discretionary age, and was at all able
+to know truth from error--supposing that to be knowable--there were
+in the country fifty thousand reverend gentlemen of every tincture of
+religious opinion who might ply him with their various theories, yet few
+of these would be contented unless they could seize him while his young
+nature was plastic, and try to imprint on immortal clay the trade-mark
+of some human invention.
+
+
+
+
+XII.--No Funds--no Faith, no Works.
+
+The Committee of the Protestant Detectoral Union on Ginx's Baby held
+twenty-three meetings. They were then as far from unity of purpose as
+when they set out. Variety was given to the meetings by the changing
+combinations of members in attendance. The finances were little
+heeded in the intensity of their zeal for truth. These at length fell
+altogether into the hands of the association's secretary, and we have
+seen involved large items of expense. The twenty-three meetings
+extended over a year. At the end of that time the secretary startled the
+committee by laying on the table a demand for the board and keep of the
+Protestant baby for three months, amounting to L 36; and adding that the
+sum in hand was L 1, 4s. 4 1/2d. In his report he said: "No effort has
+been spared by means of advertisements, pamphlets, tales, leaders
+and paragraphs in newspapers and religious journals, together with
+occasional sermons, to maintain the public interest in this child; but
+attention has been diverted from him by the great Roman Spozzi case,
+and the anxiety created throughout the Protestant world by the recent
+discovery made by Dr. Gooddee, of a solitary survivor of the ancient
+Church of the Vieuxbois Protestants in a secluded valley of the
+Pyrenees."
+
+The secretary asked the committee to provide the money to discharge the
+baby's liabilities; but they instantly adjourned, and no effort could
+afterwards get a quorum together. When the persons who had charge of the
+Protestant foundling discovered the state of affairs they began to dun
+the secretary and to neglect the child, now about thirteen months
+old and preparing to walk. Since no money appeared they sold whatever
+clothes had been provided for him, and absconded from the place where
+they had been farming him for Protestantism. The secretary, by chance
+hearing of this, was discreet enough to make no inquiries. Ginx's Baby,
+"as a Protestant question," vanished from the world. I never heard that
+any one was asked what had been done with the funds; but I have already
+furnished the account that ought to have been rendered.
+
+
+
+
+XIII.--In transitu.
+
+One night, near twelve o'clock, a shrewd tradesman, looking out of his
+shopdoor before he turned into bed, heard a cry which proceeded from a
+bundle on the pavement. This he discovered to be an infant wrapt in a
+potato-sack. He was quick enough to observe that it had been deftly laid
+over a line chiselled across the pavement to the corner of his house,
+which line he knew to be the boundary between his own parish of St.
+Simon Magus and the adjacent parish of St. Bartimeus. He took note,
+being a business man, of the exact position of the child's body in
+relation to this line, and then conveyed it to the workhouse of the
+other parish.
+
+
+
+
+PART III. WHAT THE PARISH DID WITH HIM.
+
+
+
+
+I.--Parochial Knots--to be untied without prejudice.
+
+The infant borne to the workhouse of St. Bartimeus was Ginx's Baby. When
+he had been placed on the floor of the matron's room, and examined by
+the master, that official turned to the unwelcome bearer of the burden.
+
+"Did you find this child?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Lying opposite my shop in Nether Place."
+
+"What's your name?"
+
+"Doll."
+
+"Oh! you're the cheesemonger. Your shop's on the other side of the
+boundary, in the other parish. The child ought not to come here; it
+doesn't belong to us."
+
+"Yes it does: it wasn't on my side of the line."
+
+"But it was in front of your house?"
+
+"Well, the line runs crossways: it don't follow the child was in our
+parish."
+
+"Oh, nonsense! there's no doubt about it! We can't take the child in.
+You must carry it away again."
+
+Mr. Snigger turned to leave the room.
+
+"Wait a bit, sir," said Mr. Doll; "I shall leave the child here, and you
+can do as you like with it. It ain't mine, at all events. I say it lay
+in your parish; and if you don't look after it you may be the worse of
+it. The coroner's sure to try to earn his fees. Good-night."
+
+He hurried from the room.
+
+"Stop!" shouted the master, "I say: I don't accept the child. You
+leave it here at your own risk. We keep it without prejudice,
+remember--without prejudice, sir!--without----"
+
+Mr. Doll was in the street and out of hearing.
+
+
+
+
+II.--A Board of Guardians.
+
+The Guardians of St. Bartimeus met the day after Mr. Doll's clever
+stratagem. Among other business was a report from the master of the
+workhouse that a child, name unknown, found by Mr. Doll, cheesemonger,
+of Nether Place, in the Parish of St. Simon Magus, opposite his shop,
+and, as he alleged, on the nearer side of the parish boundary, had been
+left at the workhouse, and was now in the custody of the matron. The
+Guardians were not accustomed to restrain themselves, and did not
+withhold the expression of their indignation upon this announcement. As
+Mr. Doll had himself been a guardian of St. Simon Magus, it was clear
+to their impartial minds that he was trying by a trick to foist a
+bastard--perhaps his own--on the wrong parish.
+
+Mr. Cheekey, a licensed victualler, moved that the master's report be
+put under the table.
+
+Mr. Slinkum, draper, seconded the motion.
+
+Mr. Edge, ironmonger, pointed out that there was no parliamentary
+precedent for such a disposition of the report, and, further, that such
+action did not dispose of the baby.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Cheekey, turning painfully red, "no matter how ye put
+it, I move to get rid of the brat. What's the best form of motion?"
+
+A churchwarden, who happened to be a gentleman, explained that the Board
+could not dismiss the question in so summary a way. "He could foresee
+that there might be a nice point of law in the case. They would have to
+take some legal means of ascertaining their liabilities, and of forcing
+the other parish to take the child if they ought to do so. They must
+consult their solicitor." This gentleman was sent for post haste.
+Meanwhile the baby was ordered to be brought in for inspection. The
+matron had handed him over to a sort of half-witted inmate of the house,
+whose wits, however, were strangely about him at the wrong time,
+to nurse and amuse him. This person brought Ginx's Baby into the
+Board-room, and placed him on the table. The Board of Guardians took a
+good look at him. He was not then in fair condition. He was limp, he
+was dirty, hollow in the cheeks, white, stiff in his limbs, and
+half-naked--(to be regardless of gender)--
+
+ "Pallidula, rigida, nudula."
+
+
+"Hum!" said Mr. Stink, who was a dog-breeder--"What's his pedigree?"
+
+This brutal joke was well received by some of the Guardians.
+
+"His pedigree," answered the half-wit, gravely, "goes back for three
+hundred years. Parients unknown by name, but got by Misery out o'
+Starvashun. The line began with Poverty out o' Laziness in Queen
+Elizabeth's time. The breed has been a large 'un wotever you thinks of
+the quality."
+
+This pleasantry was less acceptable to the Board.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Scoop, grocer, a great stickler for parliamentary modes
+of procedure, "I move it be committed."
+
+"Committed! Where?" said Mr. Stink.
+
+"To Newgate I s'pose," said the half-wit, his eyes twinkling.
+
+"Nonsense, sir,--for consideration. Send that man out," exclaimed
+Scoop--"clear the room for consultation."
+
+Davus was expelled, and the baby was then formally consigned to the care
+of a committee. By this time the legal adviser came in. The facts having
+been stated to him, he said:
+
+"Gentlemen, as at present advised I am of opinion that the parish in
+which the child was found is bound to maintain him. If Mr. Doll (a
+highly respectable person, my own cheesemonger) found the child beyond
+the boundaries of St. Simon Magus--and he will of course swear that he
+did--you cannot refuse to take it in. However, I had better ascertain
+the facts from Mr. Doll and take the opinion of counsel. Meanwhile we
+must beware not to compromise ourselves by admitting anything, or doing
+anything equivalent to an admission. Let me see--Ah!--yes--a notice to
+be served on the other parish repudiating the infant; another notice
+to Mr. Doll to take it away, and that it remains here at his risk and
+expense--you see, gentlemen, we could hardly venture to return it to
+Mr. Doll; we should create an unhappy impression in the minds of the
+public--"
+
+"D--n the public!" said Mr. Stink.
+
+"Quite so, my dear sir," said Mr. Phillpotts, smiling, "quite so, but
+that is not a legal or in fact practicable mode of discarding them; we
+must act with public opinion, I fear. Then, to resume, thirdly and to be
+strictly safe, we must serve a notice on the infant and all whom it may
+concern. I think I'll draft it at once."
+
+In a few minutes the committee in charge pinned to the only garment of
+Ginx's Baby a paper in the following form:--
+
+
+PARISH OF ST. BARTIMEUS.
+
+To ---- ---- (name unknown), a Foundling, and all other persons
+interested in the said Foundling.
+
+TAKE NOTICE
+
+That you, or either of you, have no just or lawful claim to have you
+or the said infant chargeable on the said Parish. And this is to notify
+that you, the said infant, are retained in the workhouse of the said
+Parish under protest, and that whatsoever is or may be done or provided
+for you is at the proper charge of you, and all such persons as are and
+were by law bound to maintain and keep the same.
+
+ WINKLE & PHILLPOTTS,
+ Solicitors for the Board.
+
+
+
+
+III.--"The World is my Parish."
+
+When Mr. Phillpotts called upon Doll, the cheesemonger, the latter
+straightway gave him the facts as they had occurred. He pointed out
+the exact spot on which the bundle had lain; he gave an estimate of the
+number of inches on each side of the line occupied by it, and declared
+that the head and shoulders of the infant lay in the parish of the
+solicitor's clients. Ginx's Baby, under the title "Re a Foundling," was
+once more submitted for the opinion of counsel. They advised the Board
+that as the child was in both parishes when found, but had been taken
+up by a ratepayer of St. Simon Magus, the latter parish was bound to
+support him. Whereupon the Guardians of St. Bartimeus at their next
+meeting resolved that the Vestry of the other parish should have a
+written notice to remove the child, failing which application should be
+made to the Queen's Bench for a mandamus to compel them to do it.
+
+On receiving the challenge the Guardians of St. Simon Magus also took
+counsel's opinion. They were advised that as the greater part, and
+especially the head of the infant, was when discovered in the parish
+of St. Bartimeus, the latter was clearly chargeable. Both parties
+then proceeded to swear affidavits. The Attorney-General and
+Solicitor-General, the two great law-officers of the crown, were
+retained on opposite sides, and took fees--not for an Imperial
+prosecution, but as petty Queen's Counsel in an inter-parochial
+squabble.
+
+
+
+
+IV.--Without prejudice to any one but the Guardians.
+
+The Court of Queen's Bench, after hearing an elaborate statement from
+the Attorney-General, granted a rule nisi for a mandamus. This rule was
+entered for argument in a paper called "The Special Paper," and, the
+list being a heavy one, nearly a year elapsed before it was reached. It
+was then again postponed several times "for the convenience of counsel."
+
+The Board of St. Bartimeus chafed under the law's delay. They became
+morbidly sensitive to the incubus of Ginx's Baby, especially as
+the press had been reviewing some of their recent acts with great
+bitterness. The Guardians were defiant. Having served their notices,
+they were induced by Mr. Stink to resolve not to maintain the infant.
+The poor child was threatened with dissolution. Thus, no doubt, many
+difficulties in parochial administration are solved--the subject
+vanishes away. The baby was kept provisionally in a room at the
+workhouse. On the outside of the door was a notice in fair round-hand:--
+
+NOTICE.
+
+
+DOLL'S FOUNDLING.
+
+Pending the legal inquiry into the facts concerning the above infant,
+and a decision as to its settlement, all officials, assistants, and
+servants of the workhouse are forbidden to enter the room in which it
+is deposited, or to render it any service or assistance, on pain of
+dismissal. No food is to be supplied to it from the workhouse kitchen.
+
+N.B. This is not intended to prevent persons other than officials, &c.,
+from having access to the infant, or assisting it.
+
+BY ORDER OF THE BOARD.
+
+
+That any body of human beings, other than Patagonians, could have
+coolly contemplated such a result as must have followed upon the strict
+performance of this order, would be incredible except in the instance of
+the Guardians of St. Bartimeus. There was nothing they could not do--or
+leave undone. Fortunately for Ginx's Baby, the order was disobeyed.
+Occasionally lady visitors went to look at him and give him some
+food--he was toddling about the room on unsteady legs--but charity
+seemed to be appalled by the official questions hanging about this
+child. The master, Snigger, whose business it was every day to ascertain
+whether the cause of the great parochial quarrel was in, or out of,
+existence, became a traitor to the Board. When the child grew hungry and
+dangerously thin, he brought bottles of pap prepared by Mrs. Snigger,
+and administered it to him. No conclusions to the disfavor of the Board
+were to be drawn from this conduct, for Snigger was particular to say to
+the boy in a loud voice, each time he fed him:--
+
+"Now, youngster, this is without prejudice, remember! I give you due
+notice--without prejudice."
+
+Who, in Master Ginx's situation, would have had any prejudices to such
+action, or have expressed them even if they were entertained? He took no
+objection as he took the pap; while Snigger was glad to be able to do an
+unusual kindness without compromising the parish.
+
+Thus things had gone on for many months, when one day an eye of that
+Argus monster, the Public, was set upon Ginx's Baby. A well-known
+nobleman, calling at the workhouse to see a little girl whom he had
+saved from infamy, as he passed down a corridor was arrested by the
+notice on the door of our hero's room. Curiosity took him in, and horror
+chained him there for some time. Had he not entered, Ginx's Baby, spite
+of Snigger, would in twenty-four hours have ceased to supply facts
+to history. He was suffering from low fever, and his condition was as
+sensationally shocking as any reporter could have wished. Out rushed
+the peer for a doctor, took a cab to a magistrate and detailed the whole
+case, to be repeated in next morning's papers. Penny-a-liners ran to the
+spot, wrote vivid descriptions of the baby and the room, and transcribed
+the notice. The Guardians were drubbed in trenchant leaders and
+indignant letters. They, instead of bending to the storm, strove to
+confront it, and passed angry resolutions of a childish and grotesque
+character. The few of them who possessed any sense of propriety were
+railed at in the meetings till they ceased to attend. The uproar outside
+increased. Why did not the President of the Poor-Law Board interfere? At
+last he did interfere: that is, instead of visiting the scene himself,
+and satisfying his own eyes as to the truth of what his ears had heard,
+a process that would have taken a couple of hours, he appointed a
+gentleman to hold an inquiry. The Guardians became furious. The reports
+of their proceedings read like the vagaries of a lunatic asylum or the
+deliberations of the American Senate. They discharged Snigger for breach
+of orders, substituting a relative of Mr. Stink. They put a lock on the
+door, and passed food to the Baby by a stick. A committee was appointed
+to see him fed, and they forwarded a memorial to the Poor-Law Board,
+stating that "he daily had more food than he could possibly eat, and
+was in admirable condition." They refused to allow any doctor but one
+employed by themselves to see him. They procured from him a certificate
+that the noble busybody and his physician had made a mistake, and that
+all the functions of life in the infant appeared to be in perfect order.
+Then came the gentleman, and the inquiry, and his report, and a letter
+from the Poor-Law Board, and further discussions and more letters, until
+the bewildered public gnashed its teeth at the Minister, the Guardians,
+and the law, and wished them all at Land's End or beyond it.
+
+
+
+
+V.-An Ungodly Jungle.
+
+The case of the Guardians of St. Bartimeus against the Guardians of St.
+Simon Magus was at length reached. The argument lasted for two days.
+There is a grim work, the short title whereof is "Burns's Justice," in
+five fat volumes, from which the legal Dryasdust turns aghast. In one of
+these portentous books, title "Poor," pp. 1200, the inquisitive may
+find a code unrivalled by the most malignant ingenuity of former or
+contemporary nations: a code wherein, by gradual accretion, has been
+framed a system of relief to poverty and distress so impolitic, so
+unprincipled, that none but the driest, mustiest, most petrified
+parish official could be expected to lift up his voice to defend it;
+so complicated that no man under heaven knows its length or breadth
+or height or depth; yet it stands to this hour a monument of English
+stolidity--a marvel of lazy or ignorant statesmanship. Imagine, if you
+please, a Lord Chief Justice and three Puisnes, all keen, practical men,
+alive to public policy and the common weal, eager to extricate the truth
+and do the right, plunging into this "ungodly jungle," thwarted at
+every turn, in search of justice for Ginx's Baby. With all his patient
+industry and lightning quickness of apprehension, the Chief Justice
+found it hard to reconcile past and present, or evolve from the vast
+confusion anything consistent with his moral instincts.--Clear the
+board, gentlemen. True regenerative legislation will begin by drawing
+away the rubbish. Reform means more than repair. Mend, patch, take down
+a little here, prop up some tottering nuisance there, fill in gaping
+chinks with patent legislative cement, coat old facades with bright
+paint, hide decay beneath a gloze of novelty, titivate, decorate,
+furbish--and after all your house is not a new one, but a whited
+sepulchre shaking to decay. Repair? There is a Repair party,
+intermediating between Tories and Reformers--Radicals or Rooters let us
+call these latter if you like--who cling to "vested interests" and all
+other sorts of antique nuisances, yet say they are willing to improve
+them. REFORM, which means, Pull down with bold statesman's hand, and
+with like hand REBUILD, is no darling of your political Repairer. Call
+the party and the men by their right names: and give me for utility in
+legislation or administrative action an Old Tory and Obstructive party
+rather than this middling, meddling, muddling Repairer--
+
+ "Eager to change yet fearful to destroy."
+
+Just now all Social Reformation, in its noblest aims and attempts,
+is fettered by the Repair party. What is termed Sanitary Reform is
+enfeebled, and the vigor withdrawn from it, by this party. "Vested
+rights," "the Liberty of the people," "Interference with personal
+freedom," "EXPENSE,"--these are the watchwords of the Repairer in
+opposition to him who, pointing to the pallor and fever of a hundred
+neighborhoods, calls upon a ministry to cleanse them with imperial
+force.
+
+A comprehensive scheme of National Education is seized and
+half-throttled by the Repair party. "Oh! utilize what there is; improve
+on and tack to the denominational system; avail yourself of the jealousy
+of sects; see what a grand building that has already erected! True, it
+is not large enough; true, it is badly built; but repair that, and add
+wings. It will cost you ever so much to rebuild--Repair!"
+
+The methods of relief to the Poor are old, cumbrous, unequal, as stupid
+as those who administer them. Forth steps the Reformer, and cries
+out--"Clear this wrack away! Get rid of your antiquated Bumbledom, your
+parochial and non-parochial distinctions, your complicated map of local
+authorities; re-distribute the kingdom on some more practical system,
+redress the injustice of unequal rating, improve the machinery and
+spirit of relief, and so on." You have the Repair party shouting its Non
+possumus as loudly as any other arch-obstructive: "Heaven forbid! Queen
+Elizabeth and the Poor Laws for ever! To the rescue of Local Government
+and Vested Interests! Repair!"
+
+Some one with a long head and a divinely-warmed heart, searching vainly
+for help to thousands in the packed alleys of his English Home, sends
+his quick glance across seas to rich lands that daily cry to heaven for
+strong arms that wield the plough and spade. "Ho!" he shouts, "Labor
+to Land--starvation to production--death unto life!" and he calls
+upon every statesman and patriot to help the good work, and give their
+energies to frame an Emigration Scheme. Then the Repair party foams:
+"Send away the Labor, the source of our wealth? No. Mend the
+condition of the laborer; give him the sop of political rights--free
+breakfasts--the ballot. Give State funds to alter social conditions? No.
+Improve the methods of local assistance to Emigration; it is a temporary
+remedy--Repair!"
+
+Thus, according to the gospel of this party, everything must be subject
+of restoration only. Like antiquarians, they utter groans over the
+abolition of anything, however ugly it may be, however unfitted for
+human uses, and with however so elegant a piece of artistry you desire
+to displace it. For them a Gilbert-Scott politician, reverential
+restorer of bygone styles, enthusiastic to conserve and amend the
+grotesque Gothic policies of the past, rather than some Brunel or
+Stephenson statesman, engineering in novel mastery of circumstances--not
+fearful to face and conquer even the antique impediments of Nature. Give
+me a trenchant statesman, or I pray you leave legislation alone. Better
+things as they are than patched to distraction.
+
+At length, by means of some delicate legal adjustments, the judges
+saw their way to affirming that Ginx's Baby's parish was that of St.
+Bartimeus, and refused the rule for a mandamus.
+
+
+
+
+VI.--Parochial Benevolence--and another translation.
+
+The authorities of St. Bartimeus did not take kindly to the charge
+imposed upon them by the Queen's Bench. Some of the Guardians privately
+hinted to the master that it was unnecessary to overfeed the infant.
+They did not burthen him with much clothing, and what he had was shared
+with many lively companions. When you, good matron, look at your little
+pink-cheeked daughter, so clean and so cosy in her pretty cot, waking
+to see the well-faced nurse, or you, still sweeter to her eyes, watching
+above her dreams, perhaps you ought to stop a moment to contrast the
+scene with the sad tableaux you may get sight of not far away.
+
+*****
+
+Ginx's Baby was not an ill-favored child. He had inherited his father's
+frame and strength: these helped him through the changes we are
+relating. What if these capacities had, by simple nourishing food,
+cleanly care-taking, and brighter, kindlier associations, been trained
+into full working order? Left alone or ill-tended they were daily
+dwindling, and the depreciation was going on not solely at the expense
+of little Ginx, but of the whole community. To reduce his strength
+one-half was to reduce one-half his chances of independence, and to
+multiply the prospects of his continuous application for STATE AID.
+
+The money spent in stopping a hole in a Dutch dyke is doubtless better
+invested than if it were to be retained until a vast breach had laid
+half a kingdom under water. Surely your Hollander would agree to be
+mulcted in one-third of his fortune rather than run the hazard!
+
+Every day through this wealthy country there are men and women busy
+marring the little images of God, that are by-and-by to be part of its
+public-shadowing young spirits, repressing their energy, sapping
+their vigor or failing to make it up, corrupting their nature by foul
+associations, moral and physical. Some are doing it by special license
+of the devil, others by Act of Parliament, others by negligence or
+niggardliness. Could you teach or force these people--many unconsciously
+engaged in the vile work--to run together, as men alarmed by sudden
+danger, and throw around a helpless generation influences and a care
+more akin to your own home ideal, would you not transfigure the next
+epoch--would not your labor and sacrifice be a GOD-WORK, reaching out
+weighty, fruit-laden branches far into the grateful future? 'Tis by
+feeling and enjoining everywhere the need of such a movement as this
+that you, O all-powerful woman! can carry your will into the play of
+a great economic and social reform. Society that recognizes not a
+root-truth like that is sowing the wind--God knows what it will reap.
+
+So the Guardians, keeping carefully within the law, neglected nothing
+that could sap little Ginx's vitality, deaden his happiest instincts,
+derange moral action, cause hope to die within his infant breast almost
+as soon as it were born. Good God!
+
+The items the Board were really entitled to charge the rate-payers as
+supplied to our hero were--
+
+Dirt,
+
+Fleas,
+
+Foul air,
+
+Chances of catching skin diseases, fevers, &c.,
+
+Vile company,
+
+Neglect,
+
+Occasional cruelty, and
+
+A small supply of bad food and clothing.
+
+Every pauper was to them an obnoxious charge by any and every means to
+be reduced to a minimum or nil. Ginx's Baby was reduced to a minimum.
+His constitution enabled him to protest against reduction to nil. But,
+just after the bills of costs had been taxed, mulcting the rate-payers
+of St. Bartimeus in a sum of more than L 1,600, the Guardians were made
+aware of the name and origin of their charge. One of the persons who
+had deserted him was arrested for theft, and among other articles in
+her possession were some of the Baby's clothes. She confessed the whole
+story, and declared that the child left in Nether Place was no other
+than the Protestant Baby, son of Ginx, about whom so much stir had been
+made two years before. The Guardians were not long in tracing Ginx, and,
+at his quarters in Rosemary Street, the hapless changeling was one day
+delivered by a deputy relieving-officer, with the benediction, by me
+sadly recorded--
+
+"There he is, d--n him!"
+
+I am sure if the Guardians had been there they would have said:
+
+"Amen."
+
+
+
+
+PART IV. WHAT THE CLUBS AND POLITICIANS DID WITH HIM.
+
+
+
+
+I.--Moved on.
+
+Ginx's Baby's brothers and sisters would have nothing to say to him.
+Mrs. Ginx declared she could see in him no likeness to her own dear lost
+one; and her husband swore that the brat never was his. The couple had
+latterly been pinching themselves and their children to save enough
+to emigrate. For this purpose aid and counsel were given to them by a
+neighboring curate, whose name, were my pages destined to immortality,
+should be printed here in golden letters. Rich and full will be his
+sheaves when many a statesman reaps tares. Finding that a thirteenth
+child was imposed on them by so superior a force as the law of England
+the Ginxes hastened their departure.
+
+Their last night in London, towards the small hours, Ginx, carrying our
+hero, went along Birdcage Walk. He scarcely knew where he was going, or
+how he was about to dispose of his burden, but he meant to get rid of
+it. On he went, here and there met by shadowy creatures who came towards
+his footsteps in the uncertain darkness, and when they could see that he
+was no quarry for them flitted away again into the night.
+
+He passed the dingy houses, since replaced by the Foreign Office, across
+the open space before the Horse Guards, near the house of a popular
+Prime Minister, and up the broad steps till he stood under the York
+Column. The shadow of this was an inviting place, but a policeman
+turning his lantern suspiciously on the man walking about at that silent
+hour with a child in his arms frustrated his wish. Slowly Ginx tramped
+along Pall Mall, with only one other creature stirring, as it seemed
+for the moment--a gentleman who turned up the steps of a large building.
+Seating the child on the bottom step and telling him not to cry, Ginx
+instantly crossed the road, turned into St. James's Square, passed by
+the rails, and stealing from corner to corner through the mazes of
+that locality, reached home by way of Piccadilly and Grosvenor Place.
+Henceforth this history shall know him no more.
+
+
+
+
+II.-Club Ideas.
+
+Scarcely had the shadow of his parent vanished in the gloom before
+Ginx's Baby piped forth a lusty protest: the street rang again. Ere long
+the doors at the top of the steps swung back, and a portly form stood in
+the light.
+
+"Halloo! what's the matter?" (This was a general observation into
+space.) "Why, bless my heart, here's a child crying on the steps!"
+
+Another form appeared.
+
+"Is there nobody with it? Halloo! any one there?"
+
+No answer came save from poor little Ginx, but his was decided. The two
+servants descended the steps and looked at the miserable boy without
+touching him. Then they peered into the darkness in hope that they might
+get a glimpse of his mother or a policeman. A rapid step sounded on the
+pavement and a gentleman came up to the group.
+
+"What have we here?" he said gently.
+
+"It's a child, Sir Charles, I found crying on the steps. I expect it's
+a trick to get rid of him. We are looking for a policeman to take him
+away."
+
+"Poor little fellow," said Sir Charles, stooping to take a fair look
+at Ginx's Baby, "for you and such as you the policeman or the parish
+officers are the national guardians, and the prison or the poor-house
+the home..... Bring him into the Club, Smirke."
