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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60064 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60064)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Dorothea Beale of Cheltenham, by Elizabeth
-Raikes
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Dorothea Beale of Cheltenham
-
-
-Author: Elizabeth Raikes
-
-
-
-Release Date: August 6, 2019 [eBook #60064]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
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-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DOROTHEA BEALE OF CHELTENHAM***
-
-
-E-text prepared by MWS and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
-(http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
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-
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- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/dorotheabealeofc00raikiala
-
-
-
-
-
-DOROTHEA BEALE OF CHELTENHAM
-
-
-[Illustration: _Photo. J. C. Hughes_
-
-_Dorothea Beale_
-
-_from the portrait by J. J. Shannon._]
-
-
-DOROTHEA BEALE OF CHELTENHAM
-
-by
-
-ELIZABETH RAIKES
-
-
-Illustrated
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London
-Archibald Constable
-and Company Ltd.
-1908
-
-Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable, Printers to His Majesty
-
-
-
-
-TO ‘HER CHILDREN’
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-Miss Beale left ample materials for the history of her work. Not only
-were all business documents, such as minutes of council meetings,
-nomination papers, examination questions carefully preserved, she kept
-also all letters which could be of any interest. She went further than
-merely arranging materials for a future book. In 1900 she compiled a very
-complete _History of the Ladies’ College_. Here she traced its origin,
-growth, and expansion; here, too, she named most carefully all who by
-earnest work and self-denial, by industry, talent, or generous gift, had
-in any way contributed to its wellbeing and influence. She was anxious
-that all faithful work should be known.
-
-But Miss Beale recognised that after her death there would be a demand
-for something more. She was earnestly desirous that in any account which
-might appear of herself, the work for which she lived should have the
-first place. With her innate sensitiveness, she shrank from the thought
-of a Life. It would not indeed be possible to write a life of Dorothea
-Beale which was not also, fully and intimately, a Life of the Ladies’
-College, Cheltenham. Yet Miss Beale left some materials for the more
-personal side of the book—many letters, diaries, and autobiographical
-fragments. One paper opens thus:
-
- ‘In these days we all live in glass houses, and it seems
- useless to say, Let nothing appear in print. The life of
- the College, for which I have lived forty years, some
- reminiscences of the state of things as regards education,
- and some traces of the way in which the Potter has formed
- the vessel for the service of the household, may perhaps be
- allowed. It seems to me that the story of the inward life
- may be helpful. I should relate only those things which, on
- looking back over my long life, seem to have exercised a
- formative influence upon my own character, and tended under
- God’s Providence to fit me for the work which was given me to
- do. The circumstances and ideals of my childhood, the family
- influences, sometimes what seems a chance acquaintance, or even
- a passing remark; these viewed from within might have had an
- influence little dreamed of at the time.’
-
-I have endeavoured in this book to follow Miss Beale’s own suggestions,
-but also to give some faint idea of what she was to the many she inspired
-and taught. In her _History of the Ladies’ College_ she left little
-historical fact unmentioned: it is possible for another to show that she
-was the real founder, the main builder.
-
-Many thanks are owing to those who kindly furnished me with letters
-from Miss Beale. It was difficult to select from the very large number
-received, and it was with much regret that many had to be excluded, lest
-the book should become unwieldy.
-
-It remains but to add one word on my gratitude for the unfailing kindness
-and generous help of those who have read this book in manuscript and
-proof; to Mrs. Reynolds and Miss Bertha Synge; to Miss Helen Cunliffe who
-undertook the somewhat wearisome task of deciphering the diaries, and,
-lastly, to Miss Alice Andrews, whose name Miss Beale associated with mine
-when she asked me to write a History of the College.
-
- ELIZABETH RAIKES.
-
-_June 2, 1908._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
-
- I. CHILDHOOD 1
-
- II. QUEEN’S COLLEGE 17
-
- III. CASTERTON 36
-
- IV. AN INTERVAL 60
-
- V. CHELTENHAM 81
-
- VI. EARLY HISTORY OF THE LADIES’ COLLEGE 108
-
- VII. A ROYAL COMMISSION 134
-
- VIII. ORGANISATION 158
-
- IX. DE PROFUNDIS 179
-
- X. THE GUILD 203
-
- XI. ST. HILDA’S WORK 226
-
- XII. TEACHER AND PRINCIPAL 254
-
- XIII. PARERGA 286
-
- XIV. HONOURS 312
-
- XV. THE LAST TERM 349
-
- XVI. LETTERS 371
-
- INDEX 427
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- DOROTHEA BEALE. From the Portrait by J. J. Shannon,
- A.R.A _Frontispiece_
-
- CAROLINE FRANCES CORNWALLIS. From a Painting by
- Herself _to face page_ 4
-
- CAMBRAY HOUSE. From an Old Engraving ” 90
-
- MISS DOROTHEA BEALE, 1859 ” 108
-
- MR. T. HOUGHTON BRANCKER ” 120
-
- THE LOWER HALL, LADIES’ COLLEGE, CHELTENHAM.
- A Photograph by Miss Bertha Synge ” 216
-
- S. HILDA’S HALL, OXFORD ” 238
-
- LADIES’ COLLEGE AND GARDEN, 1908 ” 254
-
- THE EMPRESS FREDERICK AT CHELTENHAM. From a
- Photograph by Mr. Domenico Barnett ” 334
-
- DOROTHEA BEALE, LL.D. ” 340
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-CHILDHOOD
-
- ‘Wisdom goeth about seeking them that are worthy of her, and in
- their paths she appeareth graciously, and in every purpose she
- meeteth them.
-
- ‘For her true beginning is desire of discipline; and the care
- for discipline is love of her; and love of her is observance of
- laws.’
-
- _Wisdom of Solomon_, vi. 16, 17, 18.
-
-
-Dorothea Beale was born on March 21, 1831. The story of her childhood and
-youth forms a good illustration of the best education that girls of the
-early Victorian time could obtain. It gives also a glimpse of the fears
-and hopes, the silent struggles, the disappointments of many a girl who
-strove to wrest, as from a grudging Fate, the opportunity to inform and
-use her mind. As far as possible this story is told autobiographically.
-
-Miss Beale belonged to a Gloucestershire family. One ancestor, in the
-early days of the manufacturing settlement in the Stroud Valley, married
-a Miss Hyde, a relation of the Chancellor. She brought to her husband
-Hyde Court, Chalford, where Miss Beale’s brother, Mr. Henry Beale,
-now resides. Miss Beale’s own father, however, never lived there. His
-parents, who married young, settled at Brownshill in Gloucestershire, and
-here his father (Dorothea’s grandfather) died, leaving a widow aged only
-twenty-four with three children, John, Miles, and Mary, to be brought
-up on very slender means. Mrs. John Beale removed to Bath, where she
-remained till the boys left school for Guy’s Hospital. Then she came to
-live with them in Essex, where for a time they practised in partnership.
-In 1824 Miles married Dorothea Margaret Complin, a lady of Huguenot
-extraction; her grandfather had practised as a physician in Spital
-Square, one of the original settlements of the French immigrants.
-
-In 1830 the young couple with three children came to live in St. Helen’s
-parish, Bishopsgate, where a year later Dorothea, their fourth child and
-third daughter, was born. She was baptized in the ancient church of St.
-Helen’s on June 10, 1831. ‘Awoke early. Baptism Day. Read the service,’
-she wrote in her diary in 1891.
-
-The Complins were a family of wide connections. Mrs. Beale’s aunt, Mrs.
-Cornwallis, wife of the Rev. William Cornwallis, rector of Wittersham,
-Kent, was an active, benevolent woman with literary tastes and
-occupations. She took a great interest in her two young nieces, Elizabeth
-and Dorothea Margaret Complin, who at an early age lost their own mother,
-her sister. The two little girls were sent to school at Ealing, where the
-elder, Elizabeth, gained many prizes or ‘Rewards of Merit,’ as school
-prizes were then called. After her sister’s marriage to Mr. Miles Beale,
-Elizabeth Complin lived for some time with her clever aunt and cousin,
-Mrs. Cornwallis and her daughter Caroline, sharing their interests and
-studies. On the death of her brother’s wife she came to live in London.
-There she was brought into immediate touch with her nieces, Dorothea
-Beale and her sisters, whom she delighted to help and advise in their
-reading, and who by her means became familiar with the aims and ideals of
-the Cornwallises. These more distant relations, whose intellectual aims
-and work Miss Beale always reckoned among the influences of her early
-life, were themselves authors of no mean merit. ‘Mrs. Cornwallis wrote
-several devotional books, and is said to have learned Hebrew in the first
-instance to teach her grandson, James Trimmer. She wrote also for him a
-series of papers on the canonical Scriptures, in four volumes. This was
-published by subscription, as was the custom with expensive works in
-those days. The Queen and a number of great people entered their names,
-and with the profits Mrs. Cornwallis was able to build schools in her
-husband’s parish.’[1]
-
-James Trimmer died when only twelve. His other grandmother was also
-literary—Mrs. Sarah Trimmer, famous in her own day as the author of
-nearly thirty volumes for the young. Her _Sacred History_ was the most
-important of these, but perhaps the best known now is _The History of the
-Robins_.
-
- ‘One story of his childhood,’ runs the autobiography, ‘was a
- great favourite with us as children. His uncle had settled
- to sell a pony of which James was very fond, and many were
- the tears he shed. His grandmother (Mrs. Cornwallis) said, “I
- think, James, that this life is a journey upwards; each time we
- do right, or bear a sorrow patiently, we get up one step of the
- ladder to Heaven.” So he dried his eyes and was quite cheerful
- once more. Meanwhile, his uncle, seeing the boy’s sorrow,
- cancelled the sale, and brought news to James that the pony was
- his once more. Again to his surprise, James burst into tears,
- and at length it was drawn from him that he feared now he would
- have to come down from that step of the ladder. He was finally
- consoled by some such doctrine as Browning has commended in the
- words, “’Tis not what man does that exalts him, but what man
- _would_ do.” All her pupils were not as responsive as James.
- Once, after expending her eloquence on a plough-boy whom she
- was preparing for confirmation, she said: “Now, are you not
- glad that you have a soul?” to which she could only get the
- reply, “I don’t care very little about it....”
-
- ‘Mr. Cornwallis was a scholar; he was a descendant of
- Archbishop Cornwallis. I do not know any details of his
- College career; but he taught his only unmarried daughter
- Latin and Greek classics, and she gained such a rare facility
- in understanding that he used to read the classics aloud to
- her, and expect her to follow. He was a friend of Sismondi,
- from whom Miss Cornwallis received an offer of marriage,
- which she declined on the ground of great disparity of age.
- Sismondi lent her afterwards his villa at Pisa, and my aunt,
- her great friend, accompanied her there. A journey to Italy
- for two ladies was a great undertaking, and many interesting
- reminiscences used we to hear from my aunt. She there acquired
- a good knowledge of Italian, by which we benefited later.’[2]
-
-In after years Miss Caroline Cornwallis moved to Maidstone, where she
-exercised her many talents and versatile mind in varied occupations.
-Miss Cornwallis not only studied Greek, Latin, and Hebrew, but such
-questions of the day as criminal procedure; she also read philosophy.
-She wrote besides articles for the _Westminster Review_ and _Fraser’s
-Magazine_, several books in a series entitled ‘_Small Books on Great
-Subjects_—edited by a few well-wishers to knowledge.’ The first was
-_Philosophical Theories and Experience of a Pariah_. She said women were
-regarded as pariahs, and were it known that the book was written by a
-woman it would not be read.[3] Others of the series which she wrote
-were some volumes entitled _A Brief View of Greek Philosophy_, and some
-historical works, _The State of the World before the Introduction of
-Christianity_. She also wrote a classical novel called _Pericles and
-Aspasia_. Miss Cornwallis rejoiced in the fact that as a woman, though
-unknown, she obtained for her writings the praise of ‘big-wigs.’
-
- ‘“I long,” she wrote to a friend after one of her works had
- received flattering notices in the _British Medical Journal_,
- “to knock all the big-wigs together and say it was a woman that
- did all this—a woman that laughed at you all and despised your
- praise. And if, like Caligula’s wish, I could put all mankind
- into one and leave you to say that in its ears when I am gone
- quietly to my grave, I think it would be glorious. It is as
- a woman, and not as the individual C.F.C., that I enjoy my
- triumph; for, as regards my own proper self, I like to creep in
- a corner and be quiet; but to raise my whole sex and with it
- the world is an object worth fagging for. Heart and hand to the
- work.”’
-
-[Illustration: _Caroline Frances Cornwallis_
-
-_From a painting by herself_]
-
-Miss Cornwallis reflects the thought of her day with regard to women’s
-work. It was one of the tasks of her cousin, Dorothea Beale—whose
-‘fagging’ in the next generation did so much for her own sex and the
-world—to show that the best work is done when the question of what will
-be said about it does not affect it one way or the other.[4]
-
-The authorship of the _Small Books_ was a well-kept secret.
-
- ‘We did not know who wrote the books till after her death,
- though my aunt, who gave them to us, often stayed with her as
- her amanuensis. Miss Cornwallis was a skilled handworker, too.
- Before the Society for Home Arts existed she learned to bind
- books for her library. She was no mean artist, and her portrait
- of herself in her library is considered very successful. I
- have heard how she fitted up a marionette theatre for the
- amusement of friends. I did not know her personally; she died
- when I was young; but the talk of her ability and knowledge,
- and the association with my aunt, Elizabeth Complin, who
- was her friend, had much to do with calling out my literary
- ambition.’[5]
-
-The Beales were a very large family, with more than twenty years between
-the eldest and youngest children; and all those things which make home
-life at once precious in itself and valuable as a training for the
-world’s work were theirs to a full extent: mutual love and toil and
-suffering, the elder serving the younger, the little ones looking up to
-the wise elder sisters, the constant practice of all those qualities
-which are the law of a well-ordered religious home. Both parents from the
-midst of their own absorbing personal occupations found time to lead out
-the mental abilities of their children, by reading aloud to them, giving
-verses of Scripture and poetry to be learned by heart, and finding time
-to hear them repeated. The home atmosphere was serious and intellectual.
-Dorothea said she owed much to the literary tastes of her parents. ‘I
-shall never forget,’ she said, ‘how we learned to love Shakspere, through
-my father’s reading to us, when we were quite young, selected portions. I
-still remember the terror which, as a very small child, I felt as I heard
-Portia pronounce the verdict. I thought Shylock had really gained the
-day.[6]
-
-‘History and general literature we would read with our mother, and listen
-with delight to her stories of the eventful era she had lived through.’
-
-Miles Beale, like his wife, belonged to a family with cultivated tastes
-and interests. Among his relations he could reckon the eminent geologist
-and archæologist, William Symonds,[7] rector of Pendock, Gloucestershire,
-whose daughter married Sir Joseph Hooker. In connection with his friend
-the Rev. Charles Mackenzie, vicar of St. Helen’s, and others, Mr. Beale
-joined a committee known as the Literary Society, of which he became
-honorary secretary, for the institution of lectures in Crosby Hall. A
-library and evening classes were also formed, and these became in time
-the basis of the present City of London College for young men. He was
-much helped by Miss Maria Hackett, well known for her diligent efforts
-to rescue old endowments which, granted for girls’ education, had been
-alienated to boys. Mr. Beale, who was fond of music, was also a prime
-mover in getting up concerts of sacred music. ‘This made us acquainted
-with some musicians, and amongst others with Mrs. Bartholomew and her
-husband, the friend of Mendelssohn, who translated many of the German
-songs. He was a most interesting and cultivated man, an artist and
-dramatist.’[8]
-
-The growing children were often allowed to be present when their father’s
-friends came, and thus silently heard much thoughtful and intellectual
-conversation. They looked up to him as to one who expected them to care
-for books and for matters of public moment, and he strove to interest
-them in his own pursuits and reading, and to give them a taste for what
-was really good. ‘“Blessed are the pure in heart”—poor Swift,’ he said
-one day as he handled a volume of the great satirist. ‘That,’ said
-Dorothea long after, ‘was the best literature lesson I ever received.’
-The daughter must have resembled her father both in literary taste and
-zeal. This busy man, who found time to pursue so many interests, would
-accuse himself of being ‘naturally idle.’ It may come as a surprise to
-many who knew the strenuous life at Cheltenham to find this was a fault
-of which the Principal constantly accused herself.
-
-One friend who was much with the Beales, often dining with them on
-Sundays, was Charles Mackenzie, then headmaster of St. Olave’s Grammar
-School, and successively vicar of St. Helen’s, Bishopsgate, and St.
-Benet’s, Gracechurch Street, and prebendary of St. Paul’s. Dorothea felt
-she owed much to his teaching; he prepared her for confirmation in 1847.
-As children she and her brothers and sisters attended St. Helen’s. Again
-to quote her autobiography:
-
- ‘To come to the nearer influences of my childhood. There was
- the faith of my parents, the morning and evening prayer. There
- was the Bible picture-book and the Sunday lessons. The church
- we went to was an old one, St. Helen’s, and at the entrance
- were the words, “This is none other than the House of God, and
- this is the Gate of Heaven.” There were high pews, and the
- service was almost a duet between clergyman and clerk, yet I
- realised, even more than I ever have in the most beautiful
- cathedral and perfect services, that the Lord was in that
- place, even as Jacob realised in the desert what he had failed
- to find at home. There was over the East window an oval coat
- of arms with strange scrolls which seemed to have eyes, and
- reclining on each side two life-sized golden angels. This thing
- seemed to speak strangely to my spiritual consciousness. Our
- clergyman must have read well. I remember how, as the story of
- the Crucifixion was read, the church would grow dark, as it
- seemed. There were no hymn-books, only a few hymns pasted on a
- card, and generally we sang from Tate and Brady. I know nothing
- of the substance of the sermons now, but I remember the emotion
- they often called forth, and how I with difficulty restrained
- my tears. There was a Tuesday evening service, at which I
- suppose there were never a dozen present, but I found there
- great help, and to be obliged to go elsewhere on that night was
- a great privation. The hymns were a great power in my life. I
- remember the joy with which I would sing, in my own room, Ken’s
- Evening Hymn, and the awful joy of the Trinity hymn, “Holy,
- holy, holy.”
-
- ‘The books that we read most on Sunday—for no secular book was
- allowed—were Mant’s Bible with pictures, which were explained
- by my mother, and a book of Martyrs with dreadful pictures;
- Bunyan’s _Pilgrim’s Progress_, with the outline drawings, and
- a number of tracts, such as Parley the Porter, and stories of
- good and bad children.
-
- ‘An aunt, my godmother, lived with us, and was often my
- friend in my childish troubles. I shall not speak much of
- the governesses we had in succession, because they left but
- little impression on my inner life, nor need I speak of all my
- brothers and sisters, except so far as they come into my inner
- life. The strongest influence was that of my sister Eliza. We
- were constantly together. She had a very lively imagination,
- and on most nights would tell me stories that she had invented.
- Early in the mornings she would transform our bedroom into some
- wild magic scene, and we would play at Alexander the Great, and
- ride Pegasus on the foot of our four-post bedstead. I remember
- now how Mangnall furnished her with mental pictures of heathen
- gods, which were cut out in paper and painted. London children
- had no outdoor games.’[9]
-
-The elder daughters were at first educated by daily governesses. Dorothea
-said that among her earliest reminiscences about 1840 were those relating
-to the choice of a governess.
-
- ‘My mother advertised and hundreds of answers were sent. She
- began by eliminating all those in which bad spelling occurred
- (a proceeding which as a spelling reformer I must now condemn),
- next the wording and composition were criticised, and lastly a
- few of the writers were interviewed and a selection was made.
- But alas! an inspection of our exercise-books revealed so many
- uncorrected faults, that a dismissal followed, and another
- search resulted in the same way. I can remember only one really
- clever and competent teacher; she had been educated in a good
- French school and grounded us well in the language.’[10]
-
-Memory preserves the name—Miss Wright—of the lady who earned this word of
-praise. When she left, the girls were sent to school.
-
- ‘It was a school,’ again to quote Miss Beale’s own account
- of her education, ‘considered much above the average for
- sound instruction; our mistresses were women who had read and
- thought; they had taken pains to arrange various schemes of
- knowledge; yet what miserable teaching we had in many subjects;
- history was learned by committing to memory little manuals;
- rules of arithmetic were taught, but the principles were never
- explained. Instead of reading and learning the masterpieces of
- literature, we repeated week by week the Lamentations of King
- Hezekiah, the pretty but somewhat weak “Mother’s Picture” of
- Cowper, and worse doggrel verses on the solar system.’[11]
-
-The arrangements were doubtless similar to those of the period in all
-schools of the same kind, such as were described by Miss Beale in one of
-her early articles on the Education of Girls.
-
- ‘I know one school,’ she wrote, ‘existing to the end of the
- first half of the nineteenth century, in which the terms were
- not less than £100 a year. The following was the arrangement of
- hours: Rise at seven o’clock ... Lessons till eight; breakfast,
- consisting of bread and butter, with extremely weak coffee;
- lessons till twelve, luncheon, consisting of bread and butter,
- or bread and jam, and “turns” till one o’clock. These “turns”
- consisted in going thirty times post haste round and round the
- garden; they could scarcely be accomplished unless the luncheon
- were carried round in the hand and eaten _en route_. Lessons
- from one o’clock until three forty-five. Dinner four o’clock,
- and “turns” in fine weather immediately following, as after
- luncheon. Lessons until eight, then tea, and bed at nine.’[12]
-
-The school was at Stratford, and it lent perhaps a personal reminiscence
-to a favourite line of Chaucer’s _Prologue_, on which, in the literature
-lessons at Cheltenham, Miss Beale never failed to dwell.
-
- ‘After the scole of Stratford atte Bowe,
- For Frensch of Parys was to hire unknowe.’
-
-She always had a horror of schoolgirl French, and the practice at one
-time so common of permitting no talk except in French.
-
- ‘Our thinking power was hindered from developing by intercourse
- with one another, because we were required to speak in a tongue
- in which we could indeed talk, but in which conversation was
- impossible; and the language we spoke was one peculiar to
- English boarding schools.’[13]
-
-Young as Dorothea was when she went to school, she was no doubt
-distinguished there for her industry and ability, and certainly for her
-conscientiousness. A little story of this remains. On one occasion she
-fainted in church, and when some kindly hand removed her bonnet, she
-revived, and clung to it desperately, because she would not have her
-head uncovered in church. The weary rounds in the garden lingered in
-the memory of those who performed them, and there were those who would
-tell in after years how faithfully the little Dorothea would perform her
-‘turns,’ while some girls were not above cheating a little.
-
-The school-days were not prolonged, for ‘fortunately,’ she says,—
-
- ‘Ill-health compelled me to leave at thirteen, and then began
- a valuable time of education under the direction of myself,
- during which I expended a great deal of energy in useless
- directions, but gained more than I should have probably done at
- any existing school; dreaming much, and seeking for a fuller
- realisation of the great spiritual realities, which make one
- feel that all knowledge is sacred. We had access to two large
- libraries; one that of the London Institution, the other that
- of Crosby Hall; besides which the Medical Book Club circulated
- many books of general interest, which were read by all and
- talked over at meal-times and in the evening, when my father
- used often to read aloud to us. Novels rarely came our way, but
- we found pasturage enough. We read a great deal of history:
- the works of Froissart, Thierry, Thiers, Alison, Miller’s
- _Philosophy of History_, Sir James Stephen’s books, Prescott’s,
- Creasy’s stand out very distinctly to memory.’[14]
-
-The reading of a book named _Scientific Dialogues_ she counted also as
-an era in her mental history. All the good reviews of the time, the
-_Edinburgh_, _Quarterly_, and _Blackwood’s Magazine_, came in her way,
-with books of travel and biographies. She made elaborate tables on all
-sorts of subjects, some of which in neat handwriting may still be seen.
-She had access to all Whately’s works, and worked up alone his _Logic and
-Rhetoric_.
-
-This unwearied study was no accumulation of knowledge for its own
-sake, it was the outcome of a true if youthful admiration for what
-was noble and good. ‘I worshipped for years Isabella of Castile. Sir
-James Stephen’s essay on George the Third filled my imagination with
-magnificent visions; his Port Royalists were my ideal characters;
-especially was Pascal a hero, I read and re-read his _Life and Provincial
-Letters_.’[15]
-
-Pascal’s life perhaps breathed for her a spirit of emulation. ‘I borrowed
-a Euclid, and without any help read the first six books, carefully
-working through the whole of the fifth, as I did not know what was
-usually done. It did not occur to me to ask my father for lessons in
-such subjects.’[16] She also made some way with algebra, and calculated
-for herself the distance to the moon. Much time, she owned, was wasted
-by working alone. But the very difficulties proved a source of help,
-showing her the value of knowledge acquired by effort and search, as
-opposed to mere information received from another. In all her reading
-she received both help and sympathy from her aunt, Elizabeth Complin,
-who herself understood Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, had considerable taste
-for mathematics, and was fond of philosophy. She was one of the first
-subscribers to Mudie’s. The London Library was also a mine of wealth to
-the young readers.
-
-Outside her home, the chief educational influence for Dorothea at this
-period must have been the lectures of the Literary Institution at Crosby
-Hall, and more especially the Gresham Lectures. She attended some of
-these in company with a younger sister, who often grew weary and
-hungry when Dorothea, after a long morning’s work, would stay to talk
-abstrusely with a professor, or linger over a bookstall on the way home
-to dinner. The professor was probably Mr. Pullen, of whose lectures on
-astronomy she wrote that they ‘inspired a passionate desire to know
-more of mathematics, and to understand all the processes described. I
-obtained books on mechanics and spelt them out as well as I was able, but
-was often baffled. The mysteries of the Calculus I pored over in vain
-... not knowing that I lacked the knowledge which alone could make it
-intelligible.’[17]
-
-Dorothea’s educational fortune proved itself to be better than that of
-the Prioress, for in 1847 she was sent with two elder sisters, their
-characters ‘ripe for observation,’ to Mrs. Bray’s fashionable school for
-English girls in the Champs Elysées. This school, kept by English ladies,
-was supposed to offer a good English education, as well as French.
-
- ‘Imagine our disgust,’ writes Miss Beale, ‘at being required
- to read English history in Mrs. Trimmer, to learn by heart all
- Murray’s grammar, to learn even lists of prepositions by heart,
- in order that we might parse without the trouble of thinking.
- I learned them with such anger that the list was burnt into
- my brain, and I can say it now. The “Use of the Globes,” too,
- we were taught, and very impertinent was I thought for asking
- a reason for some of the tricks we were made to play with a
- globe under the direction of Keith. We used indeed to read
- collectively Robertson’s _Charles the Fifth_, i.e. it was read
- aloud on dancing evenings. Each class went out in succession
- for the dancing lesson; thus no one read the whole book, though
- the school in its corporate capacity did. I felt oppressed with
- the routine life; I, who had been able to moon, grub, alone for
- hours, to live in a world of dreams and thoughts of my own,
- was now put into a cage and had to walk round and round like a
- squirrel. I felt thought was killed. Still, I know now that the
- time was well spent. The mechanical order, the system of the
- French school was worth seeing, worth living in, only not for
- long.’[18]
-
-One personal glimpse we have of the sisters at school in a letter of Mr.
-Beale’s to Dorothea: ‘I thought your last letter very nicely written;
-tell Eliza so, though it did not apply to hers. She does not write
-much, though in the right spirit too: but a genteel hand is of great
-importance. I am aware it requires much practice.’
-
-The old-fashioned word exactly describes the neat, fine, pointed
-handwriting, which is preserved for us in two or three French
-exercise-books of the time. This writing soon after began to suffer
-from too much of the German character, and later still more from unduly
-ambitious haste. There is also in existence a thin book of _dictées_
-signed _Dorothée_, belonging to this period. The teacher has written at
-the foot of one or two of these, after the enumeration of a few omitted
-commas and accents, a word surely inapt as bestowed on this pupil,
-‘_Etourdie_.’
-
-The school was brought to an untimely end by the Revolution of 1848, when
-a mob surrounded the house demanding garden-tools as firearms. These were
-not available, but Miss Bray faced the men and persuaded them to leave
-quietly. Before this incident occurred Dorothea Beale and her sisters had
-been fetched home by a brother, who did not, however, leave Paris without
-taking them round the city to see as much as they could of the movements
-of the Revolution.
-
-This return from school may be considered the close of childhood; for
-Dorothea was now seventeen. A grave and quiet girl, so we learn from
-one or two friends of her youth, with a sweet, earnest expression, and
-deliberate speech; also with a sunshiny smile and a merry laugh on
-occasion. She was remarkable even in a studious, sedentary family for her
-love of reading and study. For her the fields of literature had taken
-the place of those other fields and gardens now held to be a necessity
-for the best development of children’s bodies and minds. But her life
-in the less favourable surroundings of a great city was made bright by
-‘the light that never was on sea or land, the consecration and the poet’s
-dream.’ The joys of imagination and fancy, the delight of entering into
-the thoughts of the great, were hers, and lifted her above what was small
-and trivial. She knew also, and from babyhood seems to have known, a
-stern side of life. An innate sense of duty, that guide she never failed
-to observe, already hedged her steps, protecting her strong, eager spirit
-from flights of ‘unchartered freedom,’ leading it through restraint and
-self-denial towards a glorious liberty.