+
+The men hesitated a moment before executing so unwonted a demand,
+but Sir Charles Sterling was a man not safely to be thwarted--a late
+minister and a member of the committee. The child being carried into the
+magnificent hall of the Club, stood on its mosaic floor. From above the
+radiance of the gas "sunlight" streamed down over the marble pillars,
+and glanced on gilded cornices and panels of scagliola. A statue of the
+Queen looked upon him from the niche that opened to the dining-room;
+another of the great Puritan soldier, statesman, and ruler, with
+his stern massive front; and yet another, with the strong yet gentle
+features of the champion Free-Trader, seemed to regard him from their
+several corners. On the walls around were portraits of men who had
+striven for the deliverance of the people from ancient yokes and
+fetters. Of course Ginx's Baby did not see all this. He, poor boy,
+dazed, stood with a knuckle in his eye, while the porter, lackeys,
+Sir Charles Sterling, and others who strolled out of the reading-room,
+curiously regarded him. But any one observing the scene apart might have
+contrasted the place with the child--the principles and the professions
+whereof this grandeur was the monument and consecrated tabernacle, with
+this solitary atomic specimen of the material whereon they were to work.
+What social utility had resulted from the great movements initiated by
+them who erected and frequented this place? Ought they to have had, and
+did they still need a complement? While wonderful political changes had
+been wrought, and benefits not to be exaggerated won for many classes,
+WHAT HAD BEEN DONE FOR GINX'S BABY?
+
+The query would not have been very ridiculous. He was an unit of the
+British Empire--nothing could blot out that fact before heaven! Had
+anything been left undone that ought to have been done, or done that had
+well been left undone, or were better to be undone now? Of a truth that
+was worth a thought.
+
+"What's all this?" said a big Member of Parliament, a minister renowned
+for economy in matters financial and intellectual. "What are you doing
+with this youngster? I never saw such an irregularity in a Club in my
+life."
+
+"If you saw it oftener you would think more about it," said Sir Charles
+Sterling. "We found him on the steps. I think he was asking for you,
+Glibton."
+
+This sally turned a laugh against the minister.
+
+"Well," said another, "he has come to the wrong quarter if he wants
+money."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder," said a third, "if he were one of the new
+messengers at the Office of Popular Edifices. Glibton is reducing their
+staff."
+
+"If that's the case I think you have reached the minimum here, Glibton,"
+cried Sir Charles.
+
+"Can't the country afford a livery?"
+
+"Bother you all," replied the Secretary, who was secretly pleased to be
+quizzed for his peculiarities--"tell us what this means. Whose 'lark' is
+it?"
+
+"No lark at all," said Sterling. "Here is a problem for you and all
+of us to solve. This forlorn object is representative, and stands here
+to-night preaching us a serious sermon. He was deserted on the Club
+steps--left there, perhaps, as a piece of clever irony; he might be son
+to some of us. What's your name, my boy?"
+
+Ginx's Baby managed to say "Dunno!"
+
+"Ask him if he has any name?" said an Irish ex-member, with a grave
+face.
+
+Ginx's Baby to this question responded distinctly "No."
+
+"No name," said the humorist; "then the author of his being must be
+Wilkie Collins."
+
+Everybody laughed at this indifferent pleasantry but our hero. His bosom
+began to heave ominously.
+
+"What's to be done with him?"
+
+"Send him to the workhouse."
+
+"Send him to the d----" (there may be brutality among the gods and
+goddesses).
+
+"Give him to the porter."
+
+"No thank you, sir," said he, promptly.
+
+The gentlemen were turning away, when Sir Charles stopped them.
+
+"Look here!" he said, taking the boy's arm and baring it, "this boy can
+hardly be called a human being. See what a thin arm he has--how flaccid
+and colorless the flesh seems--what an old face!--and I can scarcely
+feel any pulse. Good heavens, get him some wine! A few hours will send
+him to the d---- sure enough.... What are we to do for him, Glibton? I
+say again, he is only part of a great problem. There must be hundreds
+of thousands growing up like this child; and what a generation to
+contemplate in all its relations and effects!"
+
+The gentlemen were dashed by his earnestness.
+
+"Oh, you're exaggerating," said Glibton; "there can't be such widespread
+misery. Why, if there were, the people would be wrecking our houses."
+
+"Ah!" replied the other, sadly, "will you wait to be convinced by that
+sort of thing before you believe in their misery? I assure you what
+I say is true. I could bring you a hundred clergymen to testify to it
+to-morrow morning."
+
+"God forbid!" said Glibton. "Good-night."
+
+The right honorable gentleman extinguished the subject in his own little
+brain with his big hat; but everywhere else the sparks are still aglow,
+and he, with all like him, may wake up suddenly, as frightened women in
+the night; to find themselves environed in the red glare of a popular
+conflagration. Well for them then if they are not in charge of the
+State machinery. What an hour will that be for hurrying to and fro
+with water-pipes and buckets, when proper forethought, diligence, and
+sacrifice would have made the building fireproof.
+
+
+
+
+III.--A thorough-paced Reformer--if not a Revolutionary.
+
+By the kindness and influence of Sir Charles Sterling, Ginx's Baby that
+night, and long after, found shelter in the Radical Club. He gave
+rise to a discussion in the smoking-room next evening that ought to be
+chronicled. Several members of the committee supported his benefactor
+in urging that the child should be adopted by the Club, as a pledge
+of their resolve to make the questions of which he seemed to be the
+embodied emblem subjects of legislative action. Others said that those
+questions being, in their view, social and not political, were
+not proper ones to give impulse to a party movement, and that
+the entertainment in the Club of this foundling would be a gross
+irregularity: they did not want samples of the material respecting
+which they were theorizing. To some of the latter Sir Charles had been
+insisting that, whether they kept the child or not, they could not
+stifle the questions excited by his condition.
+
+"You may delay, but you cannot dissipate them. We are filling up our
+sessions with party struggles, theoretic discussions, squabbles about
+foreign politics, debates on political machinery, while year by year the
+condition of the people is becoming more invidious and full of peril.
+Social and political reform ought to be linked; the people on whom
+you confer new political rights cannot enjoy them without health and
+well-being."
+
+"But all our legislation is directed to that!" exclaimed Mr. Joshua
+Hale. "Reform, Free Trade, Free Corn--have these not enhanced the wealth
+of the people?"
+
+"Partially; yet there are classes unregenerated by their reviving
+influences. Free trade cannot insure work, nor can free corn provide
+food for every citizen."
+
+"Nor any other legislation: let us be practical. I own there is much to
+be done. I have often stated my 'platform.' We must clip the enormous
+expenditure on soldiers and ships; reduce our overweening army of
+diplomatic spies and busybodies; abstain from meddling in everybody's
+quarrels; redeem from taxation the workman's necessaries--a free
+breakfast-table; peremptorily legislate against the custom of
+primogeniture; encourage the distribution and transfer of land; and,
+under the aegis of the ballot, protect from the tyranny of the landlord
+and employer their tenants and workmen."
+
+"Very good, perhaps, all of them," replied Sir Charles, "but some not at
+the moment possible, and all together are not exhaustive. Why do you
+not go to the bottom of social needs? You say nothing about Health
+legislation--are you indifferent to the sanitary condition of the
+people? You have not hinted at Education--Waste Lands--Emigration--"
+
+"Oh! I am opposed to that altogether."
+
+"I forgot, you are a manufacturer; yet the last man of whom I should
+believe that selfishness had warped the judgment. You have done and
+endured more than any living statesman for the advantage of your
+fellow-citizens, so that I will not cast at you the aspersion of
+class-blindness. Still, I can scarcely think you have looked at this
+matter in the pure light of patriotism, and not within the narrow scope
+of trade interests."
+
+"Quite unjust. Our best economists reprehend the policy of depleting our
+labor-market. Emigration is a timely remedy for adversity and to be very
+sparingly used. Labor is our richest vein--"
+
+"We may have too much of it. Take it as a fact that you now have more
+than you can use, and the unemployed part is starving; what will you do
+with them?"
+
+"That is a mere temporary and casual depression, to which all classes
+are liable."
+
+"But," said Sir Charles, "which none can so ill bear. Nay--what if it is
+permanent? You look to increased trade. Do you suppose we are to retain
+our manufacturing pre-eminence when every country, new and old, is
+competing with us? Can our trade, I ask you honestly to consider,
+increase at the rate of our population? Besides, for heaven's sake, look
+at the thing as a man. Grant that we have a hundred thousand men out of
+work, and hundreds of thousands more dependent on them--do you think
+it no small thing that the vast mass should be left for one, two, three
+years seething in sorrow and distress, while they are waiting for trade!
+By the time that comes they may have gone beyond the hope of rescue.
+Ah! if an elastic trade comes back to-morrow, you can never make those
+people what they were; ought we not to have forecast that they should
+not be what they are? But I contend that depression has become chronic,
+the poverty more wide-spread and persistent--how then shall we, who
+represent these classes among the rest, face the prospect?"
+
+Here interposed a gentleman high in office, a pure, keen, rigid
+economist of the highest intellectual and political rank.
+
+"My dear Sterling, pardon me if I say you are talking wildly. Perhaps
+you don't see that you are verging on rank communism. The working of
+economic laws can be as infallibly projected as a solar eclipse. You can
+secure no class from periodic calamity, and so regulate laws of supply
+and demand by guiding-wheels of legislation and taxation as to save
+every man from penury. You wish us to send away our bone and sinew
+because we have no present employment for it, and next year, or the
+year after, under a recovered trade you will be wringing your hands and
+cursing the folly that prompted you to do it."
+
+"I should be too glad of the opportunity," replied Sir Charles,
+sturdily, "but in truth there is an incubus of excessive numbers that
+no revival of trade will provide for, even if it is beyond our extremest
+hopes, and I for one will not be guilty of the inhumanity of keeping
+fellow-creatures in misery till we can find a use for them. You have
+forgotten that there are other economic laws besides those you glance
+at. Several millions of acres of unoccupied land belonging in a sense
+to the people of this country are to be kept untilled in defiance of the
+plainest policy that nature and God have indicated to us, namely, that
+labor should come in contact with land! For want of this conjunction our
+colonies are to be checked, while at home miserable millions are gaping
+for work and food."
+
+"Oh! let them take themselves out. There are too many going already.
+They will follow natural laws, and where labor is required thither the
+stream will flow."
+
+"Mere surface talk, my clever friend," replied the other, "the men who
+are trooping out at their own expense are our most sober, careful, and
+energetic workmen. Else they could not go. They go because here so many
+indifferent ones are weighing down their shoulders. And where do most of
+them go to? Not to strengthen and develop our colonies, but the United
+States--a not always friendly people, and just now your free-trader's
+bugbear!"
+
+"Well, well," said the minister, "drop that question. It's utterly
+impracticable at this time. We couldn't entertain the demand for
+State-help for an instant. I tell you again you're a Fourierite. You
+virtually propose to put your hand in the pocket of the upper classes to
+pay all sorts of expenses for the lower."
+
+"You may call me a communist if you please," replied Sir Charles
+Sterling; "I do not shrink from shadows. Perhaps I am in favor of
+something nearer to communism than our present form of society. One
+thing I am clear about: no state of society is healthy wherein every
+man does not own himself to be the guardian of the interests of the
+community as well as his own--does not see that he is bound, morally
+and as a matter of public policy, to add to his neighbor's well-being
+as well as his own. Does not society, by its protection and aggregation,
+make it possible for the rich to grow rich, the genius and the ambitious
+man to pursue their aims, the merchant to gather his vails, the noble to
+enjoy his lands? For these privileges there is more or less to pay, and
+it may be that the proper proportion which the capable classes should
+be called upon to contribute to the common weal has never been correctly
+adjusted. The first fruit of practical Christianity was community of
+goods, and but for human selfishness we might hope for an Eutopian
+era--when, while it should be ruled that if a man would not work neither
+should he eat, there should also be brought home to every man the care
+of his poorer, or weaker, or less competent brother. I never expect
+to see that. I do hope to see the men of greatest ability pay more
+generously for the privileges they enjoy. The best policy for them
+too. The better the condition of the general community the better for
+themselves. You cannot alarm me with epithets. But these views are
+happily not essential to the support of the Emigration policy."
+
+"O dear! O dear! mad as a March hare!" cried the minister, as he stumped
+from the room.
+
+"Sterling is a good fellow," said he to a colleague with whom he walked
+down Pall Mall, "and a thorough-paced Liberal. Besides, he carries great
+weight in the House. But he is an enthusiast, and, therefore, not always
+quite practical."
+
+By PRACTICAL the minister meant, not that which might well and to
+advantage be done if good and able men would resolve to do it, spite of
+all hindrances, but that which, upon a cunning review of party balances
+and a judicious probing of public opinion, seemed to be a policy fit
+for his party to pursue. The first, original and masterly statesmen are
+needed to initiate and perform--the other is simply the art of a genius
+who knows how most adroitly to manipulate people and circumstances.
+
+
+
+
+IV.--Very Broad Views.
+
+Sir Charles Sterling, Mr. Joshua Hale, and others continued the
+conversation interrupted by the minister's exit. What was to be done
+with Ginx's Baby? In the great dissected map of society what niches were
+cut out for him and all like him to fill? Most of the politicians were
+for leaving that to himself to find out. The term "law of supply and
+demand" was freely bandied between them, as it is in many journals
+nowadays, with little object save to shut up avenues of discussion by a
+high-sounding phrase.
+
+Then of these "statesmen," most clung, if not to self-interest, to
+personal crotchets. What is more darling to a man than the child of his
+intellect or fancy? How the poor poetaster hugs his tawdry verses as if
+they were the imperial ornaments of genius! Just in the same way does
+the politician love the policies himself hath devised, pressing them
+forward at all hazards, while he is blind to the utility of others.
+This is the basis of that aspect of selfishness which often mars in the
+approbation of a country a really honest statesmanship--an egotistic
+tenacity of one's own creature as the best, which yet is not the
+criminal selfishness of ambition. Still that egotism is not seldom
+disastrous to the people's interests. While these statesmen nursed their
+own bantlings and held them up to national notice, they were apt to
+avoid or too lightly regard the views of men as able as themselves. For
+instance, Joshua Hale--who is far above these remarks generally--had
+put forth a scheme for the solution of the St. Helena property
+question--very likely a good one, albeit revolutionary, and nothing
+would convince him that any other could succeed. He wished every man
+in St. Helena--a turbulent adjunct of the British Empire--to be a
+landowner, and I do think, neither desired nor hoped that any man in
+that island should be happy until he was one. Yet there were other men
+ready to offer simpler remedies, and to prove that if every man in St.
+Helena became a landowner it would become a very hell upon earth,
+and more unmanageable than it was before. If these gentlemen do not
+sacrifice their pet fancies for the sake of a settlement, what will
+become of St. Helena?
+
+Just now they were discussing Ginx's Baby. One thought that repeal of
+the Poor-Laws and a new system of relief would reach his case; another
+saw the root of the Baby's sorrow in Trades' Unions; a third propounded
+cooperative manufactures; a fourth suggested that a vast source of
+income lay untouched in the seas about the kingdom, which swarmed with
+porpoises, and showed how certain parts of these animals were available
+for food, others for leather, others for a delicious oil that would be
+sweeter and more pleasant than butter; a fifth desired a law to repress
+the tendency of Scotch peers to evict tenants and convert arable lands
+into sheep-walks and deer-forests; a sixth maintained that there were
+waste lands in the kingdom of capacity to support hungry millions. In
+fact earth, heaven, and seas were to be regenerated by Act of Parliament
+for the benefit of Ginx's Baby and the people of England. Sir Charles
+listened impatiently, and at last burst forth again.
+
+He said: "When you consider it, what we are all trying to do nowadays
+is--vulgarly--to improve the breed; but we go to work in a round-about
+way. At the outset we are met by the depreciated state of part of the
+existing generation; and one problem is to prevent these depreciated
+people from increasing, or to get them to increase healthily. No one
+seems to have gone directly to such a problem as that. The difficulties
+to be faced are tremendous. Your dirtiest British youngster is hedged
+round with principles of an inviolable liberty and rights of Habeas
+Corpus. You let his father and mother, or any one who will save you the
+trouble of looking after him, mould him in his years of tenderness as
+they please. If they happen to leave him a walking invalid, you take him
+into the poorhouse; if they bring him up a thief, you whip him and
+keep him at high cost at Millbank or Dartmoor; if his passions, never
+controlled, break out into murder and rape, you may hang him, unless his
+crime has been so atrocious as to attract the benevolent interest of
+the Home Secretary; if he commit suicide, you hold a coroner's inquest,
+which also costs money; and however he dies you give him a deal coffin
+and bury him. Yet I may prove to you that this being, whom you treat
+like a dog at a fair, never had a day's--no, nor an hour's--contact
+with goodness, purity, truth, or even human kindness; never had an
+opportunity of learning anything better. What right have you then to
+hunt him like a wild beast, and kick him and whip him, and fetter him
+and hang him by expensive complicated machinery, when you have done
+nothing to teach him any of the duties of a citizen?"
+
+"Stop, stop, Sir Charles! you are too virulent. There are endless means
+of improving your lad--charities without number----"
+
+"Yes, that will never reach him."
+
+"Never mind, they may, you know. Industrial schools, reformatories,
+asylums, hospitals, Peabody-buildings, poor-laws. Everybody is working
+to improve the condition of the poor man. Sanitary administration goes
+to his house and makes it habitable."
+
+"Very," interjected Sir Charles Sterling, dryly.
+
+"Factory laws protect and educate factory children----"
+
+"They don't educate in one case out of ten. They don't feed them, clothe
+them, give them amusement and cultivation, do they?"
+
+"Certainly not--that would be ridiculous."
+
+"Why, the question is whether that would be ridiculous!" replied Sir
+Charles. "I do not say it can be done, but in order to transform the
+next generation, what we should aim at is to provide substitutes for
+bad homes, evil training, unhealthy air, food and dulness, and terrible
+ignorance, in happier scenes, better teaching, proper conditions of
+physical life, sane amusements, and a higher cultivation. I dare say you
+would think me a lunatic if I proposed that Government should establish
+music-halls and gymnasia all over the country; but you, Mr. Fissure,
+voted for the Baths and Washhouses."
+
+"Who's to pay for all this?" asked Mr. Fissure, pertinently.
+
+"The State, which means society, the whole of which is directly
+interested. I tell you a million of children are crying to us to set
+them free from the despotism of a crime and ignorance protected by law."
+
+"That is striking; but you are treading on delicate ground. The liberty
+of the subject----"
+
+"Exactly what I expected you to say. These words can be used in defence
+of almost any injustice and tyranny. Such terms as 'political economy,'
+'communism,' 'socialism,' are bandied about in the same way. Yet
+propositions coming fairly within these terms are often mentioned with
+approval by the very persons who cast them at you. In a report of a
+recent Royal Commission I find that one of the Commissioners is quite
+as revolutionary as I am. He says it is right by law to secure that no
+child shall be cruelly treated or mentally neglected, over-worked or
+under-educated. Some people would call that communism, I fancy. But
+I think him to be correct as a political economist in that broad
+proposition. Why? Because a child's relation to the State is wider, more
+permanent, and more important than his relation to his parents. If he
+is in danger of being depreciated and damned for good citizenship, the
+State must rescue him."
+
+"A paternal and maternal government together!" cries Lord Namby--"a
+government of nurses. You know I should like to stop the production of
+children among the lower orders. Your propositions are far in advance
+of my radicalism. The State must sometimes interfere between parent and
+child; for instance, in education or protection from cruelty. But, if
+I understand you, you actually contemplate a general refining and
+elevation of the working class by legislative means."
+
+"Assuredly: I should aim to cultivate their morals, refine their tastes,
+manners, habits. I wish to lift from them that ever-depressing sense of
+hopelessness which keeps them in the dust."
+
+"So do most men; but you must do that by personal and private
+influences, not by State enactments. How would you do it?"
+
+"How? I think I could draw up a programme. For instance: Expatriate a
+million to reduce the competition that keeps poor devils on half-rations
+or sends them to the poorhouse; Take all the sick, maimed, old, and
+incapable poor into workhouses managed by humane men and not by ghouls;
+Forbid such people to marry and propagate weakness; Legislate for
+compulsory improvements of workmen's dwellings, and, if needful, lend
+the money to execute it; Extend and enforce the health laws; Open free
+libraries and places of rational amusement with an imperial bounty
+through the country; Instead of spending thousands on dilettanti
+sycophants at one end of the metropolis, distribute your art and
+amusement to the kingdom at large; The rich have their museums,
+libraries, and clubs, provide them for the poor; Establish temporary
+homes for lying-in women; Multiply your baths and washhouses till there
+is no excuse for a dirty person; Educate; Provide day schools for every
+proper child, and industrial or reformatory schools for every improper
+one; Open advanced High Schools for the best pupils, and found
+Scholarships to the Universities; Erect other schools for technical
+training; Offer to teach trades and agriculture to all comers for
+nothing--you would soon neutralize your bugbear of trades-unionism;
+Teach morals, teach science, teach art, teach them to amuse themselves
+like men and not like brutes. In a land so wealthy the programme is not
+impracticable, though severe. As the end to be attained is the welfare
+of future generations, no good reason could be urged why they should not
+contribute towards the cost of it--a better debt to leave to posterity
+than the incubus of an irrational war."
+
+Will any sane political practitioner wonder to be told that at the end
+of this harangue the smoking-room party broke up, and that some, as they
+laughed good-humoredly over Sterling's egregia, recalled the number of
+glasses of inspirited seltzer swallowed by the orator? He was so far
+in advance of the most radical reformer that there was no hope of
+overtaking him for an era or two: so they determined to fancy they had
+left him behind.
+
+
+
+
+V.--Party Tactics--and Political Obstructions to Social Reform.
+
+In the Club our hero revelled awhile under the protection of Sir Charles
+Sterling, and the petting of peers, Members of Parliament, and loungers
+who swarm therein. Certain gentlemen of Stock Exchange mannerism and
+dressiness gave the protege the go-by, and even sneered at those who
+noticed him with kindness. But then these are of the men with whom every
+question is checked by money, and is balanced on the pivot of profit and
+loss. I dare say some of them thought the worse of Judas only because
+he had made so small a gain out of his celebrated transaction. To foster
+Ginx's Baby in the Club, as a recognition of the important questions
+surrounding him, though these questions involved hundreds of thousands
+of other cases, was to them ridiculous. Of far greater consequence was
+it in their eyes to settle a dispute between two extravagant fools
+at Constantinople and Cairo, and quicken the sluggishness of Turkish
+consols or Egyptian 9 per cents. I do not cast stones at them; every man
+must look at a thing with his own eyes.
+
+But it was curious to note how the Baby's fortunes shifted in the Club.
+There were times--when he was a pet chucked under chin by the elder
+stagers, favored with a smile from a Cabinet Minister, and now and then
+blessed with a nod from Mr. Joshua Hale. Then, again, every one seemed
+to forget him, and he was for months left unnoticed to the chance
+kindness of the menials until some case similar to his own happening to
+evoke discussion in the press, there would be a general inquiry for
+him. The porter, Mr. Smirke, had succeeded, by means of a detective,
+in discovering the boy's name, but his parents were then half-way to
+Canada.
+
+The members of the Fogey Club opposite, hearing that so interesting a
+foundling was being cherished by their opponents, politely asked leave
+to examine him, and he occasionally visited them. They treated him
+kindly and discussed his condition with earnestness. The leaders of the
+party debated whether he might not with advantage be taken out of their
+opponents' hands. Some thought that a judicious use of him might win
+popularity; but others objected that it would be perilous for them to
+mix themselves up with so doleful an interest. In the result the Fogies
+tipped young Ginx, but did not commit themselves for or against him.
+Thus a long time elapsed, and our hero had grown old enough to be a
+page. He had received food, clothing, and goodwill, but no one had
+thought of giving him an education. Sometimes he became obstreperous. He
+played tricks with the Club cutlery, and diverted its silver to improper
+uses; he laid traps for upsetting aged and infirm legislators; he tried
+the coolness of the youngest and best-natured Members of Parliament
+by popping up in strange places and exhibiting unseemly attitudes. At
+length, by unanimous consent, he was decreed to be a nuisance, and a few
+days would have revoked his license at the Club.
+
+No sooner did the Fogies get wind of this than they manoeuvred to get
+Ginx's Baby under their own management. They instructed their "organs,"
+as they called them, to pipe to popular feeling on the disgraceful
+apathy of the Radicals in regard to the foundling. They had him waylaid
+and treated to confectionery by their emissaries; and once or twice
+succeeded in abducting him and sending him down to the country with
+their party's candidates, for exhibition at elections.
+
+The Radicals resented this conduct extremely. Ginx's Baby was brought
+back to the Club and restored to favor. The Government papers were
+instructed to detail how much he was petted and talked about by the
+party; to declare how needless was the popular excitement on his behalf;
+and to prove that he must, without any special legislation, be benefited
+by the extraordinary organic changes then being made in the constitution
+of the country.
+
+Sir Charles Sterling resumed his interest in the boy. He had been
+gallantly aiding his party in other questions. There was the Timbuctoo
+question. A miserable desert chief had shut up a wandering Englishman,
+not possessed of wit enough to keep his head out of danger. There was
+a general impression that English honor was at stake, and the previous
+Fogey Government had ordered an expedition to cross the desert and
+punish the sheikh. You would never believe what it cost if you had
+not seen the bill. Ten millions sterling was as good as buried in the
+desert, when one-tenth of it would have saved a hundred thousand people
+from starvation at home, and one-hundredth part of it would have taken
+the fetters off the hapless prisoner's feet.
+
+There was the St. Helena question always brooding over Parliament.
+St. Helena was a constituent part of the British Empire. Every patriot
+agreed that the Empire without it would be incomplete; and was so far
+right that its subtraction would have left the Empire by so much less.