-
-There was plenty to do at home; younger sisters to be taught and
-schoolboys’ lessons to be superintended. The boys were at Merchant
-Taylors’ School, where the education was neither better nor worse than
-in other public schools of the day. Such as it was, it gave Dorothea
-a horror of the old-fashioned methods by which boys were taught Latin
-and Euclid, without intelligence and without sympathy. It was one of
-her tasks at this time to aid in the daily grind of this uninteresting
-work. Mrs. Frederick Sewell, an old friend of the family, remembers the
-boys going off to their lessons under the supervision of the clever
-elder sister. Uncongenial as must have been to her the work of directing
-boys already wearied with a long day at school, it was evidently done
-in a spirit of dutifulness and high endeavour. In 1876, a brother, the
-Reverend Edward Beale of the Society of St. John the Evangelist, Cowley,
-wrote to her after what proved to be a final parting: ‘Our lives seem
-wonderfully linked together, and I am more conscious every year how much
-my life has been influenced by your early teaching. If I had followed
-that way of _Duty_ I should have found the entrance less rugged to the
-more excellent way.’ Nor was the task a wasted one for Dorothea herself.
-She determined, she tells us, to follow her brothers’ lessons on her
-own account as well as theirs, and thus was enabled to gain a thorough
-knowledge of Latin grammar.
-
-The younger sisters remember the careful and regular teaching given them
-by the elder ones, the quiet instructive games they were encouraged to
-play with little pictures from Greek mythology, and the rewards bestowed
-on industrious pupils. It is on record that Dorothea herself dressed a
-doll for a little sister’s birthday.
-
-For she was by no means unequal to feminine pursuits. She could be what
-is called _useful_ at home; the inevitable sock-darning which falls to a
-girl’s portion in a family of many boys was not neglected; though carried
-on simultaneously with the mental exercise of learning German verbs.
-An exquisitely fine piece of tatting remains to testify to skilfulness
-of fingers, as well as to the perseverance she more gladly devoted to
-intellectual efforts. Such was the interleaved New Testament, a monument
-of patient toil, into which she copied in very small writing whole
-passages of comment from the Fathers and other writers. So full of work
-was the home life that there can have been scarcely any leisure; but a
-few so-called holidays were spent in rubbing brasses in the ancient city
-churches. There was full occupation even for the strenuous spirit of
-Dorothea Beale, in the interests and affairs of home, but a wider field
-for her energies was to open with the gates of Queen’s College in 1848.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-QUEEN’S COLLEGE
-
- ‘Long shall the College live and grow,
- When we three sleep in peace,
- And scholars better far than we
- Its glory shall increase.’
-
- _Eliza Beale on the Jubilee of Queen’s College._
-
-
-Mr. Llewelyn Davis rightly said that the establishment of Queen’s
-College was an epoch in women’s education. Like that of all really great
-institutions, its development and growth were an outcome of the needs
-of the time. But the movement which led up to it was ‘not from beneath
-but from above. It was compassion in the hearts of a few good men which
-moved them to help a forlorn class of solitary and ill-paid workers, that
-seemed the immediate cause. A little band of men full of faith and good
-works came to the help of a man whose influence was quiet but strong.’
-The good man of whom Miss Beale thus spoke was David Laing, who was vicar
-of Holy Trinity Church, Kentish Town, from 1847 to 1858. Good he was, in
-many senses of the word: a man of education, wide culture, and personal
-force. He showed both large-hearted charity and wisdom in dealing with
-the needs of those for whom it was his duty to care, and he was ready to
-make any self-sacrifice required in carrying out his schemes for them.
-
-In 1843 he became Honorary Secretary of the Governesses’ Benevolent
-Institution, a position he occupied till his death in 1860, and the
-lamentable state of women’s education, particularly that of professing
-teachers, was brought forcibly before him. The society, which had had
-a kind of passive existence only for two or three years, began at once
-under Mr. Laing to develop manifold activities. Within a year the work
-of help for which it was primarily intended was in full swing, and its
-scope of usefulness was enlarged by the establishment of a registry and a
-scheme for granting diplomas to governesses.
-
-It was soon found to be a real difficulty to know the efficient teacher
-from the mere pretender. For the lack of education is frequently seen in
-an assumption of knowledge. In the days when women were required to teach
-everything, a confession of ignorance on almost any subject was regarded
-as a disgrace. The advance of true education is marked by the fact that
-it is no longer necessary for a governess to pretend to knowledge she
-does not possess.
-
-It was soon seen that if the registry for teachers was to be of any
-value, some test must be established for the women it undertook to
-recommend. The first efforts at examination revealed such depths of
-ignorance, that the further necessity of instructing those who wished
-to avail themselves of the society’s diplomas was perceived. This need
-happily coalesced with the generous plan of Miss Murray, Maid of Honour
-to the Queen. She seems first to have thought of a college for women, and
-had already received donations of money towards such an object. These
-she transferred to Mr. Laing, when in 1844 he entered into communication
-with the Government respecting the establishment of a college. In 1847
-Queen Victoria graciously gave her permission for the adoption of the
-title ‘Queen’s College,’ and a house in Harley Street, adjacent to that
-occupied by the Governesses’ Benevolent Institution was taken. Mr. Laing
-then called upon some of the Professors of King’s College to help him in
-the work by giving lectures to governesses and others, and it was largely
-owing to their talent and unwearied kindness that the College became
-rapidly so successful.
-
-It should not, however, be thought that Queen’s College was destined
-by its founders solely to help governesses, though in this direction
-its usefulness was immediately seen. Miss Murray and Mr. Laing, like
-Alfred Tennyson and others less immediately interested in the scheme,
-looked beyond such direct results to the larger needs of women. The time
-had come when it was recognised that marriage could not be the lot of
-all,—that there might be purpose and interest in a woman’s life even
-when she could not be married, and that to use marriage merely as an
-escape from an empty impoverished existence was an act unworthy of a good
-woman. Women were now willing to fit themselves for life independently
-of marriage, and for this end were seeking intellectual development.
-Therefore the founders of Queen’s College planned that the education
-should be general, and not merely an initiation into a craft which a
-governess might learn as if she were a member of a certain guild. For the
-governess herself, it was surely best that she should be educated as if
-she had interests in common with the rest of her sex, and for all women
-it was needful that they should seek means to inform, occupy, and control
-their own active minds and ‘wandering affections.’ Mr. Laing thought
-with compassionate horror of the wasted lives of many women, of their
-capabilities and sympathies which were meant to enrich the lives of
-others, degraded by misuse or disuse into positively harmful activities.
-After Queen’s College had been opened for some months he wrote, in words
-which some will recognise as a favourite quotation of Miss Beale’s, ‘the
-fate of some victim of a conventional marriage, or of a life of celibacy
-ending in deranged health, is particularly sad and pitiful. Like the
-daughters of Pandarus who, after being nurtured by the goddesses and fed
-on honey and incense by the Graces, are snatched away by the Harpies,
-“And doomed for all their loving eyes, To serve the Furies who hate
-constantly.”’
-
-Miles Beale was among those who shared such thoughts for women. It was
-his aim to give his daughters every opportunity to cultivate their minds
-and pursue any path of knowledge they should desire. Above all, he wished
-that they should not regard marriage as a necessity.
-
-The inaugural lecture on the opening of Queen’s College was delivered
-by the Rev. F. D. Maurice, the first Head of the College, on Wednesday,
-March 29, 1848. As his inspiring but stern words fell upon the ears of
-Dorothea Beale, we may well believe that the sense of vocation which
-must early have grown for her out of her natural dutifulness, became
-to her more clearly shaped. Certainly, in reading them now, we feel we
-are tracing back to its source a stream of that thought with which she
-herself in due time awed and inspired many a young teacher. ‘The vocation
-of a teacher is an awful one; you cannot do her real good, she will do
-others unspeakable harm if she is not aware of its usefulness. Merely
-to supply her with necessaries, merely to assist her in procuring them
-for herself ... is not fitting her for her work. You may but confirm
-her in the notion that the training of an immortal spirit may be
-just as lawfully undertaken in a case of emergency as that of selling
-ribbands. How can you give a woman self-respect, how can you win for her
-the respect of others, in whom such a notion or any modification of it
-dwells? Your business is by all means to dispossess her of it; to make
-her feel the greatness of her work, and yet to show her that it can be
-honestly performed.’
-
-The speaker went on to deal with the word ‘Accomplishments,’ a word which
-at that time was supposed to cover the whole of a woman’s education; and
-he pleaded that something more than finish, something substantial and
-elementary was needed for those whose duty was ‘to watch closely the
-first utterances of infancy, the first dawnings of intelligence;—how
-thoughts spring into acts, how acts pass into habits. Surely they ought,
-above all others, to feel that the truths which lie nearest to us are the
-most wonderful ... that study is not worth much if it is not busy about
-the roots of things.’
-
-Again, with what responsive if silent joy must the girl who had toiled
-alone at Euclid and Algebra have heard his encouraging words on
-Mathematics, then held to be an unfeminine pursuit. ‘To regard numbers
-with the kind of wonder with which a child regards them, to feel that
-when we are learning the laws of number we are looking into the very laws
-of the universe,—this makes the study of exceeding worth to the mind
-and character; yet it does not create the least impatience of ordinary
-occupations; ... on the contrary ... it helps us to know that nothing is
-mean but what is false.’
-
-The concluding thoughts of Mr. Maurice’s address must be familiar to
-Cheltenham pupils: ‘The teacher in every department, if he does his duty,
-will admonish his pupils that they are not to make fashion, or public
-opinion, their rule ... that if these are their ends, they will not be
-sincere in their work or do it well.... Colleges for men and women ...
-exist to testify that opinion is not the God they ought to worship.’ We
-can hardly realise, after nearly sixty years of the liberal education won
-for us largely through this first concerted effort of earnest men and
-women, the trembling joy and diffidence of those pupils,—some of them
-mere girls, some already themselves engaged in the work of teaching,—who
-formed the first classes in Harley Street. We have become so accustomed
-to the new order of things then inaugurated, that their allusions to
-Tennyson’s _Princess_, their fear of being regarded as _outré_ seem to
-us almost self-conscious and unnecessary. Professor Maurice opened his
-address with an apology for the word ‘College’; on another occasion he
-spoke of the project as ‘equally extravagant if not equally imaginative
-with that lately set forth by our great poet.’ Miss Wedgwood recalls
-dismay under the ‘witless laughter roused by the mention of the College
-after I had been its pupil for more than a year.’
-
-Nor was this all. A more annoying opposition took shape in articles
-in the _Quarterly_ in which the theological opinions of the lecturers
-were attacked. The writer found fault in the first place on such points
-as these: the early age of admission was likely to lead to desultory
-education; the absence of proper framework and machinery, and the want of
-proper authority were to be deplored; the low rate of payment might lead
-governesses availing themselves of the classes to get by their means a
-smattering of knowledge. He then proceeded to attack the professors for
-a ‘sort of modified Pantheism and Latitudinarianism prevailing in their
-so-called theology,’ adding that the lecturer on English Composition
-distinguished himself above the rest of his company by the ‘Germanisms
-embroidered on his prose.’ Mr. Laing took up a vigorous pen to answer
-the _Quarterly_, and in defence of Maurice, Kingsley, and the rest,
-exclaimed: ‘These men are doing a righteous and godly work in the face of
-heaven and earth.’
-
-It is a wonderful history. Remarkable, too, were the women and girls who
-seized the advantages offered them, who were waiting almost literally for
-the College doors to be opened. Mrs. Davenport, then Miss Sarah Woodman,
-records with natural pride the fact that she was the first pupil. She was
-quickly followed by Miss King, and we may be sure that the three Miss
-Beales were not far behind them.
-
-Among the earliest pupils beside those already named, were Miss Buss,
-Miss Frances Martin, Miss Jex-Blake, Miss Elizabeth Gilbert, and Miss
-Adelaide Anne Procter, whose simple holland dress without ornament, bands
-of dark hair, pale complexion, and regular features are noted for us by a
-young fellow-student, Miss Wardell. And the teachers were worthy of the
-pupils. Among the lecturers and examiners were the Rev. F. D. Maurice,
-the Rev. E. H. Plumptre, afterwards Dean of Wells, the translator of
-Dante, the Rev. Charles Kingsley, the Rev. R. C. Trench, then Dean of
-Westminster, afterwards Archbishop of Dublin, John Hullah, W. Sterndale
-Bennett, Dr. Brewer the historian, Professors Bernays and Brasseur.
-These are well-known names, but there were many others almost forgotten
-to-day, who were interesting and inspiring teachers. There were no
-lady-teachers at first, but Miss Beale enumerates with grateful words a
-staff of lady-visitors, ‘who undertook, of course gratuitously, the often
-burdensome duty of chaperoning. Lady Stanley of Alderley, stately and
-beautiful all her life, but especially then; Mrs. Wedgwood, the daughter
-of Sir James Mackintosh, so clever and kind, whom everybody liked;
-Miss Elizabeth Twining, Lady Monteagle, and Lady Page Wood were often
-present; and a Mrs. Hayes, of whom I have lost sight, was one of the most
-diligent. I never happened to meet Lady Canning, she went to India almost
-immediately.’
-
-Before tracing Miss Beale’s own connection with Queen’s, it is worth
-while to read the following letters written to her by Miss Buss in 1889,
-in which the working of the College, especially with regard to the
-evening classes, is shown in a detailed and personal way:
-
- _January 13, 1889._
-
- ‘Queen’s College was distinctly an outcome of the Governesses’
- Benevolent Institution. It was found that governesses living
- in the Home in Harley Street were often very ignorant, and
- Mr. Laing, a University man himself, asked some of the King’s
- College professors to give some lectures to the ladies living
- in the Home, so that they might be better informed when leaving
- to take a situation. The professors responded, some lectures
- were given, but it soon became evident that outsiders must be
- admitted to help to pay expenses—so the College was opened in
- 1848....
-
- ‘Mr. Laing kept his original idea before him, and soon induced
- some of the professors to give, free of charge, courses of
- evening lectures to women actually engaged in teaching. I was
- a member at the very outset, being the youngest woman then
- attending the evening lectures. A very able man, Mr. Clark,
- Principal of Battersea, gave a splendid course of Geography
- lectures (of England, I think), Mr. Cock took Arithmetic, Mr.
- Brewer, Latin translation—he was a first-rate teacher. Some
- one else took Latin Grammar, Mr. Laing gave Scripture. The
- first term I attended six nights a week, the second, four. F.
- D. Maurice took Elizabethan Literature somewhat later; Trench
- gave his lectures on English from his manuscript notes, and how
- delightful they were! English Past and Present, etc. I do not
- remember Kingsley, I was not introduced to him until many years
- after. Nicolay gave Ancient History, and was not popular....
-
- ‘Queen’s College began the Women’s Education Movement
- undoubtedly, but it became conservative, and did not grow....
- There was a Rev. A. B. Strettel, who taught grammar well, but
- only to the day-students, I think. Recalling the old days in
- this way takes one back to one’s youth. Queen’s College opened
- a new life to me, I mean intellectually. To come in contact
- with the minds of such men was indeed delightful, and it was
- a new experience to me and to most of the women who were
- fortunate enough to become students.... Believe me, as always,
- yours affectionately and admiringly,
-
- FRANCES M. BUSS.’
-
-In reply to some questions from Miss Beale in answer to the above, Miss
-Buss wrote again on January 17, 1889:—
-
- ‘The day classes were of course attended by girls and women
- from outside. I attended the evening classes in 1849. Our
- school was opened in 1850, and then as we began with sixty
- girls, and ended the first quarter with eighty, I had not time
- to attend and work as I had done before. Mr. Laing always
- wanted to help women teachers, and he was strong enough to get
- the King’s College men to teach governesses gratuitously in the
- evening, each professor only attending one night in the week.
- The men had plenty of work and pay for their day lectures.
- The evening classes went on for some time, and were very well
- attended by women, all of whom were teaching. Some of these
- women (I among them) presented themselves for the irregularly
- conducted examinations, for which certificates were offered.
- Each professor did as he liked, he saw the candidate alone—at
- any rate in my case it was so—told her to write answers to
- questions set by him, asked a few _vivâ voce_ questions, and
- then gave a certificate. No papers were printed, therefore no
- one could know what line the examiner would take. I have three
- of these certificates. Later, the examination became more
- formal and more valuable; a sort of standard was created.’
-
-Dorothea Beale was, as a matter of fact, strictly a pupil of Queen’s
-College for an even shorter time than her great contemporary. But there
-for the first time she obtained the object of her ambition—mathematical
-training, given by Mr. Astley Cock. Of this she characteristically
-remarked, ‘as the class was small I could go at my own pace. The work
-was however elementary, and as I had read a good deal alone, I found
-private lessons necessary.... I read with him privately Trigonometry,
-Conics, and the Differential Calculus.’ After a time Miss Beale was asked
-to help in teaching mathematics, and in 1849 was appointed the first
-lady mathematical tutor. ‘I had the _entrée_ of any class I liked, being
-tutor, and attended at various times—Latin, Greek, German, and Mental
-Science.’ She speaks also of the delight she had ‘at the opening of a
-Greek class by Professor Plumptre. The class, it is true, languished and
-died in less than two years. For nearly a year it consisted of myself and
-a friend, and most thoroughly did we enjoy reading Plato and Sophocles
-under such a teacher.’ Miss Beale also much enjoyed an interesting German
-literature class held by Dr. Bernays.[19] The formal reports of progress
-made, of attendance, and even of good conduct at the classes may still
-be seen. The attendance, it goes without saying, was always regular, the
-conduct very good, and the progress most satisfactory.
-
-In 1854 Mr. Plumptre required help with the Latin tuition, and asked Miss
-Beale to take a junior class. In the same year she was offered the post
-of head teacher in the school under Miss Parry, from whom she says she
-received ‘much kindness, and learned from her many valuable lessons; we
-travelled abroad together during one long vacation.’
-
-Queen’s College, both by the tuition it afforded, and the experience
-it gave in teaching and managing classes, was an important factor in
-Dorothea Beale’s training for her life’s work. There was a yet further
-advantage in its certificates. Miss Beale and her sisters, like Miss
-Buss and others engaged in the work of education, desired and obtained
-from the College diplomas certifying their ability to teach. These were
-obtained by examinations, which in the earliest days were conducted in
-the manner described in Miss Buss’s letter already quoted. Miss Dorothea
-Beale herself spoke with unmitigated pleasure of her first examination
-conducted by Professor Maurice. ‘The _vivâ voce_ was a delightful
-conversation; he led us on by his sympathetic manner and kindly
-appreciation, so that we hardly remembered he was an examiner’; and she
-says later, ‘I remember to this day what a pleasant hour we had of _vivâ
-voce_; his wonderful power of intellectual sympathy came out, and made
-us forget that we were being examined; he seemed to take pleasure in
-following up our thoughts on the bearings of the history we had read,
-so that it appeared we were holding a delightful conversation on the
-subject. Again, in speaking of language, he wanted not merely formal
-and conventional grammar, and showed such pleasure when a grammatical
-definition was enlarged beyond the scope of ordinary school-books.’
-
-It should be remembered that the examination which proved to be so
-‘delightful’ was on the result of her own private reading encouraged
-by home sympathy, and a few public lectures. The questions asked were
-of wide scope; some were quite simple, almost superficial; others were
-framed so as to draw upon intelligence or a reserve of knowledge.
-
-The educational certificates of sixty years ago, the first ever given,
-have a great and touching interest for those who love to follow the
-development of intellectual advance. The simple way in which the
-advantages offered by the examinations held by the Committee of Queen’s
-College are set forth speaks of effort and hope, unconnected with the
-school routine and studied preparation made necessary by the large and
-complicated system of the present day. Below the lists of Patrons,
-Committee, and Lady Visitors, it is stated that the Committee is prepared
-to give certificates in any of the following subjects: The knowledge of
-Scripture; English Grammar and Literature; History, Ancient or Modern;
-French, German, Italian, Latin, Greek, Hebrew, etc.; Music, Vocal or
-Instrumental; Arithmetic, Algebra, Geometry; Geography, Geology, Natural
-Philosophy, Botany, etc.; Drawing, Painting in any style; Principles and
-Methods of Teaching. To this truly magnificent offer,—infinite indeed
-if any value is to be attributed to ‘etc.’—is attached the note: ‘As it
-would be absurd to suppose that any governess could combine all these
-varied subjects, the List is offered, that Parents may select those to
-which they attach most importance; and may observe how the certificates
-meet their wishes.’
-
-Miss Dorothea Beale obtained six of these certificates, and four of the
-later ones, granted under slightly different conditions. The first, dated
-June 12, 1848, for English Literature and English Grammar, states that
-the examiner, Professor Maurice, is of opinion that Miss Dorothea Beale
-‘has shown much intelligence, and a very satisfactory acquaintance with
-these subjects.’ The diploma bears also, as do the other certificates,
-the signature of Mr. Laing, the Honorary Secretary, and of the Rev. C. F.
-Nicolay, Deputy Chairman, and afterwards called Dean of Queen’s College.
-Mr. Nicolay was also Librarian of King’s College. The next certificate,
-for French, is only three days later in date, June 15, 1848. On this,
-Professor Isidore Brasseur states that he considers Miss Dorothea Beale
-‘well qualified to teach that language (which she speaks fluently, having
-acquired it in France) theoretically and by practice.’ The two diplomas
-gained in December of the same year are of even greater interest for her
-pupils at Cheltenham. The first of these, dated December 11, 1848, and
-signed by the Rev. Thomas Jackson, Principal of the Battersea Training
-College, who had examined her in the Principles and Method of Teaching,
-states that ‘she has paid praiseworthy attention to the subject, and
-is likely to become an accomplished teacher.’ We note the office of
-the examiner. Already then, in 1848, itself a mere infant, elementary
-education was giving the lead in this important subject; for when at
-last, after a long day of desultory and often unfruitful toil, those who
-were the professed teachers of the rich sought to learn the meaning and
-methods of their work, they found that they could only do so in England
-from the teachers of the poor.
-
-The date of the next certificate, December 26, shows how much these
-diplomas were dependent on voluntary and individual attention, and
-opportunity on the part of the examiners. This, signed by Professor
-Plumptre, states that in her knowledge of Holy Scripture, Miss Dorothea
-Beale exhibits ‘a very intimate knowledge of its history and Scripture.’
-On January 16, of the following year, a certificate for Geography was
-signed by Mr. Nicolay, who is of opinion that ‘she has studied the
-subject carefully in its details, and that her knowledge in its various
-branches is satisfactory.’
-
-In November 1850 Miss Beale received from her mathematical tutor, the
-Rev. T. Cock, a certificate of efficiency in Arithmetic, Geometry,
-Algebra, and Trigonometry. He is of opinion that ‘she has acquired a
-sound knowledge of the first principles of these four subjects, showing
-considerable ingenuity in the application of them to examples and
-problems; that she possesses the power of defining and distinguishing
-with clearness and brevity, and that appreciation of mathematical
-reasoning which, if further cultivated, will enable her to study with
-success those treatises on Natural Philosophy which require a knowledge
-of the exact sciences.’
-
-In 1855, after the certificates had become classified, this diploma was
-exchanged for a first-class certificate. And in the course of these later
-years she received two other first-class certificates, one for Latin, and
-one for German; and, for pianoforte playing, a second-class certificate,
-signed by W. Sterndale Bennett. For this was required the performance
-of the more important sonatas of Mozart (without accompaniments), the
-early sonatas of Beethoven, the ‘Lieder ohne Worte’ of Mendelssohn, and
-Cramer’s Studies. This must have been for Dorothea Beale a period of
-happy and fruitful life and work, during which her interests enlarged
-in many directions. The connection with Queen’s College brought much
-congenial acquaintance, while at home she was working vigorously at
-German and still following the classical work of her brothers.
-
-In 1851 Miss Beale’s family removed to 31 Finsbury Square, then a great
-medical centre; thirty-one houses were occupied by medical men. There
-were friends to share her aims and interests. Among these we specially
-note Mrs. Blenkarne and Miss Elizabeth Alston. To the first of these
-Dorothea confided her hopes and aims, and gained from her sympathy and
-help, a boon she never forgot. The links of the friendship so begun ran
-on throughout her life. Mrs. Blenkarne’s daughters and great nieces were
-educated at Cheltenham.
-
-In Elizabeth Alston Dorothea had a friend of her own age—a friend who
-survives to tell of the many happy hours the young girls spent together,
-of the books they read and discussed, their philanthropic works, and
-dreams of good. Dorothea, always fond of teaching, gladly instructed
-her friends. Miss Alston learned from her to read St. Mark in Greek,
-and in return taught her to sing. ‘We would linger long at the piano,
-as I sought to make her convey by her singing the depth of meaning in
-the words, “But the Lord is mindful of his own.” She told me it was a
-revelation to her.’
-
-As late as 1902 Miss Beale wrote to that friend of her youth: ‘I think
-with gratitude of those lessons you gave me in singing; this, I believe,
-has helped much to make me able to teach without fatigue. “In questa
-tomba oscura” was fine for a chest voice. I suppose you are as much
-interested in music as ever.’ And in 1903, with an allusion to those
-designs on all knowledge which the friends had shared, she wrote:
-‘Sanscrit is very fascinating; my Sanscrit studies were cut short by my
-coming here.’
-
-The vacations of this period were spent sometimes at watering-places like
-Brighton, or Blackheath, where she would be in charge of the younger
-members of the family. To this day is remembered her conscientious way
-of taking them for a walk with her watch in her hand. Sometimes she went
-to Germany or Switzerland, where she took every opportunity of studying
-schools and methods of education. She was most happy in her work. The
-actual teaching, apart from the subject, was in itself a delight. That
-power of inspiration which she held should be one of the gifts a teacher
-should earnestly covet, was already hers. This was felt not only by the
-elder pupils, whose minds under her guidance opened to the interests
-of Latin and mathematics. The children in the school knew it also. An
-unexpected tribute from one of these once reached Miss Beale, when the
-parent of a pupil wrote: ‘I have just learned from my little girl that
-the Lady Principal of the Cheltenham Ladies’ College was my dear and
-valued teacher of olden days, at Queen’s College.... I assure you I
-have never ceased to cherish a warm affection for you, and I have never
-forgotten your great kindness to me in Harley Street.’ In 1905, at the
-time of the College jubilee, one who had been a child pupil of Miss
-Beale’s wrote to her: ‘The few months during which I was under your
-tuition more than fifty years ago were an epoch to me. Young as I was,
-I ever afterwards judged teaching by the standard set by yours, and
-very seldom indeed, I may truly say, has it been subsequently reached.
-The fifty years that have since passed, full as they have been, have
-never effaced the impression then received, both of your teaching and
-of something more comprehensive than teaching, which contact with you
-engendered, and which impels me to take this opportunity—late in the day
-as it is—to express and to thank you for.... I had a most keen desire to
-visit Cheltenham and the buildings and institutions which embody in so
-grand a manner the impress which my childish mind received.’
-
-There is also ample evidence that the professors and lady-visitors of the
-College highly esteemed Miss Beale’s work there. ‘The flattering regard
-in which you are held at Queen’s,’ wrote her father to her just after she
-had left the College, are words fully justified by other letters which
-exist.
-
-It is clear that this spring of work was full of hope and delight, as
-well as of scrupulous effort. Dorothea Beale possessed at this time
-a growing confidence in her own powers, educational ideals which were
-slowly shaping themselves, and a consciousness of her fitness for the
-work on which she was engaged.
-
-Then, at the end of 1856, the connection with Queen’s College came rather
-abruptly to an end by Miss Beale’s own wish. She appears to have been
-some time feeling that there was a tendency for the whole administration
-of the College to get too much into the hands of one person; and that
-there was consequently not enough scope for that womanly influence
-which she felt to be so important where the education of young girls is
-concerned. She returned to her work after the summer holiday of 1856—a
-holiday spent in visiting Swiss and German schools—to find the power of
-the lady-visitors more restricted than ever. In fact, she said, ‘the time
-had come when it could be truly said, “the lady-visitors have no power.”’
-As she was not in a position to effect the changes she desired, she sent
-in her resignation, and her friend and fellow-teacher, Miss Rowley, did
-the same. The actual moment for doing this in November seems to have
-been decided for Miss Beale by hearing she could obtain the post of
-head-teacher at Casterton.
-
-Miss Beale’s connection with Queen’s College had been long and close, and
-her gratitude to it was so great that she hoped to be allowed to resign
-without explanation. This was during the headship of Dr. Plumptre. When
-Miss Beale’s resignation reached him, he urged her to make the reasons
-for it known, and his letter on the subject shows something of the
-consideration in which she was held.
-
- ‘If there is an evil which cannot be remedied, are you right
- in leaving those to whom the welfare of the College is very
- dear to all the discomfort of feeling or imagining that there
- is something amiss without giving them any clue to that which,
- whatever it be, has been at all important enough to lead you
- to resign? Are you right in exposing the College itself to the
- consequence of the construction which will inevitably be put
- upon your conduct—whether that construction be true or false?
- I may form three or four conjectures as to the motives that
- have led you to this decision—but it is all guess work—I think
- the decision itself to be deplored. We shall lose an able
- and earnest fellow-worker. You will lose a position of great
- usefulness—you give up a work to which you have been called and
- opportunities of doing good. I believe that these lamentable
- results might have been avoided, but it is too late for this;
- there is at any rate time for the openness which, I think, we
- have a right to look for.
-
- ‘I will not end without thanking you for your consideration
- in calling to tell me what you had done, and for all the
- assistance you have given me in my College work.—I am, yours
- most sincerely,
-
- E. H. PLUMPTRE.’
-
-Miss Beale finally gave the desired explanation with full detail and this
-preface:—
-
- ‘Before consenting to answer any questions, I think it right
- that we should state that when we sent in our resignation, we
- naturally supposed we should be allowed to do so without being
- required to give any reasons.
-
- ‘It was only after several weeks of resistance that, at the
- earnest appeal of Mr. Plumptre, who placed it before us as a
- moral duty, that we at last reluctantly consented to speak to
- him and to the Lady Visitors. From the course we adopted, I
- think you will see we are prompted [solely] ... by a desire for
- the good of a College in which we feel the warmest interest.’
-
-The defects she deplored—pioneer mistakes she called them later—were
-then enumerated in detail, and she dwelt especially on the hindrance to
-education caused by so much authority being left to one individual, who
-could not possibly be in a position to know the abilities and standard of
-work of every pupil. Much harm, she pleaded, had been done
-
- ‘by withdrawing pupils from the school, compelling them
- without my consent and contrary to the wishes of their parents
- to attend College classes, although they are unable to spell
- correctly and are ignorant of the first principles of grammar;
- classes in which you know it is impossible to give that
- individual attention required by children of twelve, who, owing
- to the rank from which so many of our pupils are now derived,
- are singularly deficient in mental training, and require to be
- obliged in extra time to do work given them; to be trained,
- watched, educated by ladies (who alone can understand, and
- therefore truly educate) girls. My pupils in the school are not
- removed by competent professors who understand the subjects
- there taught. The instruction which is in itself good, and if
- given four or five years later would be beneficial, has been
- rendered useless.’
-
-On learning Miss Beale’s reasons for leaving, and that her decision was
-irrevocable, Mr. Plumptre wrote: ‘I wish to state at once that I believe
-most thoroughly that what you have done has been done conscientiously
-because it seemed to you—painful as it was—to be in the line of duty.’
-But before this letter reached her, Dorothea had accepted another post,
-that of head-teacher in the Clergy Daughters’ School at Casterton.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-CASTERTON
-
- ‘O lift your natures up:
- Embrace our aims.’
-
- TENNYSON, _The Princess_, ii.
-
-
-‘It was a year full of great suffering mingled with a peace which the
-world cannot give.... I look on this as one of the most profitable years
-of my life, but I could not long have borne the strain of work and
-anxiety.’
-
-Thus, long after, when in the distance of years the events of earlier
-life could be seen in their relation to each other and to the future,
-Miss Beale wrote of the year at Casterton. But she did not often
-speak of it. To the end it gave her pain to go in thought over that
-time of loneliness and strain. Even late in life, if she entered into
-conversation about it, she would turn from the subject saying it
-distressed her too much; ‘some other time she would try’ to speak of
-it. But, none the less, she knew she had gained much at Casterton. She,
-who was ever ready to learn from mistakes, from pain, from adverse
-circumstances, gratefully acknowledged her debt to all that had shown her
-the real difficulties of her vocation, and her own weakness, and which
-had deepened her consciousness of the only source of strength. Some lives
-are led so much at haphazard, that it really hardly appears to matter
-whether at any given period they have taken one direction or another. In
-the lives of those who, like Dorothea Beale, are always conscious of an
-over-ruling and ordering Power, every year is not only known, but seen
-to have its place. The very errors, nay failures, are sunk deep into
-the foundations to become supports to the House of Life which, under
-the direction of the Master Builder, is rendered more stately with each
-added touch of Time. Hence, this year—not a successful one, as success is
-generally reckoned—has its special interest.
-
-It was a year in which she learned much, not only about herself
-individually, but of feminine human nature in general. Those matters
-which she longed—and longed ineffectually at the time—to re-arrange in
-the system and time-tables she found existing at Casterton, prepared
-her for the organisation of the great school to which she was shortly
-afterwards to be called. Daily contact with many, who were more or less
-out of sympathy with her, must have been useful for one whose work was
-largely to be in the direction of influence on women and girls of varying
-natures and opinions. Doubtless the very loneliness of the position was
-bracing to her sensitive nature. ‘Above all,’ she had written to Mr.
-Plumptre when she accepted it, ‘it involves leaving home.’ She had seen
-from the first how hard a trial this would be to her, but strength and
-insight were won out of the suffering it cost.
-
-The manuscript account from which the opening words of this chapter are
-taken, and which has been quoted before, was written many years ago.
-As late as 1905 Miss Beale wrote to Canon Burton, the present vicar of
-Casterton and chaplain to the school, that she felt she owed much to
-it, and ‘in grateful remembrance of her connection with it’ founded a
-scholarship from the school to Cheltenham. The first Casterton-Beale
-scholar is now at the Ladies’ College.
-
-There were many reasons why Dorothea Beale could neither be happy nor
-rightly appreciated at Casterton in 1857. She went at a difficult moment
-when the school had not recovered from the relaxed discipline consequent
-on the troubles of the year before. There had been a serious outbreak of
-scarlet fever, the Lady Superintendent herself being one of the victims.
-The head-teacher had left in September, and it was not convenient to
-supply her place before the end of the half-year. The ‘School for
-Clergymen’s Daughters’ is one, like many others, of which it is the
-reverse of disparagement to say that its present is far above its past.
-And it is permissible to think that if Miss Beale had found herself in
-any other large boarding-school of the period, she would have encountered
-many of the same difficulties and disappointments as those which beset
-her life at Casterton. Of this school she wrote much later, describing
-it as she felt it to be when she was there, that it was ‘in an unhealthy
-state. There was a spirit of open irreligion and a spirit of defiance
-very sad to witness; but the constant restraints, the monotonous life,
-the want of healthy amusements were in a great measure answerable for
-this.’[20] A strange tale this to us, who know of the walks and rambles,
-the games and matches enjoyed by the girls of Casterton to-day.
-
-But the causes of her dissatisfaction were by no means due entirely
-to the school, for the engagement seems to have been entered upon on
-Miss Beale’s part without a real understanding of all that it involved.
-Her father hints this when he writes, ‘perhaps we were to blame in not
-learning more.’ She was engaged, not by the Lady Superintendent, but
-by a member of the Committee, who probably did not explain matters so
-fully as a woman might have done. The work was taken up in a moment of
-impulse, as if she were glad of the opportunity it suggested of sending
-in her resignation to Queen’s College, instead of waiting till Christmas,
-as she had at first intended. Those who knew her best did not expect her
-to be happy in it. Mr. Plumptre wrote: ‘I am glad to hear you have found
-so important a work before you as that at Casterton. It may have altered
-within the last few years, as otherwise I should not have thought its
-tone, religious as well as social, likely to be congenial to you.’
-
-She had never lived away from home for any length of time. The short
-periods of school life had been shared with sisters. The north was an
-unknown land with which the Beale family had no connection. She knew
-nothing of country life. She would be entirely among strangers, and that
-alone, for a shy and sensitive nature, is often a great trial, while
-boarding-school life, such as existed at Casterton, was practically
-unknown to her. The salary was smaller than what she had received at
-Queen’s College. But in leaving Queen’s College she lost far more than
-salary. There she had been a beloved teacher, a valued tutor whose
-resignation was deplored; at Casterton she was simply a new governess.
-Her judgment was surely at fault in thus hastily and almost impulsively
-accepting such a post. Though she may have greeted the offer as guidance
-in her difficulty about leaving Queen’s, she must have known that at
-Casterton it would be impossible for her to work in accord with religious
-opinions which were alien to her; also that in going so far she was
-cutting off much that was congenial and delightful from her life—such as
-home, friends, libraries, lectures.
-
-Though Mr. Beale obviously doubted if his daughter could be happy in the
-atmosphere of Casterton, he did not fail to perceive the ideal side of
-the work there. Appreciating the aims and generosity of the founders of
-the school, he held that from the great advantages it offered, it ought
-to become a national institution. She too went to her post there in
-something of a missionary spirit. Her success with her classes, and with
-pupils of different ages, justified her in feeling that she would be able
-to introduce fresh and better methods, while the very fact that a teacher
-of her individual experience had been chosen pointed to the belief that
-the authorities were anxious to bring the school into line with the
-advance of women’s education.
-
-Casterton is a small village, near Kirby Lonsdale, in Westmoreland,
-where that county touches Lancashire and Yorkshire. Even to-day railway
-communication is defective, and the country thinly populated, so that the
-school in its isolated position is constrained to be as self-sufficing
-as possible. The beauty of its surroundings may surely be reckoned among
-its advantages, for it is placed amid lovely country within sight of
-Ingleborough. Members of the school speak with delight of rambles over
-the surrounding fells. Perhaps Miss Beale’s habit of thinking over her
-lessons out of doors began here, for she afterwards told Miss Alston of
-the long lonely walks she used to take at Casterton.
-
-This well-known school was founded in 1823 by Mr. Carus Wilson in order
-to help the clergy of the Church of England, principally those of the
-northern dioceses. Many of the clergy of the north were known to be
-absolutely unable to provide any education for their children, who at
-home led the simplest life with bare necessaries only. Several of these
-were received, boarded, educated, and partially clothed free, and the
-terms for all were ludicrously small. These facts should be remembered
-when comment is made upon the régime at Casterton, or at Cowan Bridge,
-where the school was originally placed, a position far less favourable
-and healthy than its present one.
-
-It should also be remembered that Dorothea Beale had never herself known
-what it was to be poor; she could hardly realise, for instance, the
-comfort that might exist in the uniform school dress for children whose
-parents were actually too poor to provide them with proper clothing.
-
-As an institution the school was destined not only to assist the poor
-clergy, but, springing as it did from devoted religious effort, to save
-souls and promote the highest kind of education. It was from the first
-definitely associated with those ‘Calvinistic opinions’ on account of
-which the Bishop of Chester had rejected its founder for ordination in
-1814.[21] The dark horror of Calvinism, permitted doubtless as a scourge
-after much open irreligion and careless living, was in mercy overruled
-in countless instances for the conviction of sin, and generally to
-prepare the way for a wider and more comprehending acceptance of the
-grace which is in Christ Jesus. But its direct results on the education
-of the young were disastrous indeed. Hearts, by its agency, were turned
-to stone, or depressed into hopeless terror; worst of all, religious
-forms, phraseology, even emotions were assumed by those who were prone to
-self-deception, or over anxious to please.
-
-About 1845 Mr. Carus Wilson’s health broke down as a consequence of
-his unsparing and strenuous labours, and the management of his schools
-passed into the hands of others. In 1857 the Clergy Daughters’ School was
-governed by a Committee of six clergymen, all personal friends of the
-founder, men of good standing in the neighbourhood. Archdeacon Evans was
-Chairman. This Committee sought to obtain the best teachers possible for
-what was then—even more than now—an out-of-the-way place, as far as the
-centres of education were concerned. They also aimed at fitting the girls
-in the school to earn their own living.
-
-High testimonials were given to Miss Beale by the professors and
-lady-visitors of Queen’s College, on her appointment as head-teacher
-at Casterton. One from Prebendary Mackenzie is of special interest, as
-it shows that in accepting the work she had not in any way identified
-herself with the particular religious views then prevailing in the
-institution.
-
- ‘WESTBOURNE COLLEGE, BAYSWATER ROAD, _November 1856_.
-
- ‘I am happy to be able to give very satisfactory replies to
- your enquiries respecting Miss D. Beale. She is a young lady of
- high moral and religious character, sober-minded and discreet.
- Her parents have been careful to avoid party views, and I have
- no doubt Miss Dorothea Beale is free from them. She certainly
- is a most conscientious person, with a deep sense of her
- religious responsibilities. I feel certain that her influence
- will always be for good.’
-
-Mr. Plumptre wrote to the Lady Superintendent:—
-
- ‘I am unwilling that (Miss Beale) should enter on her work
- at Casterton without your hearing from me ... the high
- opinion which I entertained both as to her attainments and
- her conscientiousness in discharging any duties that may be
- assigned her.... I am convinced that in receiving her at
- Casterton you will gain a fellow-worker in whose zeal and
- Christian principle you may place entire confidence.’
-
-And Mr. Denton:—
-
- ‘I should esteem any institution fortunate that had her
- services. She is a person of quiet, sincere piety, and an
- intelligent Churchwoman.’
-
-Dorothea Beale went to Casterton on the Epiphany, January 6, 1857. Her
-diary of 1891 records the memory of this and of the Holy Eucharist at St.
-Bartholomew’s at six o’clock, before her long day’s journey, a journey
-which ended almost in terror, so alarming to this daughter of the City
-were the ‘high, wild hills and rough, uneven ways’ which had to be
-crossed between the railway station and the school.
-
-At first, as was natural, she seems to have thought she would like
-her work. Mrs. Wedgwood, writing to her in February, says: ‘I felt so
-much our loss in you that I could hardly join in the wishes of the
-lady-visitors of Queen’s that you might find your new work pleasant.
-However, I am truly glad now that you find your new home more agreeable
-than you had been led to expect, and that you think the children are
-happy, and times are unlike Jane Eyre.’
-
-Very soon the strain of teaching the large number of subjects required
-to be taught began to be felt. A less conscientious worker might have
-entered lightly upon these at a period when only the most superficial
-textbook knowledge was required; but to Dorothea Beale, to whom each
-lesson meant much preparation and thought, they soon became a burden.
-She said afterwards that the work left her no time for exercise or
-recreation, and not enough for sleep. She found herself expected to
-teach Scripture, arithmetic, mathematics, ancient, modern, and Church
-history, physical and political geography, English literature, grammar
-and composition, French, German, Latin, and Italian. Of the last she had
-written when she accepted the post: ‘I do not know much of Italian, I
-will, however, take lessons till Christmas.’
-
-It was obviously impossible for one person to teach all these subjects
-properly, and it is not surprising that Miss Beale soon wrote home that
-she found the work hard; she does not seem to have complained of anything
-else. She said, among other things, that she took eight Bible-classes
-every week, two of which consisted of about fifty girls at a time. Her
-father replied with the evident intention of bracing and cheering:—
-
- ‘Employment is a blessed state, it is to the body what sleep
- is to the mind.... I cannot be sorry when I hear you are fully
- employed. I am sure it will be usefully, and then by and bye
- when the body and the mind alike have perished, and work and
- sleep are no longer needed, but the soul shall burst into
- existence, how shall we wonder at the willing slaves we have
- been during our probation, for the meat which perishes. You see
- I am thoughtful,—it is fit.... I feel I can bear your being
- so far and so entirely away, with some philosophy, and I am
- delighted that your letters bear the tone of contentment, and
- that you have been taken notice of by people who seem disposed
- to be kind to you.... You will see I have not a thing to
- tell you, and I cannot now write any more about thick coming
- fancies, but give an old man’s love to all your pupils, and may
- they make their Fathers as happy as you do. God bless you, my
- dear Dorothea.’
-
-This letter was written in March 1857. Shortly after came another for her
-birthday on the 21st, showing how much her absence from home was felt,
-and that the parents were doubtful if she were in the right place.
-
- ‘God bless you and give you many happy birthdays. I fear the
- present is not one of the most agreeable; it is spent at least
- in the path of what you considered duty, and so will never be
- looked back upon but with pleasure.... Do not, however, my
- dear girl, think of remaining long in a position which may be
- irksome to you, for thus I think it will hardly be profitable
- to others, and indeed I question whether you would maintain
- your health where the employment was so great and duty the only
- stimulus to action. You have heard me often quote: “The hand’s
- best sinew ever is the heart.”’
-
-In May another letter is evidently called forth by some expression of a
-longing to be at home, and perhaps by hints of difficulties from Dorothea.
-
- ‘_May 1857._
-
- ‘I think I feel the weeks go more slowly than you do. I long
- to see you again very much. I cannot get reconciled to your
- position and feel satisfied that it is your place.... God bless
- you, my dear girl, and blunt your feelings for the rubs of the
- world, and quicken your vision for the beautiful and unseen of
- the world above us.’
-
-The last words show how well her father knew the sensitive nature hurt
-even by trifles, and prone to take small matters too seriously.
-
-So the long half wore on, and we know, from some of the few who remain to
-tell, that Miss Beale was making her mark at Casterton. There were many
-there who could appreciate her careful work and inspiring lessons. Some
-found especially valuable her accurate teaching of Latin and mathematics,
-and the enormous pains she took to make her lessons intelligible to
-the dullest; never content to let them merely accept a given fact or
-explanation, but leading them on step by step to see and comprehend.
-Her literature classes, again, led some into a new world of ideas and
-thoughts, and they responded to the thrill of some noble and beautiful
-line which would cause their teacher’s eyes to fill with tears as she
-read. One, who was Miss Beale’s pupil in the first class at Casterton at
-this time, speaks of it with extreme gratitude:—
-
- ‘I was seventeen, and had only had home teaching before.
- Great was the delight to be taught by one whom you felt to be
- complete mistress of any subject she undertook. I was a dunce
- at Arithmetic and Euclid. She cut slips of paper to illustrate
- the Pons Asinorum, etc., and with her aid I mastered the first
- book of Euclid, which has always been useful to me. Latin
- grammar we also learned from Miss Beale. She instilled strict
- accuracy by making us write verbs and declensions from memory.
- Out of class she showed us much friendliness, inviting us to
- her room in the evening, when sometimes she would read aloud
- to us, sometimes tell us about the students at Queen’s. It
- interested us to hear of those not very young ones who wore
- caps. Her appearance, as I remember it then, was charming.
- Her figure was of medium height. The rather pale oval face,
- high, broad forehead, large, expressive grey eyes, all showed
- intellectual character. Her dress was remarkable in its
- neatness. She wore black cashmere in the week, and a pretty,
- mouse-coloured grey dress on Sundays.’
-
-A little notebook remains to show how she prepared her lessons; how
-little she was content with repetition acquired by rote. There are also
-one or two little books of Scripture notes belonging to this time,
-interesting as the first of an immense series, marking the beginning
-of the work which was to be her great means of influence. One of these
-is on the Book of Proverbs, a book she never read again with a class;
-it was probably not her own choice at this time. The lessons she drew
-from it were of the most practical nature for daily life, and contain
-much teaching on true and false unworldliness. She had even then the
-satisfaction of knowing that her Bible teaching was acceptable to many.
-She wrote home: ‘Several of the first class make a practice of taking
-notes and afterwards copy them out into a book. This I never tell them
-to do, nor do I so far encourage it as to look at the notes after they
-are written. In the lower part of the school I do not allow them to take
-notes without special permission.’
-
-Some notes on the Church services show traces of the pain she felt over
-instances of irreverence which she had seen in the school. Those who
-remember the almost awful silence in which Miss Beale’s Scripture lessons
-at Cheltenham were given, how she wished it to signify the humility and
-reverence of spirit necessary for those who would study God’s Word, can
-understand how she must have suffered when she saw flippant and careless
-behaviour at prayers and Bible classes.
-
-Amongst the numbers of children, many who had been comparatively untaught
-before they were brought into this continual round of religious exercise,
-it is not surprising to find that there were some who disliked the
-appeal made to heart and conscience, and who found this strict sense of
-reverence irksome. There was even one naughty girl who in these first
-days refused to attend Miss Beale’s classes.
-
-It is clear that Miss Beale conveyed to her classes and to her
-fellow-workers, that she had come to Casterton in a missionary spirit.
-Though there were many who could appreciate her sacrifice in doing this,
-it placed her at a disadvantage with others. She knew herself to be in
-the forefront of women’s education, she knew that this school, for all
-the excellent intention of the authorities, could not be abreast of the
-movement; but she failed to realise, until she personally experienced it,
-that a self-appointed guide is not always welcomed.
-
-In the summer holidays, which Miss Beale spent at home, it was noticed
-that she was much depressed. The second half-year’s work began in August.
-Doubtless she had talked over her difficulties, and her parents knew
-that she might soon give up her work. Soon after her return she seems to
-have written very strongly about things she would have liked to alter.
-Especially was she troubled by the low tone prevailing, the want of
-respect for authority, the mischief making and unhealthy friendships.
-She found this important school through which pious intention and effort
-strove to help the very poorest by protecting them from all dangerous
-influences, by instilling definite religious opinions of a certain
-type, by giving such an education as should be an effective means of
-livelihood, very far from being the ideal college of her dreams. She
-began to specify her dissatisfaction and to form ideas for radical
-improvement. She thought its isolation against it, and that it was a
-drawback to have only one class of girls; she felt there should have been
-more communication with home,—some of the children did not even go home
-for the holidays;—that the life was too monotonous and uniform. Above all
-she deprecated a repressive system which had punishments but no prizes;
-a system in which all the virtues were negative, the highest obtainable
-being obedience to the ever-repeated ‘Thou shalt not.’
-
-It was not possible for Dorothea Beale to see anything wrong, and to act
-as if in any way consenting to it, by going on quietly with her own share
-like one not called upon to take a leading part. She felt that steps
-might be taken to improve some of the matters which distressed her, and
-after efforts which seemed to her ineffectual, she sought an interview
-with the Committee. Her father was kept fully informed of what she was
-thinking and striving to do, as may be seen by the following extracts
-from his letters to her:—
-
- ‘_1857._
-
- ‘I think we must be content to wait, at any rate for the
- present, and see if any good comes from your interview with the
- Committee. You notice two points chiefly,—the low moral tone of
- the school, and the absence of prizes. The want of sympathy and
- love (the great source of woman’s influence in every condition
- of life) was the prominent feature of the establishment in my
- mind, after talking it over with you. But nothing can flourish
- if love be not the ruling incentive, and this must be awakened
- by the teacher and Principal showing that for it they sacrifice
- any consideration of self. This I know my dear girl, you
- entirely do, and you do it ineffectually, nay, perhaps worse
- than uselessly, if you are not supported. But, as you have
- gone so far, be not easily discouraged. Weigh the matter well
- before this Christmas, and if you find no changes are made, the
- same cold management continued, with the negation of confidence
- in the pupils as instanced in the matter of letters, etc.,
- send in your resignation, and above all, state your reasons as
- they bear upon the school, and upon yourself and the class you
- represent.
-
- ‘I cannot contemplate your not coming up at Christmas. As we
- grow older, each year makes us more desirous of the company of
- those we love; perhaps because we feel how soon we shall part
- with it altogether, perhaps because we are become more selfish,
- but such is the fact.’
-
-And again on the same subject:—
-
- ‘_September 2, 1857._
-
- ‘I cannot think you would be right to say you sought to be
- put into communication with the Committee because you heard
- that they were not satisfied. Surely your application [to see
- them] came first. I wrote because I thought the position and
- designation of head-teacher to you implied responsibilities
- in connection with the authorities; because you thought the
- general moral tone of the school lower than it should be, and
- the discipline to correct it defective; because your counsel
- was not sought, or, if given, not much heeded. Perhaps we were
- to blame in not learning more, that the head-teacher was only
- an ordinary teacher at Casterton. But the world would [think it
- more]; and your own experience of classes ought to enable you
- to be a judge of what was reasonable to expect in the bearing
- of pupils, both educational and general. I know your feelings,
- not to quit hastily what you have chosen, and considered a
- post of duty, and in writing upon the subject I try to put
- out of the question my own feelings and those of your mother
- to have you at home, or at least nearer home, and really to
- view the matter from the same point of view as yourself. Your
- remaining at Casterton is, I think, only to be entertained if
- such changes in the management are made as are likely in your
- view to raise the character of the establishment. I feel your
- own education and standing are worthy of better things [than
- the position] of an ordinary teacher at Casterton, and of a
- better salary. But I cannot doubt if you fairly and without
- hesitation state your objections and views, you will convince
- some at least that you are acting independently and without
- any personal feelings ... I am much as I was, anxious about
- you all, conscious how little I can do, and praying that we
- may all see clearly that the game of life, whoever may be the
- players, is not one of chance or destiny; ... Write to me when
- you can—Ever your affectionate father,
-
- MILES BEALE.’
-
-It was unusual though not unknown for a teacher at Casterton to appeal to
-the Committee, and the six gentlemen who composed it, were not very eager
-to hear Miss Beale. They may have suspected personal motives, and some
-of them, no doubt, mistrusted her religious principles. Miss Beale has
-left notes of her interview, so interesting to us, as the first occasion
-on which she tried to gain her own ends—always the best—from a body of
-persons who were in the position of directors of education. It suggests a
-contrast with the Cheltenham Council meetings of her last years, when her
-lightest wish had weight.
-
-The way had been prepared for her by letters which had passed between the
-chairman (Archdeacon Evans) and her father. In her first interview, which
-was of a preliminary nature, she began by saying: ‘I wished before saying
-anything, to know whether it was their wish to hear what I had to say, or
-whether they would rather I did not speak. There was a hesitation. Then
-Mr. Morewood, in rather a doubtful way said they were always willing.
-I said I understood from the Committee last time, and the Chairman’s
-letters to my father, that they wished it; then the others joined in with
-“Oh yes, certainly.”’ After making her statements on the need for reform,
-Miss Beale concluded by saying she should be happy to resign if the
-Committee were dissatisfied. The reply was: ‘Oh no, certainly not.’
-
-At a second interview, the Committee allowed her to put before them
-her own suggestions for alterations. On this occasion Miss Beale began
-with a testimony to what the Lady Superintendent had effected in the
-school; then mentioned the prevailing faults which so much distressed
-her, especially irreverence and unsuitable language; then boldly went on
-to point out the details of the system which might easily be improved,
-notably, that some prizes might be given, and that letters to and from
-parents should not be supervised. She said:—
-
-‘I think an institution in which the government is entirely by
-punishments not likely to produce the best moral effects. I think that
-reports should be sent home more frequently than twice a year.’ On being
-asked to give instances of disregard of religion, she mentioned one
-or two in general terms, saying she should not think it right to give
-individual examples. Mr. Rose replied by saying, ‘Unfortunately, such
-things will occur in large schools; perhaps you came expecting to find
-clergymen’s daughters better than others.’ Some discussion took place on
-the subject of prizes, during which ‘occurred the very sapient remark
-that we do hear of angels being punished, but not of their going up
-higher, etc.... I afterwards explained what I meant by rewards, viz.,
-distinctions, privileges, and the opportunity of doing good ... and I
-concluded by saying that unless I felt that the institution were doing
-moral good I should not care to stay.’
-
-The interview had been less disagreeable than she had anticipated; she
-thought her complaint had had a fair hearing, and in spite of the strain
-of work and the anxiety connected with it, she felt her efforts were not
-wasted.
-
- ‘So many,’ she wrote home, ‘ask if they may come and speak
- to me; more of them listen when I talk of religion, and come
- privately to ask advice which I know they try to follow. I do
- feel that I am of use.... I believe I ought to wait here until
- either I feel it wrong to stay, or God calls me elsewhere.
- He has given me much more strength than I had any reason
- to expect. I shall look forward with greater longing for
- Christmas; but do get me the papers I want as soon as you can.
- I want to do as much as possible before I leave.
-
- ‘I wrote this last night; take care of it as well as the
- Committee paper; I may want them. I have a headache to-day, and
- I am afraid I show the effect. Do not tell Papa anything, if
- you think it will worry him, but let me have some advice and
- hear as often as you can.’
-
-But discomfort almost inevitably succeeds complaint. There were fresh
-interviews with the Committee; some of the matters which most tried her
-in the school régime were naturally more acutely felt, as she herself
-grew strained with both anxiety and work. The tone of her letters home
-grew more sad as she began to see that after all she must give up her
-post. She could not bear to relinquish work that she felt had been given
-her to do; but she wrote:—
-
- ‘I do not see how it is possible to do much good. I may work
- upon a few individuals, but the whole tone of the school is
- unhealthy, and I never felt anything like the depression
- arising from the constant jar upon one’s feelings caused by
- seeing great girls constantly professing not to care about
- religion.... It is next to impossible to bear rudeness and
- hear so much evil-speaking about all set over them, and keep
- up one’s spirits so as to be able to teach energetically; I
- would not want to run away if I thought I could do much good
- by staying, but I have come to the conclusion that it is time
- to send in my resignation. I have gained valuable experience,
- and do not think I have been useless; but under present
- circumstances it does not seem possible to get on.