+Most of its inhabitants were aboriginal--a mercurial race, full of fire,
+quick-witted, and gifted with the exuberant eloquence of savages, but
+deficient in dignity and self-control. Before any one else had been
+given them by Providence to fight, they slaughtered and ravaged one
+another. Our intrusive British ancestors stepped upon the island, and,
+being strong men, mowed down the islanders like wheat, and appropriated
+the lands their swords had cleared. Still the aborigines held out
+in corners, and defied the conquerors. The latter ground them down,
+confiscated the property of their half-dozen chiefs, and distributed it
+among themselves. By way of showing their imperial imperiousness, they
+built over some ruins left by their devastations a great church, in
+which they ordered all the islanders to worship. This was at first
+abomination to the islanders, who fought like devils whenever they
+could, and ended by accepting the religion of their foes. But the
+conquerors, afterwards choosing to change their own faith, resolved
+that the islanders should do so too. Forthwith they confiscated the big
+church and burying-ground, and, distributing part of the land and spoils
+among their most prominent scamps, erected a new edifice of quite a
+different character, in which the natives swore they could neither see
+nor hear, and their own clerics warned them they would certainly be
+damned. To make the complications more intricate, these clerics owed
+allegiance to an ancient woman in a distant country, who had all the
+meddlesomeness and petty jealousy of her sex, and was, besides, much
+attached to some clever wooers of hers, wily sinners who covered their
+aims under the semblance of ultra-extreme passion for her. The prominent
+scamps died, to be succeeded by their children, or other of the hated
+conquerors, from generation to generation. The islanders went on
+increasing and protesting. T hey starved upon the lands, and shot the
+landlords when a few gave them the chance, for most lived away in their
+own country, and left the property to be administered by agents. The
+Home Government had again and again been obliged to assist these people
+with soldiers, to provide an armed police, to shoot down mobs, to catch
+a ringleader here or there and send him to Fernando Po, or to deprive
+whole villages of ordinary civil rights. Then the yam crop failed, and
+nearly half the people left the island and crossed the seas, where they
+continued to hate and to plot against those whose misfortune it had been
+to get a legacy of the island from their fathers. It would be wearisome
+to recount the absurdities on both sides: the stupidity or criminal
+absence of tact from time to time shown by the Home Government--the
+resolve never to be quiet exhibited by the natives, under the prompting
+of their clerics. Upon
+
+ "--that common stage of novelty--"
+
+there were ever springing up fresh difficulties. Secret clubs were
+formed for murder and reprisal. A body called the "Yellows" had bound
+themselves by private oaths to keep up the memory of the religious
+victories of their predecessors, and to worry the clerical party in
+every possible way. Their pleasure was to go about insanely blowing
+rams'-horns, carrying flags and bearing oranges in their hands. The
+islanders hated oranges, and at every opportunity cracked the skulls of
+the orange-bearers with brutal weapons peculiar to the island. These,
+in return, cracked native skulls. The whole island was in a state of
+perpetual commotion. Still, its general condition improved, its
+farms grew prosperous, and a joint-stock company had built a mill
+for converting cocoanut fibre into horse-cloths, which yielded large
+profits. The memory of past events might well have been buried; but the
+clerics, in the interest of the old woman, fanned the embers, and the
+infamous bidding for popularity of parties at home served to keep alive
+passions that would naturally have died out. Besides, latterly folly had
+been too organized on both sides to suffer oblivion. Everybody was tired
+of the squabbles of St. Helena. At length there was a general movement
+in the interests of peace, and to pacify the islanders Parliament was
+asked to pull down the wings of the old church edifice, remove some of
+the graves, and cut off a large piece of the graveyard. Some were
+in favor also of dividing all the farms in the country among the
+aborigines, but the difficulty was to know how at the same time to
+satisfy the present occupiers. These schemes were topics of high debate,
+upon them the fortunes of Government rose and fell, and while they were
+agitated Ginx's Baby could have no chance of a parliamentary hearing.
+Many other matters of singular indifference had eaten up the legislative
+time; but at last the increasing number of wretched infants throughout
+the country began to alarm the people, and Sir Charles Sterling thought
+the time had come to move on behalf of Ginx's Baby and his fellows.
+
+
+
+
+VI.--Amateur Debating in a High Legislative Body.
+
+While Sir Charles was trying to get the Government to "give him a night"
+to debate the Ginx's Baby case, and while associations were being formed
+in the metropolis for disposing of him by expatriation or otherwise, a
+busy peer without notice to anybody, suddenly brought the subject before
+the House of Lords. As he had never seen the Baby, and knew nothing or
+very little about him, I need scarcely report the elaborate speech in
+which he asked for aristocratic sympathy on his behalf. He proposed to
+send him to the Antipodes at the expense of the nation.
+
+The Minister for the Accidental Accompaniments of the Empire was a
+clever man--keen, genial, subtle, two-edged, a gentlemanly and not
+thorough disciple of Machiavel; able to lead parliamentary forlorn
+hopes and plant flags on breaches, or to cover retreats with brilliant
+skirmishing; deft, but never deep; much moved too by the opinions of his
+permanent staff. These on the night in question had plied him well
+with hackneyed objections; but to see him get up and relieve himself of
+them--the air of originality, the really original air he threw around
+them; the absurd light which he turned full on the weaknesses of his
+noble friend's propositions, was as beautiful to an indifferent critic
+as it as saddening to the man who had at heart the sorrows of his kind.
+If that minister lived long he would be forced to adopt and advocate
+in as pretty a manner the policy he was dissecting. Lord Munnibagge, a
+great authority in economic matters, said that a weaker case had never
+been presented to Parliament. To send away Ginx's Baby to a colony
+at imperial expense was at once to rob the pockets of the rich and to
+decrease our labor-power. There was no necessity for it. Ginx's Baby
+could not starve in a country like this. He (Lord Munnibagge) had
+never heard of a case of a baby starving. There was no such wide-spread
+distress as was represented by the noble lord. There were occasional
+periods of stagnation in trade, and no doubt in these periods the poorer
+classes would suffer; but trade was elastic; and even if it were granted
+that the present was a period when employment had failed, the time was
+not far off when trade would recuperate. (Cheers.) Ginx's Baby and all
+other babies would not then wish to go away. People were always making
+exaggerated statements about the condition of the poor. He (Lord
+Munnibagge) did not credit them. He believed the country, though
+temporarily depressed by financial collapses, to be in a most healthy
+state. (Hear, hear.) It was absurd to say otherwise, when it was shown
+by the Board of Trade returns that we were growing richer every day.
+(Cheers.) Of course Ginx's Baby must be growing richer with the rest.
+Was not that a complete answer to the noble lord's plaintive outcries?
+(Cheers and laughter.) That the population of a country was a great
+fraction of its wealth was an elementary principle of political economy.
+He thought, from the high rates of wages, that there were not too
+many but too few laborers in the country. He should oppose the motion.
+(Cheers.)
+
+Two or three noble lords repeated similar platitudes, guarding
+themselves as carefully from any reference to facts, or to the question
+whether high rates of wages might not be the concomitants simply of high
+prices of necessaries, or to the yet wider question whether colonial
+development might not have something to do with progress at home. The
+noble lord who had rushed unprepared into the arena was unequal to the
+forces marshalled against him, and withdrew his motion. Thus the great
+debate collapsed. The Lords were relieved that an awkward question had
+so easily been shifted. The newspapers on the ministerial side declared
+that this debate had proved the futility of the Ginx's Baby Expatriation
+question. "So able an authority as Lord Munnibagge had established that
+there was no necessity for the interference of Government in the case
+of Ginx's Baby or any other babies or persons. The lucid and decisive
+statement of the Secretary for the Accidental Accompaniments of the
+Empire had shown how impossible it was for the Imperial Government to
+take part in a great scheme of Expatriation; how impolitic to endeavor
+to affect the ordinary laws of free movement to the Colonies." Surely
+after this the Expatriation people hid their lights under a bushel! The
+Government refused to find a night for Sir Charles Sterling, and after
+the Lords' debate he did not see his way to force a motion in the Lower
+House. Meanwhile Ginx's Baby once more decided a turn in his own
+fate. Tired of the slow life of the Club, and shivering amid the chill
+indifference of his patrons, he borrowed without leave some clothes
+from an inmate's room, with a few silver forks and spoons, and decamped.
+Whether the baronet and the Club were bashful of public ridicule or glad
+to be rid of the charge, I know not, but no attempt was made to recover
+him.
+
+
+
+
+PART V. WHAT GINX'S BABY DID WITH HIMSELF.
+
+ A full-formed Horse will, in any market, bring from twenty
+ to as high as two hundred Friedrichs d'or: such is his worth
+ to the world. A full-formed Man is not only worth nothing
+ to the world, but the world could afford him a round sum
+ would he simply engage to go and hang himself.--SARTOR
+ RESARTUS.
+
+
+
+
+The Last Chapter.
+
+Our hero was nearly fifteen years old when he left the Club to plunge
+into the world. He was not long in converting his spoils into money, and
+a very short time in spending it. Then he had to pit his wits against
+starvation, and some of his throws were desperate. Wherever he went
+the world seemed terribly full. If he answered an advertisement for an
+errand-boy, there were a score kicking their heels at the rendezvous
+before him. Did he try to learn a useful trade, thousands of adepts
+were not only ready to underbid him, but to knock him on the head for an
+interloper. Even the thieves, to whom he gravitated, were jealous of
+his accession, because there were too many competitors already in
+their department. Through his career of penury, of honest and dishonest
+callings, of 'scapes and captures, imprisonments and other punishments,
+a year's reading of Metropolitan Police Reports would furnish the exact
+counterpart.
+
+*****
+
+I don't know how many years after his flight from Pall Mall, one dim
+midnight, I, returning from Richmond, lounged over Vauxhall Bridge,
+listening to the low lapping of the current beneath the arches--looking
+above to the stars and along the dark polished surface that reflected a
+thousand lights in its undulations,--feeling the awfulness of the dense,
+suppressed life that was wrapt within the gloom and calm of the hour. I
+suddenly saw a shadow, a human shadow, that at the sound of my footstep
+quickly crossed my dreamy vision--quickly, noiselessly came and
+went before my eyes until it stood up high and outlined against the
+strangely-mingled haze. It looked like the ghost of a slight-formed man,
+hatless and coatless, and for a moment I saw at its upper extremity the
+dull flash as of a human face in the gloom, before the shadow leaped out
+far into the night. Splash! When my startled eyes looked down upon the
+glancing, waving ebony, I thought I could trace a white coruscation of
+foam spreading out into the darkness, instantly to dissipate and be lost
+for ever. I did not then know what form it was that swilled down below
+the glistening current. Had I known that it was Ginx's Baby I should
+perhaps have thought "Society, which, in the sacred names of Law and
+Charity, forbad the father to throw his child over Vauxhall Bridge, at a
+time when he was alike unconscious of life and death, has at last itself
+driven him over the parapet into the greedy waters"----
+
+Philosophers, Philanthropists, Politicians, Papists and Protestants,
+Poor-Law Ministers and Parish Officers--while you have been theorizing
+and discussing, debating, wrangling, legislating and administering--Good
+God! gentlemen, between you all, where has Ginx's Baby gone to?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ginx's Baby, by Edward Jenkins
+
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+
+GINX'S BABY
+His Birth and other Misfortunes
+A SATIRE
+{by Edward Jenkins?? 1838-1910??}
+
+
+PREFACE.
+ ----
+CRITIC.--I never read a more improbable story in my life.
+
+AUTHOR.--Notwithstanding, it may be true.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+----
+PART I. WHAT GINX DID WITH HIM.
+I. Ab initio
+II. Home, sweet Home!
+III. Work and Ideas
+IV. Digressive, and may be skipped without mutilating the History
+V. Reasons and Resolves
+VI. The Antagonism of Law and Necessity
+VII. Malthus and Man
+VIII. The Baby's First Translation
+
+PART II. WHAT CHARITY AND THE CHURCHES DID WITH HIM.
+I. The Milk of Human Kindness, Mother's Milk, and the Milk of
+ the Word
+II. The Protestant Detectoral Association
+III. The Sacrament of Baptism
+IV. Law on Behalf of Gospel
+V. Magistrate's Law
+VI. Popery and Protestantism in the Queen's Bench
+VII. A Protestor, but not a Protestant
+VIII. "See how these Christians love one another"
+IX. Good Samaritans, and Good-Samaritan Twopences
+X. The Force--and a Specimen of its Weakness
+XI. The Unity of the Spirit and the Bond of Peace
+XII. No Funds--no Faith, no Works
+XIII. In transitu
+
+PART III. WHAT THE PARISH DID WITH HIM.
+I. Parochial Knots--to be untied without Prejudice
+II. A Board of Guardians
+III. "The World is my Parish"
+IV. Without Prejudice to any one but the Guardians
+V. An Ungodly Jungle
+VI. Parochial Benevolence--and another Translation
+
+PART IV. WHAT THE CLUBS AND POLITICIANS DID WITH HIM.
+I. Moved on
+II. Club Ideas
+III. A thorough-paced Reformer--if not a Revolutionary
+IV. Very Broad Views
+V. Party Tactics--and Political Obstructions to Social Reform
+VI. Amateur Debating in a High Legislative Body
+
+PART V. WHAT GINX'S BABY DID WITH HIMSELF.
+ The Last Chapter
+
+
+
+
+PART I. WHAT GINX DID WITH HIM.
+I.--Ab initio.
+The name of the father of Ginx's Baby was Ginx. By a not
+unexceptional coincidence, its mother was Mrs. Ginx. The gender
+of Ginx's Baby was masculine.
+
+On the day when our hero was born, Mr. and Mrs. Ginx were living
+at Number Five, Rosemary Street, in the City of Westminster. The
+being then and there brought into the world was not the only
+human entity to which the title of "Ginx's Baby" was or had been
+appropriate. Ginx had been married to Betsy Hicks at St. John's,
+Westminster, on the twenty-fifth day of October, 18--, as appears
+from the "marriage lines" retained by Betsy Ginx, and carefully
+collated by me with the original register. Our hero was their
+thirteenth child. Patient inquiry has enabled me to verify the
+following history of their propagations. On July the
+twenty-fifth, the year after their marriage, Mrs. Ginx was safely
+delivered of a girl. No announcement of this appeared in the
+newspapers.
+
+On the tenth of April following, the whole neighborhood,
+including Great Smith Street, Marsham Street, Great and Little
+Peter Streets, Regent Street, Horseferry Road, and Strutton
+Ground, was convulsed by the report that a woman named Ginx had
+given birth to "a triplet," consisting of two girls and a boy.
+The news penetrated to Dean's Yard and the ancient school of
+Westminster. The Dean, who accepted nothing on trust, sent to
+verify the report, his messenger bearing a bundle of baby-clothes
+from the Dean's wife, who thought that the mother could scarcely
+have provided for so large an addition to her family. The
+schoolboys, on their way to the play-ground at Vincent Square,
+slyly diverged to have a look at the curiosity, paying sixpence a
+head to Mrs. Ginx's friend and crony, Mrs. Spittal, who pocketed
+the money, and said nothing about it to the sick woman. THIS
+birth was announced in all the newspapers throughout the kingdom,
+with the further news that Her Majesty the Queen had been
+graciously pleased to forward to Mrs. Ginx the sum of three
+pounds.
+
+What could have possessed the woman I can't say, but about a
+twelvemonth after, Mrs. Ginx, with the assistance of two doctors
+hastily fetched from the hospital by her frightened husband,
+nearly perished in a fresh effort of maternity. This time two
+sons and two daughters fell to the lot of the happy pair. Her
+Majesty sent four pounds. But whatever peace there was at home,
+broils disturbed the street. The neighbors, who had sent for the
+police on the occasion, were angered by a notoriety which was
+becoming uncomfortable to them, and began to testify their
+feelings in various rough ways. Ginx removed his family to
+Rosemary Street, where, up to a year before the time when Ginx's
+Baby was born, his wife had continued to add to her offspring
+until the tale reached one dozen. It was then that Ginx
+affectionately but firmly begged that his wife would consider her
+family ways, since, in all conscience, he had fairly earned the
+blessedness of the man who hath his quiver full of them; and
+frankly gave her notice that, as his utmost efforts could
+scarcely maintain their existing family, if she ventured to
+present him with any more, either single, or twins, or triplets,
+or otherwise, he would most assuredly drown him, or her, or them
+in the water-butt, and take the consequences.
+
+
+II.--Home, sweet Home!
+
+The day on which Ginx uttered his awful threat was that next to
+the one wherein number twelve had drawn his first breath. His
+wife lay on the bed which, at the outset of wedded life, they had
+purchased secondhand in Strutton Ground for the sum of nine
+shillings and sixpence. SECOND-HAND! It had passed through, at
+least, as many hands as there were afterwards babies born upon
+it. Twelfth or thirteenth hand, a vagabond, botched bedstead,
+type of all the furniture in Ginx's rooms, and in numberless
+houses through the vast city. Its dimensions were 4 feet 6
+inches by 6 feet. When Ginx, who was a stout navvy, and Mrs.
+Ginx, who was, you may conceive, a matronly woman, were in it,
+there was little vacant space about them. Yet, as they were
+forced to find resting-places for all the children, it not seldom
+happened that at least one infant was perilously wedged between
+the parental bodies; and latterly they had been so pressed for
+room in the household that two younglings were nestled at the
+foot of the bed. Without foot-board or pillows, the lodgment of
+these infants was precarious, since any fatuous movement of
+Ginx's legs was likely to expel them head-first. However they
+were safe, for they were sure to fall on one or other of their
+brothers or sisters.
+
+I shall be as particular as a valuer, and describe what I have
+seen. The family sleeping-room measured 13 feet 6 inches by 14
+feet.
+
+Opening out of this, and again on the landing of the third-floor,
+was their kitchen and sitting-room; it was not quite so large as
+the other. This room contained a press, an old chest of drawers,
+a wooden box once used for navvy's tools, three chairs, a stool,
+and some cooking utensils. When, therefore, one little Ginx had
+curled himself up under a blanket on the box, and three more had
+slipped beneath a tattered piece of carpet under the table,
+there still remained five little bodies to be bedded. For them
+an old straw mattress, limp enough to be rolled up and thrust
+under the bed, was at night extended on the floor. With this, and
+a patchwork quilt, the five were left to pack themselves together
+as best they could. So that, if Ginx, in some vision of the
+night, happened to be angered, and struck out his legs in navvy
+fashion, it sometimes came to pass that a couple of children
+tumbled upon the mass of infantile humanity below.
+
+Not to be described are the dinginess of the walls, the smokiness
+of the ceilings, the grimy windows, the heavy, ever-murky
+atmosphere of these rooms. They were 8 feet 6 inches in height,
+and any curious statist can calculate the number of cubic feet of
+air which they afforded to each person.
+
+The other side of the street was 14 feet distant. Behind, the
+backs of similar tenements came up black and cowering over the
+little yard of Number Five. As rare, in the well thus formed,
+was the circulation of air as that of coin in the pockets of the
+inhabitants. I have seen the yard; let me warn you, if you
+are fastidious, not to enter it. Such of the filth of the house
+as could not, at night, be thrown out of the front windows, was
+there collected, and seldom, if ever, removed. What became of
+it? What becomes of countless such accretions in like places?
+Are a large proportion of these filthy atoms absorbed by human
+creatures living and dying, instead of being carried away by
+scavengers and inspectors? The forty-five big and little lodgers
+in the house were provided with a single office in the corner of
+the yard. It had once been capped by a cistern, long since rotted
+away--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The street was at one time the prey of the gas company; at
+another, of the drainage contractors. They seemed to delight in
+turning up the fetid soil, cutting deep trenches through various
+strata of filth, and piling up for days or weeks matter that
+reeked with vegetable and animal decay. One needs not affirm
+that Rosemary Street was not so called from its fragrance. If
+the Ginxes and their neighbors preserved any semblance of health
+in this place, the most popular guardian on the board must own it
+a miracle. They, poor people, knew nothing of "sanitary reform,"
+"sanitary precautions," "zymotics," "endemics," "epidemics,"
+"deodorizers," or "disinfectants." They regarded disease with
+the apathy of creatures who felt it to be inseparable from
+humanity, and with the fatalism of despair.
+
+Gin was their cardinal prescription, not for cure, but for
+oblivion: "Sold everywhere." A score of palaces flourished
+within call of each other in that dismal district--garish, rich-
+looking dens, drawing to the support of their vulgar glory the
+means, the lives, the eternal destinies of the wrecked masses
+about them. Veritable wreckers they who construct these haunts,
+viler than the wretches who place false beacons and plunder
+bodies on the beach. Bring down the real owners of these places,
+and show them their deadly work! Some of them leading
+Philanthropists, eloquent at Missionary meetings and Bible
+Societies, paying tribute to the Lord out of the pockets of dying
+drunkards, fighting glorious battles for slaves, and manfully
+upholding popular rights. My rich publican--forgive the
+pun--before you pay tithes of mint and cummin, much more before
+you claim to be a disciple of a certain Nazarene, take a lesson
+from one who restored fourfold the money he had wrung from honest
+toil, or reflect on the case of the man to whom it was said, "Go
+sell all thou hast, and give to the poor." The lips from which
+that counsel dropped offered some unpleasant alternatives,
+leaving out one, however, which nowadays may yet reach you--the
+contempt of your kind.
+
+
+
+III.--Work and Ideas.
+
+I return again to Ginx's menace to his wife, who was suckling her
+infant at the time on the bed. For her he had an animal
+affection that preserved her from unkindness, even in his cups.
+His hand had never unmanned itself by striking her, and rarely
+indeed did it injure any one else. He wrestled not against
+flesh and blood, or powers, or principalities, or wicked spirits
+in high places. He struggled with clods and stones, and primeval
+chaos. His hands were horny with the fight, and his nature had
+perhaps caught some of the dull ruggedness of the things
+wherewith he battled. Hard and with a will had he worked through
+the years of wedded life, and, to speak him fair, he had acted
+honestly, within the limits of his knowledge and means, for the
+good of his family. How narrow were those limits! Every week he
+threw into the lap of Mrs. Ginx the eighteen or twenty shillings
+which his strength and temperance enabled him continuously to
+earn, less sixpence reserved for the public-house, whither he
+retreated on Sundays after the family dinner. A dozen children
+overrunning the space in his rooms was then a strain beyond the
+endurance of Ginx. Nor had he the heart to try the common plan,
+and turn his children out of doors on the chance of their being
+picked up in a raid of Sunday School teachers. So he turned out
+himself to talk with the humbler spirits of the "Dragon," or
+listen sleepily while alehouse demagogues prescribed remedies for
+State abuses.
+
+Our friend was nearly as guiltless of knowledge as if Eve had
+never rifled the tree whereon it grew. Vacant of policies were
+his thoughts; innocent he of ideas of state-craft. He knew there
+was a Queen; he had seen her. Lords and Commons were to him vague
+deities possessing strange powers. Indeed, he had been present
+when some of his better-informed companions had recognized with
+cheers certain gentlemen,--of whom Ginx's estimate was expressed
+by a reference to his test of superiority to himself in that
+which he felt to be greatest within him--"I could lick 'em with
+my little finger" --as the Chancellor of the Exchequer and the
+Prime Minister. Little recked he of their uses or abuses. The
+functions of Government were to him Asian mysteries. He only
+felt that it ought to have a strong arm, like the brawny member
+wherewith he preserved order in his domestic kingdom, and
+therefore generally associated Government with the Police. In
+his view these were to clear away evil-doers and leave every one
+else alone. The higher objects of Government were, if at all,
+outlined in the shadowiest form in his imagination. Government
+imposed taxes--that he was obliged to know. Government
+maintained the parks; for that he thanked it. Government made
+laws, but what they were, or with what aim or effects made, he
+knew not, save only that by them something was done to raise or
+depress the prices of bread, tea, sugar, and other necessaries.
+Why they should do so he never conceived--I am not sure that he
+cared. Legislation sometimes pinched him, but darkness so hid
+from him the persons and objects of the legislators that he could
+not criticise the theories which those powerful beings were
+subjecting to experiment at his cost. I must, at any risk, say
+something about this in a separate chapter.
+
+
+
+IV.--Digressive, and may be skipped without mutilating
+the History.
+
+I stop here to address any of the following characters, should he
+perchance read these memoirs:
+You, Mr. Statesman--if there be such;
+ Mr. Pseudo-Statesman, Placeman, Party Leader, Wirepuller;
+ Mr. Amateur Statesman, Dilettante Lord, Civil Servant;
+ Mr. Clubman, Litterateur, Newspaper Scribe;
+ Mr. People's Candidate, Demagogue, Fenian Spouter;
+or whoever you may be, professing to know aught or do anything in
+matters of policy, consider, what I am sure you have never fairly
+weighed, the condition of a man whose clearest notion of
+Government is derived from the Police! Imagine one who had never
+seen a polyp trying to construct an ideal of the animal, from a
+single tentacle swinging out from the tangle of weed in which the
+rest was wrapped! How then any more can you fancy that a man to
+whose sight and knowledge the only part of government practically
+exposed is the strong process of police, shall form a proper
+conception of the functions, reasons, operations, and relations
+of Government; or even build up an ideal of anything but a
+haughty, unreasonable, antagonistic, tax-imposing FORCE! And how
+can you rule such a being except as you rule a dog, by that which
+alone he understands--the dog-whip of the constable! Given in a
+country a majority of creatures like these, and surely despotism
+is its properest complement. But when they exist, as they exist
+in England to-day, in hundreds of thousands, in town and country,
+think what a complication they introduce into your theoretic free
+system of government. Acts of Parliament passed by a
+"freely-elected" House of Commons, and an hereditary House of
+Lords under the threats of freely-electing citizens, however pure
+in intention and correct in principle, will not seem to him to be
+the resultants of every wish in the community so much as
+dictations by superior strength. To these the obedience he will
+render will not be the loving assent of his heart, but a
+begrudged concession to circumstance. Your awe-invested
+legislature is not viewed as his friend and brother-helper, but
+his tyrant. Therefore the most natural bent of his
+workman-statesmanship--a rough, bungling affair--will be to tame
+you--you who ought to be his Counsellor and Friend. When he
+finds that your legislative action exerts upon him a repressive
+and restraining force he will curse you as its author, because he
+sees not the springs you are working. Should he even be a little
+more advanced in knowledge than our friend Ginx, and learn that
+he helps to elect the Parliament to make laws on behalf of
+himself and his fellow-citizens, he will scarce trust the
+assembly which is supposed to represent him. Will he, like a
+good citizen and a politic, accept with dignity and self-control
+the decision of a majority against his prejudices: or will he not
+regard the whole Wittenagemote with suspicion, contempt, or even
+hatred? See him rush madly to Trafalgar Square meetings, Hyde
+Park demonstrations, perhaps to Lord George Gordon Riots, as if
+there were no less perilous means of publishing his opinions!
+There wily men may lead his unconscious intellect, and stir his
+passions, and direct his forces against his own--and his
+children's good.
+
+Did it ever occur to you, or any of you, how many voters cannot
+read, and how many more, though they can read, are unable to
+apprehend reasons of statesmanship?--that even newspapers cannot
+inform them, since they have not the elementary knowledge needed
+for the comprehension of those things which are discussed in
+them; nay, that for want of understanding the same they may
+terribly distort political aims and consequences?
+
+Might it not be worth while for you, gentlemen--may it not be
+your duty to devise ways and means for conveying such elementary
+instruction by good street-preachers on politics and economy, or
+even political bible- women or colporteurs, and so to make clear
+to the understanding of every voter what are the reasons and aims
+of every act of Legislation, Home Administration, and Foreign
+Policy? If you do not find out some way to do this he may turn
+round upon you--I hope he may-- and insist on annually-elected
+parliaments, and thus oblige ambitious state-mongers, in the
+rivalry of place, to come to him and declare more often their
+wishes and objects. Other attractions may be found in that
+solution: such as the untying of some knots of electoral
+difficulty, and removing incitements to corruption. Ten thousand
+pounds for one year's power were a high price even to a
+contractor. Think then whether at any cost some general
+political education must not be attempted, since there is a
+spirit breathing on the waters, and how it shall convulse them is
+no indifferent matter to you or to me. Everywhere around us are
+unhewn rocks stirred with a strange motion. Leave these chaotic
+fragments of humanity to be hewn into rough shape by coarse
+artists seeking only a petty profit, unhandy, immeasurably
+impudent; or dress them by your teaching--teaching which is the
+highest, noblest, purest, most efficient function of Government,
+which ought to be the most lofty ambition of statesmanship--to be
+civic corner-stones polished after the similitude of a palace.
+
+
+
+V.--Reasons and Resolves.