-
- ‘I was very glad of your nice long letter before, and if you
- think I am right, should send in perhaps a slight summary of
- the causes for it with my resignation as soon as I can. I am
- glad to hear Mama is better.’
-
-Miss Beale’s difficulties were no doubt aggravated by religious
-questions. Her chief friend on the Committee, one who appreciated her
-sense of duty and intellectual power, did not wish her to remain at the
-school. He disliked her theological opinions. She seems hardly to have
-realised this at the time, though her father may have done so, as can be
-seen from the following letter:—
-
- ‘_November 8, 1857._
-
- ‘Say, if you have an opportunity, as much of what you have
- written to the Committee as will show them you sought the
- situation at Casterton for the sake of the school. For this
- I accepted for you—for this alone. Do not retain it without
- sufficient authority to carry forward the minds and morals of
- the pupils. You went there in a missionary spirit, I know,
- as to a post of usefulness; and you have hitherto retained
- it in the same spirit. Maintain this feeling, but assert it
- with meekness. We shall all be rejoiced to find you are coming
- home; but I dare not urge you beyond this. I was a party to the
- compact by which your remuneration was arranged, and I felt no
- difficulty in making any concession between what I felt was due
- to the order of educated governesses which you represented,
- and what the institution could afford to pay; but I would not
- recommend you to compromise one iota of authority which may be
- fit to carry forward the minds of your pupils, or of discipline
- to enforce obedience. Your pupils are no longer children, and,
- as the daughters of clergymen and intended to teach others, are
- lights upon a hill, and in point of education, manners, and
- morals, great charges indeed. I am witness, too, how roundly
- and unequivocally you stated your religious principle....
- I mention this much because I think you have been treated
- unfairly on this subject. If the denial of the doctrine of
- regeneration by baptism were a _sine quâ non_ by the governess,
- it ought to have been so stated. Mr. Mariner represented their
- religious basis as far more broad. Doubtless the Committee
- have a right to limit the assent of their teachers to such
- points; and doing so, I cannot object to Mr. Shepheard’s voting
- for your exclusion, neither do I see how they can accept
- money from those who think differently from the Committee.
- It is a question which has divided larger societies than at
- Casterton ... and I can remember when it convulsed the Choral
- Society.... You and I are both labouring to raise the status
- and influence of the governess, and you will do it, first
- by your attainments and education, and rectitude of conduct
- under all circumstances, and I by bringing before those public
- bodies interested in the matter, the influence and importance
- of legislating for their protection and recognition. We may
- neither of us live to see the changes which shall come, but
- even in our limited spheres we are breaking ground, and you are
- gaining whilst yet young most valuable experience.
-
- ‘ ... Above all things take care of your health.... I am quite
- sure that you have a long course of usefulness before you. The
- flattering regard in which you are held at Queen’s College,
- and the constant means you always have in London of constantly
- improving yourself, must teach you somewhat of your own value;
- though I would not indeed presume upon it farther than to give
- you confidence to act rightly. But good governesses are very
- scarce, and are far better treated than they used to be, though
- not as well as they deserve.
-
- ‘Casterton ought to be from the great advantages it offers, a
- national institution; but it will not be so if its principles
- are narrowed by anything like sectarian jealousy, or if its
- standard of education be not high. But Casterton has not yet
- been as fortunate as the good intentions of its founder would
- seem to deserve. The time will come, I hope, when this and
- kindred establishments will seek the visit and inspection of
- examiners from the Board of Government, Inspectors of Schools,
- and governesses.... I write to you when I begin _currente
- calamo_, and could do so much longer upon a theme in which we
- are both interested, and I fear I have given you no direction.
- Fear nothing; be firm, but very gentle.’
-
-The matter of the resignation seems to have been hanging on all through
-the month of November. Miss Beale evidently wrote home again for advice,
-for on the 26th she received another letter from her father:—
-
- ‘_November 26, 1857._
-
- ‘Far from dissuading you from sending in your resignation, I
- think it will be expected. We did not appeal to the Committee
- that their attention should end in talk, but in giving you
- support moral and professional. With less than this, it is
- inconsistent with self-respect, or the duty you owe to the
- children, to remain.... Now Christmas is approaching, and, as
- matters remain as they were, certainly not improved,—I would
- seek at once to be relieved. Do not suppose for a moment I
- shall consider you are forsaking an appointment to which you
- have been called, or in which time would afford you redress....
- Leave it then, and if nothing more congenial presents itself,
- we can afford to wait our time, and let us try together if
- we cannot carry forward, or at least make more widely known,
- our views of what might be effected if your half of the human
- family more extensively used that influence of which they are
- all the dispensers, as men are of their power. This is indeed,
- as Christ said to the woman of Samaria, “living water,” if
- derived from Him, satisfying all thirst from its welling up
- from within; and by its purity testing the value of everything
- it is brought in contact with. You say you have learned much at
- Casterton. What matters it if you have to wait for the Harvest
- that we are sure “we shall reap if we faint not,” and gather
- “fruit unto life eternal.” It is often in this world, indeed,
- that “one soweth and another reapeth,” but though delayed the
- seed is not lost.’
-
-Before Miss Beale could formally send in her threatened resignation to
-the Committee, she received the following letter from the Chairman:—
-
- ‘On your last interview with the Committee you implied an
- intention of resigning in case certain alterations should not
- be made by the Committee....
-
- ‘The Committee are of opinion that under the circumstances it
- would be better that your connection with the school should
- cease after Christmas next, they paying you a quarter’s salary
- in advance.
-
-It will readily be imagined that this summary step on the part of the
-Committee caused great distress to one of Miss Beale’s sensitive nature.
-Nor was it easy for her to see why the difficult part she had taken upon
-herself for the good of the school should be misunderstood. At that
-moment it must have seemed like a sentence of failure,—
-
- ‘For who can so forecast the years,
- To find in loss a gain to match.’
-
-Among the crowning successes of later life she recognised that the blow
-had had its place in fashioning her life’s work. Her letter home on the
-subject is not preserved, but the following is evidently an answer to
-it:—
-
- ‘_December 1857._
-
- ‘MY DEAR GIRL,—Be sure I have been with you in heart every day
- and all day.... We shall all be delighted to have you at home.
- I would not have you commit yourself to writing statements
- on any account. You have given proof of the truth of your
- assertion by offering and sending in your resignation, and
- thus relinquishing your salary and the occupation of teaching
- to which you had felt yourself called, because you could not
- retain the one or follow the other conscientiously. Though you
- have not accomplished all you sought, you have sowed seed which
- will bear fruit; it may be for others’ benefit altogether;
- but to doubt the ultimate result were a want of faith. Whilst
- I object to writing, I think you owe it to yourself to seek
- rather than shun an interview with Mr. Wilson. His countenance
- of you I should consider very valuable.... Is not this again
- an instance of the influence of women, ... the dispensers of
- influence for good or evil? How important, then, to cultivate
- that principle of rightly discerning. Do you remember the
- apologue of Esdras? “The first wrote: Wine is the strongest.
- The second wrote: The king is the strongest. The third wrote:
- Women are strongest. But above all things Truth beareth away
- the victory.” How irresistible, then, is truth, if urged by
- the self-denial and patient perseverance of an enlightened
- and Christian woman! It is very possible, my dear Dorothea,
- that you have never been fairly represented or appreciated at
- Casterton, and now you are called to rest content with the
- consciousness of acting from right motives, secure that you
- possess too the regard and love of all those who can value such
- sacrifices as you have made of home, and ease, and peace for
- others’ good. I write in great haste, but I will write as often
- as you like until we see you.’
-
-Thus was Dorothea cheered and supported from home. Encouragement came
-from others also. On December 7, Mr. Plumptre wrote:—
-
- ‘I have been informed to-day that you are going to leave
- Casterton at Christmas. I fear from this that you have not
- found your work there so pleasant as you hoped. If there are
- any particulars connected with your change of plan which you
- would like to tell me, or anything as to your prospects for
- the future, I need not say that I shall be glad to hear them.
- Should you feel disposed to resume any part of your work at
- Queen’s College? The place of Assistant is of course being
- worthily occupied, and so far as I know not likely to be
- vacant; but tutorships in Mathematics and other subjects might
- probably be open.’
-
-Mr. Shepheard, curate-in-charge of Casterton, and chaplain to the school,
-wrote thus to Miss Beale on her leaving:—
-
- ‘It is natural that you should wish to have my testimony, and
- right that I should give it you regarding the line of conduct
- you have persevered in, and the difficult position in which you
- have been placed, as well as regarding your general principles.
-
- ‘It is no more than your due that I should say to others what
- I have said to yourself, that I think your conduct throughout
- the painful circumstances of your connection with the Clergy
- Daughters’ School has been such as to reflect the highest
- honour upon yourself. You have only done your duty in boldly
- expressing what you thought required correction in the school.
- And if your faithful discharge of that duty has brought
- discomfiture on yourself, you have the comfort of knowing that
- it is no dishonour to suffer for well-doing.
-
- ‘I have the greatest pleasure in offering you my cordial esteem
- and regard. And though there are points of religious doctrine,
- and those not small nor secondary, on which we must agree to
- differ, this cannot affect my opinion of the high principle and
- conscientious conduct which you have manifested throughout your
- stay at Casterton.
-
- ‘Of your abilities and acquirements I need not speak. They
- are well known here, and can better be described by those who
- have had the opportunity of witnessing and benefiting by them
- personally, than by myself; and of such witnesses there are no
- lack.
-
- ‘We shall always be glad to hear of your happiness, and hope to
- retain your friendship when removed to a distance from us.—I
- am, dear Miss Beale, very sincerely yours,
-
- H. SHEPHEARD (Incumbent).’
-
-The letter shows, what was indeed true, that difficulties and differences
-both in the Committee and the school were aggravated by bitterness on the
-subject of religious opinions. This comes out still more clearly in a
-correspondence Miss Beale kept up for a little time with Mrs. Shepheard,
-who was a daughter of Mr. Carus Wilson, the aged founder of the school,
-and at this time infirm and worn by the immense labours of his younger
-days.
-
-The Bishop and Dean of Carlisle, being called upon to advise the
-Committee, patiently heard evidence for eight hours. Mr. Carus Wilson
-also decided to visit the school himself; but before he went north, Mrs.
-Shepheard arranged an interview between him and Miss Beale, writing
-to her: ‘Do not be afraid of my beloved father—tall, grey-headed, and
-anxious, but clear and open as you please.’ A memorable meeting surely
-this, of two who with widely differing methods were alike in high,
-earnest aim and self-devotion. It took place in February, and in the same
-month Mr. Wilson made one of his last visits to his old home and flock.
-Mrs. Shepheard notes that ‘it is supposed that nine hundred were in this
-little church last Sunday to hear my father!’
-
-In the course of the year 1858 many changes were made in the management
-of the Clergy Daughters’ School, and this chapter on Casterton may fitly
-close with an extract from a letter written to Miss Beale by her friend,
-Mrs. Greene, of Whittington Hall:—
-
- ‘ ... There was a little music yesterday evening at the Clergy
- School, and Miss Vincent asked me to be present. I know your
- kind heart will give interest to what goes on there, and so I
- waited till it was over to tell you how it went off, etc.... I
- assure you the performance was extremely good, and the girls’
- manners and appearance were those of young English Gentlewomen;
- this I consider good praise. Miss Vincent appears to me the
- very person to fill so important a post.... We spoke much of
- you, she evidently appreciates you; and when the music was
- over, I went to one or two of the ladies near, and asked, “Were
- you acquainted with Miss Beale?” One came forward with a
- beaming face and replied, “Oh, I know her well, and have heard
- from her.” I replied, “So have I; and I shall write to her
- to-morrow.” I do not know who my friend was, but perhaps you
- will.
-
- ‘And now let me tell you how delighted I am you are so
- comfortable; that you are doing much good I am equally sure....
- I hope we may sometimes meet. Would you even spare us a little
- time here? If so, I would offer you a hearty welcome.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-AN INTERVAL
-
- ‘O dignitosa coscienza e netto
- Come t’e picciol fallo amaro morso.’
-
- DANTE, _Purgatorio_, iii.
-
-
-The early part of the year 1858 is the one period in the life of Dorothea
-Beale when she could have been called really free. It was a time when
-it became her part to choose what she would do; to wait for what was
-suitable, to decide between conflicting claims. She came home depressed,
-defeated, disappointed; but she had discovered her own weakness and real
-strength; she had increased her knowledge of human nature through some
-experience of a boarding-school and its Committee. She had learned for
-one thing, that it would be best for herself and for the world that she
-should be head of a school, and she submitted to wait for one. But in the
-meantime other calls and needs besides that of education were heard and
-considered.
-
-The fact of apparent failure in her recent position at Casterton might
-have been taken as an indication that her energies should perhaps be
-directed to a fresh field of action. She was not under the necessity
-of earning her bread; she loved her home and had a circle of friends
-and interests about her. Various kinds of good work for others appealed
-to her, and her ability and gifts made it clear that she might have
-succeeded in other walks of life than the one in which her steps were
-finally directed.
-
-Though Dorothea had inherited, in a strong degree, her father’s antipathy
-to a _mariage de convenance_, though she was far from regarding marriage
-as the necessary completion of a woman’s life, she had not—at this time
-at least—made any definite refusal of it. This is a subject to which
-it will not be necessary to return in Miss Beale’s life, devoted as it
-became to one great cause. But here, before her vocation had distinctly
-declared itself, it is right to say that in the course of events she was
-not only not without opportunities of marriage, she also gave it her
-full consideration. Flippant scholars might echo the words of Punch,
-‘How different from us, Miss Beale and Miss Buss!’ But in the sense in
-which the words were intended, this was not true in either case. Suffice
-it to say, that Dorothea Beale knew what it was to be admired, loved,
-even for a short time engaged to be married. She knew also, among other
-experiences, what it was to sacrifice a girlish romance because it was
-right to put away vain regret; to forget the things that are behind, and
-in this matter as in others, to use any sense of personal loss in such a
-way that it strengthened her character.
-
-To pass from this subject, which, as it happens, does not appear to
-have had any place in the short period which elapsed between Casterton
-and Cheltenham, it is interesting to note what kinds of work Miss Beale
-considered with a view to taking them up.
-
-Philanthropic occupations in the ordinary sense of the term she had had
-but few. Her duties as a tutor at Queen’s College were first undertaken
-when she was still eighteen, and up to then her time had been filled
-with interests arising from her own education and that of her brothers.
-Yet, while at Queen’s, busy as she was, she had made time to aid one
-less fortunate than herself. In 1853 her friend Miss Alston consulted
-her how best to help a clever boy brought up in a charity school. Miss
-Beale volunteered to teach him Euclid and algebra, and for four months
-gave him a lesson a week in each of these subjects. In that time he went
-through the first four books of Euclid and part of the sixth. Miss Beale
-enjoyed these lessons, for her pupil was keen and intelligent and took a
-delight in working out things for himself. Doubtless he too responded to
-the teaching of one whose method was ever to lead a pupil on to perceive
-a truth before accepting it. When, after a time, he came under the
-instruction of the headmaster of a public school, the latter remarked to
-Miss Alston _à propos_ of Miss Beale’s teaching: ‘What a well-balanced
-head your friend must have!’
-
-She had never, however, been engaged in the Sunday School teaching
-and visiting of the poor, such as was not infrequently undertaken
-by thoughtful girls of her day. Her strong intellectual bent, her
-well-defined sense of purpose possibly kept her from even good
-occupations which might have seemed desultory. But one kind of work for
-others seems actually to have been considered. This was in connection
-with Mrs. Lancaster whom for some years Miss Beale had helped by
-collecting money for the Church Penitentiary Association, and for a
-Diocesan Home at Highgate. Mrs. Lancaster became in 1861 the founder
-of St. Peter’s Sisterhood. She died in 1874. ‘She was,’ says one who
-knew her, ‘a very remarkable woman, of great charm and cleverness, and
-wholly devoted to the service of God.’ Her letters to Miss Beale at this
-time show that she was at once drawn to her young helper, so active in
-inspiring others to share in the good work, so punctual in her payments.
-
-It was work in which Miss Beale was interested all her life, to which she
-gave largely, and which she ever promoted as far as her much filled time
-and thought permitted. Mrs. Lancaster greeted her first sign of interest
-with a warm welcome to the new worker. ‘Indeed, it was a great joy to me
-to see another drawn in by the Good Shepherd to help in seeking His lost
-sheep. May He bless and strengthen your will and power for the work.’
-
-Dorothea appears to have been an assistant secretary, and to have
-collected money from her sisters and friends for this object. It is
-unnecessary, perhaps, to say that this money was always paid on the same
-date of each year.
-
-After a time, when it seemed likely that Miss Beale would not remain at
-Casterton, Mrs. Lancaster obviously hoped to find in her one who would
-give up her life and talents to this cause. ‘I wish,’ she wrote, ‘for
-the sake of poor Penitents that you were more free, for I fancy you are
-a _real, steady, orderly doer_, and that is worth much in such a cause.
-Still, you do what you can, and may well be grateful to help in any way.
-Thank your sister too very much; it is very delightful to get young
-interest.’
-
-Then, when an occasion arrived on which it was absolutely necessary to
-find a worker for the Highgate Home, she wrote: ‘_Are you sure_ that
-you don’t know of a really good young lady not _over_ accomplished, and
-she need know neither Greek nor Hindostanee, who would come and _live_
-at the Home, with a salary of £30 only, and _poor people’s_ diet?’ This
-was followed by a still more practical suggestion: ‘Is there any chance
-(I don’t like the word) of your liking to take the Headship of a large
-Penitentiary to be worked by Sisters, but the whole under strict, honest,
-English principles—more like Kaiserwerth than anything we have now?’
-Dorothea’s answer seems to have emboldened Mrs. Lancaster to make a
-definite suggestion to her to come herself, either as a Sister or a lay
-worker, and the following note from Mrs. Lancaster, written during the
-summer holidays of the Casterton year, shows that the idea was to some
-extent entertained. It is interesting also in the history of the work and
-institution established by that lady.
-
- ‘As your mind does not altogether say “No” to my proposal at
- once, I write a line to beg you not to _decide against_ the
- thought of what I wrote to you about, without weighing very
- seriously these considerations:
-
- ‘What is the highest work?
-
- ‘What constitutes a call to God’s service?
-
- ‘Is it lawful to give up a higher for a lower work?
-
- ‘If, when you have considered it well, you feel at all drawn
- towards it, then will you write either to me or to the Rev.
- John Oliver of St. Mary’s House of Mercy, Highgate, appointing
- with him to see you (for the appointment is in his hands),
- and he will not make it unless he is fully convinced that the
- lady would work it on strictly English principles, and that
- her _heart_ was given to God first. He is very earnest and
- very honest, and all there seems most hopeful if regarded as a
- beginning and a foundation, for at present there are only two
- Sisters and one other lady at work. The house and grounds are
- delightful, the Penitents in a good healthy state, and if but
- a _wise_ lady is given to the work I should be very hopeful of
- seeing _there_, _such_ a Sisterhood as we have talked about
- but have not been privileged to see growing up in English
- soil. Pray do consult your sister, or your parents, but please
- confidentially, as I think we ought to do these _preliminaries_
- as quietly as possible. I have mentioned your name _quite_ in
- confidence to Mr. Oliver, and I _do_ hope you will see him and
- talk it out to _the bottom_ with him before you decide. I know
- you will do what is better than all, ask for guidance that
- cannot fail.
-
- ‘I do not think your parents would object, after allowing
- you to go to Casterton and Queen’s College, because in point
- of position, this is _now_ felt to be _all_ that a lady need
- care about. I am so _very_ anxious about Highgate because it
- seems so _hopeful_ as regards soundness of principle _now_, but
- I will say no more excepting to beg you to remember that the
- appointment does not _rest_ with me even if you felt you could
- and would take it.—Ever yours affectionately and sincerely,
-
- ROSA: LANCASTER.’
-
-It is probable that Mrs. Lancaster’s friendship and the glimpse of
-Sisterhood life which she obtained by means of it deepened the sense
-of vocation with which Miss Beale was prepared to take up the new work
-for which she was waiting in 1858. It may also have had its influence
-on outside matters such as dress, which we know, when engaged on her
-work of teaching, was in early days especially very plain and simple.
-Mrs. Lancaster was obviously a friend whom she revered, one to whom she
-could speak of religious matters, and with whose devoted work among poor
-women she fully sympathised; but the conventual side of it never really
-appealed to her.
-
-Through Miss Twining, who began her work in 1850, Miss Beale became much
-interested in the reform of workhouses, and the idea even passed through
-her mind of seeking a position as matron in order to help to promote a
-better state of affairs. We can only wonder what would have been wrought
-had that great personality and unwearied diligence, that refusal to
-accept anything but the best, been brought to bear on the Poor Law, on
-Vestries, or Boards of Guardians.
-
-The education of girls of her own class was of far deeper interest to her
-than any other work for women. She was trained for it, was conscious of
-her own power and knowledge of what a school should be, and she decided
-to wait till she could find a headship and carry out her own ideas. It
-was not quite easy to find the post she wanted. As she put it herself,
-‘They might say, “She could not get on at Queen’s, she could not get
-on at Casterton”’; and it is obvious from her diary, that though she
-was actually told as early as January 1858 of the possible vacancy at
-Cheltenham, she tried for more than one school before she was elected
-there in June.
-
-While she waited, she worked. There was plenty of home interest, a
-pleasant circle of friends about her: she took her share in the life of
-others, and yet led her own and accomplished a large amount in those few
-months. During a part of this time she gave weekly lessons in mathematics
-and Latin at Miss Elwall’s school at Barnes, a school which afterwards
-became well known under Miss Eliza Beale, already in 1858 an assistant
-teacher there. But the great occupation of these months was _The
-Student’s Textbook of English and General History_.
-
-In point of time this important work was the third book produced by Miss
-Beale, and a word on its first predecessor will not be out of place here.
-
-The little volume on the Deaconesses’ Institution at Kaiserwerth was the
-outcome of a visit there during one of two summers passed in Germany for
-the sake of studying schools and foreign methods of education. Miss Beale
-stayed for a few days with the founder, Pastor Fliedner, and his wife,
-and studied each department of work. She was specially pleased with the
-Hospital and Sunday-school, of which she wrote with much appreciation:
-‘I never was present at a lesson which seemed to give so much pleasure
-to children and listeners, as well as to the teacher, who certainly
-understood the art of drawing out children by means of questions.’
-
-Germany, its schools and similar institutions, its literature and
-language, even its handwriting, had a great attraction for Miss Beale.
-She had a few German lessons at the Paris school and afterwards worked at
-it alone, finally perfecting herself in the language by two long visits
-to the country, when she stayed principally at Brunswick and Dresden. On
-one occasion she resided for some time in a German family. In after years
-she would talk of this time to the girls at Cheltenham, telling them how
-she would make a point of conversing with the person she understood least
-easily at any gathering, inquiring the meaning of any word she did not
-know, to make use of it herself at the first opportunity. ‘And of course
-I did not mind being laughed at a little,’ she would add with a smile.
-Hence the praise that German ladies teaching at Cheltenham would accord
-her knowledge of the language, saying that she never made a mistake
-either in speaking or writing. She frequently made use of the German
-character in writing her diary.
-
-The book on Kaiserwerth, written as it was for a special cause, has
-naturally long since had its day, though on its appearance it was
-accepted widely enough to justify the thought of a second edition. Mrs.
-Lancaster was greatly interested by it, and showed it to the Bishop of
-London,[22] who had just signed the Rule of the newly-founded Sisterhood.
-Both Bishop Jackson and Dean Trench declined, in friendly letters,
-dedications to themselves of a second edition, and none appears to have
-been issued; possibly on account of difficulties suggested by Mrs.
-Lancaster, who wished the scope of the book enlarged to embrace work
-of a similar nature in England. In the event of this being done, she
-begged Miss Beale to add a notice of the infant Community of St. Peter’s,
-then in Broughton Square. To-day the book can scarcely be called extant,
-but there is certainly one copy in England and one in Kaiserwerth. It
-is interesting because it shows, like other writing of this time, the
-continuity of Miss Beale’s ideas and thoughts. Her sowing had been
-betimes and abundant, and she could already gather as she needed. She did
-not give till she had the wherewithal, and though in her long years she
-frequently sowed afresh—was ever disciple as well as teacher—she was an
-early husbandman, a wise householder, able continuously and opportunely
-to bring out things new and old. The simile of Jairus’s daughter,
-occurring for the first time in the passage quoted below, was one she
-often quoted in connection with that awakening of women’s energies it had
-been her lot to share; and one she finally enshrined for her children in
-the window placed in the College to the memory of Miss Buckoll in 1890.
-And like much of her later work, the little book shows also how much her
-religion went hand in hand with all her work for others. There was no
-thought of the emancipation of women, no word of rights; she spoke only
-of duties, of scope to do good; but even these were quite secondary to
-the desire, the will to make the effort, the ear to hear the bidding
-voice. Here is a passage to illustrate this:
-
- ‘It has occurred to me that a more detailed description than
- that given six years ago by Miss Nightingale of an institution
- in which she was herself trained, and which has since that
- time many new features, might assist those who are considering
- the best way of turning to account the wasted energy of our
- country-women, of those whose highest happiness it would be to
- be like Mary, Joanna, and Susannah, to follow Christ.... There
- are many who, when they pray to God “to comfort and succour
- all them who ... are in trouble, sorrow, need, sickness, or any
- other adversity,” cannot be satisfied without giving a small
- portion of their money, who tremble at the thought of being
- numbered with the women who are at ease, with the careless
- daughters. O that Christ would take us by the hand. He has but
- to speak the word: “Daughter, I say unto thee, Arise”; and
- we shall arise and minister to Him: then will the scorners
- acknowledge we were only sleeping, and our souls will magnify
- the Lord.’[23]
-
-Two other short extracts must be permitted:
-
- ‘I could not but contrast the aimless existence of many of my
- own country-women, the dreary regions of the fashionable world,
- with the wide field under cultivation by this band of Sisters,
- who, by God’s blessing, penetrate year by year farther into
- the wilderness, and rescue so many of their fellow-creatures
- from evils more to be dreaded than famine, pestilence, and the
- sword.’[24]
-
-Finally, the following passage tells how the strengthening thought of the
-Communion of Saints, of which she spoke to Miss Gore on the last Sunday
-of her life, was already beginning to be hers:
-
- ‘The happiness of a Deaconess does not arise from external
- circumstances; it is a peace which the world cannot give. She
- must be prepared to live away from the world, without any
- society but that of a few sick persons and children, without
- beautiful services; to believe, in the midst of unbelief and
- sin, in the Holy Catholic Church and the Communion of Saints.
- She must always be watching for her Lord’s coming, for in the
- midst of the pestilence and near the field of battle is her
- post.’[25]
-
-A second visit to Kaiserwerth, ten years later, gave Miss Beale great
-pleasure. She was delighted with the work being done and the extension of
-the small beginnings she had seen in 1856. In 1905, at Oeynhausen, she
-met accidentally a Deaconess of Kaiserwerth, was much attracted by her,
-and invited her to come and see her and talk to her of the institution,
-and after her return to England exchanged letters with her.
-
-The _Textbook of History_ entailed a great deal of labour and study,
-which must have been a boon to its writer at a time of depression and
-uncertainty. Though the scheme of it was no doubt in her mind before she
-left Casterton, and the book was probably begun in the summer holidays of
-1857, it was not till after Christmas that she was free to devote herself
-to it. Then she threw into the work every hour she could justly secure,
-striving at the same time not to neglect family claims. The conditions
-under which it was done were little short of heroic. In order to secure
-freedom from interruption both for herself and her books of reference,
-she chose for her study a large empty room, where she worked in the midst
-of open volumes spread round her on the floor. It was winter, but she
-was glad to avail herself of the difficulty of keeping up a daily fire
-at the top of the old City house, in order to give less attraction to
-any other members of the household to sit with her and take up time in
-conversation. The empty grate by which she wrote lends significance to
-an entry in the diary of March 1858: ‘Self-indulgence because of cold.’
-The self-denial and concentration of the writer bore early fruit, for
-this book, a digest of world-wide histories, was published in August
-1858, just after its author had come to Cheltenham. The production of
-this textbook is an instance of the way in which Miss Beale would see
-and seize an opportunity. There was a real need for such a work. In her
-introduction she alludes to objections which could be raised to similar
-books then in use, and which were stated in articles which appeared in
-the _Times_ of January 1857.
-
-Miss Beale’s reference is doubtless to two letters headed ‘The
-Corruption of Popular School Books.’ The first of these, by the noted Dr.
-Cumming, appeared on January 17, and dealt with certain changes which had
-been made, in a Romish direction, in a widely used textbook of English
-history by Henry Ince. A new edition had lately appeared, professing
-itself to be much extended and improved, in wide circulation, and
-sanctioned by her Majesty’s Committee of the Council of Education. This
-edition, pleaded the writer of the _Times_ letter, contained statements
-which made it ‘unsuitable for use in Protestant schools.’ Those quoted,
-_e.g._ that ‘Queen Elizabeth was a mistress in the art of dissembling,’
-do not seem very reprehensible, but enough savour of Papistry had been
-introduced into the book to cause the Committee above-mentioned and the
-Society of Arts to strike the book off their lists. Dorothea Beale was
-quick to see and seize the opportunity thus afforded for a new textbook.
-
-The very large scope of the work, embracing as it does the whole
-history of the world since the beginning of the Christian era, with the
-history of England given in rather fuller detail than the rest, makes
-it imperative that its hundred and seventy closely printed pages should
-be rather dry. The _Textbook_ is intended for the teacher rather than
-the pupil; highly useful in its arrangement of facts, and names, and
-suggestions of ideas, but not in itself a complete lesson-book. Its
-clearness and fulness are not more characteristic of the writer than the
-dramatic instinct which led her to give such names, titles, and short
-quotations as tend at once to fix a fact in the memory, and to conjure up
-visions of the conditions under which such and such events took place.
-Miss Beale had a remarkable quickness in seizing on the important matter
-and stating it in a few telling words. It is interesting to take at
-haphazard her history of any century, and mark what a wealth of interest
-rather than of information is brought together in a few short pages to
-stimulate the reader’s thirst for knowledge. But it is sufficient to
-point out the titles chosen for the centuries, as showing what seemed to
-her of greatest importance to the progress of mankind.[26]
-
-The book is completed with an account of the English Constitution and
-some genealogical tables. It reached a seventh edition, but Miss Beale
-was disinclined to bring it up to quite modern times, doubtless because
-she felt there are now other books to cover the ground as well or better
-than her own. Consequently the nineteenth century is left uncompleted.
-The book, however, played a useful part at a time when the teaching of
-history was very imperfect, and was well received by those who knew its
-author. ‘The plan of the book,’ wrote Mr. Plumptre, ‘seems to me very
-good, and I cannot doubt that you have carried into the details the same
-painstaking accuracy with which we used to be familiar in your work with
-us.’
-
-Mr. Mackenzie, at the writer’s request, made an elaborate criticism, from
-which it is enough to quote his ‘_chief_ complaint’: ‘Your unfairness to
-your own sex, and your willingness to believe and repeat the calumnies
-uttered against them by male writers, a fault to which the old monks were
-especially prone; but they were not quite silent, as you are, upon the
-virtues of the royal and noble Anglo-Saxon ladies, who did so much, even
-in the darkest ages, towards educating and refining the barbarous people
-by whom they were surrounded.’
-
-Mr. Beale mentioned it more than once in his letters to the daughter in
-whose talent he had such pride: ‘The success of your little book is
-very encouraging. E. says they call it “Beale’s Ince.” ... I dined at
-the Adams’ last week, a doctor’s party. Dr. Daldy was loud in praise of
-the _Textbook_.’ And again, ‘Underneath D. Beale in my own copy I have
-written “sed summa sequar festigia rerum.”’ And to the end it was a
-source of satisfaction to the writer herself. ‘You could not have done so
-well without my _Textbook_, could you?’ she said to an old pupil whose
-Histories for Schools have been widely accepted.
-
-The third work of this period was a little book entitled
-_Self-Examination_. This was chiefly designed for schools, and was edited
-by Mr. Denton, the vicar of St. Bartholomew’s, Moor Lane. This book,
-too, written when books of devotion were far less common than they are
-now, and in order to supply a real need of schoolgirls, has been long
-superseded by others, but in many cases the works for which it has been
-put on one side are less thoughtful and penetrating. The questions and
-meditations are arranged round the subjects of ‘My Duty towards God, and
-my Duty towards my Neighbour,’ and with the comment of verses from the
-Bible are presented in that tabular form which Miss Beale loved.[27]
-The actual questions for self-examination are throughout slight and
-few in proportion to what is suggested by the Scripture texts and the
-meditations; the reason doubtless being to make the reader think for
-herself.
-
-This little work brings us face to face with that religion which all her
-life long was the motive power of Dorothea’s life. Deep religious feeling
-was no phase nor change of thought which came to her with years or
-experience. It was not wrought for her in the furnace of sorrow, though
-many times there renewed and purified. It was so much the dominating
-force of her mind and life, that, by which every day as every year she
-was controlled and inspired, that it may be reverently regarded as a
-special gift to one called to a great service. ‘I cannot,’ she wrote,
-‘look back upon the time when God was not a present Friend. I would throw
-myself on my knees in trouble, and He gave of His compassion. How (as a
-child) I used to follow the service and wish it were possible to think of
-what God was;—to think of Him as mere Light was the nearest approach.’
-And as an old woman—despite the love of friends, and her well-deserved
-honours, often alone and sick and weary—she wrote, ‘The Lord is my
-Light.’ But the religion of Dorothea Beale was far indeed from being a
-mere succession of beautiful and comforting thoughts. It meant authority.
-It involved all the difficulties of daily obedience, it meant the fatigue
-of watching, the pains of battle, sometimes the humiliation of defeat.
-Intense as was her feeling on religious subjects, it was never permitted
-to go off in steam, as she would term it, but became at once a practical
-matter for everyday life. Sorrow and regret for sin and mistakes passed
-into fresh effort against them; the perception of a beautiful thought or
-idea became a new motive for definite acts of charity and diligence. With
-regard to such a religious life as hers, the mind dwelling habitually in
-a region which is beyond controversy, it seems like a descent to a lower
-plane to speak of religious _opinions_. Yet no approximately true history
-of her can be related without reference to these. Even if there were no
-record of it as there is, it is obvious that one at once so large-minded
-and clear-headed, whose life displayed so much organisation and
-arrangement, must have definitely faced the great problems of eternity,
-must have listened to every appeal of Christianity, and with her own
-eyes have looked up each avenue of thought which promised an approach
-to Truth. And this she undoubtedly did. But in the knowledge of Divine
-things, as in that which she would scarcely permit to be called secular,
-her faithfulness and simple obedience to early teaching directed her mind
-to certain religious duties and opinions from which she never parted: ‘If
-any man will do His will he shall know of the doctrine,’ is a text she
-was fond of quoting to her Scripture classes. She lived to realise it.
-Very early and continuously she ruled her life by the commandments of the
-Lord, and when storms arose, when winds and floods of doubt threatened
-ruin, when she was herself ready to cry, ‘All is gone,’ the foundations
-of the house of faith were yet secure, and thereon love rebuilt.
-
-And so it may be truly said that the framework of her personal religion
-was in age what it had been in youth. She had her own distinctly outlined
-path to which she had been guided early by such friends as her father
-and Mr. Mackenzie. This has been sometimes lost sight of, possibly owing
-to her deep sympathy and interest in matters of doubt and difficulty.
-When any of her children turned to her in distress of this nature, she
-felt, more than at any other time, the yearning of a mother’s heart, and
-was fearful of saying any word or even of showing any opinion of her own
-which might alarm or seal up confidence. Hence people of widely different
-views wished to claim her as of their own way of thinking when often
-she was not. She did not think it of paramount importance when speaking
-to the unorthodox, or even to the agnostic, to state her own beliefs
-precisely. She did not seek to proselytise but to help, to remove, as
-far as power was given her, all hindrances to the light, to persuade
-those who were in darkness still to obey. But she knew that she could not
-make any _see_; she recognised faith as the gift of God.
-
-Miles Beale was a Churchman of the type known best by its nickname ‘High
-and Dry.’ His daughters were still quite young when they found this
-was a school to which not all the world belonged, and they began to
-appreciate religious differences. They heard, between St. Helen’s and St.
-Bartholomew’s, preachers of varying shades of thought. Mr. Mackenzie was
-succeeded at St. Helen’s by an incumbent of evangelical views. Some of
-Mr. Denton’s curates at St. Bartholomew’s went over to Rome; one became
-Father Ignatius.
-
-Dorothea was only sixteen when her father wrote to her on the subject of
-the Hampden-Gorham dispute, as of a matter she well understood and found
-interesting. And this recalls the fact that religious controversy of
-that day raged specially round the question of Baptismal Regeneration.
-A letter written to the Council of the Ladies’ College after her
-appointment[28] shows how clearly and concisely, and without reference
-to books, Miss Beale could state her opinions. It deals with her views
-of the Sacraments, marking her religious position at the time and
-indeed to the end;—it was for her Prayer-book that she asked in the one
-clear moment of the last unconsciousness. This letter contains a bare,
-unemotional statement of belief, to which may well be added this: that
-while she held firmly the doctrine of ‘Two only, as generally necessary
-to salvation,’ the life of grace through the Sacraments was the power
-by which she lived. She recognised herself as fortunate in her special
-heritage of Christian thought, writing of it thus:—
-
- ‘It was a time of great religious revival: the bald services
- of my childhood were beginning to develop into the musical
- services of our own time.... The beautiful music of to-day
- is not more dear to me than those plain services with often
- grotesque accompaniments where I learned to see Heaven opened.
- Miss Sewell’s writings, especially _The Experience of Life_,
- helped me in early youth to work out the problems of my daily
- life. Religion quickened the intellectual life, for Sacramental
- teaching was to the leaders of that movement no narrow
- dogmatism, but the discovery of the river of the water of
- life flowing through the whole desert of human existence, and
- making it rejoice and blossom as the rose, revealing a unity in
- creation, a continuity in history, a glory in art, a purpose in
- life, making life infinitely worth living.’[29]
-
-When quite young she began the practice of Sunday Communion, and many a
-week day found her at the 6 A.M. celebration at St. Bartholomew’s Church.
-From first to last her scanty diary records this service among the
-leading facts of ordinary life.
-
-In the power thus gained she had ever before her the thought of
-co-operation, of working out salvation, of putting on Christ by daily
-dying to self by minute watchfulness, and in every sense of the word
-painstaking diligence. At a time when the pulpits of Cheltenham were
-ringing with statements which seemed to her to misrepresent the great
-doctrine of the Atonement, she was speaking to her children of the true
-nature of the Redeemer’s Blood, of the living stream flowing from the
-Heart through all the members; she was seeking for herself and for them
-the righteousness of Christ, not as a mere substitution, but as a real
-attainment won by the union of a soul wholly surrendered to the workings
-of the grace of God.
-
-This chapter may fitly close with a passage from the diary, which she
-appears to have begun to keep for the first time this year, when she
-was to some extent forced back upon herself, when she was making her
-own scheme of daily work. Begun on Ash Wednesday, February 17, 1858,
-it was continued intermittently at least to 1901, when the increasing
-infirmities of age made all reading and writing difficult. Sometimes
-dropped for many months, it was taken up again as if with the suggestion
-of a sense of culpability for neglect. It was never full; never, so far
-as outward events are concerned, of any great interest. Some of these,
-indeed, as the writing of certain letters, the visits of certain friends,
-or business engagements, are just mentioned and no more; doubtless for
-the sake of reference only. It remains for us as a revelation of the
-keen self-scrutiny with which she, who had to guide and warn others, was
-daily searching her own soul. Very often for weeks there is no mention
-of anything done, or seen, or thought as far as the matters of this
-world are concerned; but she never failed to note what she regarded as
-the real life, spiritual growth or the reverse, right or wrong conduct,
-faithful or unfaithful performance of religious duties. This diary cannot
-be ignored if a true presentment of Dorothea Beale is to be given.
-Hence, intimate as it is, enough extracts as may display the persistent
-effort of her life are inserted here. They are not consecutive, but
-chosen as characteristic and interesting, and showing to some extent the
-occupations of the period. Scanty traces indeed of what she was doing
-and thinking, they are yet enough to show a little of the anxiety and
-conflict of which she wrote in 1901 to Miss Margaret Richardson, in these
-words: ‘Once I had an interval of work, and I thought perhaps God would
-not give it me again—but after that interval He called me here. I think
-now I can see better how I needed that time of comparative quiet and
-solitude, and a time to think over my failures, and a time to be more
-helpful to my family.’
-
- EXTRACTS FROM DIARY OF 1858
-
- ‘_February 17th._—Ash Wednesday. [To] S. M’s. [Applied] for
- school at Holloway. Lip-service. Snappish. _Resolution._ [to
- strive for more] humility, patience, charity.
-
- ‘_February 26th._—Miss Alston came. Idle [meditation] on peace.
- To be less anxious.
-
- ‘_February 27th._—History for seven hours. Church. Some
- idleness.
-
- ‘_March 5th._—Went to see Mr. Sankey about boy’s evening
- school. To church. History. Many impatient answers to Mama.
-
- ‘_March 6th._—History. Aunt E. came. Cross at not getting my
- own way. Some idleness. Impatient manner.
-
- ‘_March 7th_, Sunday.—Went to H. E. without prayer. Not a
- devoted service. Morning prayer nothing but vain thoughts. At
- evening Church. Very cross.
-
- ‘_April 14th._—History. Elizabeth. Called on Mrs. Blenkarne.
- Dined at Chapter House. Idle. Indulgence in reading story at
- my time for evening prayer. Unpunctual in morning. Thoughtless
- about Mama.
-
- ‘_April 20th._—History, 16th Century. Felt terribly cross. O
- grant me calmness.
-
- ‘_April 22nd._—Went about servants till 11.30. Wrote to Miss
- Hyde. Still some tempest within.
-
- ‘_June 2nd._—Copying. Dinner party. Eliza at home. Worldly.
-
- ‘_June 3rd._—Headache. To Mrs. Northcote’s. [Wrote] preface.
-
- ‘_June 4th._—Saw Mrs. Barrett. Copied. Neglected prayer
- greatly. Very worldly.
-
- ‘_June 7th._—Wrote letters. A terrible blank of worldliness.
- Idle.
-
- ‘_June 9th._—Wrote to Miss Elwall. Letter from Cheltenham. M.
- copied certificates. Worldly. Spoke angrily to A.
-
- ‘_June 10th._—Wrote to Cheltenham. Saxon Exhibition. Selfish
- and worldly.
-
- ‘_June 13th._—S. Bartholomew’s twice. H. E. Inattentive twice.
- Unkind thoughts and words.
-
- ‘_June 14th._—Letter to go to Cheltenham.
-
- ‘_June 16th._—Elected.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-CHELTENHAM
-
- ‘He builded better than he knew.’—EMERSON.
-
-
-Dorothea Beale in age remembered that in youth she had planned ‘an
-air-castle school, with a central quadrangle, cloisters and rooms over.’
-
-To few is it given, as it was given to her, to realise so nearly the
-dreams of youth, for few possess the sense of purpose and the indomitable
-will which fell to her portion. But the college of her vision did not
-come into being without a process of development so slow that for
-some years progress could hardly be recorded, nor without infinite
-disappointment even in matters which seemed at the time vital; not
-without ceaseless effort, seen and unseen, on the part of the Lady
-Principal.
-
-We have reached, in the twentieth century, a period in the history of
-education in which schools may be said to be founded ready-made. A great
-and fine ‘plant,’ opening ceremonies, royal patronage, appear necessities
-from the beginning. The Ladies’ College, Cheltenham, was twenty years
-old before it had a building of its own, its first stone was laid by
-an unknown hand, its opening rite consisted of school prayers in the
-ordinary way on a Monday morning, at 9 A.M., with the addition of a few
-words rather nervously read by the Lady Principal. The college has never
-had a patron, nor did it even have any specially distinguished visitor,
-till the Empress Frederick came in 1897.
-
-The Ladies’ College did not originate with Miss Beale. She brought to it,
-when it was but a weakling and like to perish, all her dreams and all her
-energies. She made it emphatically her own; but its first inception was
-with a small number of Cheltenham residents, notably with the Reverend H.
-Walford Bellairs, then H.M. Inspector of Schools for Gloucestershire,[30]
-and the Reverend C. A. Bromby,[31] Principal of the Training Colleges.
-Its foundation was a continuation of work already begun in the town with
-the opening of Cheltenham College, in 1843. This was one of the earliest
-of the great nineteenth century public schools, and one of the very few
-which has no ancient origin. A very slight glance at the history of the
-town, which has produced two great colleges, will serve to show that
-their work in its midst has been almost that of a quiet and beneficent
-revolution.
-
-The mild air and fertile soil of the great plain below the Cotswold
-Hills were recognised as early as the days of Edward the Confessor, when
-Cheltenham was called upon to furnish a large amount of bread for the
-royal kennels. For centuries only a little market town with a beautiful
-Early Gothic church on the banks of an insignificant stream, it crept
-out of obscurity in the pages of Ogilby who, in 1785, described it
-as inhabited by people ‘much given to plant tobacco, though they are
-suppressed by authority.’
-
-Forty years after this the discovery of the medicinal properties of
-its waters made the place attractive to those who could afford to take
-the remedy, and in the later years of George the Third, it came to be
-the ‘Queen of watering places.’ Details of the long royal visit of
-1788 may be read in the pages of Fanny Burney and others. The King
-would afterwards speak of Cheltenham and the Vale of Gloucester as ‘the
-finest part of my kingdom that I have beheld.’ Other distinguished
-visitors followed: the Prince Regent, who gave a ball; Charles James
-Fox; Wellington, within a year of Waterloo; Louis Philippe and Marie
-Amélie in their exile; and many others, among whom, as a boy, came Byron,
-to wander, according to a continental biographer, ‘on the seashore at
-Cheltenham!’
-
-As late as 1870 there was in Cheltenham scarcely a house which did not
-testify by its grandiose, pseudo-classic[32] architecture to the past
-magnificence of a town which had striven to be worthy of a court. Even
-to-day there are but few which do not follow the lines laid down by the
-builders of the early years of the nineteenth century, a time at which
-the town grew with mushroom speed. It was a period when population was
-rapidly increasing all over the country; but in few places were the leaps
-and bounds so marked as in Cheltenham, where in 1840, a census return was
-tenfold larger than it had been in 1804.
-
-This rapid growth was due, less to the famous wells and pump-rooms than
-to the reputation of its climate, and the absence of any great winter
-severity, attractive to those who had lived in tropical countries. Hence
-Cheltenham became a favourite residence for Anglo-Indians, military and
-civil. The town grew perhaps a little less distinguished, but not less
-gay and popular. The fashion in Cheltenham waters passed; kings and dukes
-sought their ‘cure’ abroad; but it was possible to have balls and other
-amusements without a Prince Regent, while the hunting season especially
-became a time of festivity. And side by side with the lovers of pleasure,
-who formed so large and sparkling a part of Cheltenham society, existed
-those who took all life with deep, almost forbidding seriousness.
-
-To meet the needs of the rapidly growing population during the first
-forty years of the nineteenth century, several churches were built
-under the auspices of different persons. Church-building in the days of
-proprietary sittings was a not unprofitable investment; there were also
-liberal benefactors to support Mr. Close, who was incumbent of Cheltenham
-for nearly thirty years, in his schemes for the welfare of his flock.
-
-Francis Close, a disciple of Charles Simeon, came to Cheltenham in 1824,
-as curate-in-charge of Holy Trinity, a newly erected chapel-of-ease to
-the parish church. The living of Cheltenham was already at that time
-in the hands of Simeon, who had purchased it from its various patrons,
-and presented it to the Reverend C. Jervis. On the death of Mr. Jervis,
-Simeon appointed young Close to this important charge. From the first
-Mr. Close was a very popular preacher. ‘It was,’ says an admirer, ‘a new
-and interesting sight to see so singularly handsome a young man filled
-with such religious zeal.’ A man of pronounced and narrow views, immense
-activity and determination, combined with geniality and cheerfulness, he
-sought to regulate the ways of society, and to some extent succeeded. He
-ruled the town from the pulpit of the parish church as from a throne,
-and earned, among those who loved him least, the name of the ‘Pope of
-Cheltenham.’[33] He preached against racing, acting, dancing. But if, as
-has been said, he established dinner-parties and destroyed the theatre,
-he acted only with others of his school of thought. Those were the days
-of eating and drinking, since some form of recreation was necessary,
-and, moreover, abstinence had a suspiciously Roman look. They were days
-when all forms of art, not that of the theatre alone, were regarded with
-distrust. It is true that Mr. Close gave a lecture on ‘Literature and
-the Fine Arts considered as Legitimate Pursuits of a Religious Man’;
-he also preached a sermon entitled ‘The Restoration of Churches is the
-Restoration of Popery,’ and he said to the head-mistress of a fashionable
-boarding-school where dancing was included in the curriculum: ‘When Mrs.
-Close wished my daughters taught dancing, I reminded her of her marriage
-vow.’
-
-Mr. Close’s energies took visible and permanent shape in the buildings
-which arose during his long incumbency. Eight churches grew up around
-the parish church, but that, alas! was not their model. Most of the
-new ones displayed all the worst features of a debased style of church
-architecture: a diminutive chancel, three-decker arrangements for parson
-and clerk, high pews, with safe doors for the congregation.
-
-National schools were built, and training colleges founded, also under
-the direction of Mr. Close, and he took his share in the institution of
-the Proprietary College for Boys, in 1843.
-
-With the new churches came new clergy, among whom, the most popular
-name at the time, was that of Archibald Boyd, vicar of Christchurch, a
-very eloquent preacher who brought the little schoolroom in the hamlet
-of Alstone, where he lectured on Sunday evenings, into rivalry with the
-parish church. To-day, he is famous for having had as his curate, for
-five years, the young Frederick Robertson, whose afternoon sermons at
-Christchurch, in spite of the suspicion of unorthodoxy which early began
-to attach itself to his name, drew many thoughtful hearers, such as the
-Principal of Cheltenham College.
-
-The most leading mind at the time among the younger clergy was that of
-Charles Henry Bromby, who became vicar of St. Paul’s in 1843. He was a
-man of large mental gifts, and had special perception of the intellectual
-needs of his day. The Working Men’s Club, which he established in
-his parish, was among the very first in the country. All the great
-educational institutions of Cheltenham are indebted to his outlook and
-zeal. Joint-founder of Cheltenham College, and later, though he took no
-public part and earned no name in the matter, of that for ‘Young Ladies
-and Children,’ his most active interest and work was for the teaching
-of the poor. He became first Principal of the Training Colleges[34] for
-headmasters and mistresses of national schools, starting the work on wise
-and secure lines, and rapidly bringing it to the front among that of
-kindred institutions.
-
-Mr. Bellairs was actively as well as zealously associated with Mr. Bromby
-in all the great schemes, by which Cheltenham, rich and poor, was to be
-enlightened, and in the case of the Proprietary College for Ladies, it is
-his name which comes to the front, and it was in his house that the first
-meeting to draw up its constitution was held.
-
-There was every reason to hope that a high-class day-school for girls,
-then almost unknown, might succeed in Cheltenham, where parents had had
-a successful experience of such a school for their boys. Everywhere,
-people, who cared about a good education for girls, found it difficult
-to obtain even at great cost. Many liked to keep their children with
-them; those who were indifferent would be glad to avail themselves of the
-cheaper method of the day-school, provided it could be run on exclusive
-lines. There had been for some years in the town, select boarding
-schools, where a few day-scholars were received. The advantage over these
-of a large public school, necessarily of a more permanent character than
-a small private institution could be, was obvious.
-
-At the meeting in the house of Mr. Bellairs, on September 30, 1853,
-a date which Miss Beale has noted as the birthday of the Ladies’
-College, there were present but three others. These were the Reverend
-W. Dobson, Principal of Cheltenham College, the Reverend H. A. Holden,
-Vice-Principal, and Dr. S. E. Comyn. One other gentleman should be named
-among these early builders, namely, Mr. Nathaniel Hartland. Colonel
-Fitzmaurice was also a member of the first council.
-
-The founders of this college and day-school for girls were anxious to
-make it clear that their aim was to develop in the pupils character and
-fitness for the duties of later life. Hence the first report states that
-it was intended ‘to afford, on reasonable terms, an education based upon
-religious principles which, preserving the modesty and gentleness of the
-female character, should so far cultivate [a girl’s] intellectual powers
-as to fit her for the discharge of those responsible duties which devolve
-upon her as a wife, mother, mistress and friend, the natural companion
-and helpmeet for man.’ In framing the constitutions Mr. Bellairs and his
-colleagues had before their minds the successful College for Boys, and
-adopted its rules with regard to religious instruction, and the social
-rank of the pupils.
-
-The draft of the resolutions, made at the first meeting, may still be
-read. Hardly less remarkable than the development of later days is the
-permanent nature of the impress given to the College at its first start.
-Some of the resolutions were:—
-
- ‘That an Institution for the daughters and young children of
- Noblemen and Gentlemen be established in Cheltenham, and be
- entitled the Cheltenham College for the education of young
- Ladies and Children.
-
- ‘The College to be established by means of one hundred shares
- of £10 each; the possessor of each share to have the power of
- nominating a Pupil, and a vote at annual and special meetings.
-
- ...
-
- ‘That the management of the College for the ensuing year shall
- be vested in the Founders, viz.... who for this purpose shall
- be constituted the Committee of Management after the expiration
- of the first year, exclusive of the Treasurer and Honorary
- Secretary, who will be _ex officio_ members of the Board, they
- being shareholders and members of the Church of England....
-
- ‘That the College be under the direction of a Principal, a
- Lady from whom the pupils will receive religious instruction
- at appointed times in accordance with the doctrine and the
- teaching of the Church of England....
-
- ‘That at the end of each year the pupils be examined by
- competent persons appointed by the Committee.
-
- ‘That the College shall consist of two departments, the Junior
- for children of both sexes, admissible after five years of age,
- the boys to be removed when they have attained their eighth
- year.
-
- ‘The appointment of the Lady Principal and all subordinate
- teachers and officers to be vested in the Committee.’
-
-With few alterations these resolutions passed into the prospectus issued
-to the public in November 1853, an exact copy of which will be found in
-the appendix.[35] Experimental prospectuses, which never left the hands
-of the Committee, exist to show how the founders formed and modified
-their views for the College. It was proposed at one time to have a noble
-patron and a visitor, besides the working Committee; but as Miss Beale
-somewhat whimsically relates, this was found to be impracticable. ‘It was
-thought that it would add to the prestige of the College, and diminish
-the prejudice which then existed, to have a distinguished patron, and
-so Lord de Saumerez, then resident in Cheltenham, was applied to, but
-in vain. So there was no Patron.’[36] There was also no visitor until
-1875, when Dr. Ellicott, then Bishop of Gloucester, kindly undertook the
-charge. The difficulty of securing patronage was probably what caused
-the Council, in virtue of one of their own rules, to invite Mr. Close to
-accept the office of President, with a seat at the Board. At the same
-time Mr. Bellairs was appointed Vice-President.
-
-In the first instance it was intended that the College should be confined
-to day-scholars; then, in case this restriction should limit the scope
-of the work and perhaps injure it financially, a sort of half-measure
-was planned, and it was proposed to state that: ‘the Committee will
-not interfere with any arrangements made by the Parents and Friends
-of pupils for Boarding their Children, provided the numbers in any
-given Boarding-House do not exceed six. Should Boarding-Houses ever be
-opened offering accommodation to a greater number of pupils than six,
-the Committee reserve to themselves the power of insisting upon and
-conferring a License, before Children in such Boarding-Houses be allowed
-the privilege of becoming Students in the College.’
-
-As early as the 1st of November three ladies had been found to undertake
-boarding-houses, and they were not restricted as to numbers. The
-low terms of the boarding-houses (£40 a year including all expenses,
-of course without the tuition fees) suggest that the ideas of the
-liberal-minded Committee may have forestalled those of the future Lady
-Principal, ever eager to help on those who deserved but could not afford
-education. The tuition fees were on the same low scale; from six guineas
-to twenty guineas, and including pianoforte lessons, class singing,
-elementary drawing and needlework, besides English subjects and French.
-
-Shares had been taken up to the number of one hundred and fifty-seven, so
-the Council had enough money at their disposal to justify the necessary
-initial outlay. After an unsuccessful effort to obtain Lake House,
-which its owner declined to let for the purposes of a school, Cambray
-House, a fine old Georgian building with a beautiful garden, was taken
-at a rent of £200 a year. Some hundreds of pounds were spent in making
-this house suitable for its purpose, arranging a schoolroom (40 by 30
-feet), a system of heating, and so on, while a part of it was set aside
-as a residence for the Lady Principal. The Committee appointed in this
-capacity Mrs. Procter, widow of Colonel Procter, ‘a highly educated
-officer,’ but her daughter Annie Procter, who was called Vice-Principal,
-was the actual head of the College. ‘The former,’ ran the first report,
-‘is possessed of that age and experience which are necessary for the
-training of the young; the latter of that youth and vigour which are
-necessary for teaching.’ A younger sister had the post of assistant
-secretary, and several regular teachers and professors were also
-appointed.