+
+Ginx has been waiting through three chapters to explain his
+truculence upon the birth of his twelfth child. Much explanation
+is not necessary. When he looked round his nest and saw the many
+open mouths about him, he might well be appalled to have another
+added to them. His children were not chameleons, yet they were
+already forced to be content with a proportion of air for their
+food. And even the air was bad. They were pallid and pinched.
+How they were clad will ever be a mystery, save to the poor woman
+who strung the limp rags together and Him who watched the noble
+patience and sacrifice of a daily heroism. Of her own
+unsatisfied cravings, and the dense motherly horrors that
+sometimes brooded over her while she nursed these infants, let me
+refrain from speaking, since if as vividly depicted as they were
+real, you, Madam, could not endure to read of them. Her poor,
+unintelligent mind clung tenaciously to the controverted
+aphorism, "Where God sends mouths he sends food to fill them."
+Believing that there was a God, and that He must be kind, she
+trusted in this as a truth, and perhaps an all-seeing eye reading
+some quaint characters on her simple heart, viewed them not too
+nearly, but had regard to their general import, for, as she
+expressed it, "Thank God! they had always been able to get
+along."
+
+In the rush and tumult of the world it is likely that the summum
+bonum of nine-tenths of mankind is embraced in that purely
+negative happiness--to get along. Not to perish: to open eyes,
+however wearily, on a new morning: to satisfy with something, no
+matter what, a craving appetite: to close eyes at night under
+some shadow or shelter: or, it may be, in certain ranks to walk
+another day free from bankruptcy or arrest: Thank Heaven, they
+are just able to get along!
+
+Convinced that another infant straw would break his back, Ginx
+calmly proposed to disconcert physical, moral, and legal
+relations by drowning the straw Mrs. Ginx clinging to Number
+Twelve listened aghast. If a mother can forget her sucking child
+she was not that mother. The stream of her affections, though
+divided into twelve rills, would not have been exhausted in
+twenty-four, and her soul, forecasting its sorrow, yearned after
+that nonentity Number Thirteen. She pictured to herself the
+hapless strangeling borne away from her bosom by those strong
+arms, and--in fact she sobbed so that Ginx grew ashamed, and
+sought to comfort her by the suggestion that she could not have
+any more. But she knew better.
+
+
+VI.--The Antagonism of Law and Necessity.
+
+In eighteen months, notwithstanding resolves, menaces, and
+prophecies, GINX'S BABY was born. The mother hid the impending
+event long, from the father. When he came to know it, he fixed
+his determination by much thought and a little extra drinking.
+He argued thus: "He wouldn't go on the parish. He couldn't keep
+another youngster to save his life. He had never taken charity
+and never would. There was nothink to do with it but drown it!"
+Female friends of Mrs. Ginx bruited his intentions about the
+neighborhood, so that her "time" was watched for with interest.
+At last it came. One afternoon Ginx, lounging home, saw signs of
+excitement around his door in Rosemary Street. A knot of women
+and children awaited his coming. Passing through them he soon
+learned what had happened. Poor Mrs. Ginx! Without staying to
+think or argue, he took up the little stranger and bore it from
+the room----
+
+"O, O, O, Ginx! Ginx!!"
+
+She would have risen, but a strong power called weakness pulled
+her back.
+
+ * * * *
+
+
+The man meanwhile had reached the street.
+
+"Here he comes! There's the baby! He's going to do it, sure
+enough!" shrieked the women. The children stood agape. He
+stopped to consider. It is very well to talk about drowning your
+baby, but to do it you need two things, water and opportunity.
+Vauxhall Bridge was the nearest way to the former, and towards it
+Ginx turned.
+
+"Stop him!"
+
+"Murder!"
+
+"Take the child from him!'
+
+The crowd grew larger, and impeded the man's progress. Some of
+his fellow-workmen stood by regarding the fun.
+
+"Leave us aloan, naabors," shouted Ginx; "this is my own baby,
+and I'll do wot I likes with it. I kent keep it; an' if I've got
+anythin' I kent keep, it's best to get rid of it, ain't it? This
+child's goin' over Wauxhall Bridge."
+
+But the women clung to his arms and coattails.
+
+"Hallo! What's all this about?" said a sharp, strong man,
+well-dressed, and in good condition, coming up to the crowd;
+"anothe r foundling! Confound the place, the very stones produce
+babies. Where was it found?"
+
+CHORUS (recognizing a deputy-relieving officer). It warn't found
+at all; it's Ginx's baby.
+
+OFFICER. Ginx's baby? Who's Ginx?
+
+GINX. I am.
+
+OFFICER. Well?
+
+GINX. Well!
+
+CHORUS. He's goin' to drown it.
+
+OFFICER. Going to drown it? Nonsense.
+
+GINX. I am.
+
+OFFICER. But, bless my heart, that's murder!
+
+GINX. No 'tain't. I've twelve already at home. Starvashon's
+sure to kill this 'un. Best save it the trouble.
+
+CHORUS. Take it away, Mr. Smug, he'll kill it if you don't.
+
+OFFICER. Stuff and nonsense! Quite contrary to law! Why, man,
+you're bound to support your child. You can't throw it off in
+that way;--nor on the parish neither. Give me your name. I must
+get a magistrate's order. The act of parliament is as clear as
+daylight. I had a man up under it last week. "Whosoever shall
+unlawfully abandon or expose any child, being under the age of
+two years whereby the life of such child shall be endangered or
+the health of such child shall have been or shall be likely to be
+permanently injured (drowning comes under that I think) shall be
+GUILTY OF a MISDEMEANOR and being convicted thereof shall be
+liable at the discretion of the court to be KEPT IN PENAL
+SERVITUDE for the term of three years or to be imprisoned for any
+term not exceeding two years with or without hard labor."
+
+Mr. Smug, the officer, rolled out this section in a sonorous
+monotone, without stops, like a clerk of the court. It was his
+pride to know by heart all the acts relating to his department,
+and to bring them down upon any obstinate head that he wished to
+crush. Ginx's head, however, was impervious to an act of
+parliament. In his then temper, the Commination Service or St.
+Ernulphus's curse would have been feathers to him. The only
+feeling aroused in his mind by the words of the legislature was
+one of resentment. To him they seemed unjust, because they were
+hard and fast, and made no allowance for circumstances. So he
+said:
+
+GINX. D---- the act of parliament! What's the use of saying I
+shan't abandon the child, when I can't keep it alive?
+
+OFFICER. But you're bound by law to keep it alive.
+
+GINX. Bound to keep it alive? How am I to do it? There's the
+rest on 'em there (nodding towards his house) little better nor
+alive now. If that's an act of Parleyment, why don't the act of
+Parleyment provide for 'em? You know what wages is, and I can't
+get more than is going.
+
+CHORUS. Yes. Why don't Parleyment provide for 'em? You take
+the child, Mr. Smug.
+
+OFFICER (regardless of grammar). ME take the child! The parish
+has enough to do to take care of foundlings and children whose
+parents can't or don't work. You don't suppose we will look
+after the children of those who can?
+
+GINX. Jest so. You'll bring up bastards and beggars' pups, but
+you won't help an honest man to keep his head above water. This
+child's head is goin' under water anyhow!" --and he prepared to
+bolt, amid fresh screams from the Chorus.
+
+
+
+VII.--Malthus and Man.
+
+Two gentlemen, who had been observing the excitement, here came
+forward.
+
+FIRST GENTLEMAN. This is our problem again, Mr. Philosopher.
+
+Mr. PHILOSOPHER (to Ginx). You don't know what to do with your
+infant, my friend, and you think the State ought to provide for
+it? I understand you to say this is your thirteenth child. How
+came you to have so many?
+
+This question, though put with profound and even melancholy
+gravity, disconcerted Ginx, Officer, and Chorus, who united in a
+hearty outburst of laughter.
+
+GINX. Haw, Haw, Haw! How came I to have so many? Why my old
+woman's a good un and----
+
+In fact, after searching his mind for some clever way of putting
+a comical rejoinder, Ginx laughed boisterously. There are two
+aspects of a question.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. I am serious, my friend. Did it never occur to you
+that you had no right to bring children into the world unless you
+could feed and clothe and educate them?
+
+CHORUS. Laws a' mercy!
+
+GINX. I'd like to know how I could help it, naabor. I'm a
+married man.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Well, I will go further and say you ought not to
+have married without a fair prospect of being able to provide for
+any contingent increase of family.
+
+CHORUS. Laws a' mercy!
+
+PHILOSOPHER (waxing warm). What right had you to marry a poor
+woman, and then both of you, with as little forethought as
+two--a--dogs, or other brutes--to produce between you such a
+multitudinous progeny--
+
+GINX. Civil words, naabor; don't call my family hard names.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Then let me say, such a monstrous number of
+children as thirteen? You knew, as you said just now, that wages
+were wages and did not vary much. And yet you have gone on
+subdividing your resources by the increase of what must become a
+degenerate offspring. (To the Chorus) All you workpeople are
+doing it. Is it not time to think about these things and stop
+the indiscriminate production of human beings, whose lives you
+cannot properly maintain? Ought you not to act more like
+reflective creatures and less like brutes? As if breeding were
+the whole object of life! How much better for you, my friend, if
+you had never married at all, than to have had the worry of a
+wife and children all these years.
+
+The philosopher had gone too far. There were some angry murmurs
+among the women and Ginx's face grew dark. He was thinking of
+"all those years" and the poor creature that from morning to
+night and Sunday to Sunday, in calm and storm, had clung to his
+rough affections: and the bright eyes, and the winding arms so
+often trellised over his tremendous form, and the coy tricks and
+laughter that had cheered so many tired hours. He may have been
+much of a brute, but he felt that, after all, that sort of thing
+was denied to dogs and pigs. Before he could translate his
+thoughts into words or acts a shrewd-looking, curly-haired
+stonemason, who stood by with his tin on his arm, cut into the
+discussion.
+
+STONEMASON. Your doctrines won't go down here, Mr. Philosopher.
+I've 'eard of them before. I'd just like to ask you what a man's
+to do and what a woman's to do if they don't marry: and if they
+do, how can you honestly hinder them from having any children?
+
+The stonemason had rudely struck out the cardinal issues of the
+question.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Well, to take the last point first, there are
+physical and ethical questions involved in it, which it is hard
+to discuss before such an audience as this.
+
+STONEMASON. But you must discuss 'em, if you wish us to change
+our ways, and stop breeding.
+
+PHILOSOPHER. Very well: perhaps you are right. But, again, I
+should first have to establish a basis for my arguments, by
+showing that the conception of marriage entertained by you all is
+a low one. It is not simply a breeding matter. The beauty and
+value of the relation lies in its educational effects--the
+cultivation of mutual sentiments and refinements of great
+importance to a community.
+
+STONEMASON. Ay! Very beautiful and refining to Mr. and Mrs.
+Philosopher, but I'd like to know where the country would have
+been if our fathers had held to that view of matrimony? Why,
+ain't it in natur' for all beings to pair, and have young? an'
+you say we ain't to do it! I think a statesman ought to make
+something out of what's nateral to human beings, and not try to
+change their naturs. Besides, ain't there good of another kind
+to be got out of the relation of parents and children? Did you
+ever have a child yourself?
+
+GINX (contemplating the Philosopher's physique). HE have a
+youngster! He couldn't.
+
+CHORUS. Ha! Ha! Ha!
+
+STONEMASON. I don't believe in yer humbuggin' notions. They
+lead to lust and crime;--I'm told they do in France. If you
+yourself haven't the human natur in you to know it, I'll tell
+you, and we can all tell you that as a rule if the healthy
+desires of natur ain't satisfied in a honest way, they will be in
+another. You can't stop eating by passin' an act of Parleyment
+to stop it. And as for yer eddication and cultivation, that
+makes no difference. We know something here about yer eddicated
+men;--more than they think. Who is it we meet about the streets
+late at night, goin' to the gay houses? Some of 'em stand near
+as high as you, but that don't alter their natur. They have
+their passions like other men; and eddication don't keep 'em
+down. Well, if that's the case, how can you ask people of our
+sort to put on the curb, or make us do it? Are we to live more
+like beasts than we are now, or do what's worse than murder? I
+don't see no other way. Among us I tell you, sir, three-fourths
+of our eddication, is eddication of the heart. We have to learn
+to be human, kind, self-denyin', and I think this makes better
+men, as a rule, than head-larnin'; tho' I don't despise that,
+neither. But you don't suppose head-citizens would fight for
+their country like men with wives and children behind 'em; why
+they don't even at home work for daily food like a man with wife
+and babies to provide for!
+
+The stonemason was above his class--one of those shrewd men that
+"the people called Methodists" get hold of, and use among the
+lower orders, under the name of "local preachers;" men who learn
+to think and speak better than their fellows. The Philosopher
+testified some admiration by listening attentively, and was about
+to reply, but the Chorus was tired, and the women would not hear
+him.
+
+CHORUS. Best get out o' this. We don't want any o' yer
+filhosophy. Go and get childer' of yer own, &c., &c.
+
+The Philosopher and his friend departed, carrying with them
+unsolved the problem they had brought.
+
+
+VIII.--The Baby's First Translation.
+
+The stonemason had been the hero of the moment; now attention
+centred on our own hero. Ginx hurried off again, but as the
+crowd opened before him, he was met, and his mad career stayed,
+by a slight figure, feminine, draped in black to the feet,
+wearing a curiously framed white-winged hood above her pale face,
+and a large cross suspended from her girdle. He could not run
+her down.
+
+NUN. Stop, MAN! Are you mad? Give me the child.
+
+He placed the little bundle in her arms. She uncovered the
+queer, ruby face, and kissed it. Ginx had not looked at the face
+before, but after seeing it, and the act of this woman, he could
+not have touched a hair of his child's head. His purpose died
+from that moment, though his perplexity was still alive.
+
+NUN. Let me have it. I will take it to the Sisters' Home, and
+it shall live there. Your wife may come and nurse it. We will
+take charge of it.
+
+GINX. And you won't send it back again? You'll take it for good
+and all?
+
+NUN. O, yes.
+
+GINX. Good. Give us yer hand.
+
+A little white hand came out from under her burthen, and was at
+once half-crushed in Ginx's elephantine grasp.
+
+GINX. Done. Thank'ee, missus. Come, mates, I'll stand a drink.
+
+A few minutes after, the woman of the cross, who had been up to
+comfort the poor mother, fluttered with her white wings down
+Rosemary Street, carrying in her arms Ginx's Baby.
+
+
+
+PART II.
+
+WHAT CHARITY AND THE CHURCHES DID WITH HIM.
+
+I.--The Milk of Human Kindness, Mother's Milk, and the
+Milk of the Word.
+
+The early days of his residence at the Home of the Sisters of
+Misery, in Winkle Street, was the Eden of Ginx's Baby's
+existence. Themselves innocent of a mother's experiences, the
+sisters were free to give play to their affections in a novel
+direction, and to assume a sort of spiritual maternity that was
+lucky for the changeling. He was nestled in kind serge-covered
+arms: kisses rained upon him from chaste lips. A slight scandal
+thrilled the convent upon the discovery of his sex, which had of
+course been a pure matter of conjecture to Sister Pudicitia when
+she rescued him; but enthusiasm can overcome anything. The
+awkward questions foreshadowed in the discovery were left to be
+considered when their growing importance should demand upon them
+the judgment of the archbishop. Visions of an unusual sanctity
+to be fostered in the pure regions of the convent, and to be sent
+on a mission into the world to attest the power of their
+spiritual discipline, began to haunt the brains of the
+sequestered nuns. Might not this infant be an embryo saint,
+destined for a great work in the heretical wilderness out of
+which he had come? How little healthy food the brains must have
+had wherein these insane dreams were excited by our innocent
+baby! Hardly did the sacred spinsters forecast what was in store
+for them when he should be teething.
+
+But Ginx's Baby was in a religious atmosphere, and that is always
+surcharged with electricity. His lot must have been above that
+of any other human being if he could long have remained in such a
+climate unvisited by thunder. The mother had been permitted to
+attend at the Home with the same regularity as the milkman, to
+discharge her maternal duties. Then with the rise of the
+visionary projects just mentioned the gravest doubts began to
+agitate the fertile and casuistic mind of the Lady Superior. The
+holier her ideal St. Ginx of the future, the more to be deplored
+was any heretical taint in the present. Holy mother! Was it not
+perhaps eminently perilous to his spiritual purity that an
+unbeliever like Mrs. Ginx should bring unconsecrated milk into
+the convent to be administered to this suckling of the Church!
+In her uneasiness she appealed to Father Certificatus, the
+conventual confessor. He gave his opinion in the following
+letter:--
+
+"DEAR SISTER SUSPICIOSA,
+ "The very grave question you have put to me has given me
+much anxiety. It could not but do so since it occupied, I knew,
+so fully your own holy reflections. I pondered it during the
+night while I repeated one hundred Aves on my knees, and I think
+the Blessed Virgin has vouchsafed her assistance.
+
+"I understood you to say you thought that the physical health of
+the infant, so singularly and miraculously thrown upon your care,
+required the offices of his heretic mother, and yet that you felt
+how inconsistent it was with the noble future we contemplate for
+him, that he should receive unorthodox lacteal sustentation. In
+this you are but following the usage of the Church in all ages,
+for She has ever enjoined the advantage of infusing Her doctrines
+into Her children with the mother's milk.
+
+"Three courses only appear to me to be open to us. First, we may
+try to work upon the mother's feelings, and on behalf of her
+child induce her to avail herself of the inestimable privileges
+of the Church in which he is fostered. Secondly, should she
+repel us--and these lower class heretics are even brutally
+refractory--we might at least allure her to allow us to make with
+holy water the sign of the Cross upon the natural reservoirs of
+infant nourishment each time before she approaches the infant.
+This, besides overcoming the immediate difficulty and securing
+for the child a supply of sanctified food, might open the way for
+the entrance into her own bosom of the milk of the word.
+Thirdly, should she reject these proposals, I see nothing for it
+but to forbid her to have access to her infant, and, commending
+him to the care of the Holy Mother, to feed him with pap or other
+suitable nourishment, previously consecrated by me in its crude
+state, and prepared by the most holy hands of your community.
+Thus we may hope to shield the young soul in its present
+freshness from contact with carnal elements.
+ "Your loving Father in, &c.,
+ "CERTIFICATUS."
+
+
+On receiving this letter the Superioress conferred not with flesh
+and blood, but sent for Mrs. Ginx. That worthy woman was not
+enchanted with her child's position. I have hinted that her
+faith was simple, but in proportion to its simplicity it was
+strongly-rooted in her nature. 'Tis not infrequent to find it
+so. Lengthy creeds and confessions of faith are apt to extend
+the strength and fervor of belief over too wide a surface. In
+the close frame of some single article will be concentrated the
+whole energy of the soul. The first formula, "Repent and believe
+in the Lord Jesus Christ," was maintained with a heat that became
+less intense, though more distributed, in the insertion of an
+Athanasian creed. Mrs. Ginx's creed was succinct.
+
+ Mrs. GINX'S PRIMARY CREED.
+
+I believe in God, giver of bread, meat, money, and health.
+
+This she maintained, with indifferent ritual and devotional
+observances. But there was to Mrs. Ginx's faith a corollary or
+secondary creed, only needed to meet special emergencies.
+
+Mrs. GINX'S SECONDARY CREED.
+
+1. I believe in the Church of England.
+2. I believe in Heaven and Hell.
+3. (A negative article) I hate Popery, priests, and the Devil.
+
+
+When her husband made his fatal gift to the nun, this third
+article of his wife's belief, or unbelief, stirred up and waxed
+aggressive.
+
+Said the Lady Superior, "My good woman, your child thrives under
+the care of Holy Mother Church."
+
+"Yes'm, he thrives well," replies Mrs. Ginx, repeating no more of
+Sister Suspiciosa's sentence, "an' I've 'ad more milk than ever
+for the darlin' this time, thank God."
+
+"And the Holy Virgin."
+
+"I dunno about her," cries Mrs. Ginx emphatically, perhaps not
+seeing congruity between a virgin and the subject of
+thankfulness.
+
+"And the Holy Virgin," repeated the nun, "who interests herself
+in all mothers. She has thus blessed you that your child may be
+made strong for the work of the Church. Do you not see a miracle
+is worked within you to prove Her goodness? This, no doubt, is
+an evidence to you of Her wish to bless you and take you for Her
+own. I beseech you listen to Her voice, and come and enter Her
+fold."
+
+"If you mean the Virgin Mary, mum, I ain't a idolater, beggin'
+yer parding," says Mrs. Ginx; "an' tho' I wouldn't for the world
+offend them as has been so kind to my child, an' saved it from
+that deer little creetur bein' thrown over Wauxhall Bridge--an'
+Ginx ought to be ashamed of hisself, so he ought-- I ain't
+Papish, mum, and I ain't dispoged, with twelve on 'em there at
+home all Protestant to the back bone, to turn Papish now, an' so
+I 'ope an' pray, mum," says Mrs. Ginx, roaring and crying, "you
+ain't agoin' to make Papish of my flesh an' blood. O dear! O
+dear!"
+
+The Lady Superior shut her ears; she had raised a familiar spirit
+and could not lay it. She temporized.
+
+"You know your husband has given the child to us. It will be
+called the infant Ambrosius."
+
+"Dear, dear!" sighed Mrs. Ginx, "what a name! "
+
+"We wish him to be kept from any worldly taint, and by-and-by his
+saintliness may gain you forgiveness in spite of your heretical
+perversity. I cannot permit you to give him unconsecrated milk,
+and as we wish to treat you kindly, the holy Father Certificatus
+has allowed me to make an arrangement with you, to which you can
+have no objection--I mean, that you should let me make the sign
+of the cross upon your breasts morning and evening before you
+suckle your infant. You will permit me to do that, won't you?"
+
+Conceive of Mrs. Ginx's reply, clothed in choice Westminster
+English: it asserted her readiness to cut off her right hand, her
+feet, to be hanged, drowned, burned, torn to pieces, in fact to
+withstand all the torments ascribed by vulgar tradition to Roman
+Catholic ingenuity, and to see her baby "a dead corpse" into the
+bargain, before she would submit her Protestant bosom to such an
+indignity.
+
+"No, mum!" she said; "I couldn't sleep with that on my breast;"
+and cried hysterically.
+
+This lower class heretic WAS "brutally refractory." So thought
+the Superioress, and so gave Mrs. Ginx notice to come no more.
+She went home rather jubilant--she was a martyr.
+
+
+
+II.--The Protestant Detectoral Association.
+
+Ginx's baby was now fed on consecrated pap. But his mother was
+not a woman to be silent under her wrongs. From her husband she
+hid them, because the subject was forbidden. She poured out her
+complaint to Mrs. Spittal and other Protestant matrons. Thus it
+came to pass that one day, in Ginx's absence, the good woman was
+surprised by a visit from a "gentleman." He was small, sharp,
+rapid, dressed in black. He opened his business at once.
+
+"Mrs. Ginx? Ah! I am the agent of the Protestant Detectoral
+Association."
+
+Mrs. Ginx wiped her best chair and set it for him.
+
+"By great good fortune the secretary received only half an hour
+ago intelligence of the shocking instance of Papal aggression of
+which you have been the victim."
+
+To hear her case put so grandly was honey to Mrs. Ginx.
+
+"Well now," continued the little man, "we are ready to render you
+every assistance to save your child from the claws of the Great
+Dragon. I wish to know the exact circumstances--let me
+see--(opening a large pocket book) I have this memorandum: the
+child was carried off from his mother's bedside in broad daylight
+by a nun accompanied by two priests and a large body of Irish: is
+that a correct version?"
+
+"Law, no, sir, it warn't quite like that," said Mrs. Ginx.
+"We've 'ad so many on 'em that Ginx was for drownin' the
+thirteenth"--
+
+--The little man opened his eyes----
+
+"An' he went and gave it away, sir," said she crying, "to a nun,
+sir--ah! ah! ah!-- they won't let me see the darlin' now, sir--
+ah! ah! ah! because I won't let Missis Spishyosir mark me with
+the cross, sir, an' me with as fine a breast o' milk as ever was
+for 'im, sir--ah! ah! ah! "
+
+"Hem!" said the little man, "that's different from what I
+understood."
+
+He was quite honest, but who does not know how disappointing it
+is to find a wrong you wish to redress is not so bad as you had
+hoped?
+
+However, it looked bad enough, and might be made worse. It was
+the very case for the Protestant Detectoral Association.
+
+"Would Mr. Ginx not join in an effort to recover his child?"
+
+"No, sir; I should think not: he went an' gave it away."
+
+"I know; but he is a Protestant?"
+
+"I don't think he be much o' anything, sir. I know he hate
+priests like pison, but he don't care about these things as I
+do."
+
+"Oh! I see." Writes in his memorandum book--husband indifferent.
+
+
+"But don't you think he would help you to get the child back
+again?"
+
+"No, sir. I wouldn't speak of it to him for the world. He'd
+knock any one down if they was to mention the child to him."
+
+The little man mentally determined not to see Ginx.
+
+"Well; would you like to have your child back?"
+
+"You see, I couldn't bring it 'ere, sir. Ginx won't 'ave it; but
+I'd like to see it took away from them nunnerys."
+
+"Ha! very well then. We can perhaps manage it for you. You
+would be content to hand it over to some Protestant Home, where
+it would be taken care of and you could see it when you liked?"
+
+"O yes, sir," cries Mrs. Ginx, brightening.
+
+"Then we'll have an affidavit and apply for a Habeas Corpus."
+
+It was impossible not to be satisfied with such words as these,
+whatever they meant and Mrs. Ginx was cheered, while the little
+man went on his way.
+
+
+
+III.--The Sacrament of Baptism.
+
+Mother, or "Mrs." Suspiciosa, fed Ginx's Baby with holy pap. It
+seemed proper now that he should be christened and formally
+received into the Church. No small stir was made by this
+ceremony, for which all the resources of the convent were called
+into action. The day selected was that sacred to St. Ambrosius.
+The chapel was decorated with flowers. Mass was celebrated,
+candles flamed upon the altar surrounding a figure of the Infant
+Jesus, incense was burning around the baby, sisters and novices
+knelt in serried rows of virginity
+
+ "like doves
+ Sunning their milky bosoms on the thatch. "
+
+Mother Suspiciosa carried the infant, clothed in a pure white
+robe, with a red cross embroidered on its front. In the absence
+of the natural parent a wax figure of St. Ambrosius did duty for
+him, and another wax figure stood godfather: but I dare not enter
+into details of matters that may be looked at as awfully profane,
+or awfully solemn, by different spectators. These things are a
+mystery.
+
+I have no hesitation about describing the impious behavior of
+little Ginx. Whatever swaddled infant could do in the way of
+opposition, with hands, and legs, and voice, was done by that
+embryo saint. The incense made him cough and sputter; the
+lights and singing raised the very devil within him. His cries
+drowned the prayers. He frightened his conductress by the
+redness of his face. He ruined the red cross with ejected
+matter. You would have taken him for an infant demoniac. Mother
+Suspiciosa, though annoyed, was encouraged. She looked upon this
+as an evident testimony to little Ginx's value. The devil and
+St. Michael were contending for his body. At length he was
+baptized, and carried out. Credat Judaeus. He instantly sank
+into a deep sleep. It was a miracle: Satan had yielded to the
+sign of the cross!