-
-[Illustration: _Cambray House._
-
-_From an old engraving._]
-
-The College was actually opened on February 13, 1854, the pupils,
-eighty-two in number, having been examined a week before that date. Thus
-the inauguration ceremony was the actual beginning of work. When writing
-her Jubilee history of the College, Miss Beale collected reminiscences
-from some who were present on the opening day. Nothing more impressive
-was forthcoming than a scrimmage of dogs in the cloak-room, the calling
-over of names, followed by immediate sorting into classes already
-arranged as a result of the examination, and that ‘various old gentlemen
-promenaded about the first few days, and held conclaves in a Board-Room
-on the right hand of the front door.’ The age of the pupils varied
-considerably from that of tiny mites to that of grown-up girls. They were
-arranged in different departments, the lowest being a kind of infant
-school on raised benches.
-
-At first the numbers increased rapidly, and by the end of the year there
-were one hundred and twenty pupils. But the fees were too low, and the
-Committee soon had cause for anxiety over expenses. In the first year,
-1854, more than £1300 was expended in regular salaries and in payments
-to visiting teachers; the accounts in December showed a deficit of £400.
-Matters improved but slowly in 1855, and in order to lessen expenses,
-various changes were suggested, such as the substitution of German, which
-the Vice-Principal could teach, for Latin, and an arrangement by which
-the pianoforte should be taught on a class system. In the general meeting
-of that year, it was resolved no longer to admit boys to the College, and
-with them disappeared the whole of the infant department, not to reappear
-till the Kindergarten was opened in 1882.
-
-This change led to a slight diminution of numbers, and the report
-of the year 1856 (published in and dated February 1857), while it
-embodied many words of praise from the examiners and showed a balance
-of receipts above expenditure in the current expenses, yet breathed a
-consciousness of many difficulties and obstacles to be overcome. It was
-acknowledged that had it been desirable to purchase furniture for the
-Lady Principal instead of paying her £25 a year for the use of her own,
-it could not have been done from the funds in hand. ‘In conclusion,’
-said the Chairman, ‘your Council beg to express their thanks to those
-parents who, during the past year, have continued to place confidence in
-the College and its system. On their own part and on that of the Lady
-Principal and the Vice-Principal, they desire to assure the public that
-no efforts shall be wanting on their part to amend what may appear, on
-mature consideration, to be defective.... They cannot depart from their
-fundamental principle, which, as they stated, is soundness rather than
-show; _magna est veritas et prævalebit_.’
-
-Next year, 1857, the numbers crept down, first to ninety-three, then to
-eighty-nine, and the capital account, which had never gone up, was little
-above £400. Shares which should have been £10, were offered for half that
-sum. The want of success was partly due to want of harmony between Miss
-Procter and the Council on points of educational method. In May 1858,
-when the numbers were again reduced, and the prospect of improvement very
-small, the Procters resigned; also the ladies who took boarders one by
-one gave up. So poor was the outlook for the College at this time that
-the Council might have felt justified in abandoning the whole scheme.
-Fortunately, however, those who possessed the foresight and courage,
-which could still carry it on, were supported by the circumstance that
-the lease of Cambray House had a couple more years to run. So it came to
-pass that in May 1858, within a fortnight of Miss Procter’s resignation,
-the Council advertised for a Lady Principal thus:—
-
- CHELTENHAM LADIES’ COLLEGE
-
- ‘A Vacancy having occurred in the Office of Lady Principal,
- Candidates for the Appointment are requested to apply by letter
- (with references) before the 1st of June, to J. P. Bell, Esq.,
- Hon. Sec., Cheltenham.
-
- ‘A well-educated and experienced Lady (between the ages of 35
- and 45) is desired, capable of conducting an Institution with
- not less than 100 day-pupils.
-
- ‘A competent knowledge of German and French, and a good
- acquaintance with general English Literature, Arithmetic, and
- the common branches of female education, are expected.
-
- ‘Salary, upwards of £200 a year, with furnished apartments, and
- other advantages.
-
- ‘No Testimonials to be sent until applied for, and no answers
- will be returned except to Candidates apparently eligible.’
-
-The shareholders requested a general meeting in order to receive an
-explanation of the cause which led to the resignation of Miss Procter,
-and this was convened for June 2. The Committee was occupied during the
-fortnight which succeeded this in selecting and interviewing some of the
-fifty candidates for the Headship, and Miss Beale was elected on June 13.
-In July Miss Procter took her final leave in the following letter to Mr.
-Hartland:—
-
- GLENDALE HOUSE, _July 28, 1858_.
-
- ‘MY DEAR SIR,—I thank you much for your kind letter enclosing
- your cheque for £41, 10s. 6d.
-
- ‘I take this opportunity of sending you the keys of the
- College. The house has been cleaned throughout. The Chimneys
- have all been swept.
-
- ‘Some few stores,—nearly a ¼ cwt. of soap, some dip candles,
- and two new scrubbing brushes,—are in a closet in the pantry.
-
- ‘The new zinc ventilator is in the press used for the drawing
- materials.
-
- ‘Two cast-iron fenders, of mine, have been removed from two of
- the class-rooms.—I remain, my dear Sir, yours very sincerely,
-
- S. ANNE PROCTER.’
-
-Miss Beale heard of a vacancy on the staff of the Ladies’ College in
-January 1858, when a Queen’s College friend, Miss Mulcaster, wrote her
-a letter interesting for the glimpses it gives both of Casterton and
-Cheltenham.
-
- ‘I am anxious,’ the letter ran, ‘that you should as soon as
- possible receive this letter, which is the very earliest reply
- in my power to make to yours.... I cannot feel very sorry on
- your own account for your leaving Casterton, although I do
- so at the manner of it.... I am very glad that you feel the
- discipline and teaching have been useful to you. I do not
- know that anything better could be desired for you than a
- return to Queen’s, but I have something, or rather a _shadow_
- of something I wish you to know in case you are disappointed
- there. I believe a place in the Ladies’ College at Cheltenham
- is vacant, and if so it might suit you. Miss Procter the
- Superintendent and many of the Committee are considered High
- Church. Miss Brewer, I am sure, would be very much pleased to
- hear from you, and I think would be disposed to facilitate your
- appointment, if there is still a vacancy. She, being one of the
- teachers, could answer any inquiries better than I. There is no
- home provided for the teachers by the Committee, but they have
- hitherto made private arrangements to live together.
-
- ‘Cheltenham, to my mind, presents unusual advantages as a place
- of residence; combining those of town and country, and last but
- not least those to be derived from Canon Boyd’s ministry and
- dear Mr. Bromby’s. I could give you some introductions, but it
- is too soon to talk of those things yet....’
-
-Miss Beale must have answered this, and probably wrote at the same time
-to Miss Brewer, whom she had known at Queen’s; but there are no further
-letters existing on the subject. But she herself told in later life
-that she declined to apply for the post as she had resolved to seek a
-Headship. There is no mention of Cheltenham in the diary until May, but
-it appears that other schools were either applied for or considered. On
-February 17 we have ‘For school at Holloway.’ On February 18, ‘A letter
-from a Greenwich school.’ This was perhaps visited on the 22nd, when the
-diary mentions a journey to Greenwich; but it is not named again. On
-March 2 we find ‘Mamma wrote to Mrs. Birch about school at Reigate.’ On
-March 24, ‘Talked to Mr. Hyde about College at Camberwell.’ This possibly
-appears again in the record of April 17: ‘Mary decides against Camberwell
-scheme.’
-
-A letter mentioned in Miss Beale’s diary as received from Cheltenham
-on May 18 was doubtless in answer to her application, after the
-advertisement had appeared, to inform her that she was accepted as
-a candidate for the vacant Headship. The record of the next few
-weeks, brief as it is, bears marks of the zeal and activity with
-which everything possible was done to procure testimonials and the
-recommendations of friends; while, at the same time, the work went on at
-Barnes, and the sheets of the _Textbook_ were passing through the press.
-The writer was obviously full of anxiety and hope, having perceived in
-Cheltenham a promising sphere of work; but she did not relax the daily
-spiritual combat to which we owe the existence of the diary.
-
-On receipt of a favourable answer she went at once to see Mr. Plumptre,
-and wrote to Dr. Trench. After the Casterton experience it was necessary
-to have further recommendations than those which she had taken there from
-Queen’s College. Among the friends to whom she wrote was Mrs. Lancaster,
-who replied by return:—
-
- ‘ENGLEMERE, _Whit. Tues., 1858_.
-
- ‘I am very sorry that you did not tell me about Cheltenham
- before: I am one of the Proprietors! or Committee or something!
- and my brother is Vice-Principal—indeed he almost established
- it. I have now written to him telling him my thoughts as
- to the maturity of your mind and judgment, and I hope it
- may be successful. If you are not quite determined against
- Penitentiary work there is a very nice thing for a Lady
- Superintendent ... about which the Hon. and Rev. C. Harris
- ... would give you full particulars.... It is worked by a
- Committee, but the Lady Superintendent would be allowed to do
- as she liked....’
-
-In the course of the next fortnight many more letters were received.
-Among them one from Miss Elwall of the Barnes School. She wrote:—
-
- ‘ ... You have succeeded in making subjects usually styled dry,
- positively attractive, whilst your plan has been successful in
- forming not merely superficial scholars even whilst producing
- results in a remarkably short period.
-
- ‘Your gentleness of manner, patience, and lady-like deportment
- are all that could be desired, and should you leave me I shall
- feel the greatest regret at the termination of an engagement
- which has been equally agreeable to myself and to my pupils.—I
- am, dear Miss Beale, with much esteem, yours most sincerely,
-
- M. J. ELWALL.’
-
-One from Mrs. Curling, the wife of Dr. Curling, an eminent physician and
-her father’s friend, runs:—
-
- ‘39 GROSVENOR STREET, _June 12, 1858_.
-
- ‘ ... I shall be truly happy if any recommendation of mine
- can promote your success. I have had the pleasure of knowing
- you many years, and in your journeys with me abroad I have
- had frequent opportunities of witnessing your tact and common
- sense, as well as good temper, and believe you to possess
- in addition the power of management essential for such an
- appointment. I am sure that the College would be fortunate in
- obtaining your assistance.’
-
-Some friends wrote direct to the Cheltenham Council. The testimony
-borne to Miss Beale’s high character is genuine and strong, if quaintly
-expressed according to present-day notions in some of these. Mr.
-Shepheard wrote:—
-
- ‘SILVERDALE, _June 1858_.
-
- ‘I have the greatest pleasure in expressing my high opinion of
- Miss Beale’s character and attainments generally. Though she
- holds opinions on the subject of sacramental grace entirely
- opposed to my own, it is no more than her due that I should
- say that her high sense of duty, and inflexible integrity of
- principle, and conscientious following of the path of duty
- without regard to consequences, have won my highest respect and
- esteem.
-
- ‘The circumstances under which she left the Clergy Daughters’
- School in this place, were such, that I cannot speak of them in
- detail, out of unwillingness to reflect on the conduct of the
- authorities there, but I consider her dismissal by them to have
- been highly honourable to herself.
-
- ‘As a Teacher, I have reason to believe that she is very highly
- accomplished and has been very successful—though I say this
- from general impressions only.
-
- H. SHEPHEARD, M.A.
-
- _Incumbent of Casterton, late Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford,
- and late Head Master of Cheam School, Surrey._’
-
-and Miss Reynolds privately approached Mr. Bellairs:—
-
- ‘TRINITY TERRACE, CHELTENHAM.
-
- ‘A friend has asked me whether I can do anything to advance the
- interests of Miss Beale....
-
- ‘Miss Beale is not personally known to me, but from all I have
- heard she is a very conscientious and hard-working person,
- as well as one whose attainments are very high in most and I
- believe _all_ of the departments necessary for the successful
- discharge of so important an office. Whether her talents for
- government correspond with her educational skill, and her _very
- high religious and moral character_, I know not; but I have
- been anxious to fulfil her wish in drawing your attention to
- her application, which she feared might be overlooked as one
- among many.
-
-The most interesting of this series of letters is one from Miss Alston
-to Mrs. Lancaster. This, through Mr. Bellairs, undoubtedly helped to
-influence the Council, whose members were wise enough to seek for
-character as much as attainment in the new Head. Others had dwelt on Miss
-Beale’s talent and power and single-hearted devotion to her calling; Miss
-Alston could also speak of her life and value at home.
-
- ‘DONNINGTON RECTORY, _June 12, 1858_.
-
- ‘ ... I heard from Miss Beale this morning that the Cheltenham
- College had written for her testimonials. I hope she may
- obtain the appointment she desires, it seems one for which
- she is so well qualified. Of her power of teaching others,
- and making them delight in their studies, there is no doubt.
- But you do not know her as I do, in her home and daily life;
- there all look up to her and seek her counsel. Our friendship
- commenced when we were eighteen; since that time I have not
- only profited, I trust, by the instruction she has given me in
- the pursuit of various studies, but I have always consulted
- her on all my plans, where the welfare of others has been
- concerned, and have found her counsel full of common sense
- and kind consideration for the feelings of those we desired
- to help or instruct. She is good-tempered and has plenty of
- tact, but shows instantly her dislike to anything untrue in
- word or act. Forgive this long letter, but I thought you might
- have some influence, and I am much interested for my friend,
- and at the same time feel that I should rather place any one I
- loved under her than with any one else I have met. With kind
- regards,—Believe me yours very sincerely,
-
- ELIZA ANN ALSTON.’
-
-On June 14 came a letter summoning Miss Beale to Cheltenham. Her diary
-does not tell us where she stayed, or give any particulars of the
-interviews she had with the Council as a body, or with individuals. It
-records her election on the 16th, and the fact that Mr. Bellairs came
-to breakfast on the 17th. On the same day she saw Mr. Hartland and Dr.
-Comyn. By the single word ‘dress,’ which concludes her meagre entries of
-what were such momentous events for her, hangs a little tale of personal
-need supplied by the kind thought of a sister who willingly lent a blue
-silk gown for the would-be Lady Principal to wear at her first interview
-with her Council. Absorption in the _Textbook_ and kindred subjects had
-precluded care of the writer’s wardrobe, and when this important moment
-came, it was felt that neither the simple black nor the mouse-coloured
-grey was equal to the occasion. The conscientious care of the borrowed
-plumes is still remembered.
-
-On June 18 she returned from Cheltenham, full of hope, to write
-innumerable letters—stamps, under their ancient name of ‘heads,’
-became almost a daily entrance in the diary, which sometimes served as
-account-book;—to finish the lessons at Barnes, for the school year had
-not yet ended; and to correct the proofs of the _Textbook_, with the
-satisfaction of feeling that she had in it something that would help in
-the formation of her teachers-to-be. She received many congratulations.
-Some letters were kept; Mr. Shepheard’s is given, as it bears upon a
-subject which was about to cause fresh trouble.
-
- ‘SILVERDALE, _June 24, 1858_.
-
- ‘ ... I must tell you how pleased I am on your account
- personally, at your success—and the triumph of justice in your
- case over unfairness and tyranny. My pleasure would be indeed
- great, if I had any hope that you might be led to reconsider
- those opinions on sacramental grace which have formed the only
- subject of division in opinion between us. The longer I live
- the more I am convinced of their danger as containing in fact
- the germ of all popery; and subverting the very nature and
- essence of vital godliness, by substituting the _form_ for the
- _reality_, the outward _act_ for the inward spiritual power and
- operation.
-
- ‘I wish you would read Mr. Litton’s book, _The Church of
- Christ_, on that subject; it is unanswerable.
-
- ‘What is exactly the name and nature of your College?—Very
- sincerely yours with all kindest regards,
-
- H. SHEPHEARD.’
-
-There were also through these weeks a good many interchanged visits on
-matters both of business and pleasure. The name of Miss Vincent occurs
-twice among others mentioned in the diary. This is the lady who in August
-of 1858 became Lady Superintendent at Casterton, and remained there till
-1888, when she died there in harness at the age of seventy-five.
-
-Dorothea Beale was not, however, destined to take possession of her
-kingdom without a conflict. The old religious dispute was handed on from
-Casterton, for Mr. Shepheard, with one other whose name does not appear,
-felt he could not but mention the points he held to be ‘dangerous’ in
-her religious beliefs. And there was certainly still another letter to
-discourage the Council, from M. Mariette to Mr. Penrice Bell, questioning
-Miss Beale’s suitability for the post of Head Mistress on the ground that
-she was not sympathetic in manner. This appears to have been disregarded,
-but the partisans of Dean Close felt bound to consider the accusation of
-High Church opinions. Miss Beale first learned of the opposition which
-had arisen to her appointment on July 12, in the following letter from
-Mr. Bell:—
-
- ‘_July 10, 1858._
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—Letters have been put into my hand to-day
- which cause me much anxiety, and before consulting the Council
- upon the subject, I think it best to communicate with you,
- begging an immediate reply in the same spirit of unreserve and
- candour and frankness as that in which I now write.
-
- ‘When here I took pains to impress upon your mind the fact
- that the Council could not in justice to those whom they
- represent accept a Lady Principal who holds High Church views
- or sympathises with them; and that they had rejected most
- satisfactory testimonials from one of the candidates solely
- on the ground of her professing doctrinal views of that
- character. I was thus explicit with you in order to prevent
- any misunderstanding upon this most important question, but
- nothing fell from your lips to lead me to suppose you were
- open to an objection of that nature. I forbore from motives of
- delicacy (and probably the other members of the Council did the
- same), to press this subject upon you in the shape of direct
- enquiry, feeling sure you would not conceal your real views
- if they were indeed such as I plainly stated to be opposed
- to those entertained by the founders of the institution. The
- letters are marked “Private,” so I am not at liberty to name
- the writers, but I will quote the material portions; and I may
- remark that both gentlemen speak in the highest terms of your
- qualifications in general.
-
- ‘“She, Miss Beale, is very High Church to say the least, and
- holds ultra views of Baptismal Regeneration.” ... “She has
- also a serious and deep religious feeling, and a self-denying
- character. _But_ she is decidedly High Church. Her opinions
- on the vital and critical question of sacramental grace
- are altogether those of the High Church or Tractarian
- School—assuming the _opus operatum_ of the Sacraments to
- convey, of necessity and in all cases, the inward grace of
- which that Sacrament is the sign.”
-
- ‘“It is right to add that Miss Beale avows her belief in the
- _Bible_ as the rule of faith.”
-
- ‘Now you have undoubtedly full right to entertain such opinions
- as in your conscience you believe to be true, but at the same
- time you are (and were) bound in honour of good faith, on such
- occasion as the offering of yourself for the important position
- to which you have been recently appointed, to _avow_ your
- opinions openly and distinctly; especially when made acquainted
- with the views of those responsible for your selection.
-
- ‘If it be the fact that you do hold opinions such as are
- attributed to you, it is clear that you will not only inflict
- serious injury on the Institution, but also on yourself, by
- assuming the office—for if you hold us to the appointment the
- Council would and must, I imagine, at once give you the three
- months’ notice (or salary equivalent), and cancel it at the
- earliest period, publishing their reasons for so extraordinary
- a step. If, however, you are misrepresented, I shall heartily
- rejoice on every account, but I beg of you, _by return of
- post_, to favour me with a definite reply to the two questions
- I feel it now my duty to put to you:—
-
- ‘1st. Do you or do you not hold the doctrine of the _opus
- operatum_ in the Sacrament of Baptism?
-
- ‘2nd. Do you or not sympathise with and are attached to the
- principles of the High Church party?—Believe me to remain,
- yours very truly,
-
- J. PENRICE BELL, _Hon. Sec._
-
- ‘_PS._—I think it better not to print the Prospectus until the
- present difficulty is settled in some way.’
-
-This letter, which must have come as a bolt from the blue, was a blow,
-but not of a crushing nature to one whose energies were ever braced
-by conflict. Miss Beale wrote at once to Mr. Bellairs to tell him what
-had happened, and to Mr. Bell in answer to his attack. Both letters are
-given, as they clearly state her religious position. To Mr. Bellairs she
-wrote:—
-
- ‘31 FINSBURY SQUARE, _July 12_.
-
- ‘ ... Although our acquaintance has been very short, owing
- to the kindness with which you received me, I cannot help
- considering you in some measure as a friend, and feeling that
- you will understand me: perhaps, also, your office both as
- Clergyman and Vice-President of the Cheltenham Ladies’ College
- gives me some right to trouble you upon this occasion.
-
- ‘I received this morning a note from Mr. Bell, accusing me
- of want of candour in not speaking of my religious views,
- although they were in no way alluded to by the Council, and
- telling me he has been informed that my opinions are those of
- the Tractarian School. Now, as I have never seen more than a
- few pages of the “Tracts,” I cannot positively contradict such
- a statement. I have explained somewhat at large to him what
- are my opinions; I will not repeat them to you, as you will
- no doubt see the letter. That my views differ considerably
- from those of the ultra-evangelical party, of which Mr. Carus
- Wilson is one of the leaders, and the _Record_ the accredited
- organ, I freely acknowledge; but I think them those of a
- moderate member of the English Church, and on seeing your
- name as Vice-President, I concluded the Ladies’ College was
- not identified with any exclusive party. I have endeavoured
- to be perfectly candid, for I could not undertake so great a
- work without the hope of God’s blessing. Should my own letter
- not be considered decisive evidence against me, perhaps you
- would think it worth while to write to Mrs. Lancaster or Mrs.
- Greene (with whom I think you said you were acquainted). With
- both of them I have spoken freely on religious subjects, and
- they would tell you whether they believed my opinions to be
- extreme. As nothing is farther from my wishes than to deceive
- the Council, I forward to you by this post two books, which I
- have published without my name—not because I was ashamed of
- expressing what I thought right, but because one naturally
- shrinks from exposing without necessity one’s inner religious
- life. I feel this more especially with regard to the smaller
- book, which I must therefore ask you not to mention to others.
- I send them to you, because they may assist you in coming to a
- right conclusion, whether for or against my retaining the post
- to which I have been appointed, and I think the Council will be
- in a great measure guided by your decision.’
-
-To Mr. Penrice Bell:—
-
- ‘31 FINSBURY SQUARE, _July 12, 1858_.
-
- ‘On looking at the Prospectus of the Casterton School,
- I saw on the Committee the names of those who professed
- ultra-evangelical views; I therefore felt it my duty distinctly
- to explain, before accepting the appointment, wherein my
- opinions differed from those which I knew them to hold. It
- was _after_ I had made that statement that I was appointed.
- On looking at the papers of the Cheltenham College, I found
- the name of Mr. Close in conjunction with that of Mr. Bellairs
- and others. From this and what I had heard privately I was led
- to conclude that you were not identified with any particular
- party in the Church; that your views were not more exclusive
- than those of the Educational Committee of Queen’s College,
- who had expressed themselves satisfied with my teaching. I
- also placed in your hands a testimonial from the Professor of
- Theology there; my opinion was still further strengthened by
- your accepting the recommendation of the Dean of Westminster
- and including the Liturgy of the Church of England amongst the
- subjects taught.
-
- ‘Believing myself to hold moderate, certainly not ultra, views
- I did not feel myself open to the charge brought against me
- after my appointment. I think you will remember the subject of
- religion was in no way alluded to before.
-
- ‘Having thus, I hope, justified myself from any accusation of
- want of candour, I proceed to answer your questions as briefly
- as I can.
-
- ‘If you understand by the _opus operatum_ “efficacy” of
- Baptism,—that all who are baptized are therefore saved (a
- doctrine which Mr. Shepheard assured me was held by some), I
- explicitly state that I do not hold that doctrine. I believe
- Baptism to be “an outward and visible sign of an inward and
- spiritual grace given unto us” (Catechism); to be the appointed
- means for admitting members into the Church of Christ,
- according to St. Paul’s teaching that “Christ gave Himself for
- the Church that He might save it and cleanse it by the washing
- of water by the word” (Eph. v. 26); that “according to His
- mercy we are saved by the washing of regeneration and renewing
- of the Holy Ghost” (Tit. iii. 5); that we are therein made
- “members of Christ” and adopted “children of God”; but when I
- use the word “regeneration” I do not understand that spoken
- of by St. John when he says, “he that is born of God cannot
- sin,” but that gift of life without which we are unable even
- to _think_ any good thing; a gift which the Bishop solemnly
- declares to have been already received by those who come to
- be confirmed (Confirmation Service), but which requires daily
- renewal, a gift which we may lose by grieving God’s Holy
- Spirit by neglecting the means of grace, by hiding our Lord’s
- treasure. And this teaching I hold because I find it in the
- Bible, which I acknowledge with the sixth article to be our
- only rule of faith—because it seems to me the basis of St.
- Paul’s teaching (1 Cor. iii.; 2 Cor. vi. 10)—and it makes our
- responsibilities higher and deeper if we acknowledge with
- the Apostle in the language which he used to the whole of
- the Corinthian Church, that we are “the temples of the Holy
- Ghost.” I feel that any partial views which tell us of God’s
- grace being given to some and not to others are contrary to the
- whole tenor of Scripture. Your second question again cannot be
- categorically answered, since it has never been defined what
- are the opinions of the High Church party; I would say that I
- differ from some who assume that title....[37] I think no one
- could entertain a greater dread than I of those Romish opinions
- entertained by some “who went out from us, but were not of
- us”; indeed during the last six months I have been engaged in
- preparing an English History for the use of schools, _because_
- Ince’s _Outlines_ (a book used in your College) inculcates
- Romish doctrines.
-
- ‘In conclusion, I must apologize for the unmethodical way in
- which I have expressed myself, as I am writing in great haste
- to catch the next post, and I have thought it right to reply to
- you without consulting any person or book, except the Bible and
- Prayer Book. I have endeavoured to be perfectly candid;—should
- the Council decide that my views are so unsound that I am unfit
- to occupy the position to which I have been appointed, I shall
- trust that they will allow me to make as public a statement of
- my opinions as they are obliged to make of my dismissal, for
- I shall feel that after this no person of moderate views will
- trust me, and my own conscience would not allow me to work with
- the extreme party in either high or low church.’
-
-The diary of these two days gives a hint of the anxiety Miss Beale
-underwent when the attack was made upon her, and before she could receive
-answers to her own letters:—
-
- ‘_July 12._—Mr. B(ell)’s letter about H(igh) Church from
- Cheltenham, and my answer. Some vanity. (Prayer) for
- resignation.
-
- ‘_July 13._—Sent proofs to Cheltenham. Dined at the Curlings.
- Dr. Clarke very agreeable. Felt angry with Mr. Shepheard.’
-
-Mr. Bell’s reply to Miss Beale’s letter suggests that the difficulty
-before the Council was less directly one of religious principle than that
-of working a school where certain precise opinions were not professed.
-
- ‘_July 13, 1858._
-
- ‘MY DEAR MISS BEALE,—I have to-day laid your reply before Mr.
- Hartland and Dr. Comyn, the only two of my colleagues now here,
- and we have no fault to find with its tenor, which is explicit
- enough. Whether or not the fact of your holding the opinions
- thus avowed will lead to difficulties hereafter, we cannot
- say. If you feel conscientiously bound in and out of class to
- make known and inculcate your distinctive views of doctrine
- according to your interpretation of scripture and of our
- Liturgy and Articles, then it is easy to foresee the result.
- If, however (as I hope), you regard it of primary importance
- in the instruction of the children to inculcate love to God
- and His Son, and charity (in its manifold phases and with its
- relative duties), towards our fellows—treating as of far minor
- importance the doctrinal points about which good men differ so
- widely,—then I should not anticipate any active opposition from
- those to whom your peculiar opinions may be known.
-
- ‘The gentleman (a resident clergyman of some influence) to
- whom the two quoted letters were addressed, is now absent for
- a few days; and it remains to be seen whether his scruples and
- objections are, if not removed, at least rendered quiescent
- by your reply. If he should withdraw his children, and make
- known the grounds of doing so, the effect would undoubtedly be
- prejudicial to the College, and the experiment of conducting it
- under your auspices might be futile. Much may depend on what
- answer you can conscientiously make to this question:—
-
- Holding the opinions you have expressed, should you consider
- it a duty and feel it incumbent on you to inculcate them in
- your Divinity instruction to the pupils?
-
- If you could favour me by a few lines by _return_ of post (as I
- leave before post hour on Friday morning) on this point, which
- I can annex to your letter of to-day, I could see my colleagues
- on the subject once more, and arrange what shall be done in my
- absence.—Yours truly,
-
- J. PENRICE BELL, _Hon. Sec._’
-
-Among Miss Beale’s papers exists an undated and much erased note, which
-appears to be her answer to the above. It begins with the remark: ‘I am
-glad to find the Council has not decided that I am so great a heretic
-as from your first letter I feared they would’; and it closes with the
-statement: ‘I quite feel it to be a Christian duty, if it be possible
-to live peaceably with all men, not giving heed to those things which
-minister questions rather than godly edifying, but I am sure you will
-feel I should be unworthy of your confidence could I through any fear of
-consequences resort to the least untruthfulness.’ Meanwhile Mr. Bellairs
-also wrote:—
-
- ‘ ... Mr. Bell’s letter was, I imagine, of a private character,
- as I had heard nothing of the subject of it before the arrival
- of your note of to-day.
-
- ‘So far as I am concerned, my impression is that we of the
- Council have nothing to do _now_ with your private Theological
- opinions, whatever they are, unless they are so extreme as
- would damage the College (and within tolerably wide limits,
- I individually am very indifferent on the matter). I trust
- you have good sense and propriety sufficient to induce you
- to avoid all teaching which would in any degree disturb the
- character which the College ought, in my opinion, to maintain:
- viz. a place of learning in which all members of the Church
- of England may receive religious instruction in an honest and
- straightforward way, according to the teaching of the Bible and
- the formularies of the Church, without extreme interpretation
- one way or the other. I shall probably hear more of this matter
- when I see Mr. Bell.’
-
-The storm was over. Though individuals of quite opposing views would,
-later on, occasionally cavil at points in Miss Beale’s method of
-teaching Scripture, she never really experienced further trouble on this
-ground. There are many, like the unknown lady to whose ‘High Church’
-opinions the Council took objection, who would have felt they could not
-work in the spirit of compromise implied in the letters of Mr. Bell and
-Mr. Bellairs. There are some who might have agreed to do so, and in
-terror of offending, would have shirked the difficult task of religious
-instruction to the point of making it a lifeless thing. Miss Beale
-undertook it with her eyes open, and in spite, or possibly because of the
-hindrances in the way, her Scripture lessons became the very pivot of her
-teaching.
-
-The diary again is very characteristic at this point. The anxiety of mind
-caused by her trouble was not permitted to excuse ill-temper. ‘July 4.
-Letter from Cheltenham. Neglect of prayer. Several times rude.’ This was
-the day which practically settled the fate of the Ladies’ College, and
-was the greatest visible landmark in Miss Beale’s life. In the ensuing
-fortnight, the last she spent at home, though there is an entry for
-every day, the name of Cheltenham does not occur. Two visits from Miss
-Brewer, who had been re-appointed to the Cheltenham staff with the title
-of Vice-Principal, ‘shopping,’ and ‘turning out,’ suggest preparations.
-There is no entry of the day on which she went, but from deduction it was
-August 4, and in the company of her mother.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-EARLY HISTORY OF THE LADIES’ COLLEGE
-
- ‘Old fables are not all a lie
- Which tell of wondrous birth;
- Of Titan children, Father Sky,
- And wondrous Mother Earth.
-
- Earth-born, my sister, thou art still
- A daughter of the sky;
- Oh, climb for ever up the hill
- Of thy divinity.
-
- ...
-
- For cause and end of all thy strife,
- And unrest as thou art—
- Still stings thee to a higher life
- The Father at thy heart.’
-
- GEORGE MACDONALD, _To my Sister,
- on her Twenty-first Birthday_.
-
-
-Cambray House, which was Miss Beale’s home for fifteen years, is one of
-the finest buildings erected in the period when Cheltenham was being laid
-out with a view to royal visits. The Duke of Wellington himself stayed
-there in 1823.
-
-[Illustration: _Miss Dorothea Beale_
-
-_1859._]
-
-The garden, mentioned in the early College reports as the ‘pleasure
-grounds,’ was a special delight to Miss Beale. In 1858 it was still
-untouched, and had many beautiful trees; one, a standard apricot tree,
-was—happy omen! covered with golden fruit in that first autumn of
-her life at Cheltenham. The house itself was beginning to change its
-character of family residence to that of a building adapted for school
-purposes, and before very long even the rooms given up for the use of the
-Principal and the Vice-Principal were encroached upon. Nor were those
-rooms furnished in character with the stately outside of the house.
-‘The second-hand furniture procured would not have delighted people of
-æsthetic taste. Curtains were dispensed with as far as possible, and it
-was questioned whether a carving-knife was required by the Principal
-in her furnished apartments.’[38] To such domestic details Miss Beale
-was indifferent, but it must have been less easy to practise an economy
-which limited the extension of her work. ‘The teaching staff was reduced
-as low as possible, and the Principal and Vice-Principal gave up their
-half-holiday to chaperone those who took lessons from masters. The
-Principal taught all the English subjects to Classes I. and II., besides
-giving weekly lessons in Holy Scripture throughout the College.’
-
-So long as the chief task of the Lady Principal was to prevent the
-College losing further ground, so long as her time and thought outside
-school hours were absorbed by anxiety over every pupil who came and went,
-still more over those who failed to come, there could be no rapid process
-of development. But it would have been impossible for Miss Beale to take
-up an existing educational work without at once making her individual
-mark upon it, and from the first the school felt the grasp of her able
-hand. At Casterton she had longed at once to change, to reform. At
-Cheltenham remodelling rather than revolution was her aim—fulfilment and
-wise development.
-
-To understand the way in which she gave fresh life, and gradually
-refashioned the methods she found, it is necessary to go back to the
-prehistoric days before her arrival in 1858. There is little record of
-the educational system and teaching of that period, but it is certain
-that both were liberal and thorough, free from narrowness and petty
-tyranny, in advance of those existing in the ordinary boarding-school
-of the day. The curriculum, it is noteworthy, was arranged with a view
-to developing the mind and character. Latin was taught at first ‘very
-thoroughly,’ and the change by which after the first year it was replaced
-by German, which the Lady Principal could teach, was a question of
-economy, not of conciliation of parents who might think dead languages
-useless subjects of study. In making the substitution it was hoped,
-so runs the report of 1856, that instruction in German ‘might be made
-equally instrumental with that in the Latin language for conveying an
-accurate, exact, and logical knowledge of the principles of general
-Grammar. In this impression (your Council) find ... that they have not
-been mistaken.’
-
-This attitude with regard to German was no new idea to Miss Beale,
-and she pursued the aims of the founders when she made the language a
-necessary subject of study for all pupils above the lower classes. Latin
-she discouraged, except in the case of those who were near the top of the
-College, maintaining that girls of seventeen and eighteen could learn in
-a few months as much Latin as would absorb the greater part of a boy’s
-whole time at school.
-
-On the question of music the founders had shown themselves out of
-sympathy with the fashionable practice of a day when every ‘young lady’
-was expected to perform on the piano, every governess to teach it. They
-conceded so far as to include music in the regular curriculum, but the
-expense of providing the requisite number of teachers and pianos for so
-many pupils was heavy. To meet this a system of class instruction was
-devised, by which the teacher gave a lesson to four pupils at once, the
-same piece being performed simultaneously on the treble and bass of two
-pianos. Whether such an arrangement was conducive to the production of
-good music or the formation of taste may be doubted. It suggests, indeed,
-a certain irony in those who hit upon a scheme that might just satisfy a
-foolish popular demand, assured that any who really cared for music would
-not grudge payment to the good teachers provided for the extra classes.
-The music difficulty occupies some space in the early reports which,
-in somewhat stilted and solemn fashion, set forth new ideals for the
-education of the ‘fairer sex.’ The following is quoted from the report of
-February 1856:—
-
- ‘Your Council cannot refrain from stating their belief that
- as long as the singular and extraordinary notion continues
- to prevail in the minds of those forming the upper classes
- of English Society, that dexterity of fingering on a single
- instrument is _the_ most important part of female education,
- against, it might have been thought, not only the suggestions
- of common sense, but the practical lessons of later life, so
- long will the time required to be given for attaining even
- a low amount of proficiency in this sleight of hand, most
- seriously interfere with progress in all education and mental
- cultivation worthy of the name.
-
- ‘How far the acknowledged deficiency of many of the fairer
- sex in logical qualities and reasoning powers is due to this
- strange delusion, it is not for your Council to discuss; but
- they are not without hopes that the time may not be far distant
- when they will be supported in an arrangement which will
- place instrumental music altogether among the extra subjects,
- and leave them and the teachers free to elevate and improve,
- morally and intellectually, the condition of the female mind,
- unembarrassed by so unessential an accomplishment.’
-
-These remarks were followed in 1857 by others:—
-
- ‘Your Council have nothing to add to or retract from what
- was said upon this subject in that Report: but, while they
- believe that the instruction in this so-called accomplishment
- is as efficient within these walls as it is capable, under all
- circumstances, of being made, they must repeat their regret
- that so vast a portion of valuable time should be sacrificed,
- in the earlier years of almost every Englishwoman who hopes
- to become a wife and mother, to that which is confessedly of
- no value in an intellectual point of view; and can, by no
- possibility, be of service to her in either of these two most
- important, and generally much coveted capacities.’
-
-The College had opened with a goodly array of teachers of
-‘accomplishments,’ as it was hoped thus to attract bye-students. These
-were gradually dismissed, and it cannot have added to the reputation
-of the school that some of the best-known masters, such as M. Théodore
-Colson, were considered too expensive. When the new Principal came there
-were only two teachers of music, one of whom was Mrs. Lloyd, mother of
-the great singer. Of this lady’s skill and loyalty Miss Beale always
-spoke with affectionate remembrance. The Lady Principal gained her
-support in a reform instituted very early in her reign, when separate
-piano lessons were again introduced, and the class system, disliked by
-Miss Beale on other than musical grounds, was swept away. She could
-not permit an arrangement which withdrew four pupils at once from the
-ordinary work of the school; through which important lessons were lost,
-and ‘collisions between class and music teachers made frequent.’ That
-the Council allowed such a change to be made is a testimony to their
-confidence in the new Principal. The immediate result was disastrous to
-the funds, and continued to be so until Mr. Brancker introduced his new
-financial scheme in 1860.
-
-The founders of the College were not men to be content with knowledge
-obtained from epitomes; Miss Procter, also, was earnest and devoted
-in her work, and took trouble to teach by means of lectures; but only
-dictated notes were given, and these were not corrected. Her lessons were
-evidently interesting:—
-
- ‘We worked hard, and the teaching was very thorough. I have
- no doubt many of the pupils beside myself would willingly own
- the great debt of gratitude they owe to Miss Procter; not so
- much, perhaps, for what she taught, as for the way in which
- she educated us by developing and enlarging our minds. She
- possessed a good library, and we were often sent for books
- of reference, and shown the bearings of the subject we were
- studying. Physical geography was taught by Miss Brewer, who
- always carefully prepared her lessons. M. Tiesset made our
- French lessons delightful, even the grammar was a pleasure, and
- he seemed to enjoy teaching us as much as we did being taught
- by him.’
-
-So wrote Mrs. Coulson (_née_ Hartland) for Miss Beale’s _History of the
-Ladies’ College_, and another old pupil added:—
-
- ‘We had interesting lectures on Ancient History in general,
- and Greek History and Literature, from Miss Procter.... M.
- Tiesset and his sister taught French very well indeed, and I
- especially remember a chart of irregular verbs, M. Tiesset’s
- own arrangement, which, I believe, was a valuable help.’
-
-Greek history was a favourite subject with Miss Procter, who neglected
-for it the teaching of any other. Miss Beale, fresh from her _Textbook_,
-at once began English and general history with her young first class.
-Regardless of the additional labour it brought her, she also taught the
-children to take notes, which she corrected for them. She gave weekly
-examinations on the subjects studied, thus affording opportunity for
-English composition.
-
-No science nor mathematics were taught in the early days. Miss Beale
-would have liked to introduce Euclid at once, but says, ‘Had I done so, I
-might have been the death of the College, so I had to wait for the tide.
-I began my innovations with the introduction of scientific teaching, and
-under the name of physical geography I was able to teach a good deal.
-This subject was unobjectionable, as few boys learned geography.’
-
-In one particular Miss Beale found the authorities of her new school
-striving to be abreast with the times. It was a rule of the constitution
-that the pupils should be examined annually, and each year a graduate of
-Oxford or Cambridge had undertaken the task. The first examiner (in 1853)
-was Mr. Nicolay, then Dean of Queen’s College, Harley Street. In the
-succeeding years a College master or some other local scholar conducted
-the examination and sent in a report to the Council.
-
-The few specimens left of those early examination questions, even without
-the answers, mark a tide-line now interesting to trace.
-
-At first the review of all knowledge was comprehended in twelve very
-simple questions, the most difficult mathematical calculation set before
-the first class being, ‘The Price of 3 ozs. of tea at 4s. 4d. per lb.’
-The paper concluded thus:—
-
- ‘11. Write out that part of your duty towards your neighbour
- which explains the fifth commandment, and prove each assertion
- from Scripture.
-
- ‘12. Write out the following sentence in large text, and small
- hand, as specimens of your handwriting:
-
- ‘Integrity of understanding, and nicety of discernment, were
- not allotted.
-
- ‘(Attach to this paper specimens of your needlework and of your
- drawing).’
-
-To the true teacher the interest of her work lies, beyond and above all
-subjects and methods, in the child. No tale, alas! nor letter remains
-to show what Miss Beale thought of her children when she first came
-among them. In one respect there must have been disappointment. Miss
-Procter had opened a rival school, which had drawn off the elder pupils;
-consequently the first class consisted of girls of thirteen and fourteen.
-But fortunately there are some of those same children who can recall
-the first impression made upon themselves by the new Principal, as she
-appeared on August 19, 1858. Mrs. Mace, a daughter of the late Bishop
-Bromby, was among these. She writes:—
-
- ‘I well remember Miss Beale’s first appearance at College,
- and how I and three or four special friends, who were already
- there ... felt fiercely loyal to the former rule, and told
- each other we knew exactly what the new Principal would be
- like, “thin, tall, spectacled, and old-maidy.” I can see her
- now as she appeared in reality,—the slight, young figure, the
- very gentle, gliding movements, the quiet face with its look
- of intense thoughtfulness and utter absence of all poor and
- common stress and turmoil, the intellectual brow, the wonderful
- eyes with their calm outlook and their expression of inner
- vision. You may be sure it was not long before the captious
- thirteen-year-olds were changed into warm admirers.
-
- ‘I do not think her quiet dignity, her strength and
- personality, her power of influence, could at any time of
- her strenuous and successful life have been greater or more
- impressive. We were few in number then, and, of course, saw
- more of her than was possible for later pupils.
-
- ‘I never remember her raising her voice, scolding us, being
- satirical or impatient with dulness or inattention. She was not
- satirical even when a small girl, on being asked what criticism
- might be passed on Milton’s treatment of _Paradise Lost_,
- ventured the audacious suggestion that the poet was “verbose.”’
-
-Small instances of the new Principal’s own powers of observation and use
-of outside facts stand out through the mists of time; for instance,
-
- ‘an afternoon when she visited the needlework room and found
- me being most justly blamed for inefficiency. In kindly tones
- she said to the shy and clumsy culprit, “You ought to sew well,
- for your mother has such beautiful long fingers,” and somehow
- I felt comforted and encouraged. Then there was a day when I
- summoned up courage to go and tell her that I had been guilty
- of some small disobedience, as well as others who had been
- detected and punished. She seized the opportunity of impressing
- upon me that as I was (though only fourteen) a teacher in my
- father’s Sunday-school,—a fact of which I did not know she was
- aware,—I must surely see that obedience to rule was necessary.
- I can still hear the low, earnest tones in which she made her
- appeal to my sense of justice and right.’
-
-The incident suggests a laxer state of discipline than was ever known
-after. Assuredly on this point Miss Beale found a good deal to do. Some
-of the ‘young ladies’ treated the good-natured French master as their
-brothers at Cheltenham College might have done. There is a story, too, of
-a convenient cupboard at the end of the schoolroom, large enough for a
-quiet game or gossip, and of the consternation produced on a little knot
-of girls who thought they had assembled unobserved, when the door was
-quietly opened upon them by the Lady Principal herself.
-
-In the matter of discipline, as of tuition, Miss Beale appears to
-have worked on lines already laid down. Perhaps she kept before her
-mind counsel which she later gave to a pupil who left Cheltenham to
-be head of a Foundation School: ‘Remember the school belongs to the
-governors, not to you.’ But we are equally certain that she would not
-have worked on any lines which she did not approve. She found no system
-of rules and penalties. She did not wish to introduce one; but she
-made real and abiding, in a manner hardly credited by those outside,
-the rule introduced by Miss Procter, by which no pupil might speak
-to another without leave. With regard to this rule, which at once
-taught self-control and produced order, the ‘quietness which minimises
-irritability,’ it may be further remarked that in a place and time of
-‘exclusive’ views, the College could hardly have existed without it.
-The rule, kept, in itself prevented any pupil from making friends for
-the first time in College; at any rate, it enabled her not to do so.
-There was, however, when Miss Beale first came, a good deal of speaking
-without leave. This disobedience with other irregularities she gradually
-overcame, not by an overawing personality alone, but with the ‘quiet’
-ways and the word in season of which more than one old pupil speaks.
-
-Tracing in sequence the history of Miss Beale’s first two years, when
-the College, though in the eyes of the world slowly perishing, was
-really sinking strong foundations, the Report of 1859 stands out with
-its commendation of the new Lady Principal. ‘Of Miss Beale herself it
-may suffice to remark, that to varied and extensive knowledge in all
-branches of Education, and skill in imparting it, she unites a manner
-and disposition which at once command the respect and win the affection
-of her Pupils, and renders it pleasant to your Council to maintain that
-frequent personal communication with her which is greatly conducive to
-the wellbeing of the Institution.’ Beyond this there is little definite
-to record, save the steady half-yearly diminution in the number of
-pupils and of the balance at the bank, and the consequent retrenchments,
-implying fresh burden and effort for the small teaching staff.
-
-In her _History of the College_, Miss Beale dismissed as with a smile the
-tale of her early struggles, when each quarter it seemed less likely that
-the school could live, till in the last half-year of 1859 there were only
-sixty-five pupils and but a few pounds in the bank. But she admitted that
-perhaps only a barrister sitting in his chambers, and waiting in vain for
-briefs, could sympathise with the anxiety of that time, when upon one or
-two pupils more or less depended the very existence of the College. The
-story she tells of recalling pupils, sent from the door by a servant who
-said she was at dinner, shows her unwearying zeal: ‘I sent her to fetch
-them back, saying, I am never at dinner.’ No pupil was lost for want of
-watchfulness. None could give notice without her knowing the reason, and
-in many cases getting the notice recalled. The problem was to live on,
-working in a way the public had not learned to appreciate. Those were
-days when nervous strain was little known and scarcely feared. School
-hours were long; the time-table of the College then involved morning and
-afternoon school for most days in the week. To one who sought ever to
-instruct with freshness and zeal, and to take trouble to make her pupils
-think for themselves, the work of teaching twice a day through the long
-half-years would now be counted an undue effort and strain. In addition
-to this, Dorothea Beale took upon herself, as if it were her own personal
-need (and she made it so), the daily fretting anxiety of making the
-College pay. This she never really threw off, though in the last years
-of established success it became somewhat modified. The economic strain
-was relaxed when Mr. Brancker’s able hand was laid upon the finances; the
-labour of teaching was lightened when the hours were changed, and when
-with gradually improving fortunes more and better teachers were engaged.
-Doubtless she might have taken advantage of these improvements to give
-herself more ease of body and mind. But she cared for no reward, save the
-‘wages of going on.’ Her eager, nobly ambitious nature responded but too
-quickly to the claims of the College, so with each step made certain,
-there was ever immediately before her another to be fought for and won.
-It were hardly possible to say too much in praise of the enthusiastic
-self-sacrifice which made the College what it is; but some of the results
-of the early strife with fortune were to be deplored. It left her too
-conscious of the place of the institution in the public eye; it made it
-hard for her to justify a more generous expenditure than was possible at
-first.
-
-The improved discipline, the invigorating teaching, even the efforts
-of the new Principal herself, failed to attract pupils, and when in
-1860 the lease of Cambray House expired, no one was willing to take the
-responsibility of renewing it.
-
-Forty years later, when looking back on that time of gloom, Miss Beale
-wrote: ‘How often I was full of discouragement. It was not so much the
-want of money as the want of ideals which depressed me. If I went into
-society I heard it said, “What is the good of education for our girls?
-They have not to earn their living.” Those who spoke did not see that
-for women as for men it is a sin to bury the talents God has given; they
-seemed not to know that the baptismal right was the same for girls as for
-boys, alike enrolled in the army of light, soldiers of Jesus Christ.
-
-‘But helpers were sent with a faith and courage greater than mine.’
-
-First among these was Mr. J. Houghton Brancker, who, already a member
-of the Council, became at the moment of deepest need, auditor of the
-accounts, and brought to the service of the College his great knowledge
-of business and enthusiastic interest in education. Mr. Brancker had come
-to live in Cheltenham for the sake of his daughters, in the year that
-Miss Beale became Principal. He was churchwarden to Mr. Bromby, whose
-liberal views he shared. Mr. Brancker had more than zeal and interest;
-he could think out a plan and pursue it. He spared no effort or trouble
-where a good end was to be obtained. When he became financier of the
-College he gave it ‘a large share of his time, and as a paid secretary
-could not be afforded, he undertook all duties gratuitously.’ He made
-out a new scheme by which the ordinary fees were lowered, but music and
-drawing became extras. It was too great a venture to renew the lease of
-Cambray House; but the owner of the house consented to take the College
-on as a yearly tenant. The new scheme of payment helped at once to bring
-improvement, the number of pupils went up, and Mr. Brancker went so far
-as to order ‘seven new benches, three of them with backs.’
-
-[Illustration: _Mr. T. Houghton Brancker_]
-
-This act of extravagance was followed almost immediately by an
-enlargement of the schoolroom, making it seventy feet long. Mr. Brancker
-proved that this additional space was really a financial economy; for
-with it all the pupils could be contained in one room, and the necessity
-of increasing the staff was deferred. As an alternative to the extension
-he breathed the suggestion, for the first time probably in the history of
-the College, of a new building, a building of its own, should a suitable
-site be obtained. In his letter on this subject to Mr. Hartland, the
-‘young ladies’ for the first time appear as ‘children.’ Mr. Brancker’s
-dream was destined to be deferred for ten years; but was borne in mind
-by those whom it most concerned. It may be thought he was premature even
-in the enlargement, in spending at once the small profit made out of the
-increasing number of pupils. But he did not aim at making a fortune for
-the College. From the first it was proposed that the shareholders should
-reap no financial profit, and Mr. Brancker wished it to be evident that
-every penny was needed for the improvement of the work: hence, it was no
-part of his plan to have a balance in hand. His effort was to keep up the
-prestige of the College in every way, and in order to do this he limited
-the number of shares issued to the actual number of pupils, in order that
-they might not be advertised for sale at a lower price than that at which
-they were purchased.
-
-In three years from the time at which Mr. Brancker became auditor, he
-was able to write: ‘February 1863. We promised assets over £1000, they
-are £1076. We promised a money balance of over £200, and it is £356.
-So I think the shareholders may have confidence in their Chancellor of
-the Exchequer. We may well be proud of the result, but we are _deeply_
-indebted to Miss Beale’s exertions for it, and I am glad her remuneration
-(by capitation fees) is so much increased.’
-
-By 1864 all pressing anxiety for the existence of the College was over.
-With its one hundred and thirty pupils it was practically full. A
-regularly constituted boarding-house was opened. Here the day-pupils,
-whose parents were leaving Cheltenham, could be taken, and thus another
-cause of diminution in the number of pupils was put an end to. Undivided
-attention and care could now be given to the work.
-
-In February a change which greatly told on this was made, a change which
-now seems to have been only wise and reasonable, but which was at the
-time regarded as extraordinary and revolutionary. Longer morning hours
-were substituted for morning and afternoon school each day, Thursday
-afternoons being set apart for dancing and needlework. Possibly Miss
-Beale anticipated the outcry that would be raised; for she asked the
-mother of one of the pupils, one likely to be opposed to the change, to
-be with her at the Council meeting at which it was determined, ostensibly
-because she herself dreaded the meeting, but doubtless in order that a
-representative of the parents might hear the subject fully discussed. No
-notice of the change was sent to the shareholders, parents and guardians
-received an intimation scarcely a week before it took place. Before that
-week was over, stormy articles appeared in the local papers, notices of
-removal were sent in, and a memorial from the shareholders and others
-caused Mr. Brancker hastily to summon another Council meeting, and to
-write to Mr. Hartland, ‘May I specially beg that you will attend ... as
-I consider the vital interests and the future prospects of the College
-are at stake.’ Mr. Brancker and Miss Beale recognised that now or never
-the battle must be won. Either the College authorities must rule, or the
-local papers and popular clamour.
-
-The objections of the memorialists were that the change was a _coup
-d’état_; that four hours’ continuous study was too much for the children;
-that the governesses were idle in wanting a half-holiday every afternoon.
-But the real ground of dislike was doubtless that parents shirked the
-responsibility of looking after their children in the afternoons,
-and preferred schoolroom arrangements which would provide them with
-occupation during the whole day.
-
-The Council replied in a circular to the parents that they would limit
-the experiment to a period of two months, after which they would act
-upon the opinion of the parents; and should the new plan be adopted, the
-quarter’s fees should be returned to those who wished to remove their
-children. The advantages of the change were then set forth.
-
-It had been made to meet the objections raised to physical and mental
-effort following immediately upon a hurried meal; to the young ladies
-passing constantly through the streets, to the trouble of sending
-servants, the exertion of so much walking, the time wasted in dressing
-and undressing, and to many others.
-
-Medical men, among whom were Dr. Barlow and Dr. Gull,[39] were asked
-for their opinions; these were uniformly favourable to the change. The
-long morning hours were lightened by the introduction of calisthenics,
-drawing, and needlework, and it was arranged that certain teachers
-should attend the College every afternoon to supervise the preparation
-of lessons when the parents desired it. When a general meeting on the
-subject took place at the end of the specified two months, only eight
-voted for the old system. ‘It was found,’ says Miss Beale, ‘that more
-work was done in less time, for attention was closer ... teachers and
-children had been able to get some afternoon exercise.’
-
-What was then thought so extraordinary has since become the order of the
-day for girls’ schools. In this matter Cheltenham led the way, a similar
-change was made by Miss Buss in 1865, and when the hours of the Girls’
-Public Day School Company were arranged in 1873, it was on the plan of
-putting all regular studies into the morning hours.
-
-At the end of Miss Beale’s first six years the College was in a much
-improved condition. There were ten classes, where she had found six.
-The notable changes on the staff, which was now larger, were that Miss
-Brewer had left to open a school for little boys in Brighton, and Miss
-Anna Beale and the Miss Eatons had joined. Increased prosperity, and
-above all an older first class, enabled Miss Beale to introduce some of
-the subjects which at first were thought to be too unacceptable to be
-safe. There was, of course, opposition from those who were constantly
-repeating that ‘girls would be turned into boys by studying the same
-subjects.’ What, it was asked by some parents, do girls want with Euclid
-or advanced arithmetic? There were, however, a few who understood Miss
-Beale’s aims, and she was ever grateful for the support they gave her.
-
-The method of annual examinations was gradually improved. When there was
-so little money available, local examiners, some of whom had no claim
-to the position, were chosen. Miss Beale records her conviction that a
-German examiner, who was at the time teaching in a local school, was a
-waiter from some hotel who had come to England out of the season. One
-English examiner recommended that history should be taught backwards.
-This was then regarded as an astounding proposition. Mr. Brancker fully
-sympathised with Miss Beale’s wish to improve the standard by obtaining
-examiners from one of the universities, and obtained permission from
-the Council to seek them himself in Oxford. The result was that for
-two or three years Mr. Sidney Owen undertook the principal part of the
-annual examination. His name was the first of a long list of men notable
-for scholarly achievement or educational progress, who in later years
-conducted these examinations at Cheltenham. In his first report Mr. Owen
-said much for the moral characteristics revealed by the intellectual work
-it was his business to survey. He concludes a very favourable judgment by
-saying he must not omit to mention that there were particular instances
-of remarkable excellence of which the College may justly be proud. Some
-of the papers he said, ‘would do credit to any Institution and gain high
-marks in any public examination.... May the College long give the lie to
-the miserable and pernicious fancy that accomplishments ought to be the
-staple of a lady’s education, and that her reason is not designed by the
-Almighty to be highly cultivated.’ But he thought the papers too long.
-Mr. Owen was indeed the very first adventurer into that flood of response
-which examination questions cause to flow from uncontrolled feminine
-pens. Mr. Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) was in 1863 the first university
-examiner in arithmetic and mathematics.
-
-This year was a fruitful one to Miss Beale for yet another reason. It was
-the year of the completion of her _Chart_. Always interested in history,
-ideally and practically, she had as early as the Queen’s College days
-adopted a French scheme by which the learning of dates was to be simple
-and easy, and the connections of history, the bearing of facts and events
-upon each other, were to be seen at a glance. She now perfected and
-brought it into use. The plan was based on the assumption that a fact is
-more readily grasped through the eye, than by the ear. By means of large
-squares, which were to represent centuries, enclosing smaller ones, which
-should denote years, the whole coloured in different shades according to
-the different ruling dominions and dynasties, a complete outline of the
-history of a country was to appear on one page. The reckoning was made
-by which ninety-nine was counted as the last year of a century, with the
-result that in the year 1900 the chart found itself somewhat discredited.