+
+
+IV.--Law on Behalf of Gospel.
+
+In the moment of Sister Suspiciosa's triumph, the enemy was
+laying his train against her. The little man made his report to
+the secretary of the Protestant Detectoral Association. This
+gentleman was well-born and well-bred; moved to work in this
+"cause" by an honest hatred of superstition, priestcraft, and
+lies; now giving all his energies to the ambitious design of
+pulling down the strongholds of Satan. In any other matter he
+could act coolly, and with deliberation; in this he was an
+enthusiast. He had a keen Roman nose. He could scent a priest
+anywhere in the United Kingdom. He could smell Jesuitry in the
+Queen's drawing-room, a cabinet council or convocation, though he
+had never been at either. His eye was beyond a falcon's; he saw
+things that were invisible. It penetrated through all disguises.
+He knew a secret emissary of the Pope by the cock of his hat, or
+the color of his stockings. At least, he thought so, and
+thousands of persons acted on his estimate of himself.
+
+"This case," said he to the little man, when he had concluded his
+report, "though not in its first incidents so grave as we were
+led to expect, is, in another point of view, very serious. Here
+is a man, as you have expressed it, 'indifferent' to his child's
+life-- animal and spiritual. The mother, with a true Protestant
+heart, and a fine breast of milk, is longing to nurture her
+child, and to deliver it from the toils of the Papacy. But the
+husband, what's his name? . . . . Ginx-- Ginx? a very bad name
+for a case, by the way--GINX'S CASE!--this Ginx has given up his
+child to the Sisters of Misery. How are we to get it away again,
+without his cooperation? . . . . Well, we must try."
+
+The solicitor of the Association was forthwith summoned. When
+the matter had been laid before him, he expressed doubts, offered
+and withdrew courses of action, and ended by suggesting that he
+should take the opinion of counsel.
+
+"Mr. Stigma, I suppose?" said he to the secretary.
+
+"Oh, yes, Sir Adolphus Stigma is one of our principal supporters,
+and his son's heart is thoroughly with us."
+
+Messrs. Roundhead, Roundhead and Lollard, drew up a case to be
+submitted to Mr. Stigma. I will only transcribe the latter
+paragraphs:--
+
+
+Mr. Ginx being indifferent, and Mrs. Ginx being ready to assist
+in regaining the custody of her child, to be conveyed to a
+Protestant Home,
+
+ "YOU ARE REQUESTED TO ADVISE:
+
+"1. Whether a summons should be taken out before a magistrate
+against the Lady Superior of the convent, for enticing away or
+detaining the infant, under the 56th sect. of 24 and 25 Vict., c.
+100 Or,
+
+"2. Whether the proper remedy is by a writ of Habeas Corpus?
+and, if so, whether it is necessary that the father should be
+joined in the proceedings or his leave obtained to prosecute
+them? Or, failing these,
+
+3. Whether counsel is of opinion that this is a case within
+Talfourd's Act, and an application might not be made to the Lord
+Chancellor, or the Master of the Rolls, on the mother's behalf
+for the custody of her child? And,
+
+"4. To advise generally on behalf of the infant."
+
+
+Mr. Adolphus Stigma took ten days to consider. Meanwhile, the
+infant Ambrosius continued to thrive on conventual pap. Then Mr.
+Stigma wrote his opinion. It was a model for a barrister. You
+took the advice at your own peril--not his. Therefore I
+transcribe it.
+
+ "OPINION.
+
+'I have given to this case my most careful attention; and it is
+one of great difficulty. Having regard to the questions put to
+me, I think--
+
+"1. Section 56 of the Act of 24 and 25 Vict., c. 100, appears at
+first sight to be directed against the stealing and abduction of
+children for marriage, or other improper purposes. It provides
+that 'Whosoever shall UNLAWFULLY, either by force or fraud, lead
+or take away, or decoy, or entice away, or detain any child, &c.,
+with intent to deprive ANY parent, &c., of the possession of such
+child'--shall be guilty of felony. It is perfectly clear, that
+in the case before me, the infant was not, 'by force or fraud,
+led or taken away, or decoyed, or enticed away.' The statute,
+however, uses the word 'detain;' and this, it appears to me, has
+much the same force and intention as the previous words. It is
+to be noted, however, that it is separated from them by the
+disjunctive 'or;' and, therefore, it might be argued with some
+plausibility that any act of forceful or fraudulent detention,
+after notice, by persons who have originally acquired a child's
+custody in a lawful way, came within the section. The point is
+new, and of great importance; and if the Protestant Detectoral
+Association feel disposed to try it, they would do so under
+favorable circumstances in the present case. Should they decide
+to do so, a written demand should be served upon the authorities
+of the convent, by the mother, or some one acting on her behalf,
+to give up the infant.
+
+"2. The second question is also involved in difficulty. Were the
+father to be joined in the proceedings, the writ of Habeas Corpus
+would be the correct remedy. But his probable refusal
+necessitates the inquiry whether the mother can alone apply for
+the writ. The general rule of law is, that the father is
+entitled to the custody and disposition of his children. In
+Cartlidge and Cartlidge, 31, L. J., P. M. & D. 85, it was held
+that this rule would not be generally departed from by the
+Divorce Court; but in Barnes v. Barnes, L. R. I, P. & D. 463, the
+court made an order, giving the custody of two infant children to
+the mother, respondent in a suit for a dissolution of marriage,
+on the ground that the mother's health was suffering from being
+deprived of their society, and that they were living with a
+stranger, and not with the father. These cases were, however, in
+the Divorce Court, and do not apply. But, as there seems to be
+much ground in the peculiar circumstances here, for arguing that
+the mother should have the custody of the child, or, at least,
+that it should not be left to that of persons of a different
+religion from both parents, an application might be made to the
+Queen's Bench to try the question.
+
+"3. Should the common law remedies fail, resort may perhaps be
+had to the powers in Chancery under Talfourd's Act, but on this
+point I should like to confer with an equity counsel before
+giving a decided opinion. It has been decided under this Act
+that the court has power to give the custody of children under
+seven to the mother. (Shillito v. Collett, 8, W. R. 683-696.) As
+this infant is but six weeks old it comes within that case.
+
+"4. I have no general advice to give on behalf of the infant.
+ "ADOLPHUS STIGMA,
+ "9, Plumtree Court."
+
+
+If none of the courses suggested by Mr. Stigma was very decided,
+Messrs. Roundhead, Roundhead and Lollard were not sorry to have
+three strings to their bow. The Detectoral Association
+were good clients; most of their funds went into their lawyers'
+pockets. It was part of their policy to be litigious. Thereby
+the world was kept alive to the existence of Papacy within its
+bosom. Who shall say the Association were wrong? Some healthy
+daylight was occasionally let in upon the mysteries of Jesuitism,
+and there are people who think that worth while at the risk of a
+chance injustice. Though the Devil should not get his due, few
+would give him any sympathy.
+
+The solicitor at once instructed Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q.C., to
+apply with Mr. Stigma to a magistrate for a summons. Mr. Bailey,
+Q.C., was not chosen for his partialities. In religious matters
+he was a perfect Gallio; but he was like St. Paul in one
+particular, he could be all things to all men.
+
+
+V.--Magistrate's Law.
+
+The personnel of the magistrate to whom Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q. C.,
+(with him Mr. Adolphus Stigma), applied in the case of re an
+infant, exparte Ginx, is not material to this history. He was
+like his fellow stipendiaries --mild as to humor, vigilant in his
+duties, opinionated in his views, resenting the troublesome
+intrusion into his court of a barrister, apt to treat him with
+about one-eighth of the courtesy extended to the humblest junior
+by the Queen's Bench, and curiously unequal both with himself and
+his brother magistrates in adjusting punishment. It will be most
+convenient to insert the report of the Daily Electric Meteor:--
+ "WESTMINSTER.
+
+"Mr. Dignam Bailey, Q.C., (with whom was Mr. Adolphus Stigma),
+applied for a summons against Mary Dens, commonly called Sister
+Suspiciosa, of the convent of the Sisters of Misery, in Winkle
+Street, for abducting and detaining a male child of John Ginx and
+Mary his wife.
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY. On whose behalf do you apply?
+
+"The learned counsel stated that he was instructed by the
+Protestant Detectoral Association to apply on behalf of the
+mother. The case was also watched by the solicitors of the
+Society for Preventing the Suppression of Women and Children.
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY. Does the father join in the application?
+
+"Mr. BAILEY. No, sir.
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY. Why? He ought to be joined if living.
+
+"Mr. BAILEY. Perhaps you will allow me, sir, to state the case.
+The circumstances are peculiar. The fact is----
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY. I cannot understand why the father should not
+be represented if the child has been abducted. Where was it
+taken from?
+
+"Mr. Bailey proceeded to state that the child had been taken by a
+nun from No. 5, Rosemary Street, without the mother's consent,
+and was now imprisoned in the convent. The father appeared to be
+indifferent, or to have given a sort of general acquiescence.
+This was Mrs. Ginx's thirteenth child, around whom gathered the
+concentrated affections
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY (interrupting the learned gentleman). We have
+no time for sentiment here, Mr. Bailey. If the father consented,
+can you call it abduction? It looks like reduction. (Laughter.)
+
+"Mr. Bailey called attention to the consolidated statutes of
+criminal law, and said he was going for illegal detention rather
+than abduction, and argued at great length from section 56. At
+the conclusion of the argument, after refusing to hear Mr.
+Stigma,
+
+"Mr. D'Acerbity said that the case clearly did not come within
+the section, and he was afraid the learned counsel knew it. The
+father had been a consenting party, on the counsel's own
+statement, to the child's removal, and no suggestion had been
+made that he had withdrawn his consent. He should refuse a
+summons.
+
+"Mr. Bailey endeavored to address the magistrate but was stopped.
+
+"Mr. D'ACERBITY. I have no more to say. You can apply to the
+Queen's Bench. I have no sympathy with you whatever."
+
+Mr. D'Acerbity's law was good, but--what has justice to do with
+"sympathies?" Surely the day after this report appeared the
+magistrate must have had a letter from the Home Secretary?
+
+
+
+VI-Popery and Protestantism in the Queen's Bench.
+
+The application to the magistrate was far from satisfactory.
+There had not even been an exposure, and the Windmill Bulletin
+gayly bantered the Detectoral Association. Meanwhile had
+happened the grand christening, of which a circumstantial account
+was in the hands of the council of the Detectoral Association
+shortly after the ceremony had been performed. Here was a
+monstrous indignity to a Protestant child! The account was at
+once printed, together with a verbatim report of the application
+to the magistrate as well as one of "a conversation held with the
+mother by an agent of the Association." Board-men paraded the
+great thoroughfares carrying this appeal:--
+
+PROTESTANT DETECTORAL ASSOCIATION.
+--------
+NO POPERY!
+Abduction Of an Infant!
+Assault on the Liberty of the Subject!
+Mysterious and Awful Proceedings!
+Baptism of a Protestant Child in a Convent!
+
+OUTRAGE
+Upon the Nation by Foreign Mercenaries!
+----------------
+Every Father and Mother is Invited to Co-operate in
+Maintaining the
+PROTESTANT RELIGION,
+The Sanctity of Home, and the Inviolability of
+BRITISH FREEDOM!
+--------
+NO SURRENDER!
+
+
+If there was no coherency in this production, it should be noted
+how little that is of the essence of popular appeal. The
+metropolis was in an uproar. Meetings were held, subscriptions
+poured in, dangerous crowds collected in Winkle Street. When Mr.
+Dignam Bailey, Q. C., went down to Westminster, to move the Court
+of Queen's Bench, multitudes besieged it. Protestant champions
+and Papal ecclesiastics vied in their efforts to get seats. The
+writ had gone from judge's chambers returnable to the full court.
+Sister Suspiciosa, bearing the infant Ambrosius, and supported by
+two novices and Father Certificatus, had been smuggled into court
+through mysterious passages in its rear. Mrs. Ginx also, brought
+from Rosemary Street by the little man who provided her with a
+bonnet trimmed with orange-colored ribbons, sat staring with red
+eyes at her child, now enveloped in a robe that was embroidered
+with little crosses.
+
+Why need I tell you, how dead silence fell upon the Court after
+the stir caused by the entrance of the judges; how everybody knew
+what was coming when a master beneath the bench rose, and called
+out, "Re Ginx, an infant, Exparte Mary Ginx!" How the Chief
+Justice, fresh and rosy-looking, then blew his nose in a delicate
+mauve-colored silk handkerchief: how he tried and discarded
+half-a-dozen pens, amid breathless silence; how in his blandest
+manner he said: "Who appears for the Respondent?" and Mr. Dignam
+Bailey, Q. C., and Mr. Octavius Ernestus, Q. C., rose together to
+say that Mr. Ernestus did!
+
+Mr. Ernestus was a Catholic. He was assisted by half-a-dozen
+counsel. He riddled the affidavits on the other side, and read
+voluminous ones on his own; bitterly animadverted upon the
+absence of an affidavit by the father; held up to the scorn of a
+civilized world the course pursued towards his meek and gentle
+clients by the "fanatical zealots of the Protestant Detectoral
+Association;" in moving tones referred to the shrinking of "quiet
+recluses, from the gaze of a rude, unsympathizing world;" cited
+cases from the time of Magna Charta, down; called upon the Court
+to vindicate Protestant justice, ending his peroration with the
+aphorism of Lord Mansfield, Fiat justitia ruat caelum.
+
+One cannot do Justice to Mr. Dignam Bailey's argument, when after
+lunch he rose to reply. He was logical and passionate,
+vindictive and pathetic by turns. He inveighed against the Lady
+Superior, against her attorneys, against Father Certificatus,
+against Ginx,--"craven to his heaven-born rights of political and
+religious freedom,"-- against the Roman Catholic religion, the
+Pope, the Archbishop of Westminster, the Virgin Mary. The Court
+knew, and every one else knew, that this was pure pyrotechny, and
+Mr. Bailey knew that best of all; but, though the Bench is swift
+to speak, slow to hear, it felt obliged, in a case of this public
+interest, to sit by, and be witnesses of the exhibition. Mr.
+Bailey concluded by a play on the aphorism cited by his learned
+friend. "He would say that if such justice were to be done, as
+his friend had urged, the Kingdom of Heaven in England would rush
+to its fall."
+
+The Court at once decided that, as the father had confided the
+custody of the infant to the Sisters of Misery, and did not
+appear to desire that it should be withdrawn, they, disregarding
+the religious clouds in which the subject had been too carefully
+involved on both sides, gave judgment for the defendant, with
+costs.
+
+As they passed out of Court, Mr. Stigma said to his clients,
+"Quite as I anticipated; you remember I told you so in my
+Opinion."
+
+
+
+VII.--A Protestor, but not a Protestant.
+
+The infant Ambrosius and his conductors could scarcely reach the
+convent in safety. The building showed few windows to the
+street, but they were all broken. What might have happened in a
+few days, but that Ginx's Baby took the matter into his own
+hands, none can say.
+
+The treatment to which the little saint was subjected soured his
+temper. His kind nurses had choked him twice a day with incense,
+and now he had inhaled for seven hours the air of the Queen's
+Bench. On his return to the convent he was hastily fed, and
+carried to the chapel to give thanks for the victory of the day.
+Wrapped in a handsome chasuble, they laid him on the steps of the
+altar. In the most solemn part of the service he coughed, and
+grew sick. The chasuble was bespattered. When the officiating
+priest, to save that garment, took the child in his arms, he
+nefariously polluted the sacerdotal vestments and the altar
+steps. Then he kicked toward the altar itself, roared lustily,
+and finally went into convulsions in Sister Suspiciosa's arms.
+Like most women, the Lady Superior required her enthusiasm to be
+fed with success. She began to think that she had been cozened:
+Ginx's Baby was too evidently a spiritual miscarriage. He must,
+like the rest of his family, be, indeed, "Protestant to the
+backbone." Father Certificatus agreed with her. His robes and
+best chasuble were befouled.
+
+"Let us not risk a repetition of this conduct," said he; "let the
+child be given up. He is baptized, and cannot be severed from
+the Church. He will return after many days."
+
+Next morning the solicitors of the Protestant Detectoral
+Association received a letter from their opponents. In this they
+said that--presuming Messrs. Roundhead, Roundhead, and Lollard,
+intended to apply to the Master of the Rolls, the authorities of
+the convent had decided, after having vindicated themselves in
+the Queen's Bench, to give up the child, which would be, for
+twenty-four hours, at the order and disposal of the Association,
+and afterwards of his parents. "We are instructed by our
+clients," they added, "to ask you to bear in mind that the child
+has been admitted, and is a member of the Catholic Church, owing
+allegiance to the Holy Father at Rome, a bond from which only the
+Papal excommunication can absolve him."
+
+
+
+VIII.--"See how these Christians love one another."
+
+A mass-meeting of Protestants had been summoned for three o'clock
+on the day designated in the letter of the Papist attorneys, to
+be held in the Philopragmon Hall. That was the favorite centre
+of countless movements, both well-meant and well-executed, and of
+others as futile as they were foolish. Yet one could not say
+that a larger proportion of the latter were connected with the
+Hall than existed in as many other human enterprises of any sort.
+The concession of the Romanists at first dashed the managers of
+the demonstration. Their grievance was gone. Still there
+remained topics for a meeting: they would rejoice over victory,
+and consult about the future of the Protestant Baby.
+
+The Secretary was an old hand at these meetings. He planned to
+import into this one a sensation. Ginx's Baby, brought from the
+convent, stripped of his papal swathings and enveloped in a
+handsome outfit presented by an amiable Protestant Duchess, was
+placed in a cradle with his head resting on a Bible. I am afraid
+he was quite as uncomfortable as he had ever been at the
+convent. When, at the conclusion of the chairman's speech, in
+which he informed the audience of their triumph, this exhibition
+was deftly introduced upon the platform, the huzzas, and
+clappings, and waving of handkerchiefs were such as even that
+place had never seen. The child was astounded into quietness.
+
+Mr. Trumpeter took the chair--believed by many to be, next to the
+Queen, the most powerful defender of the faith in the three
+kingdoms. I never could understand why the newspapers reported
+his speeches--I cannot.
+
+When he had done, Lord Evergood, "a popular, practical peer, of
+sound Protestant principles," as the Daily Banner alliteratively
+termed him next morning, rose to move the first resolution,
+already cut and dried by the committee--
+
+"That the infant so happily rescued from the incubus of a
+delusive superstition, should be remitted to the care of the
+Church Widows' and Orphans' Augmentation Society, and should be
+supported by voluntary contributions."
+
+Before Lord Evergood could say a word murmurs arose in every part
+of the hall. He was a mild, gentlemanly Christian, without
+guile, and the opposition both surprised and frightened him. He
+uttered a few sentences in approval of his proposition and sat
+down.
+
+An individual in the gallery shouted-- "Sir! I rise to move an
+amendment!"
+
+Cheers, and cries of "Order! order! Sit down!" &c.
+
+The Chairman, with great blandness, said: "The gentleman is out
+of order; the resolution has not yet been seconded. I call upon
+the Rev. Mr. Valpy to second the resolution."
+
+Mr. Valpy, incumbent of St. Swithin's-within, insisted on
+speaking, but what he said was known only to himself. When he
+had finished there was an extraordinary commotion. On the
+platform many ministers and laymen jumped to their feet; in the
+hall at least a hundred aspirants for a hearing raised themselves
+on benches or the convenient backs of friends.
+
+The Chairman shouted, "Order! ORDER, gentlemen! This is a great
+occasion; let us show unanimity!"
+
+There seemed to be an unanimous desire to speak. Amid cheers,
+cries for order, and Kentish fire, you could hear the Rev. Mark
+Slowboy, Independent, the Rev. Hugh Quickly, Wesleyan, the Rev.
+Bereciah Calvin, Presbyterian, the Rev. Ezekiel Cutwater,
+Baptist, calling to the chair.
+
+A lull ensued, of which advantage was taken by Mr. Stentor, a
+well-known Hyde Park orator, who bellowed from a friend's
+shoulders in the pit, "Mr. Chairman, hear ME!" an appeal that was
+followed by roars of laughter.
+
+What was the matter? Why the proposal to hand over the baby to
+an Anglican refuge stirred up the blood of every Dissenter
+present. It was lifting the infant out of the frying-pan and
+dexterously dropping him into the fire. But the chairman was
+accustomed to these scenes. He stayed the tumult by proposing
+that a representative from each denomination should give his
+opinion to the audience. "Whom would they have first? "
+
+The loudest cries were for Mr. Cutwater, who stood forth--a weak,
+stooping, half-halting, little man, with a limp necktie, and
+trousers puffy at the knees--but with honest use of them, let me
+say. It is quite credible that if Dr. Watts's assertion be true
+that--
+
+ "Satan trembles when he sees
+ The weakest saint upon his knees,"
+
+that arch-enemy was unusually perturbed when Ezekiel Cutwater was
+upon his. On these he had borne manly contests with evil. Two
+things--yea, three--were rigid in Ezekiel's creed; fire would
+never have burned them out of him: hatred of Popery, contempt of
+Anglican priestcraft and apostolic succession, and adhesion to
+the dogma of adult baptism and total immersion. Whoso should not
+join with him in these let him be Anathema Maranatha.
+
+His eye kindled as he looked at the seething audience. "Sir,"
+said he, "I beg to move an amendment to the motion of the noble
+lord. (Cheers.) That motion proposes to transfer to the care of
+the Established Church this tender and unconscious infant
+(bending over Ginx's baby), just snatched from the toils of a
+kindred superstition. (Oh, oh, hisses and cheers.) I withdraw
+the expression; I did not mean to be offensive. (Hear.) This is
+a grand representative meeting--not of the English Church, not of
+the Baptist Church, not of the Wesleyan Church--but of
+Protestantism. (Cheers and Kentish fire.) In such an assembly
+is it right to propose any singular disposition of a
+representative infant? This is now the adopted child, not of
+one, but of all denominations. (Cheers.) Around his, or her--I
+am not sure which --cherubic head circle the white-winged angels
+of various Churches, and on her or him, whichever it may be----"
+
+The Chairman said that he might as well say that he had authentic
+information that it was HIM.
+
+"Him then--concentrate the sympathies of every Protestant heart.
+Let us not despoil the occasion of its greatness by exhibiting a
+narrow bigotry in one direction! Let us bring into this
+infantile focus the rays of Catholic unity. (Loud cheering and
+Kentish fire.) To me, for one, it would be eminently painful to
+think--what doubtless would occur if the motion is adopted--that
+within a week of his entrance into the asylum of the society
+named in it, this diminutive and unknowing sinner should go
+through the farce of a supposititious admission into the Church
+of Christ. (Oh!) Yes! I say a farce, whether you regard the
+age of the acolyte or the indifferent proportion of water with
+which it would be performed. (Uproar, oh, oh! and some cheering
+from the Baptist section.) But I will not now further enter into
+these things," said Mr. Cutwater, who knew his cue perfectly
+well, "I can hold these opinions and still love my brethren of
+other denominations. I move, as an amendment, that a committee,
+consisting of one minister and one layman to be selected from
+each of the Churches, be appointed to take charge of the physical
+well-being and mental and spiritual training of the infant."
+
+By this proposition, which was received with enthusiasm, Ginx's
+Baby was to be incontinently pitched into an arena of polemical
+warfare. Every one was willing that a committee should fight out
+the question vicariously; and, therefore, when Mr. Slowboy
+seconded the amendment, it was carried with loud acclamations.
+
+But they were not yet out of the wood. On proceeding to nominate
+members of the committee, the Unitarians and Quakers claimed to
+be represented. The platform and the meeting were by the ears
+again. It was fiercely contended that only Evangelical
+Christians could have a place in such a work, and many of the
+nominees declared that they would not sit on a committee
+with--well, some curious epithets were used. The Unitarians and
+Quakers took their stand on the Catholic principles embodied in
+the amendment, and on the fact that Ginx's Baby had now "become
+national Protestant property." Mr. Cutwater and a few others,
+moved by the scandal of the dispute, interfered, and the
+committee was at length constituted to the satisfaction of all
+parties. It was to be called "The Branch Committee of the
+Protestant Detectoral Union for promoting the Physical and
+Spiritual Well-being of Ginx's Baby. "
+
+A fourth resolution was adopted, "That the subject should be
+treated in the Metropolitan pulpits on the next Sabbath, and a
+collection taken up in the various churches for the benefit of
+the infant." This promised well for Master Ginx's future.
+
+The meeting had lasted five hours, and while they were discussing
+him the child grew hungry. In the tumult every one had forgotten
+the subject of it, and now it was over, they dispersed without
+thought of him. But he would not allow those near him at all
+events to overlook his presence.
+
+Some, foreseeing that awkwardness was impending, slipped away;
+while three or four stayed to ask what was to be done with him.
+
+"Hand him over to the custody of the Chairman," said a Mr. Dove.
+
+"I should be most happy," said he, smoothly, "but Mrs. Trumpeter
+is out of town. Could your dear wife take him, Mr. Dove?"
+
+Mr. Dove's wife was otherwise engaged.
+
+The Secretary was unmarried--chambers at Nincome's Inn.
+
+In the midst of their distress a woman who had been hanging about
+the hall near the platform, came forward and offered to take
+charge of him, "for the sake of the cause." Every one was
+relieved. After her name and address had been hastily noted, the
+Protestant baby was placed in her arms. My Lord Evergood, the
+Chairman, the clergy, the Secretary, and the mob went home
+rejoicing. Some hours after, Ginx's Baby, stripped of the
+duchess's beautiful robes, was found by a policeman, lying on a
+doorstep in one of the narrow streets, not a hundred yards behind
+the Philopragmon. By an ironical chance he was wrapped in a copy
+of the largest daily paper in the world.
+
+
+IX.--Good Samaritans, and Good-Samaritan Twopences.
+
+At every breakfast-table in town next morning the report of the
+great Protestant meeting was read, and a further report, in
+leaded type, of the discovery of Ginx's Baby at a later period of
+the evening by a policeman. A pretty comment on the proceedings!
+The Good Samaritan put his patient on his ass and carried him to
+an inn; while the priest and the Levite, though the latter looked
+at him, at least let him alone. To have called a public meeting
+to discuss his fate before deserting him, would have been a
+refinement of inhumanity. The committee were rather ashamed when
+they met. Instant measures were taken to recover the child and
+place him in good hands. The duchess again provided
+baby-clothes. The next Sunday sermons were preached on his
+behalf in a score of chapels. The collections amounted to L 800,
+a sum increased by donations and subscriptions to the handsome
+total of L 1360 10s. 3 1/2d.
+
+It will be seen hereafter what the committee did with the baby,
+but I happen to have an account of what became of the funds.
+They were spent as follows, according to a balance sheet never
+submitted to the subscribers:--
+
+ Pounds s. d.
+Committee-rooms . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 0 0
+2 Secretaries employed by the
+ Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 0 0
+Agents, canvassing, &c . . . . . . . . . . 88 6 2
+Printing Notices, Placards,
+ Pamphlets, a "Daily Bulletin of
+ Health," "Life of Ginx's Baby,"
+ "Protestant Babyhood, a Tale,"
+ "The Cradle of an Infant Martyr,"
+ "A Snatched Brand," and other
+ Works issued by the Committee . . . . . . 596 13 5
+Advertisements of Meetings,
+ Sermons, &c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 261 1 1
+Legal Expenses . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 77 6 8
+Stationery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 10 0
+Postage, Firing, and Sundries . . . . . . . 27 19 2
+ ----------------
+ Total Pounds 1251 16 6
+ ================
+
+
+This left L 108 13s. 9 1/2d. for the baby's keep. No child could
+have been more thoroughly discussed, preached and written about,
+advertised, or advised by counsel; but his resources dwindled in
+proportion to these advantages. Benevolent subscribers too
+seldom examine the financial items of a report: had any who
+contributed to this fund seen the balance sheet they might have
+grudged that so little of their bounty went to make flesh, bone,
+and comfort for the object of it. A cynic would tell them that
+to look sharply after the disposal of their guerdon was half the
+gift. Their indifference was akin to that satirized by the
+poet--
+
+ "Prodigus et stultus dedit quae spernit et odit."
+
+In an age of luxury we are grown so luxurious as to be content to
+pay agents to do our good deeds for us; but they charge us three
+hundred per cent. for the privilege.
+
+
+X.--The Force--and a Specimen of its Weakness.
+
+Ginx's baby had been discovered by a policeman swaddled in a
+penny paper, distressingly familiar to metropolitan travellers by
+rail. To omit the details of his treatment at the hands of that
+great institution, "The Force," would be invidious. The member
+thereof who fell in with him was walking a back street, sighting
+doors with his bull's-eye. He was provided with massive boots,
+so that a thief could hear him coming a hundred yards off; he was
+personally tall and unwieldy, and a dexterous commissioner had
+invented a dress designed to enhance these qualities--a heavy
+coat, a cart-horse belt, and a round cape. He had been carefully
+drilled not to walk more than three miles an hour. He was not a
+little startled when the rays of his lamp fell upon a struggling
+newspaper, out of which, as from a shell, came mysterious cries.
+He took up a corner of the paper and peeped in upon the face of
+Ginx's Baby; then he occupied a quarter of an hour in
+embarrassing reflections. A nearly naked child crying in the
+cold ought to be housed as soon as possible, but X 99 was ON HIS
+BEAT, and those magic words chained him to certain limits. This,
+of course, was the rule under a former commissioner, and every
+one knows that such absurd strategy has been abolished in the
+existing regime. At that time, however, each watchman had his
+beat, to leave which was neglect of duty, except with a prisoner,
+and then it was neglect of all the householders within the magic
+compass. Had X 99 heard the baby crying across the street, which
+was part of the beat of X 101, he would have passed on with a
+cheery heart, for the case would have been beyond his
+jurisdiction. Unhappily the baby was on his beat, and he was
+delivered from the temptation of transferring it to the other by
+the appearance of X 101's bull's-eye not far off. What was he to
+do? The station was a mile away--the inspector would not arrive
+for an hour--and it would be awkward, if not undignified, to
+carry on his rounds a shouting baby wrapped in the largest daily
+paper. If he left it where it was, and it perished, he might be
+charged with murder. He was at his wits' end--but having got
+there, he resolved on the simplest process, namely to carry it to
+the station. No provision was made by the regulations of the
+force to protect a beat casually deserted even for a proper
+purpose. Hence, while X 99 was absent on his errand of mercy,
+the valuable shop of Messrs. Trinkett and Blouse, ecclesiastical
+tailors, was broken into, and several stoles, chasubles,
+altar-cloths and other decorative tapestries were appropriated to
+profane uses.
+
+At the station the baby was disposed of according to rule. Due
+entry was first made in the night-book by the superintendent of
+all the particulars of his discovery. Some cold milk was then
+procured and poured down the child's throat. Afterwards, wrapped
+in a constable's cape, he was placed in a cell where, when the
+door was locked, he could not disturb the guardians of the peace.
+
+The same night, in the next cell, an innocent gentleman, seized
+with an apoplexy in the street but entered in the charge-sheet as
+drunk and incapable, died like a dog.
+
+
+XI.--The Unity of the Spirit and the Bond of Peace.
+
+When the committee met, every one discovered his incongruity with
+the rest. Each was disposed to treat Ginx's Baby in a different
+way--in other words, each wished to reflect the views of his
+particular sect on the object of their charity. They were a new
+"Evangelical Alliance," agreed only in hatred to Popery.
+
+Finding at their first meeting that the discussion needed to be
+brought into a focus, the committee appointed three of their
+number to draw up a minute of the matters to be argued. This
+committee reported that there arose, respecting the child, the
+following questions:--
+
+"I. As touching the body:
+
+ a. Wherewithal he should be fed and clothed?
+
+ b. In what manner and fashion that should be done?
+
+ II. As touching the mind and spirit:
+
+ a. Whether he should be educated? If so,
+
+ b. What were to be the subjects of instruction?
+
+ c. What creed, if any, should be primarily taught?
+
+ d. Should he be further baptized? If so,
+
+ 1. Into what communion?
+
+ 2. By what ceremonial?"
+
+
+
+This programme, it appeared to its concoctors, embraced
+everything that concerned Ginx's Baby except his death by the act
+of God or the Queen's enemies. No sooner was the report made
+than adopted. Then a member, eager for the fray, moved the
+postponement of the first division of questions until the others
+had been determined. Why should apostles of truth trouble
+themselves to serve tables? These were very subordinate
+questions to them--though, I think, of first importance to Ginx's
+Baby. It was decided to discuss little Ginx's future before
+considering his present.
+
+The ball was opened by the Venerable Archdeacon Hotten, who, amid
+much excitement, contended that from the earliest buddings of
+thought in an infant mind religion should be engrafted upon it;
+there could be no education worth the name that was not
+religious. That with the A should be taught the origin, and with
+the Z the final destiny and destruction, of evil. To separate
+education from religion was to clip the wings of the heavenly
+dove. He asserted that the committee ought at once to have the
+child baptized in Westminster Abbey, though he was rather of
+opinion that the previous baptism was canonically valid; that he
+should be taught the truths of our most holy faith, and since
+there could be no faith without a creed, and the only national
+creed was that of the Church of England, the baby should be
+handed over to the care of a clergyman, and then be sent to a
+proper religious school. He need not say that he excluded Rugby
+under its then profane management.
+
+The Church was, however, divided against itself, for the Dean of
+Triston said he would give more latitude than his very reverend
+brother. You ought not to define in an infant mind a rigid
+outline of creed. In fact, he did not acknowledge any creed, he
+was not obliged to by law and was disinclined to by his reason.
+He would rather allow the inner seeds of natural light--the
+glorious all-pervading efflorescence of the Deity in all men's
+hearts, to grow within the young spirit. The Dean was assuredly
+vague and far less earnest than his brother cleric.
+
+The "Rev." Mr. Bumpus, Unitarian, met the suggestions of the
+Archdeacon with the scorn they merited. It was impossible to
+apply to a representative child of an enlightened age theories so
+long exploded. The Dean had certainly come nearer the truth with
+that broad sympathy for which he was noted. He himself proposed
+that the child should be made a model nursling of the liberalism
+of a new era. Old things were passing away;--all things had
+become new. Creeds were the discarded banners of a mediaeval
+past, fit only to be hung up in the churches, and looked at as
+historic monuments; never more to be flaunted in the front of
+battle! The education of the day was that which taught a man the
+introspection whereby he recognized the Divine within
+himself--under any aspect, under any tuition, whether of Brahma,
+Confucius, or Christ. Truth was kaleidoscopic, and varied with
+the media through which it was viewed. As for the child, every
+aspect of truth and error should be allowed to play upon his
+mind. Let him acquire ordinary school learning for fifteen
+years, and then send him to the London University.
+
+Here the Chairman, and half-a-dozen members of the committee,
+protested that the said University was a school of the devil, and
+several interchanges of discourtesy took place.
+
+Mr. Shortt, M. P., begged to suggest, as a matter of business,
+that for the present the child was not capable of receiving any
+ideas whatever, and might die, or prove to be dumb, or an idiot,
+and so require no education. Ought they not to postpone this
+discussion until the subject was old enough to be worth
+consideration?
+
+It was Mr. Shortt's habit to show his practical vein by
+business-like obstructions of this kind. He had been able a
+score of times to demonstrate to the House of Commons how silly
+it was to consider probabilities. In fact, he was opposed heart
+and soul to prophetic legislation; he would live, legislatively,
+from hand to mouth.
+
+But the committee would not allow Mr. Shortt to run away with the
+bone of contention.
+
+The Rev. Dr. M'Gregor Lucas, of the National Caledonian
+Believers, had been silent too long to contain himself further.
+This man needs some particular description whenever his name is
+made public. Nay, for this he lives, and by it, some think. At
+all events, he appears to be equally eager for rebuke and
+applause; they both involve notoriety, and notoriety is sure to
+pay. Few absurdities had been overlooked by his shallow
+ingenuity. Simply to have invested his limited mental endowments
+in trying to make the world believe him a genius, would have been
+only so like what many thousands are doing as to have absolved
+him from too harsh a judgment; but he traded in perilous stuff.
+Cheap prophecy was his staple. It was his wont to give out about
+once in five years, that the world would shortly come to an end,
+and, like Mr. Zadkiel, he found people who thought their
+inevitable disappointment a proof of his inspiration. Had you
+heard the honeyed words dropping from his lips, you would have
+taken him for a Scotch angel, and, consequently, a rarity. Could
+such lips utter harsh sayings, or distil vanities? Show him a
+priest, and you would hear! The Pope was his particular born
+foe; Popery his enemies' country--so he said. It was safe for
+him to stand and throw his darts. No one could say whether they
+hit or did not; while most spectators had the good will to hope
+that they did. How he would have lived if Daniel and St. John
+had dreamed no dreams, one cannot conjecture. As it was, they
+provided the doctor with endless openings for his fancy. Since
+no one could solve the riddle of their prophecies, it was certain
+that no one could disprove his solutions. Yet these came so
+often to their own disproof by lapse of time, that I can only
+think that the good doctor hoped to die before his critical
+periods came, or was so clever as to trust the infallibility of
+human weakness.
+
+I describe Dr. Lucas at so great a length, because it will be
+easier and more edifying to the reader to conceive what he said,
+than for me to recount it. He showed the Baby to be one of seven
+mysteries. He was in favor of teaching him at once to hate
+idolatry, music, crosses, masses, nuns, priests, bishops, and
+cardinals. The "humanities," the Shorter Catechism, the
+Confession of Faith, and "The whole Duty of Man," would, in his
+opinion, be the books to lay the groundwork in the child's mind
+of a Christian character of the highest type.
+
+Mr. Ogle, M. P., here vigorously intervened. Said he:--
+
+"I can't, with all deference, agree to any of these suggestions.
+They involve hand-to-hand fighting over this baby's body. No one
+of us is entitled to take charge of him. Else why did we all
+unite to rescue him from the nunnery? He will be torn to pieces
+among contending divines! I think a purely secular education is
+all that as a committee we should aim at. We have, but just
+withdrawn the child from the shadow of a single ecclesiastical
+influence--would you transfer it to another? Every Protestant
+denomination is contributing to his support, how can you devote
+their gifts to rearing him for one? You would have no peace;
+better at once treat him as the man of Benjamin treated his wife,
+cut him up into enough pieces to send to all the tribes of
+Israel, summoning them to the fight. I say we have nothing to do
+with this just now; let him be educated in a secular academy, and
+let each sect be free to send its agents to instruct him out of
+school hours as they please."
+
+The Rev. Theodoret Verity, M.A., rose in anger.
+
+"Surely, sir, you cannot seriously propound such a scheme! Would
+you leave this precious waif to be buffeted between the
+contending waves of truth and error, in the vague hope that by
+some lucky wind he might finally be cast upon a rock of safety?
+I protest against all these educational heresies--they are
+redolent of brimstone. Truth is truth, or there is none at all.
+If there be any, it is our duty to impart it to this immortal at
+the outset of his existence. Secular education! What do you
+mean by it? Who shall sever one question from another, and call
+one secular and the other religious? Is not every relation and
+every truth in some way or other connected with religion?" &c.
+&c. Mr. Verity has been saying the same thing any time these
+forty years.
+
+"Forgive me," replied Mr. Ogle, "if I say that this is very vague
+talking. I have not proposed to sever one question from another.
+I only propose to do in a different way that which is being done
+now by the most rigid of Mr. Verity's friends. It is impossible
+to comprehend what is meant by such a statement as that every
+truth is somehow connected with religion. It may be
+that the notion--if it really is not, as I suspect it to be, mere
+verbiage and clap-trap, used by certain fools to mislead
+others--means that there is some such coherency between all
+truths as there is, for instance, between the elements of the
+body. I would admit that, but is not blood a different and
+perfectly severable thing from bone? Each has its place, office,
+relation. But who would say that one could not be regarded by a
+physicist in the largest variety of its aspects apart from the
+other? Yet the physicist comes back again to consider with
+respect to each its relations to all the rest! The separate
+study has rather prepared him for more profound insight into
+those relations. Thus it is with the body of truth. In spite of
+Mr. Verity I affirm that there are truths that have not in
+themselves any element of religion whatever. The forty-seventh
+proposition of Euclid will be taught by a Jesuit precisely as it
+is taught in the London University; geography will affirm certain
+principles and designate places, rivers, mountains--that no faith
+can remove and cast into unknown seas. These subjects and others
+are taught in our most bigoted schools in separate hours and
+relations from religion. What then do you mean by affirming that
+there can be no secular education of this child--apart from
+religious teaching? We are not likely to agree, if I may judge
+from what I have seen, on any one method of religious instruction
+for it, therefore I wish first to fix common bounds within which
+our common benevolence may work. Well, we all go to the Bible.
+We agree that between its covers lies religious truth somewhere.
+If you like let him have that--and let him have some kindly and
+holy influences about him in the way of practice and example,
+such as many of our sects can supply many instances of. Give him
+no catechism--let him read a creed in our daily life. The
+articles of faith strongest in his soul will be those which have
+crystallized there from the combined action of truth and
+experience, and not as it were been pasted on its walls by
+ecclesiastical bill-posters. 'What is truth?' he must ask and
+answer for himself, as we all must do before God. Don't mistake
+me; I hope I am not more indifferent to religion than any here
+present--but I differ from them on the best method of imbuing the
+mind and heart with it. Surely we need not, we cannot--it would
+be an exquisite absurdity--pass a resolution in this committee
+that the child is to be a Calvinist! Who then would agree to
+secure him from any taint of Arminian heresy in years to come?
+Dare you even resolve that he shall be a Christian and a
+Protestant! I would not insure the risk. But, with so many of
+Christ's followers about me, surely, surely without providing any
+ecclesiastical mechanism, there will be testified to him simply
+how he may be saved. Your prayers, your visits, your kindly
+moral influence and talk, your living example of a goodness
+derived not from dogmas but from affectionate following of a holy
+pattern and trust in revealed mercies, your pointing to that
+pattern and showing the daily passage of these mercies will
+prompt his search after the truth that has made you what you are.
+Let some good woman do for him a mother's part, but choose her
+for her general goodness and not for the dogmas of her church.
+The simpler her piety the better for him I should say!"
+
+This straightforward speech fell like a new apple of discord in
+the midst of the committee. Angry knots were formed, and the
+noble chairman found that he could not restore order. An
+adjournment was agreed to. Luckily for the body of Ginx's Baby,
+he had been meanwhile sent to a home where Protestant money
+secured to him for the time good living, while his benefactors
+were discussing what to do with his soul.
+
+--------
+
+
+Surely, it were no impertinence to interrupt this history and
+advert to the fact, that, in the discussion just related, every
+one was to some extent right and to some extent agreed.
+
+That religious teaching was due to an immortal spirit--some
+notion and evidence of the Divine and the Great Hereafter to be
+conveyed to it--scarce was disputed. Nor was there collision
+over the necessity of what is called intellectual cultivation.
+The boy must be taught something of the world in which he was to
+live; nay, this latter knowledge seemed to be most immediately
+practical. As each disputant fixed his eye on one or the other
+aim that end appeared to him to be the most important. Hence, by
+a natural lapse, they came to treat subjects as antagonistic
+which were, in fact, parallel and quite consistent. The one
+called the others godless--the others threw back the aspersion of
+bigotry. Then came complication. What was "religion?"
+Intellectual culture they could agree about--it embraced
+well-known areas; but this religion divided itself into many
+disputable fields. These brother Protestants were like country
+neighbors who must encounter each other at fairs, markets, meets,
+and balls, and smile and greet, though each, at heart, is looking
+savagely at the other's landmarks, and most are very likely
+fighting bitter lawsuits all the while. It was because religion
+meant CREED to most members of the committee, and because it so
+implies to the vast bodies they represented, that they could not
+come to terms about Ginx's Baby or any other infantile immortal.
+Not always, perhaps, but often, they fought for futile
+distinctions. Had Mahomet's creed consisted of but one article,
+There is one God, the blood of many nations might never have
+given testimony against the creed they resented when to it he
+tacked and Mahomet is His prophet. Could Protestants but consent
+to agree in their agreement and peacefully differ in their petty
+differences, how would the aggregated impulse of a simple faith
+roll down before it all the impediments of error!
+
+When Ginx's Baby had grown to a discretionary age, and was at all
+able to know truth from error--supposing that to be
+knowable--there were in the country fifty thousand reverend
+gentlemen of every tincture of religious opinion who might ply
+him with their various theories, yet few of these would be
+contented unless they could seize him while his young nature was
+plastic, and try to imprint on immortal clay the trade-mark of
+some human invention.
+
+
+XII.--No Funds--no Faith, no Works.
+
+The Committee of the Protestant Detectoral Union on Ginx's Baby
+held twenty-three meetings. They were then as far from unity of
+purpose as when they set out. Variety was given to the meetings
+by the changing combinations of members in attendance. The
+finances were little heeded in the intensity of their zeal for
+truth. These at length fell altogether into the hands of the
+association's secretary, and we have seen involved large items of
+expense. The twenty-three meetings extended over a year. At the
+end of that time the secretary startled the committee by laying
+on the table a demand for the board and keep of the Protestant
+baby for three months, amounting to L 36; and adding that the sum
+in hand was L 1, 4s. 4 1/2d. In his report he said: "No effort
+has been spared by means of advertisements, pamphlets, tales,
+leaders and paragraphs in newspapers and religious journals,
+together with occasional sermons, to maintain the public interest
+in this child; but attention has been diverted from him by the
+great Roman Spozzi case, and the anxiety created throughout the
+Protestant world by the recent discovery made by Dr. Gooddee, of
+a solitary survivor of the ancient Church of the Vieuxbois
+Protestants in a secluded valley of the Pyrenees."
+
+The secretary asked the committee to provide the money to
+discharge the baby's liabilities; but they instantly adjourned,
+and no effort could afterwards get a quorum together. When the
+persons who had charge of the Protestant foundling discovered the
+state of affairs they began to dun the secretary and to neglect
+the child, now about thirteen months old and preparing to walk.
+Since no money appeared they sold whatever clothes had been
+provided for him, and absconded from the place where they had
+been farming him for Protestantism. The secretary, by chance
+hearing of this, was discreet enough to make no inquiries.
+Ginx's Baby, "as a Protestant question," vanished from the world.
+I never heard that any one was asked what had been done with the
+funds; but I have already furnished the account that ought to
+have been rendered.
+
+
+
+XIII.--In transitu.
+
+One night, near twelve o'clock, a shrewd tradesman, looking out
+of his shopdoor before he turned into bed, heard a cry which
+proceeded from a bundle on the pavement. This he discovered to
+be an infant wrapt in a potato-sack. He was quick enough to
+observe that it had been deftly laid over a line chiselled across
+the pavement to the corner of his house, which line he knew to be
+the boundary between his own parish of St. Simon Magus and the
+adjacent parish of St. Bartimeus. He took note, being a business
+man, of the exact position of the child's body in relation to
+this line, and then conveyed it to the workhouse of the other
+parish.
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+WHAT THE PARISH DID WITH HIM.
+
+I.--Parochial Knots--to be untied without prejudice.
+
+The infant borne to the workhouse of St. Bartimeus was Ginx's
+Baby. When he had been placed on the floor of the matron's room,
+and examined by the master, that official turned to the unwelcome
+bearer of the burden.
+
+"Did you find this child?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Lying opposite my shop in Nether Place."
+
+"What's your name? "
+
+"Doll."
+
+"Oh! you're the cheesemonger. Your shop's on the other side of
+the boundary, in the other parish. The child ought not to come
+here; it doesn't belong to us."
+
+"Yes it does: it wasn't on my side of the line."
+
+"But it was in front of your house?"
+
+"Well, the line runs crossways: it don't follow the child was in
+our parish."
+
+"Oh, nonsense! there's no doubt about it! We can't take the
+child in. You must carry it away again."
+
+Mr. Snigger turned to leave the room.
+
+"Wait a bit, sir," said Mr. Doll; "I shall leave the child here,
+and you can do as you like with it. It ain't mine, at all
+events. I say it lay in your parish; and if you don't look after
+it you may be the worse of it. The coroner's sure to try to earn
+his fees. Good-night."
+
+He hurried from the room.
+
+"Stop!" shouted the master, "I say: I don't accept the child.
+You leave it here at your own risk. We keep it without
+prejudice, remember-- without prejudice, sir!--without----"
+
+Mr. Doll was in the street and out of hearing.
+
+
+
+II.--A Board of Guardians.
+
+The Guardians of St. Bartimeus met the day after Mr. Doll's
+clever stratagem. Among other business was a report from the
+master of the workhouse that a child, name unknown, found by Mr.
+Doll, cheesemonger, of Nether Place, in the Parish of St. Simon
+Magus, opposite his shop, and, as he alleged, on the nearer side
+of the parish boundary, had been left at the workhouse, and was
+now in the custody of the matron. The Guardians were not
+accustomed to restrain themselves, and did not withhold the
+expression of their indignation upon this announcement. As Mr.
+Doll had himself been a guardian of St. Simon Magus, it was clear
+to their impartial minds that he was trying by a trick to foist a
+bastard--perhaps his own--on the wrong parish.
+
+Mr. Cheekey, a licensed victualler, moved that the master's
+report be put under the table.
+
+Mr. Slinkum, draper, seconded the motion.
+
+Mr. Edge, ironmonger, pointed out that there was no parliamentary
+precedent for such a disposition of the report, and, further,
+that such action did not dispose of the baby.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Cheekey, turning painfully red, "no matter how
+ye put it, I move to get rid of the brat. What's the best form
+of motion?"
+
+A churchwarden, who happened to be a gentleman, explained that
+the Board could not dismiss the question in so summary a way.
+"He could foresee that there might be a nice point of law in the
+case. They would have to take some legal means of ascertaining
+their liabilities, and of forcing the other parish to take the
+child if they ought to do so. They must consult their
+solicitor." This gentleman was sent for post haste. Meanwhile
+the baby was ordered to be brought in for inspection. The matron
+had handed him over to a sort of half-witted inmate of the house,
+whose wits, however, were strangely about him at the wrong time,
+to nurse and amuse him. This person brought Ginx's Baby into the
+Board-room, and placed him on the table. The Board of Guardians
+took a good look at him. He was not then in fair condition. He
+was limp, he was dirty, hollow in the cheeks, white, stiff in his
+limbs, and half-naked-- (to be regardless of gender)--
+
+ "Pallidula, rigida, nudula."
+
+
+"Hum!" said Mr. Stink, who was a dog-breeder--"What's his
+pedigree?"
+
+This brutal joke was well received by some of the Guardians.
+
+"His pedigree," answered the half-wit, gravely, "goes back for
+three hundred years. Parients unknown by name, but got by Misery
+out o' Starvashun. The line began with Poverty out o' Laziness
+in Queen Elizabeth's time. The breed has been a large 'un
+wotever you thinks of the quality."
+
+This pleasantry was less acceptable to the Board.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Scoop, grocer, a great stickler for
+parliamentary modes of procedure, "I move it be committed. "
+
+"Committed! Where?" said Mr. Stink.
+
+"To Newgate I s'pose," said the half-wit, his eyes twinkling.
+
+"Nonsense, sir,--for consideration. Send that man out,"
+exclaimed Scoop--"clear the room for consultation."
+
+Davus was expelled, and the baby was then formally consigned to
+the care of a committee. By this time the legal adviser came in.
+The facts having been stated to him, he said:
+
+"Gentlemen, as at present advised I am of opinion that the parish
+in which the child was found is bound to maintain him. If Mr.
+Doll (a highly respectable person, my own cheesemonger) found the
+child beyond the boundaries of St. Simon Magus--and he will of
+course swear that he did--you cannot refuse to take it in.
+However, I had better ascertain the facts from Mr. Doll and take
+the opinion of counsel. Meanwhile we must beware not to
+compromise ourselves by admitting anything, or doing anything
+equivalent to an admission. Let me see--Ah!--yes--a notice to be
+served on the other parish repudiating the infant; another notice
+to Mr. Doll to take it away, and that it remains here at his risk
+and expense--you see, gentlemen, we could hardly venture to
+return it to Mr. Doll; we should create an unhappy impression
+in the minds of the public--"
+
+"D--n the public!" said Mr. Stink.
+
+"Quite so, my dear sir," said Mr. Phillpotts, smiling, "quite so,
+but that is not a legal or in fact practicable mode of discarding
+them; we must act with public opinion, I fear. Then, to resume,
+thirdly and to be strictly safe, we must serve a notice on the
+infant and all whom it may concern. I think I'll draft it at
+once."
+
+In a few minutes the committee in charge pinned to the only
+garment of Ginx's Baby a paper in the following form:--
+
+
+PARISH OF ST. BARTIMEUS.
+
+To ---- ---- (name unknown), a Foundling, and all other persons
+interested in the said Foundling.
+
+TAKE NOTICE
+
+That you, or either of you, have no just or lawful claim to have
+you or the said infant chargeable on the said Parish. And this
+is to notify that you, the said infant, are retained in the
+workhouse of the said Parish under protest, and that whatsoever
+is or may be done or provided for you is at the proper charge of
+you, and all such persons as are and were by law bound to
+maintain and keep the same.
+
+ WINKLE & PHILLPOTTS,
+ Solicitors for the Board.
+
+
+III.--"The World is my Parish."
+
+When Mr. Phillpotts called upon Doll, the cheesemonger, the
+latter straightway gave him the facts as they had occurred. He
+pointed out the exact spot on which the bundle had lain; he gave
+an estimate of the number of inches on each side of the line
+occupied by it, and declared that the head and shoulders of the
+infant lay in the parish of the solicitor's clients. Ginx's
+Baby, under the title "Re a Foundling," was once more submitted
+for the opinion of counsel. They advised the Board that as the
+child was in both parishes when found, but had been taken up by a
+ratepayer of St. Simon Magus, the latter parish was bound to
+support him. Whereupon the Guardians of St. Bartimeus at their
+next meeting resolved that the Vestry of the other parish should
+have a written notice to remove the child, failing which
+application should be made to the Queen's Bench for a mandamus to
+compel them to do it.
+
+On receiving the challenge the Guardians of St. Simon Magus also
+took counsel's opinion. They were advised that as the greater
+part, and especially the head of the infant, was when discovered
+in the parish of St. Bartimeus, the latter was clearly
+chargeable. Both parties then proceeded to swear affidavits.
+The Attorney-General and Solicitor-General, the two great
+law-officers of the crown, were retained on opposite sides, and
+took fees--not for an Imperial prosecution, but as petty Queen's
+Counsel in an inter-parochial squabble.
+
+
+IV.--Without prejudice to any one but the Guardians.
+
+The Court of Queen's Bench, after hearing an elaborate statement
+from the Attorney-General, granted a rule nisi for a mandamus.
+This rule was entered for argument in a paper called "The Special
+Paper," and, the list being a heavy one, nearly a year elapsed
+before it was reached. It was then again postponed several times
+"for the convenience of counsel."
+
+The Board of St. Bartimeus chafed under the law's delay. They
+became morbidly sensitive to the incubus of Ginx's Baby,
+especially as the press had been reviewing some of their recent
+acts with great bitterness. The Guardians were defiant. Having
+served their notices, they were induced by Mr. Stink to resolve
+not to maintain the infant. The poor child was threatened with
+dissolution. Thus, no doubt, many difficulties in parochial
+administration are solved--the subject vanishes away. The baby
+was kept provisionally in a room at the workhouse. On the
+outside of the door was a notice in fair round-hand:--
+
+NOTICE.
+
+DOLL'S FOUNDLING.
+
+Pending the legal inquiry into the facts concerning the above
+infant, and a decision as to its settlement, all officials,
+assistants, and servants of the workhouse are forbidden to enter
+the room in which it is deposited, or to render it any service or
+assistance, on pain of dismissal. No food is to be supplied to
+it from the workhouse kitchen.
+
+N.B. This is not intended to prevent persons other than
+officials, &c., from having access to the infant, or assisting
+it.
+ BY ORDER OF THE BOARD.
+
+
+That any body of human beings, other than Patagonians, could have
+coolly contemplated such a result as must have followed upon the
+strict performance of this order, would be incredible except in
+the instance of the Guardians of St. Bartimeus. There was
+nothing they could not do--or leave undone. Fortunately for
+Ginx's Baby, the order was disobeyed. Occasionally lady visitors
+went to look at him and give him some food--he was toddling about
+the room on unsteady legs--but charity seemed to be appalled by
+the official questions hanging about this child. The master,
+Snigger, whose business it was every day to ascertain whether the
+cause of the great parochial quarrel was in, or out of,
+existence, became a traitor to the Board. When the child grew
+hungry and dangerously thin, he brought bottles of pap prepared
+by Mrs. Snigger, and administered it to him. No conclusions to
+the disfavor of the Board were to be drawn from this conduct, for
+Snigger was particular to say to the boy in a loud voice, each
+time he fed him:--
+
+"Now, youngster, this is without prejudice, remember! I give you
+due notice--without prejudice."
+
+Who, in Master Ginx's situation, would have had any prejudices to
+such action, or have expressed them even if they were
+entertained? He took no objection as he took the pap; while
+Snigger was glad to be able to do an unusual kindness without
+compromising the parish.
+
+Thus things had gone on for many months, when one day an eye of
+that Argus monster, the Public, was set upon Ginx's Baby. A
+well-known nobleman, calling at the workhouse to see a little
+girl whom he had saved from infamy, as he passed down a corridor
+was arrested by the notice on the door of our hero's room.
+Curiosity took him in, and horror chained him there for some
+time. Had he not entered, Ginx's Baby, spite of Snigger, would
+in twenty-four hours have ceased to supply facts to history. He
+was suffering from low fever, and his condition was as
+sensationally shocking as any reporter could have wished. Out
+rushed the peer for a doctor, took a cab to a magistrate and
+detailed the whole case, to be repeated in next morning's papers.
+Penny-a-liners ran to the spot, wrote vivid descriptions of the
+baby and the room, and transcribed the notice. The Guardians
+were drubbed in trenchant leaders and indignant letters. They,
+instead of bending to the storm, strove to confront it, and
+passed angry resolutions of a childish and grotesque character.
+The few of them who possessed any sense of propriety were railed
+at in the meetings till they ceased to attend. The uproar
+outside increased. Why did not the President of the Poor-Law
+Board interfere? At last he did interfere: that is, instead of
+visiting the scene himself, and satisfying his own eyes as to the
+truth of what his ears had heard, a process that would have taken
+a couple of hours, he appointed a gentleman to hold an inquiry.
+The Guardians became furious. The reports of their proceedings
+read like the vagaries of a lunatic asylum or the deliberations
+of the American Senate. They discharged Snigger for breach of
+orders, substituting a relative of Mr. Stink. They put a lock on
+the door, and passed food to the Baby by a stick. A committee
+was appointed to see him fed, and they forwarded a memorial to
+the Poor-Law Board, stating that "he daily had more food than he
+could possibly eat, and was in admirable condition." They
+refused to allow any doctor but one employed by themselves to see
+him. They procured from him a certificate that the noble
+busybody and his physician had made a mistake, and that all the
+functions of life in the infant appeared to be in perfect order.
+Then came the gentleman, and the inquiry, and his report, and a
+letter from the Poor-Law Board, and further discussions and more
+letters, until the bewildered public gnashed its teeth at the
+Minister, the Guardians, and the law, and wished them all at
+Land's End or beyond it.
+
+
+V.-An Ungodly Jungle.
+
+The case of the Guardians of St. Bartimeus against the Guardians
+of St. Simon Magus was at length reached. The argument lasted
+for two days. There is a grim work, the short title whereof is
+"Burns's Justice," in five fat volumes, from which the legal
+Dryasdust turns aghast. In one of these portentous books, title
+"Poor," pp. 1200, the inquisitive may find a code unrivalled by
+the most malignant ingenuity of former or contemporary nations: a
+code wherein, by gradual accretion, has been framed a system of
+relief to poverty and distress so impolitic, so unprincipled,
+that none but the driest, mustiest, most petrified parish
+official could be expected to lift up his voice to defend it; so
+complicated that no man under heaven knows its length or breadth
+or height or depth; yet it stands to this hour a monument of
+English stolidity--a marvel of lazy or ignorant statesmanship.
+Imagine, if you please, a Lord Chief Justice and three Puisnes,
+all keen, practical men, alive to public policy and the common
+weal, eager to extricate the truth and do the right, plunging
+into this "ungodly jungle," thwarted at every turn, in search of
+justice for Ginx's Baby. With all his patient industry and
+lightning quickness of apprehension, the Chief Justice found it
+hard to reconcile past and present, or evolve from the vast
+confusion anything consistent with his moral instincts.
+
+--Clear the board, gentlemen. True regenerative legislation will
+begin by drawing away the rubbish. Reform means more than
+repair. Mend, patch, take down a little here, prop up some
+tottering nuisance there, fill in gaping chinks with patent
+legislative cement, coat old facades with bright paint, hide
+decay beneath a gloze of novelty, titivate, decorate,
+furbish--and after all your house is not a new one, but a whited
+sepulchre shaking to decay. Repair? There is a Repair party,
+intermediating between Tories and Reformers--Radicals or Rooters
+let us call these latter if you like--who cling to "vested
+interests" and all other sorts of antique nuisances, yet say they
+are willing to improve them. REFORM, which means, Pull down with
+bold statesman's hand, and with like hand REBUILD, is no darling
+of your political Repairer. Call the party and the men by their
+right names: and give me for utility in legislation or
+administrative action an Old Tory and Obstructive party rather
+than this middling, meddling, muddling Repairer--
+
+ "Eager to change yet fearful to destroy."
+
+Just now all Social Reformation, in its noblest aims and
+attempts, is fettered by the Repair party. What is termed
+Sanitary Reform is enfeebled, and the vigor withdrawn from it, by
+this party. "Vested rights," "the Liberty of the people,"
+"Interference with personal freedom," "EXPENSE," --these are the
+watchwords of the Repairer in opposition to him who, pointing to
+the pallor and fever of a hundred neighborhoods, calls upon a
+ministry to cleanse them with imperial force.
+
+A comprehensive scheme of National Education is seized and
+half-throttled by the Repair party. "Oh! utilize what there is;
+improve on and tack to the denominational system; avail yourself
+of the jealousy of sects; see what a grand building that has
+already erected! True, it is not large enough; true, it is badly
+built; but repair that, and add wings. It will cost you ever so
+much to rebuild--Repair!"
+
+The methods of relief to the Poor are old, cumbrous, unequal, as
+stupid as those who administer them. Forth steps the Reformer,
+and cries out--"Clear this wrack away! Get rid of your
+antiquated Bumbledom, your parochial and non-parochial
+distinctions, your complicated map of local authorities;
+re-distribute the kingdom on some more practical system, redress
+the injustice of unequal rating, improve the machinery and spirit
+of relief, and so on." You have the Repair party shouting its
+Non possumus as loudly as any other arch-obstructive: "Heaven
+forbid! Queen Elizabeth and the Poor Laws for ever! To the
+rescue of Local Government and Vested Interests! Repair!"
+
+Some one with a long head and a divinely-warmed heart, searching
+vainly for help to thousands in the packed alleys of his English
+Home, sends his quick glance across seas to rich lands that daily
+cry to heaven for strong arms that wield the plough and spade.
+"Ho!" he shouts, "Labor to Land--starvation to production--death
+unto life!" and he calls upon every statesman and patriot to help
+the good work, and give their energies to frame an Emigration
+Scheme. Then the Repair party foams: "Send away the Labor, the
+source of our wealth? No. Mend the condition of the laborer;
+give him the sop of political rights--free breakfasts--the
+ballot. Give State funds to alter social conditions? No.
+Improve the methods of local assistance to Emigration; it is a
+temporary remedy--Repair!"
+
+Thus, according to the gospel of this party, everything must be
+subject of restoration only. Like antiquarians, they utter
+groans over the abolition of anything, however ugly it may be,
+however unfitted for human uses, and with however so elegant a
+piece of artistry you desire to displace it. For them a
+Gilbert-Scott politician, reverential restorer of bygone styles,
+enthusiastic to conserve and amend the grotesque Gothic policies
+of the past, rather than some Brunel or Stephenson statesman,
+engineering in novel mastery of circumstances--not fearful to
+face and conquer even the antique impediments of Nature. Give me
+a trenchant statesman, or I pray you leave legislation alone.
+Better things as they are than patched to distraction.
+
+At length, by means of some delicate legal adjustments, the
+judges saw their way to affirming that Ginx's Baby's parish was
+that of St. Bartimeus, and refused the rule for a mandamus.
+
+
+
+VI.--Parochial Benevolence--and another translation.
+
+The authorities of St. Bartimeus did not take kindly to the
+charge imposed upon them by the Queen's Bench. Some of the
+Guardians privately hinted to the master that it was unnecessary
+to overfeed the infant. They did not burthen him with much
+clothing, and what he had was shared with many lively companions.
+When you, good matron, look at your little pink-cheeked daughter,
+so clean and so cosy in her pretty cot, waking to see the
+well-faced nurse, or you, still sweeter to her eyes, watching
+above her dreams, perhaps you ought to stop a moment to contrast
+the scene with the sad tableaux you may get sight of not far
+away.
+
+* * *
+Ginx's Baby was not an ill-favored child. He had inherited his
+father's frame and strength: these helped him through the changes
+we are relating. What if these capacities had, by simple
+nourishing food, cleanly care-taking, and brighter, kindlier
+associations, been trained into full working order? Left alone
+or ill-tended they were daily dwindling, and the depreciation was
+going on not solely at the expense of little Ginx, but of the
+whole community. To reduce his strength one-half was to reduce
+one-half his chances of independence, and to multiply the
+prospects of his continuous application for STATE AID.
+
+The money spent in stopping a hole in a Dutch dyke is doubtless
+better invested than if it were to be retained until a vast
+breach had laid half a kingdom under water. Surely your
+Hollander would agree to be mulcted in one-third of his fortune
+rather than run the hazard!
+
+Every day through this wealthy country there are men and women
+busy marring the little images of God, that are by-and-by to be
+part of its public-shadowing young spirits, repressing their
+energy, sapping their vigor or failing to make it up, corrupting
+their nature by foul associations, moral and physical. Some are
+doing it by special license of the devil, others by Act of
+Parliament, others by negligence or niggardliness. Could you
+teach or force these people--many unconsciously engaged in the
+vile work--to run together, as men alarmed by sudden danger, and
+throw around a helpless generation influences and a care more
+akin to your own home ideal, would you not transfigure the next
+epoch--would not your labor and sacrifice be a GOD-WORK, reaching
+out weighty, fruit-laden branches far into the grateful future?
+'Tis by feeling and enjoining everywhere the need of such a
+movement as this that you, O all-powerful woman! can carry your
+will into the play of a great economic and social reform.
+Society that recognizes not a root-truth like that is sowing the
+wind--God knows what it will reap.
+
+So the Guardians, keeping carefully within the law, neglected
+nothing that could sap little Ginx's vitality, deaden his
+happiest instincts, derange moral action, cause hope to die
+within his infant breast almost as soon as it were born. Good
+God!
+
+The items the Board were really entitled to charge the
+rate-payers as supplied to our hero were--
+
+Dirt,
+
+Fleas,
+
+Foul air,
+
+Chances of catching skin diseases, fevers, &c.,
+
+Vile company,
+
+Neglect,
+
+Occasional cruelty, and
+
+A small supply of bad food and clothing.
+
+Every pauper was to them an obnoxious charge by any and every
+means to be reduced to a minimum or nil. Ginx's Baby was reduced
+to a minimum. His constitution enabled him to protest against
+reduction to nil. But, just after the bills of costs had been
+taxed, mulcting the rate-payers of St. Bartimeus in a sum of more
+than L 1,600, the Guardians were made aware of the name and
+origin of their charge. One of the persons who had deserted him
+was arrested for theft, and among other articles in her
+possession were some of the Baby's clothes. She confessed the
+whole story, and declared that the child left in Nether Place was
+no other than the Protestant Baby, son of Ginx, about whom so
+much stir had been made two years before. The Guardians were not
+long in tracing Ginx, and, at his quarters in Rosemary Street,
+the hapless changeling was one day delivered by a deputy
+relieving-officer, with the benediction, by me sadly recorded--
+
+"There he is, d--n him!"
+
+I am sure if the Guardians had been there they would have said:
+
+"Amen."
+
+
+
+PART IV.
+
+WHAT THE CLUBS AND POLITICIANS DID WITH HIM.
+
+I.--Moved on.
+
+Ginx's Baby's brothers and sisters would have nothing to say to
+him. Mrs. Ginx declared she could see in him no likeness to her
+own dear lost one; and her husband swore that the brat never was
+his. The couple had latterly been pinching themselves and their
+children to save enough to emigrate. For this purpose aid and
+counsel were given to them by a neighboring curate, whose name,
+were my pages destined to immortality, should be printed here in
+golden letters. Rich and full will be his sheaves when many a
+statesman reaps tares. Finding that a thirteenth child was
+imposed on them by so superior a force as the law of England the
+Ginxes hastened their departure.
+
+Their last night in London, towards the small hours, Ginx,
+carrying our hero, went along Birdcage Walk. He scarcely knew
+where he was going, or how he was about to dispose of his burden,
+but he meant to get rid of it. On he went, here and there met by
+shadowy creatures who came towards his footsteps in the uncertain
+darkness, and when they could see that he was no quarry for them
+flitted away again into the night.
+
+He passed the dingy houses, since replaced by the Foreign Office,
+across the open space before the Horse Guards, near the house of
+a popular Prime Minister, and up the broad steps till he stood
+under the York Column. The shadow of this was an inviting place,
+but a policeman turning his lantern suspiciously on the man
+walking about at that silent hour with a child in his arms
+frustrated his wish. Slowly Ginx tramped along Pall Mall, with
+only one other creature stirring, as it seemed for the moment--a
+gentleman who turned up the steps of a large building. Seating
+the child on the bottom step and telling him not to cry, Ginx
+instantly crossed the road, turned into St. James's Square,
+passed by the rails, and stealing from corner to corner through
+the mazes of that locality, reached home by way of Piccadilly and
+Grosvenor Place. Henceforth this history shall know him no more.
+
+
+
+II.-Club Ideas.
+
+Scarcely had the shadow of his parent vanished in the gloom
+before Ginx's Baby piped forth a lusty protest: the street rang
+again. Ere long the doors at the top of the steps swung back,
+and a portly form stood in the light.
+
+"Halloo! what's the matter?" (This was a general observation into
+space.) "Why, bless my heart, here's a child crying on the
+steps!"
+
+Another form appeared.
+
+"Is there nobody with it? Halloo! any one there?"
+
+No answer came save from poor little Ginx, but his was decided.
+The two servants descended the steps and looked at the miserable
+boy without touching him. Then they peered into the darkness in
+hope that they might get a glimpse of his mother or a policeman.
+A rapid step sounded on the pavement and a gentleman came up to
+the group.
+
+"What have we here?" he said gently.
+
+"It's a child, Sir Charles, I found crying on the steps. I
+expect it's a trick to get rid of him. We are looking for a
+policeman to take him away."
+
+"Poor little fellow," said Sir Charles, stooping to take a fair
+look at Ginx's Baby, "for you and such as you the policeman or
+the parish officers are the national guardians, and the prison or
+the poor-house the home. . . . . Bring him into the Club,
+Smirke."
+
+The men hesitated a moment before executing so unwonted a demand,
+but Sir Charles Sterling was a man not safely to be thwarted--a
+late minister and a member of the committee. The child being
+carried into the magnificent hall of the Club, stood on its
+mosaic floor. From above the radiance of the gas "sunlight"
+streamed down over the marble pillars, and glanced on gilded
+cornices and panels of scagliola. A statue of the Queen looked
+upon him from the niche that opened to the dining-room; another
+of the great Puritan soldier, statesman, and ruler, with his
+stern massive front; and yet another, with the strong yet gentle
+features of the champion Free-Trader, seemed to regard him from
+their several corners. On the walls around were portraits of men
+who had striven for the deliverance of the people from ancient
+yokes and fetters. Of course Ginx's Baby did not see all this.
+He, poor boy, dazed, stood with a knuckle in his eye, while the
+porter, lackeys, Sir Charles Sterling, and others who strolled
+out of the reading-room, curiously regarded him. But any one
+observing the scene apart might have contrasted the place with
+the child--the principles and the professions whereof this
+grandeur was the monument and consecrated tabernacle, with this
+solitary atomic specimen of the material whereon they were to
+work. What social utility had resulted from the great movements
+initiated by them who erected and frequented this place? Ought
+they to have had, and did they still need a complement? While
+wonderful political changes had been wrought, and benefits not to
+be exaggerated won for many classes, WHAT HAD BEEN DONE FOR
+GINX'S BABY?
+
+The query would not have been very ridiculous. He was an unit of
+the British Empire--nothing could blot out that fact before
+heaven! Had anything been left undone that ought to have been
+done, or done that had well been left undone, or were better to
+be undone now? Of a truth that was worth a thought.
+
+"What's all this?" said a big Member of Parliament, a minister
+renowned for economy in matters financial and intellectual.
+"What are you doing with this youngster? I never saw such an
+irregularity in a Club in my life."
+
+"If you saw it oftener you would think more about it," said Sir
+Charles Sterling. "We found him on the steps. I think he was
+asking for you, Glibton."
+
+This sally turned a laugh against the minister.
+
+"Well," said another, "he has come to the wrong quarter if he
+wants money."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder," said a third, "if he were one of the new
+messengers at the Office of Popular Edifices. Glibton is
+reducing their staff."
+
+"If that's the case I think you have reached the minimum here,
+Glibton," cried Sir Charles.
+
+"Can't the country afford a livery?"
+
+"Bother you all," replied the Secretary, who was secretly pleased
+to be quizzed for his peculiarities--"tell us what this means.
+Whose 'lark' is it?"
+
+"No lark at all," said Sterling. "Here is a problem for you and
+all of us to solve. This forlorn object is representative, and
+stands here to-night preaching us a serious sermon. He was
+deserted on the Club steps --left there, perhaps, as a piece of
+clever irony; he might be son to some of us. What's your name,
+my boy?"
+
+Ginx's Baby managed to say "Dunno!"
+
+"Ask him if he has any name?" said an Irish ex-member, with a
+grave face.
+
+Ginx's Baby to this question responded distinctly "No."
+
+"No name," said the humorist; "then the author of his being must
+be Wilkie Collins."
+
+Everybody laughed at this indifferent pleasantry but our hero.
+His bosom began to heave ominously.
+
+"What's to be done with him?"
+
+"Send him to the workhouse."
+
+"Send him to the d----" (there may be brutality among the gods
+and goddesses).
+
+"Give him to the porter."
+
+"No thank you, sir," said he, promptly.
+
+The gentlemen were turning away, when Sir Charles stopped them.
+
+"Look here!" he said, taking the boy's arm and baring it, "this
+boy can hardly be called a human being. See what a thin arm he
+has--how flaccid and colorless the flesh seems--what an old
+face!--and I can scarcely feel any pulse. Good heavens, get him
+some wine! A few hours will send him to the d---- sure enough. .
+. . . What are we to do for him, Glibton? I say again, he is
+only part of a great problem. There must be hundreds of
+thousands growing up like this child; and what a generation to
+contemplate in all its relations and effects!"
+
+The gentlemen were dashed by his earnestness.
+
+"Oh, you're exaggerating," said Glibton; "there can't be such
+widespread misery. Why, if there were, the people would be
+wrecking our houses."
+
+"Ah!" replied the other, sadly, "will you wait to be convinced by
+that sort of thing before you believe in their misery? I assure
+you what I say is true. I could bring you a hundred clergymen to
+testify to it to-morrow morning."
+
+"God forbid!" said Glibton. "Good-night."
+
+The right honorable gentleman extinguished the subject in his own
+little brain with his big hat; but everywhere else the sparks are
+still aglow, and he, with all like him, may wake up suddenly, as
+frightened women in the night; to find themselves environed in
+the red glare of a popular conflagration. Well for them then if
+they are not in charge of the State machinery. What an hour will
+that be for hurrying to and fro with water-pipes and buckets,
+when proper forethought, diligence, and sacrifice would have made
+the building fireproof.
+
+
+III.--A thorough-paced Reformer--if not a Revolutionary.
+
+By the kindness and influence of Sir Charles Sterling, Ginx's
+Baby that night, and long after, found shelter in the Radical
+Club. He gave rise to a discussion in the smoking-room next
+evening that ought to be chronicled. Several members of the
+committee supported his benefactor in urging that the child
+should be adopted by the Club, as a pledge of their resolve to
+make the questions of which he seemed to be the embodied emblem
+subjects of legislative action. Others said that those questions
+being, in their view, social and not political, were not proper
+ones to give impulse to a party movement, and that the
+entertainment in the Club of this foundling would be a gross
+irregularity: they did not want samples of the material
+respecting which they were theorizing. To some of the latter Sir
+Charles had been insisting that, whether they kept the child or
+not, they could not stifle the questions excited by his
+condition.
+
+"You may delay, but you cannot dissipate them. We are filling up
+our sessions with party struggles, theoretic discussions,
+squabbles about foreign politics, debates on political machinery,
+while year by year the condition of the people is becoming more
+invidious and full of peril. Social and political reform ought
+to be linked; the people on whom you confer new political rights
+cannot enjoy them without health and well-being."
+
+"But all our legislation is directed to that!" exclaimed Mr.
+Joshua Hale. "Reform, Free Trade, Free Corn--have these not
+enhanced the wealth of the people?"
+
+"Partially; yet there are classes unregenerated by their reviving
+influences. Free trade cannot insure work, nor can free corn
+provide food for every citizen."
+
+"Nor any other legislation: let us be practical. I own there is
+much to be done. I have often stated my 'platform.' We must
+clip the enormous expenditure on soldiers and ships; reduce our
+overweening army of diplomatic spies and busybodies; abstain from
+meddling in everybody's quarrels; redeem from taxation the
+workman's necessaries--a free breakfast-table; peremptorily
+legislate against the custom of primogeniture; encourage the
+distribution and transfer of land; and, under the aegis of the
+ballot, protect from the tyranny of the landlord and employer
+their tenants and workmen."
+
+"Very good, perhaps, all of them," replied Sir Charles, "but some
+not at the moment possible, and all together are not exhaustive.
+Why do you not go to the bottom of social needs? You say nothing
+about Health legislation--are you indifferent to the sanitary
+condition of the people? You have not hinted at Education--Waste
+Lands--Emigration--"
+
+"Oh! I am opposed to that altogether."
+
+"I forgot, you are a manufacturer; yet the last man of whom I
+should believe that selfishness had warped the judgment. You
+have done and endured more than any living statesman for the
+advantage of your fellow- citizens, so that I will not cast at
+you the aspersion of class-blindness. Still, I can scarcely
+think you have looked at this matter in the pure light of
+patriotism, and not within the narrow scope of trade interests."
+
+"Quite unjust. Our best economists reprehend the policy of
+depleting our labor-market. Emigration is a timely remedy for
+adversity and to be very sparingly used. Labor is our richest
+vein--"
+
+"We may have too much of it. Take it as a fact that you now have
+more than you can use, and the unemployed part is starving; what
+will you do with them?"
+
+"That is a mere temporary and casual depression, to which all
+classes are liable."
+
+"But," said Sir Charles, "which none can so ill bear. Nay--what
+if it is permanent? You look to increased trade. Do you suppose
+we are to retain our manufacturing pre-eminence when every
+country, new and old, is competing with us? Can our trade, I ask
+you honestly to consider, increase at the rate of our population?
+Besides, for heaven's sake, look at the thing as a man. Grant
+that we have a hundred thousand men out of work, and hundreds of
+thousands more dependent on them--do you think it no small thing
+that the vast mass should be left for one, two, three years
+seething in sorrow and distress, while they are waiting for
+trade! By the time that comes they may have gone beyond the hope
+of rescue. Ah! if an elastic trade comes back to-morrow, you can
+never make those people what they were; ought we not to have
+forecast that they should not be what they are? But I contend
+that depression has become chronic, the poverty more wide-spread
+and persistent--how then shall we, who represent these classes
+among the rest, face the prospect?"
+
+Here interposed a gentleman high in office, a pure, keen, rigid
+economist of the highest intellectual and political rank.
+
+"My dear Sterling, pardon me if I say you are talking wildly.
+Perhaps you don't see that you are verging on rank communism.
+The working of economic laws can be as infallibly projected as a
+solar eclipse. You can secure no class from periodic calamity,
+and so regulate laws of supply and demand by guiding-wheels of
+legislation and taxation as to save every man from penury. You
+wish us to send away our bone and sinew because we have no
+present employment for it, and next year, or the year after,
+under a recovered trade you will be wringing your hands and
+cursing the folly that prompted you to do it."
+
+"I should be too glad of the opportunity," replied Sir Charles,
+sturdily, "but in truth there is an incubus of excessive numbers
+that no revival of trade will provide for, even if it is beyond
+our extremest hopes, and I for one will not be guilty of the
+inhumanity of keeping fellow-creatures in misery till we can find
+a use for them. You have forgotten that there are other economic
+laws besides those you glance at. Several millions of acres of
+unoccupied land belonging in a sense to the people of this
+country are to be kept untilled in defiance of the plainest
+policy that nature and God have indicated to us, namely, that
+labor should come in contact with land! For want of this
+conjunction our colonies are to be checked, while at home
+miserable millions are gaping for work and food."
+
+"Oh! let them take themselves out. There are too many going
+already. They will follow natural laws, and where labor is
+required thither the stream will flow."
+
+"Mere surface talk, my clever friend," replied the other, "the
+men who are trooping out at their own expense are our most sober,
+careful, and energetic workmen. Else they could not go. They go
+because here so many indifferent ones are weighing down their
+shoulders. And where do most of them go to? Not to strengthen
+and develop our colonies, but the United States--a not always
+friendly people, and just now your free-trader's bugbear!"
+
+"Well, well," said the minister, "drop that question. It's
+utterly impracticable at this time. We couldn't entertain the
+demand for State-help for an instant. I tell you again you're a
+Fourierite. You virtually propose to put your hand in the pocket
+of the upper classes to pay all sorts of expenses for the lower."
+
+"You may call me a communist if you please," replied Sir Charles
+Sterling; "I do not shrink from shadows. Perhaps I am in favor
+of something nearer to communism than our present form of
+society. One thing I am clear about: no state of society is
+healthy wherein every man does not own himself to be the guardian
+of the interests of the community as well as his own--does not
+see that he is bound, morally and as a matter of public policy,
+to add to his neighbor's well-being as well as his own. Does not
+society, by its protection and aggregation, make it possible for
+the rich to grow rich, the genius and the ambitious man to pursue
+their aims, the merchant to gather his vails, the noble to enjoy
+his lands? For these privileges there is more or less to pay,
+and it may be that the proper proportion which the capable
+classes should be called upon to contribute to the common weal
+has never been correctly adjusted. The first fruit of practical
+Christianity was community of goods, and but for human
+selfishness we might hope for an Eutopian era--when, while it
+should be ruled that if a man would not work neither should he
+eat, there should also be brought home to every man the care of
+his poorer, or weaker, or less competent brother. I never expect
+to see that. I do hope to see the men of greatest ability pay
+more generously for the privileges they enjoy. The best policy
+for them too. The better the condition of the general community
+the better for themselves. You cannot alarm me with epithets.
+But these views are happily not essential to the support of the
+Emigration policy."
+
+"O dear! O dear! mad as a March hare!" cried the minister, as he
+stumped from the room.
+
+"Sterling is a good fellow," said he to a colleague with whom he
+walked down Pall Mall, "and a thorough-paced Liberal. Besides,
+he carries great weight in the House. But he is an enthusiast,
+and, therefore, not always quite practical."
+
+By PRACTICAL the minister meant, not that which might well and to
+advantage be done if good and able men would resolve to do it,
+spite of all hindrances, but that which, upon a cunning review of
+party balances and a judicious probing of public opinion, seemed
+to be a policy fit for his party to pursue. The first, original
+and masterly statesmen are needed to initiate and perform--the
+other is simply the art of a genius who knows how most adroitly
+to manipulate people and circumstances.
+
+
+IV.--Very Broad Views.
+
+Sir Charles Sterling, Mr. Joshua Hale, and others continued the
+conversation interrupted by the minister's exit. What was to be
+done with Ginx's Baby? In the great dissected map of society
+what niches were cut out for him and all like him to fill? Most
+of the politicians were for leaving that to himself to find out.
+The term "law of supply and demand" was freely bandied between
+them, as it is in many journals nowadays, with little object save
+to shut up avenues of discussion by a high-sounding phrase.
+
+Then of these "statesmen," most clung, if not to self-interest,
+to personal crotchets. What is more darling to a man than the
+child of his intellect or fancy? How the poor poetaster hugs his
+tawdry verses as if they were the imperial ornaments of genius!
+Just in the same way does the politician love the policies
+himself hath devised, pressing them forward at all hazards, while
+he is blind to the utility of others. This is the basis of that
+aspect of selfishness which often mars in the approbation of a
+country a really honest statesmanship--an egotistic tenacity of
+one's own creature as the best, which yet is not the criminal
+selfishness of ambition. Still that egotism is not seldom
+disastrous to the people's interests. While these statesmen
+nursed their own bantlings and held them up to national notice,
+they were apt to avoid or too lightly regard the views of men as
+able as themselves. For instance, Joshua Hale-- who is far above
+these remarks generally--had put forth a scheme for the solution
+of the St. Helena property question--very likely a good one,
+albeit revolutionary, and nothing would convince him that any
+other could succeed. He wished every man in St. Helena--a
+turbulent adjunct of the British Empire--to be a landowner, and I
+do think, neither desired nor hoped that any man in that island
+should be happy until he was one. Yet there were other men ready
+to offer simpler remedies, and to prove that if every man in St.
+Helena became a landowner it would become a very hell upon earth,
+and more unmanageable than it was before. If these gentlemen do
+not sacrifice their pet fancies for the sake of a settlement,
+what will become of St. Helena?
+
+Just now they were discussing Ginx's Baby. One thought that
+repeal of the Poor-Laws and a new system of relief would reach
+his case; another saw the root of the Baby's sorrow in Trades'
+Unions; a third propounded cooperative manufactures; a
+fourth suggested that a vast source of income lay untouched in
+the seas about the kingdom, which swarmed with porpoises, and
+showed how certain parts of these animals were available for
+food, others for leather, others for a delicious oil that would
+be sweeter and more pleasant than butter; a fifth desired a law
+to repress the tendency of Scotch peers to evict tenants and
+convert arable lands into sheep-walks and deer-forests; a sixth
+maintained that there were waste lands in the kingdom of capacity
+to support hungry millions. In fact earth, heaven, and seas were
+to be regenerated by Act of Parliament for the benefit of Ginx's
+Baby and the people of England. Sir Charles listened
+impatiently, and at last burst forth again.
+
+He said: "When you consider it, what we are all trying to do
+nowadays is--vulgarly-- to improve the breed; but we go to work
+in a round-about way. At the outset we are met by the
+depreciated state of part of the existing generation; and one
+problem is to prevent these depreciated people from increasing,
+or to get them to increase healthily. No one seems to have gone
+directly to such a problem as that. The difficulties to be faced
+are tremendous. Your dirtiest British youngster is hedged round
+with principles of an inviolable liberty and rights of Habeas
+Corpus. You let his father and mother, or any one who will save
+you the trouble of looking after him, mould him in his years of
+tenderness as they please. If they happen to leave him a walking
+invalid, you take him into the poorhouse; if they bring him up a
+thief, you whip him and keep him at high cost at Millbank or
+Dartmoor; if his passions, never controlled, break out into
+murder and rape, you may hang him, unless his crime has been so
+atrocious as to attract the benevolent interest of the Home
+Secretary; if he commit suicide, you hold a coroner's inquest,
+which also costs money; and however he dies you give him a deal
+coffin and bury him. Yet I may prove to you that this being,
+whom you treat like a dog at a fair, never had a day's--no, nor
+an hour's--contact with goodness, purity, truth, or even human
+kindness; never had an opportunity of learning anything better.
+What right have you then to hunt him like a wild beast, and kick
+him and whip him, and fetter him and hang him by expensive
+complicated machinery, when you have done nothing to teach him
+any of the duties of a citizen?"
+
+"Stop, stop, Sir Charles! you are too virulent. There are
+endless means of improving your lad--charities without
+number----"
+
+"Yes, that will never reach him."
+
+"Never mind, they may, you know. Industrial schools,
+reformatories, asylums, hospitals, Peabody-buildings, poor-laws.
+Everybody is working to improve the condition of the poor man.
+Sanitary administration goes to his house and makes it
+habitable."
+
+"Very," interjected Sir Charles Sterling, dryly.
+
+"Factory laws protect and educate factory children----"
+
+"They don't educate in one case out of ten. They don't feed
+them, clothe them, give them amusement and cultivation, do they?"
+
+"Certainly not--that would be ridiculous."
+
+"Why, the question is whether that would be ridiculous!" replied
+Sir Charles. "I do not say it can be done, but in order to
+transform the next generation, what we should aim at is to
+provide substitutes for bad homes, evil training, unhealthy air,
+food and dulness, and terrible ignorance, in happier scenes,
+better teaching, proper conditions of physical life, sane
+amusements, and a higher cultivation. I dare say you would think
+me a lunatic if I proposed that Government should establish
+music-halls and gymnasia all over the country; but you, Mr.
+Fissure, voted for the Baths and Washhouses."
+
+"Who's to pay for all this?" asked Mr. Fissure, pertinently.
+
+"The State, which means society, the whole of which is directly
+interested. I tell you a million of children are crying to us to
+set them free from the despotism of a crime and ignorance
+protected by law."
+
+"That is striking; but you are treading on delicate ground. The
+liberty of the subject----"
+
+"Exactly what I expected you to say. These words can be used in
+defence of almost any injustice and tyranny. Such terms as
+'political economy,' 'communism,' 'socialism,' are bandied about
+in the same way. Yet propositions coming fairly within these
+terms are often mentioned with approval by the very persons who
+cast them at you. In a report of a recent Royal Commission I
+find that one of the Commissioners is quite as revolutionary as I
+am. He says it is right by law to secure that no child shall be
+cruelly treated or mentally neglected, over-worked or
+under-educated. Some people would call that communism, I fancy.
+But I think him to be correct as a political economist in that
+broad proposition. Why? Because a child's relation to the State
+is wider, more permanent, and more important than his relation to
+his parents. If he is in danger of being depreciated and damned
+for good citizenship, the State must rescue him."
+
+"A paternal and maternal government together!" cries Lord
+Namby--"a government of nurses. You know I should like to stop
+the production of children among the lower orders. Your
+propositions are far in advance of my radicalism. The State must
+sometimes interfere between parent and child; for instance, in
+education or protection from cruelty. But, if I understand you,
+you actually contemplate a general refining and elevation of the
+working class by legislative means."
+
+"Assuredly: I should aim to cultivate their morals, refine their
+tastes, manners, habits. I wish to lift from them that
+ever-depressing sense of hopelessness which keeps them in the
+dust."
+
+"So do most men; but you must do that by personal and private
+influences, not by State enactments. How would you do it?"
+
+"How? I think I could draw up a programme. For instance:
+Expatriate a million to reduce the competition that keeps poor
+devils on half-rations or sends them to the poorhouse; Take all
+the sick, maimed, old, and incapable poor into workhouses managed
+by humane men and not by ghouls; Forbid such people to marry and
+propagate weakness; Legislate for compulsory improvements of
+workmen's dwellings, and, if needful, lend the money to execute
+it; Extend and enforce the health laws; Open free libraries and
+places of rational amusement with an imperial bounty through the
+country; Instead of spending thousands on dilettanti sycophants
+at one end of the metropolis, distribute your art and amusement
+to the kingdom at large; The rich have their museums, libraries,
+and clubs, provide them for the poor; Establish temporary homes
+for lying-in women; Multiply your baths and washhouses till there
+is no excuse for a dirty person; Educate; Provide day schools for
+every proper child, and industrial or reformatory schools for
+every improper one; Open advanced High Schools for the best
+pupils, and found Scholarships to the Universities; Erect other
+schools for technical training; Offer to teach trades and
+agriculture to all comers for nothing--you would soon neutralize
+your bugbear of trades-unionism; Teach morals, teach science,
+teach art, teach them to amuse themselves like men and not like
+brutes. In a land so wealthy the programme is not impracticable,
+though severe. As the end to be attained is the welfare of
+future generations, no good reason could be urged why they should
+not contribute towards the cost of it--a better debt to leave to
+posterity than the incubus of an irrational war."
+
+Will any sane political practitioner wonder to be told that at
+the end of this harangue the smoking-room party broke up, and
+that some, as they laughed good-humoredly over Sterling's
+egregia, recalled the number of glasses of inspirited seltzer
+swallowed by the orator? He was so far in advance of the most
+radical reformer that there was no hope of overtaking him for an
+era or two: so they determined to fancy they had left him behind.
+
+
+
+V.--Party Tactics--and Political Obstructions to Social Reform.
+
+In the Club our hero revelled awhile under the protection of Sir
+Charles Sterling, and the petting of peers, Members of
+Parliament, and loungers who swarm therein. Certain gentlemen of
+Stock Exchange mannerism and dressiness gave the protege the
+go-by, and even sneered at those who noticed him with kindness.
+But then these are of the men with whom every question is checked
+by money, and is balanced on the pivot of profit and loss. I
+dare say some of them thought the worse of Judas only because he
+had made so small a gain out of his celebrated transaction. To
+foster Ginx's Baby in the Club, as a recognition of the important
+questions surrounding him, though these questions involved
+hundreds of thousands of other cases, was to them ridiculous. Of
+far greater consequence was it in their eyes to settle a dispute
+between two extravagant fools at Constantinople and Cairo, and
+quicken the sluggishness of Turkish consols or Egyptian 9 per
+cents. I do not cast stones at them; every man must look at a
+thing with his own eyes.
+
+But it was curious to note how the Baby's fortunes shifted in the
+Club. There were times--when he was a pet chucked under chin by
+the elder stagers, favored with a smile from a Cabinet Minister,
+and now and then blessed with a nod from Mr. Joshua Hale. Then,
+again, every one seemed to forget him, and he was for months left
+unnoticed to the chance kindness of the menials until some case
+similar to his own happening to evoke discussion in the press,
+there would be a general inquiry for him. The porter, Mr.
+Smirke, had succeeded, by means of a detective, in discovering
+the boy's name, but his parents were then half-way to Canada.
+
+The members of the Fogey Club opposite, hearing that so
+interesting a foundling was being cherished by their opponents,
+politely asked leave to examine him, and he occasionally visited
+them. They treated him kindly and discussed his condition with
+earnestness. The leaders of the party debated whether he might
+not with advantage be taken out of their opponents' hands. Some
+thought that a judicious use of him might win popularity; but
+others objected that it would be perilous for them to mix
+themselves up with so doleful an interest. In the result the
+Fogies tipped young Ginx, but did not commit themselves for or
+against him. Thus a long time elapsed, and our hero had grown
+old enough to be a page. He had received food, clothing, and
+goodwill, but no one had thought of giving him an education.
+Sometimes he became obstreperous. He played tricks with the Club
+cutlery, and diverted its silver to improper uses; he laid traps
+for upsetting aged and infirm legislators; he tried the coolness
+of the youngest and best-natured Members of Parliament by popping
+up in strange places and exhibiting unseemly attitudes. At
+length, by unanimous consent, he was decreed to be a nuisance,
+and a few days would have revoked his license at the Club.
+
+No sooner did the Fogies get wind of this than they manoeuvred to
+get Ginx's Baby under their own management. They instructed
+their "organs," as they called them, to pipe to popular feeling
+on the disgraceful apathy of the Radicals in regard to the
+foundling. They had him waylaid and treated to confectionery by
+their emissaries; and once or twice succeeded in abducting him
+and sending him down to the country with their party's
+candidates, for exhibition at elections.
+
+The Radicals resented this conduct extremely. Ginx's Baby was
+brought back to the Club and restored to favor. The Government
+papers were instructed to detail how much he was petted and
+talked about by the party; to declare how needless was the
+popular excitement on his behalf; and to prove that he must,
+without any special legislation, be benefited by the
+extraordinary organic changes then being made in the constitution
+of the country.
+
+Sir Charles Sterling resumed his interest in the boy. He had
+been gallantly aiding his party in other questions. There was
+the Timbuctoo question. A miserable desert chief had shut up a
+wandering Englishman, not possessed of wit enough to keep his
+head out of danger. There was a general impression that English
+honor was at stake, and the previous Fogey Government had ordered
+an expedition to cross the desert and punish the sheikh. You
+would never believe what it cost if you had not seen the bill.
+Ten millions sterling was as good as buried in the desert, when
+one-tenth of it would have saved a hundred thousand people from
+starvation at home, and one-hundredth part of it would have taken
+the fetters off the hapless prisoner's feet.
+
+There was the St. Helena question always brooding over
+Parliament. St. Helena was a constituent part of the British
+Empire. Every patriot agreed that the Empire without it would be
+incomplete; and was so far right that its subtraction would have
+left the Empire by so much less. Most of its inhabitants were
+aboriginal--a mercurial race, full of fire, quick-witted, and
+gifted with the exuberant eloquence of savages, but deficient in
+dignity and self-control. Before any one else had been given
+them by Providence to fight, they slaughtered and ravaged one
+another. Our intrusive British ancestors stepped upon the
+island, and, being strong men, mowed down the islanders like
+wheat, and appropriated the lands their swords had cleared.
+Still the aborigines held out in corners, and defied the
+conquerors. The latter ground them down, confiscated the
+property of their half-dozen chiefs, and distributed it among
+themselves. By way of showing their imperial imperiousness, they
+built over some ruins left by their devastations a great church,
+in which they ordered all the islanders to worship. This was at
+first abomination to the islanders, who fought like devils
+whenever they could, and ended by accepting the religion of their
+foes. But the conquerors, afterwards choosing to change their
+own faith, resolved that the islanders should do so too.
+Forthwith they confiscated the big church and burying-ground,
+and, distributing part of the land and spoils among their most
+prominent scamps, erected a new edifice of quite a different
+character, in which the natives swore they could neither see nor
+hear, and their own clerics warned them they would certainly be
+damned. To make the complications more intricate, these clerics
+owed allegiance to an ancient woman in a distant country, who had
+all the meddlesomeness and petty jealousy of her sex, and was,
+besides, much attached to some clever wooers of hers, wily
+sinners who covered their aims under the semblance of
+ultra-extreme passion for her. The prominent scamps died, to be
+succeeded by their children, or other of the hated conquerors,
+from generation to generation. The islanders went on increasing
+and protesting. T hey starved upon the lands, and shot the
+landlords when a few gave them the chance, for most lived away in
+their own country, and left the property to be administered by
+agents. The Home Government had again and again been obliged to
+assist these people with soldiers, to provide an armed police, to
+shoot down mobs, to catch a ringleader here or there and send him
+to Fernando Po, or to deprive whole villages of ordinary civil
+rights. Then the yam crop failed, and nearly half the people
+left the island and crossed the seas, where they continued to
+hate and to plot against those whose misfortune it had been to
+get a legacy of the island from their fathers. It would be
+wearisome to recount the absurdities on both sides: the stupidity
+or criminal absence of tact from time to time shown by the Home
+Government--the resolve never to be quiet exhibited by the
+natives, under the prompting of their clerics. Upon
+
+ "--that common stage of novelty--"
+
+there were ever springing up fresh difficulties. Secret clubs
+were formed for murder and reprisal. A body called the "Yellows"
+had bound themselves by private oaths to keep up the memory of
+the religious victories of their predecessors, and to worry the
+clerical party in every possible way. Their pleasure was to go
+about insanely blowing rams'-horns, carrying flags and bearing
+oranges in their hands. The islanders hated oranges, and at
+every opportunity cracked the skulls of the orange-bearers with
+brutal weapons peculiar to the island. These, in return, cracked
+native skulls. The whole island was in a state of perpetual
+commotion. Still, its general condition improved, its farms grew
+prosperous, and a joint-stock company had built a mill for
+converting cocoanut fibre into horse-cloths, which yielded large
+profits. The memory of past events might well have been buried;
+but the clerics, in the interest of the old woman, fanned the
+embers, and the infamous bidding for popularity of parties at
+home served to keep alive passions that would naturally have died
+out. Besides, latterly folly had been too organized on both
+sides to suffer oblivion. Everybody was tired of the squabbles
+of St. Helena. At length there was a general movement in the
+interests of peace, and to pacify the islanders Parliament was
+asked to pull down the wings of the old church edifice, remove
+some of the graves, and cut off a large piece of the graveyard.
+Some were in favor also of dividing all the farms in the country
+among the aborigines, but the difficulty was to know how at the
+same time to satisfy the present occupiers. These schemes were
+topics of high debate, upon them the fortunes of Government rose
+and fell, and while they were agitated Ginx's Baby could have no
+chance of a parliamentary hearing. Many other matters of
+singular indifference had eaten up the legislative time; but at
+last the increasing number of wretched infants throughout the
+country began to alarm the people, and Sir Charles Sterling
+thought the time had come to move on behalf of Ginx's Baby and
+his fellows.
+
+
+VI.--Amateur Debating in a High Legislative Body.
+
+While Sir Charles was trying to get the Government to "give him a
+night" to debate the Ginx's Baby case, and while associations
+were being formed in the metropolis for disposing of him by
+expatriation or otherwise, a busy peer without notice to anybody,
+suddenly brought the subject before the House of Lords. As he
+had never seen the Baby, and knew nothing or very little about
+him, I need scarcely report the elaborate speech in which he
+asked for aristocratic sympathy on his behalf. He proposed to
+send him to the Antipodes at the expense of the nation.
+
+The Minister for the Accidental Accompaniments of the Empire was
+a clever man--keen, genial, subtle, two-edged, a gentlemanly and
+not thorough disciple of Machiavel; able to lead parliamentary
+forlorn hopes and plant flags on breaches, or to cover retreats
+with brilliant skirmishing; deft, but never deep; much moved too
+by the opinions of his permanent staff. These on the night in
+question had plied him well with hackneyed objections; but to see
+him get up and relieve himself of them--the air of originality,
+the really original air he threw around them; the absurd light
+which he turned full on the weaknesses of his noble friend's
+propositions, was as beautiful to an indifferent critic as it as
+saddening to the man who had at heart the sorrows of his kind.
+If that minister lived long he would be forced to adopt and
+advocate in as pretty a manner the policy he was dissecting.
+Lord Munnibagge, a great authority in economic matters, said that
+a weaker case had never been presented to Parliament. To send
+away Ginx's Baby to a colony at imperial expense was at once to
+rob the pockets of the rich and to decrease our labor-power.
+There was no necessity for it. Ginx's Baby could not starve in a
+country like this. He (Lord Munnibagge) had never heard of a
+case of a baby starving. There was no such wide-spread distress
+as was represented by the noble lord. There were occasional
+periods of stagnation in trade, and no doubt in these periods the
+poorer classes would suffer; but trade was elastic; and even if
+it were granted that the present was a period when employment had
+failed, the time was not far off when trade would recuperate.
+(Cheers.) Ginx's Baby and all other babies would not then wish
+to go away. People were always making exaggerated statements
+about the condition of the poor. He (Lord Munnibagge) did not
+credit them. He believed the country, though temporarily
+depressed by financial collapses, to be in a most healthy state.
+(Hear, hear.) It was absurd to say otherwise, when it was shown
+by the Board of Trade returns that we were growing richer every
+day. (Cheers.) Of course Ginx's Baby must be growing richer
+with the rest. Was not that a complete answer to the noble
+lord's plaintive outcries? (Cheers and laughter.) That the
+population of a country was a great fraction of its wealth was an
+elementary principle of political economy. He thought, from the
+high rates of wages, that there were not too many but too few
+laborers in the country. He should oppose the motion. (Cheers.)
+
+Two or three noble lords repeated similar platitudes, guarding
+themselves as carefully from any reference to facts, or to the
+question whether high rates of wages might not be the
+concomitants simply of high prices of necessaries, or to the yet
+wider question whether colonial development might not have
+something to do with progress at home. The noble lord who had
+rushed unprepared into the arena was unequal to the forces
+marshalled against him, and withdrew his motion. Thus the great
+debate collapsed. The Lords were relieved that an awkward
+question had so easily been shifted. The newspapers on the
+ministerial side declared that this debate had proved the
+futility of the Ginx's Baby Expatriation question. "So able an
+authority as Lord Munnibagge had established that there was no
+necessity for the interference of Government in the case of
+Ginx's Baby or any other babies or persons. The lucid and
+decisive statement of the Secretary for the Accidental
+Accompaniments of the Empire had shown how impossible it was for
+the Imperial Government to take part in a great scheme of
+Expatriation; how impolitic to endeavor to affect the ordinary
+laws of free movement to the Colonies." Surely after this the
+Expatriation people hid their lights under a bushel! The
+Government refused to find a night for Sir Charles Sterling, and
+after the Lords' debate he did not see his way to force a motion
+in the Lower House. Meanwhile Ginx's Baby once more decided a
+turn in his own fate. Tired of the slow life of the Club, and
+shivering amid the chill indifference of his patrons, he borrowed
+without leave some clothes from an inmate's room, with a few
+silver forks and spoons, and decamped. Whether the baronet and
+the Club were bashful of public ridicule or glad to be rid of the
+charge, I know not, but no attempt was made to recover him.
+
+
+PART V. WHAT GINX'S BABY DID WITH HIMSELF.
+
+A full-formed Horse will, in any market, bring from twenty to as
+high as two hundred Friedrichs d'or: such is his worth to the
+world. A full-formed Man is not only worth nothing to the world,
+but the world could afford him a round sum would he simply engage
+to go and hang himself.--SARTOR RESARTUS.
+
+
+The Last Chapter.
+Our hero was nearly fifteen years old when he left the Club to
+plunge into the world. He was not long in converting his spoils
+into money, and a very short time in spending it. Then he had to
+pit his wits against starvation, and some of his throws were
+desperate. Wherever he went the world seemed terribly full. If
+he answered an advertisement for an errand-boy, there were a
+score kicking their heels at the rendezvous before him. Did he
+try to learn a useful trade, thousands of adepts were not only
+ready to underbid him, but to knock him on the head for an
+interloper. Even the thieves, to whom he gravitated, were
+jealous of his accession, because there were too many competitors
+already in their department. Through his career of penury, of
+honest and dishonest callings, of 'scapes and captures,
+imprisonments and other punishments, a year's reading of
+Metropolitan Police Reports would furnish the exact counterpart.
+--------
+
+I don't know how many years after his flight from Pall Mall, one
+dim midnight, I, returning from Richmond, lounged over Vauxhall
+Bridge, listening to the low lapping of the current beneath the
+arches--looking above to the stars and along the dark polished
+surface that reflected a thousand lights in its
+undulations,--feeling the awfulness of the dense, suppressed life
+that was wrapt within the gloom and calm of the hour. I suddenly
+saw a shadow, a human shadow, that at the sound of my footstep
+quickly crossed my dreamy vision--quickly, noiselessly came and
+went before my eyes until it stood up high and outlined against
+the strangely-mingled haze. It looked like the ghost of a
+slight-formed man, hatless and coatless, and for a moment I saw
+at its upper extremity the dull flash as of a human face in the
+gloom, before the shadow leaped out far into the night. Splash!
+When my startled eyes looked down upon the glancing, waving
+ebony, I thought I could trace a white coruscation of foam
+spreading out into the darkness, instantly to dissipate and be
+lost for ever. I did not then know what form it was that swilled
+down below the glistening current. Had I known that it was
+Ginx's Baby I should perhaps have thought "Society, which, in the
+sacred names of Law and Charity, forbad the father to throw his
+child over Vauxhall Bridge, at a time when he was alike
+unconscious of life and death, has at last itself driven him over
+the parapet into the greedy waters"----
+
+Philosophers, Philanthropists, Politicians, Papists and
+Protestants, Poor-Law Ministers and Parish Officers--while you
+have been theorizing and discussing, debating, wrangling,
+legislating and administering--Good God! gentlemen, between you
+all, where has Ginx's Baby gone to?
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Ginx's Baby,
+
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