-But this method of counting, of course, in no way interfered with the
-system. In learning dates at the College, great stress was laid upon
-having a chart open before the student, so that she might grow familiar
-with its look, and become able to call up the knowledge of any special
-event by remembering the position of a dot in a certain square. There
-were those to say with Canon Francis Holland, founder of the Church of
-England High Schools in London, ‘Why was I born before such aids were
-given to the understanding?’ Whether this system was indeed the royal
-road Miss Beale had planned for her pupils may well be questioned;
-but the _Chart_ had at any rate the value of a simple _vade mecum_ of
-chronology, introducing every girl at College to the minimum of facts she
-should know in the history of the world.
-
-The _Chart_ drew for its author a last kind word of recognition from an
-old friend, when Mr. Mackenzie wrote:—
-
- ‘WESTBOURNE COLLEGE, 1863.
-
- ‘ ... I am proud to think that I had any part, however humble,
- in directing your mind to the Tabular style of teaching; and I
- am gratified to find that one of whom I had so early formed a
- favourable opinion, has proved to be so able a worker in the
- great cause of Education.
-
- ‘I hope that you and your sisters, as well as my Godson, quite
- understand that I entertain for you all the feelings of an old
- friend, who values you on your own account as well as for the
- sake of both your Parents.—Believe me to be always your sincere
- Friend,
-
- C. MACKENZIE.’
-
-So, in the best sense the College grew. Not in outward prosperity alone,
-in teaching power, in class rooms; but within. The invisible fabric of
-mind, and will, and heart, co-ordinated by one great idea, was slowly
-being raised. The ‘aborigines,’ as those who were girls of the Cambray
-House time call themselves, even insist that at no time of her career was
-Miss Beale’s personal influence so direct as then, when teaching so many
-subjects herself, and in small classes, she came personally in contact
-with nearly all the older pupils. All classes had their place and desks
-in the long hall; but the lowest division had a separate schoolroom as
-soon as funds justified it, and the rooms of the house, even on occasion
-those appointed to the Principal, were used as classrooms. Miss Beale
-did not often teach in the large hall. The young ones were cleared out
-of their division room when she gave a big lecture; a small class, such
-as one for German translation, would be taken in her drawing-room. There
-came a moment when even her bedroom was invaded. Those small classes
-of mathematics or German were more especially the ones which endeared
-teacher and pupils to each other. There was always enough personal awe
-and inspiration about the Lady Principal to ensure a well-prepared lesson
-from really interested pupils, and often beyond the lesson there would
-be delightful talk. _Iphigenie in Tauris_ recalls many thoughts beyond
-German translation, and the verbal exercise itself was deprived of every
-vestige of dulness by her great interest in the growth and development of
-words. No noble thought, no fine simile was allowed to pass unnoticed;
-other poems were compared, or perhaps a passage would be given to be
-translated into English verse. In the mere suggestion of this, what hope
-and encouragement lay for many who hardly liked to own their pleasure in
-such an attempt, or who had found earlier efforts of the kind thwarted by
-criticism too bracing for beginners! It may indeed be thought that Miss
-Beale had always an unwarranted admiration for the verse-making of her
-pupils. If in this she sometimes offended the cause of pure literature,
-her attitude towards it was yet surely the right one for a teacher.
-
-This must indeed have been one of the happiest periods of her work, when
-she first came into near touch with the children she had seen grow up
-about her, and felt herself able to give impetus and training to growing
-aspirations and developing thought, when her sympathy was constantly
-appealed to in the way in which she could best give it.
-
- ‘It is my peculiar privilege to have spent all my College
- career in her class, to go through years of her special
- personal teaching. In later days, when the College assumed
- larger dimensions, such an experience must have been rare;
- to those who could claim it, it meant a potent influence for
- life. How vividly can I recall her sitting on her little
- dais, scanning the long school-room and discovering anything
- amiss at the far end of it; or making a tour of inspection to
- the various classes with a smiling countenance that banished
- terror.’
-
-So writes one old pupil of that time. Another speaks of that deep
-tenderness which she ever felt, but often concealed, and was not afraid
-of showing in a case of special need.
-
- ‘When I was almost a child at College I lost my mother, and
- shall never forget Miss Beale’s tender sympathy and help. She
- took such interest in my preparation for Confirmation, and
- brought me herself to my first Communion,—just she and I alone;
- a day I shall always remember. All through my girlhood she was
- a kind and ready adviser, and continued her interest throughout
- my married life. One always felt whatever happened to one, Now
- I must tell Miss Beale.’
-
-It is sad to know that Miss Beale was often depressed in that hopeful
-spring-time of the College by the tongues of gossip and slander. She had
-so profound a horror of petty talk about other people’s business, that
-she possibly exaggerated the importance of carelessly repeated and untrue
-reports. She mentions the local gossip from which the College had to
-suffer.
-
- ‘Tales were handed about that it was impossible to trace. It
- was said that accomplishments were neglected, that the pupils
- played on dumb pianos. Persons who did not exist, and others
- who would never have been admitted, were said to attend the
- College. News was sent out to Canada that the cattle plague
- was prevailing, and the report was half believed. The mere
- circulation of absurd falsehoods is, however, often enough to
- decide a mother to place her daughter elsewhere; sometimes no
- falsehood at all, a contemptuous tone is enough. Such things
- can only be met by silence and steady and unobtrusive work.
- Perhaps one is better off without the children of those who
- accept their rule of life from Mrs. Grundy. Certainly such
- opposition and persecution prove an excellent tonic, and
- I personally feel grateful for it, though it was a bitter
- draught. We had to remember that the interests of some were
- injured by the establishment of the College; the wish being
- father to the thought, people would sometimes believe what they
- said.’
-
-Matters reached a climax when an absolutely untrue statement concerning
-cruelty to animals was set on foot about Mrs. Fraser, who had opened a
-boarding-house in connection with the College. The real gravity of the
-report lay in the circumstance that some in the College had listened to
-it, and it was necessary to address the teachers on the subject. It was a
-painful task, but bravely faced by the Lady Principal, who said:
-
- ‘Now I have nothing to do to judge them that are without. We
- must cheerfully bear evil-speaking. But if it come from within,
- the matter is for that reason a serious one; for this reason I
- feel it must be traced up to its source.... I feel I can appeal
- to you as lovers of truth, as those who feel that no advantages
- of education, of health, or any other, can compensate for the
- disadvantage which would arise to any children who lived in an
- atmosphere of evil-speaking, lying, and slandering.’
-
-Thus grasped, the nettle ceased to sting. It was perhaps a small incident
-scarcely worth noting. But Miss Beale remembered it as one which caused
-great discomfort at the time, and it had far-reaching consequences. Her
-power then was more limited than in after years. She learned through this
-difficulty the need for more liberty to act independently of the Council
-in the internal management of the College. In her efforts to get the
-evil rooted out from their midst, she nearly exceeded her powers. This,
-doubtless, taught her to prosecute her reforms more warily. Above all,
-it may be believed that she gained a fresh access of that self-control
-so necessary to all governors. For it is only in fiction that difficulty
-can be overcome by a sudden word or action; in real life work has to be
-carried on despite the obstacle;—growth takes place under pressure.
-
-Outside the work of the College there is not a great deal to relate about
-Miss Beale’s life at this period. Her holidays were sometimes spent in
-visits to her family.
-
-After the deaths of Mr. and Mrs. John Beale, Hyde Court, the old family
-house came into the possession of Miss Beale’s mother, who had been left
-a widow in 1862. In 1868 Mrs. Beale came with two daughters to reside at
-Hyde Court until her death in 1881. There the Lady Principal often went
-in the holidays, finding pleasure in the beautiful surroundings. An old
-pupil tells of the delights of a visit to her there,—of Mrs. Beale, whom
-her daughter Dorothea greatly resembled, calm and majestic looking, of
-the glorious view from the windows of the room appropriated to Miss Beale
-and her large correspondence.
-
-A good part of the holidays even then was spent in Cheltenham, but there
-were some visits abroad. One year Miss Beale accompanied her brother
-Edward, then recovering from illness, to the Black Forest. On another
-occasion she went with her sister to Chamounix, and enjoyed the mountain
-walks. In 1864 she spent some time at Zürich. More than once she went
-to Paris. This continental travel was by no means for recreation and
-refreshment only. It nearly always implied visits to schools, where
-fresh and foreign methods were studied. No opportunity of gaining new
-ideas was ever neglected, for Miss Beale could not understand ever
-living apart from her work. In the holidays, as in school-time, she was
-still working, though in a different way. In Cheltenham itself there
-was little time or opportunity for recreation. Society, as the word is
-generally understood, had little to say to the new head-mistress, whose
-insignificant figure and plain dress did not provoke much interest. Her
-absence of small talk, her quiet intellectual face, her reputation as
-a clever woman, her connection with Queen’s College, all represented
-something unwonted and new. She had received no welcome from the
-religious world of Cheltenham, whose leaders, Mr. Close and Mr. Boyd,
-though one of them had accepted a seat on the Council, remained aloof
-from the interests of the Ladies’ College, perhaps sharing the prejudice
-still prevalent against any departure from the beaten track of women’s
-education.
-
-It was of little moment to Miss Beale to find herself unsought by
-society, for she seldom cared to spend an evening from her work. She
-could not understand the position, which some have thought it wise to
-take up, that it is good for a school to have its head seen in society.
-She held it to be best for a school that its head should give herself
-unremittingly to her work,—disastrous to the welfare of any pupils for
-their teacher to sacrifice to social engagements the time she ought to
-give to the preparation of lessons. The friends of that early time were a
-few thoughtful people who were interested like herself in education.
-
-On first coming to Cheltenham Miss Beale, to please Miss Brewer, she
-said, attended Christchurch, but she soon left this for St. Philip’s
-and St. James’ at Leckhampton, and for St. Paul’s. Both these churches
-were less obviously in the possession of wealthy seat-holders than the
-churches in the town. To St. Philip’s she went at that time when she
-‘wanted to be quiet,’ taking up a position near the door. All the middle
-of that church was then occupied by charity children and the poor, but
-there were in the rich part of the congregation many whose names have
-interest from one cause or another.
-
-The incumbent of St. Philip’s, the Rev. A. E. Riddle, was a man of much
-learning. He had been Bampton Lecturer in 1832, and was the author of a
-well-known Latin Dictionary and other books. Miss Beale felt at home in
-his great library, and visits to Mrs. Riddle at Tudor Lodge were among
-the few recreations. Mr. Riddle died in 1859, and for the next few years
-she seems to have regularly attended St. Paul’s or Holy Trinity churches.
-She found real friends in the parsonage-house at St. Paul’s, but the
-immediate tie was soon broken, for in 1864 Mr. Bromby was made Bishop of
-Tasmania.
-
-The claims of relationship and early friendship were not forgotten,
-but there was little time for letter-writing beyond the ever-growing
-correspondence connected with work. Mr. Beale wrote playfully of his
-daughter’s growing absorption:—
-
- ‘You always write as if you were at the top of your speed,
- and this is not good. I doubt not you have a great deal to
- occupy your time and your attention, but pray do not be always
- in a hurry, you will inevitably break down if you are so—you
- will lose in power what you gain in speed, as certainly as in
- mechanics; and with greater danger to the regularity of the
- machine.... I am really fearful to take up your time.... I
- daresay now you are scrambling through my note without that
- respect to which the writer and the subject are entitled. But
- pray remember that to neglect (the care of your health) is the
- worst economy in the world....
-
- ‘I will now release you, but I was unwilling quite to lose
- your correspondence, though do not write to me until you have a
- little patient leisure.’
-
-Thus, in difficulty and obscurity, the life-work of Dorothea Beale was
-begun. But hers was a light which could not long be hid. Each year it
-burned more surely and shone further afield. By 1864, when the Endowed
-Schools’ Inquiry Commission was instituted, she was known as a successful
-head-mistress whose views and methods were worth hearing. With Miss Buss
-and others she was asked to give evidence.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-A ROYAL COMMISSION
-
- ‘I learnt the royal genealogies
- Of Oviedo, the internal laws
- Of the Burmese Empire,—by how many feet
- Mount Chimborazo outsoars Teneriffe,
- What navigable river joins itself
- To Lara, and what census of the year five
- Was taken at Klagenfurt....
- I learnt much music, ...
- fine sleights of hand
- And unimagined fingering.’
-
- E. B. BROWNING, _Aurora Leigh_.
-
-
-This volume, which memorialises one great name in one field of women’s
-work, is not the place in which to dwell upon the details of that work in
-other departments. But it may be remarked in passing that the educational
-movement itself was but a part—an essential part—of a larger one. It
-seemed, Miss Beale often said in speaking of this time, that women, like
-the damsel of old, heard the Voice of the Master penetrating the slumber
-of death, bidding them Arise. And they obeyed. They arose in many and
-various ways to minister to Him.
-
-The first sign of this awakening was publicly seen in 1844, when Dr.
-Pusey engaged several leading laymen, among whom was Mr. Gladstone,
-to help him in the foundation of an Anglican Sisterhood. Two or three
-Orders date from before the opening of Queen’s College in 1848; those
-at Clewer and Wantage followed soon after. The devotion of Florence
-Nightingale and her little band in 1854 led many to follow her example,
-and the reform of nursing steadily if slowly followed. In 1866, before
-the reports of the Schools’ Inquiry were published, Dr. Elizabeth
-Blackwell took an M.D. degree in Switzerland, and Miss Garrett began to
-study for one in London. The desire for better teaching and training was
-widespread. The establishment of the Cheltenham Ladies’ College was a
-part of a larger movement which was affecting the whole country. Sixteen
-years had passed since the opening of Queen’s College had unsealed the
-fountain of knowledge for women. Immediately after, in 1849, a college
-had been established on undenominational lines. This was Bedford College,
-which found a liberal donor in Mr. Reid, and among its first teachers
-counted Francis Newman, De Morgan, and Dr. Carpenter. These led the way.
-Then in 1850 the great school which will for ever be associated with the
-name of Frances Mary Buss was opened in Camden Road, its enterprising
-head-mistress having there removed the private school she had carried
-on successfully for some years, to develop it on the lines of a public
-school, under the enlightened supervision of Mr. Laing. Cheltenham
-followed four years later, and these two, for many years the only public
-schools for girls in the country, may be considered the direct offspring
-of Queen’s College.
-
-The general condition of girls’ education remained unimproved some years
-longer. Yet amid the thousands of private schools where worthless or
-poor teaching prevailed, there were a few which had come into the hands
-of capable women who had been inspired by the noble ideals of those
-who led the religious and intellectual thought of the day. The name of
-Elizabeth Sewell is representative of these; but for the most part they
-lived and died unknown, because their work was of less public moment
-than that of the great leaders. Yet, in an account of women’s education
-it seems ungracious to name only the well known, however great, and to
-pass unnoticed the wise virgins, less prominent but not less faithful,
-whose lamps shone and were replenished through the night. In her death,
-as in her work on earth, Dorothea Beale was not alone. Miss Sewell, aged
-ninety, passed but a few weeks before her, and very shortly after two
-other unknown fellow-workers, who had not laboured in vain. The _Times_
-of January 1907 told of Miss Piper, the founder and head of Laleham. Of
-Miss Piper it could be said, that at a time when the instruction given
-to girls was of a formal character, ‘she set herself to make her pupils
-think, to stimulate interest, to enforce thoroughness.’ These were the
-very points on which the Schools’ Commission found girls’ education
-defective. A fortnight later died Emily Milner, who was for fifty years
-head of St. Mary’s School at Brighton, to which she devoted all her small
-income. She taught with marvellous energy and freshness, inspiring her
-pupils themselves to be zealous and persevering, and keeping them in
-touch with all that was best in the rapid advance and change of modern
-education. But such head-mistresses were rare. The Commissioners seldom
-found either thoroughness or freshness in the schools they inspected.
-
-The Schools’ Inquiry Commission was instituted in 1864, a year in which
-John Ruskin, in a lecture at Manchester, made a passionate appeal to rich
-women to claim their right to serve—and reign. His cry did not reach
-a larger public until, eight years later, the lecture was published
-under the title ‘Of Queens’ Gardens’ in _Sesame and Lilies_. Like the
-simultaneous discovery of some great star, by watchers strange to one
-another and half a continent apart, the movement for enlarging the
-scope of women’s work was furthered by men of divers ways and methods,
-heralded by visionaries like Tennyson and Ruskin, marshalled into
-deliberate order by high-hearted officials like the Secretary of the
-Governesses’ Benevolent Society and the School Inspector Joshua Fitch.
-Possibly no Assistant Commissioner, as he drew up his report, recalled
-the ringing words of Ruskin. But though the medium varies to the stretch
-of difference between the inspiration of a great poem and the deliberate
-statements of a blue-book, we recognise the same force behind both, and
-see both alike to be channels for one great stream of tendency. The
-conclusions drawn from the report, the resulting effects seen in new
-schools and organised public examinations, miss nothing of their special
-value if regarded in connection with such words as these:—
-
- ‘Let a girl’s education be as serious as a boy’s. You bring up
- your girls as if they were meant for side-board ornaments, and
- then complain of their frivolity. Give them the same advantages
- that you give their brothers ... teach _them_, also, that
- courage and truth are the pillars of their being.... There is
- hardly a girl’s school in this Christian Kingdom where the
- children’s courage and sincerity would be thought of half
- so much importance as their way of coming in at a door....
- And give them, lastly, not only noble teachings, but noble
- teachers.’[40]
-
-The Schools’ Inquiry Commission was instituted to examine into the
-existing state of education above the elementary grade, and to report
-on measures needed for its improvement, having special regard to all
-endowments applicable, or which could rightly be made applicable,
-thereto. By the instance of Miss Emily Davies, girls’ schools were
-included in the inquiry. Among the Commissioners was Lord Lyttelton,
-who was regarded by those who wished to improve women’s education as a
-friend to girls. He had manfully asserted their right to a share of the
-endowments, and of women to a share in the management of girls’ schools.
-Sir Stafford Northcote, Dr. Temple, and Mr. Forster were also members of
-the Commission. Among the Assistant Commissioners, whose business it was
-to visit and report upon schools, were such well-known names as those of
-T. H. Green, J. G. Fitch, and J. Bryce.
-
-No schools outside the eight selected districts were visited, but the
-Principals of some beyond their limit were requested to give evidence
-before the Commissioners in London. In the year 1868-9 reports and
-evidence were gradually issued in a series of twenty large blue-books. Of
-these volumes about nineteen-twentieths related to the education of boys
-and general questions, and about one-twentieth to the education of girls
-alone.
-
-Miss Beale hailed the Commission as a means of bringing the thousand
-inefficiencies of girls’ education to the light. She took advantage
-of it in an address she gave in 1865 at Bristol, at a meeting of that
-now extinct body, the Social Science Congress, when she pleaded that,
-for boys and girls alike, education should be planned with the view of
-developing character. Her argument was none the less weighty because so
-carefully guarded:—
-
- ‘Let me say at once that I desire to institute no comparison
- between the mental abilities of boys and girls, but simply to
- say what seems to be the right means of training girls, so that
- they may best perform that subordinate part in the world to
- which, I believe, they have been called.
-
- ‘First, then, I think that the education of girls has too
- often been made showy, rather than real and useful; that
- accomplishments have been made the main thing, because these
- would, it was thought, enable a girl to shine and attract,
- while those branches of study especially calculated to form the
- judgment, to cultivate the understanding, and to discipline the
- character (which would fit her to perform the duties of life)
- have been neglected; and thus, while temporary pleasure and
- profit have been sought, the great moral ends of education have
- been too often lost sight of.
-
- ‘To the poorer classes the toil and struggle of their daily
- life do, to some extent, afford an education which gives
- earnestness, and strength, and reality; and if we would not
- have the daughters of the higher classes idle and frivolous,
- they too must be taught to appreciate the value of work. We
- must endeavour to give them, while young, such habits, studies,
- and occupations as will brace the mind, improve the taste, and
- develop the moral character. They must learn, not for the sake
- of display, but from motives of duty. They must not choose the
- easy and agreeable, and neglect what is dull and uninviting.
- They must not expect to speak languages without mastering the
- rudiments; nor require to be finished in a year or two, but
- impatiently refuse to labour at a foundation.’
-
-These words were pioneers of the Commissioners’ reports, in which they
-find a literal echo. The reports, with her own evidence and that of
-other ladies interested in education, were by Miss Beale preserved for
-posterity. She perceived instinctively that if they were not brought
-into general circulation all would soon be forgotten, much never known
-at all. With that stern sense of economy which caused her never to waste
-an opportunity or a scrap of material, she took the task upon herself.
-She obtained permission to republish the matter relating to girls’
-schools in a single volume, for which she wrote a preface. In this she
-dealt with the evidence of the Commissioners, discussing at some length
-the questions of examinations and overwork. But she sought chiefly,
-as she had already done a few years before in an article in _Fraser’s
-Magazine_,[41] to show the need of real study for women, the advantage
-to be gained for character and mind from such subjects as history and
-literature.
-
-The general report of the Commissioners on Girls’ Education forms the
-first chapter of Miss Beale’s blue-book. It opened with a quotation
-to the effect that an educated mother is of even more importance than
-an educated father. Miss Beale may have thought this an exaggerated
-statement; but she must have welcomed and republished it with some
-satisfaction. She was for ever having it dinned into her ears, by those
-who opposed all serious study for their daughters, that girls should be
-educated to be wives and mothers. Mrs. Grey showed the real fallacy of
-the statement, in a paper which was the direct result of the republished
-reports, when she pointed out that girls were not being educated to _be_
-wives, but to _get_ husbands. A happy marriage Mrs. Grey held to be ‘the
-_summum bonum_ of a woman’s life ... not an object to be striven for,
-but to be received as the supreme grace of fate when the right time and
-the right person come.’[42] With Miss Beale and Miss Emily Davies she
-deprecated the education which is designed from the first to fit and
-prepare for a special position in life. She would have women and men
-alike, working men, tradesmen, men of fortune educated as human beings,
-not technically instructed for some special walk in life. In eloquent
-words she pictured the ideal for which she and others like-minded
-were striving, and were seeking to attain by the practical method
-of enlightening public opinion, founding schools, asking for public
-examinations. She wrote:—
-
- ‘The true meaning of the word education is not instruction....
- It is intellectual, moral, and physical development, the
- development of a sound mind in a sound body, the training of
- reason to form just judgments, the disciplining of the will and
- affections to obey the supreme law of duty, the kindling and
- strengthening of the love of knowledge, of beauty, of goodness,
- till they become governing motives of action.’
-
-Mrs. Grey’s conclusions were the same as those of the Commissioners,
-who complained that there was no demand for the education of girls, the
-cause of the indifference being that low idea which regards only the
-money value of education, and estimates it solely as a means of getting
-on. Girls were taught with a view to increasing their attractiveness
-before marriage, rather than with that of increasing their happiness and
-usefulness after. This was the general cause of dissatisfaction, but
-there were many details.
-
-One and all complained that, with the exception of quite a few schools,
-the education of girls in the middle classes was much worse than that
-existing in the elementary schools of the day. This was of course
-specially the case in subjects like arithmetic, and arose greatly from
-the mistaken notion that they were of no use to girls. The Commissioners
-were unanimous in condemning the prevailing method of instruction by
-means of such books as _Mangnall’s Questions_ and the like, termed by
-Mr. Bryce ‘the noxious brood of catechisms.’ Of this, be it said, Miss
-Mangnall’s famous work, which bears witness to its author’s well-stored
-mind, and which reached nearly a hundred editions, was the best. The
-‘Questions’ demanded indeed the knowledge of such useless facts as the
-number of houses burned in the Great Fire of London; but there were in
-use, in the numerous small private schools of the period, cheaper and
-more stupid books, in which the information was not merely useless,
-but even defied common sense. A small catechism on ‘Science,’ entitled
-‘Why and Because,’ concluded a long list of inept questions with:
-‘Why do pensioners and aged cottagers put their teapots on the hob to
-draw?’ In some books, facts of varying nature—of history, geography,
-grammar, etc.—were all jumbled together. It is not surprising that girls
-instructed by the parrot-like, inconsequent methods of such lesson-books,
-passed from school with no love of reading.
-
-The Commissioners complained further, that though French and music were
-held to be the most important subjects to which a girl should devote
-herself, they were nearly always very badly taught. They spoke of time
-wasted at the piano; they calculated the thousands of hours given to
-music which was not worth hearing at the last. They gave instances of
-ludicrous mistakes in French, which no effort of visiting masters could
-improve into anything like a real knowledge of the language, because
-rudimentary grammar had never been mastered. They spoke of drawing taught
-with an equal disregard of thoroughness, and with still more disastrous
-result. ‘The common practice of masters touching up their pupils’
-performances for exhibition at home fosters a habit of dishonesty,
-and that too prevalent tendency running through the whole of female
-education, the tendency to care more for appearance than reality, to seem
-rather than to be.’[43]
-
-Some spoke of the absence of healthy interests, of the need for games,
-a need which appealed but little to Miss Beale, in whose own youth play
-was marked by its absence only. Many urged the necessity for founding in
-every town public schools similar to boys’ grammar schools, where girls
-could obtain a sound education, without accomplishments, at a low cost.
-
-These reports embody a number of facts concerning a state of things
-now happily passed away. Hundreds of small private schools might have
-read their doom in them, for the establishment of many public schools,
-endowed and otherwise, soon followed the inquiry. We see the poor sham
-education, with its wrong notions of the beautiful and the best, vanish
-without a regret. Yet, since all human effort has its worth and place,
-is it possible and fair to say one word above its grave? Was there no
-genuine wish to give pleasure pleading in the miserable pieces of the
-boarding-school young lady, and even in the painful drawings which
-the master’s touch failed to make tolerable? They testify at least to
-something out of the work-a-day sphere, to the desire for the ‘something
-afar,’ often the first step to a truer vision. Precious years of girlhood
-spent on the vain effort to attain accomplishments speak of some dim
-perception of the refinement and uplifting which men look for in women.
-Ill-devised, badly attempted, poorly carried out, the thought of giving
-delight was not only mercenary in aim; behind it was some consciousness
-of a real human need. The educators of women to-day should know better
-than to despise its pleading, however imperfectly expressed. ‘May I not
-have _one_ ornamental one?’ said a brother when a third sister was about
-to devote herself to obtaining certificates for mathematics.
-
-Nine ladies, including Miss Emily Davies, Miss Buss, and Miss Beale,
-were asked to give evidence before the Commission. Miss Beale’s, which
-was taken in 1865, is of double interest, at once touching the state of
-girls’ education in general, and the advance being made in the Ladies’
-College, Cheltenham. She took with her a hundred entrance examination
-papers arranged in order for inspection. Actuated perhaps by the
-marvellous carefulness which lost nothing, and seeing a use even in what
-would often be considered waste papers, as well as by the definite aim of
-preserving a record of progress, she had kept all the answers written by
-her pupils to entrance examination questions. With the College papers,
-she showed also some written by children in one of the national schools
-at Cheltenham, in order that the Commissioners might make a comparison
-for themselves.
-
-On being questioned, Miss Beale explained in detail the whole system of
-the College, interesting the Commissioners in the method of teaching
-Euclid, one which at some points antedated by many years the present
-teaching of geometry in the public schools, and which has lately been
-adopted by the universities. At a time when schoolboys were learning
-Euclid by heart, Miss Beale was teaching it to girls by a method of
-explanation which they had to follow and finally reproduce without any
-learning by rote.
-
-With regard to the teaching of Holy Scripture she said, ‘Each class
-teacher takes her own class, and that, I think, very important’; but on
-this subject little was said.
-
-On the question of discipline and moral difficulties she explained that
-the government of the College was chiefly by personal influence, and that
-her plan was to make use of very simple means, such as changing the seat
-of a child who was suspected of being dishonest in her work. ‘It is a
-small thing, but it indicates want of trust, and it is by small things we
-govern.’ Such discipline obviously appeared slight to Dr. Storrar, who
-asked on hearing it, ‘Perhaps girls are more sensitive than boys in such
-matters?’ ‘I will not attempt to decide,’ replied Miss Beale, ‘but my
-opinion is that they are not.’
-
-Asked her opinion on a system of examination, Miss Beale recommended
-a general Board for the examination of teachers, to be founded with
-national sanction, and an inspection of the schools under the management
-of those who had passed the examination. ‘There is one other point,’ she
-added: ‘the cause might be helped on by the establishment of a model
-school for the training of teachers; I hardly know how such would work.’
-
-The evidence of the Commission, published in 1868, produced a great
-impression on Mrs. William Grey and her sister, Miss Shireff. Under
-their able leadership there was formed, in 1871, ‘The National Union
-for Improving the Education of Women,’ for the purpose of organising
-effort and helping to create a sounder public opinion with regard to
-education itself. The work of this society led two years later to the
-foundation of the Girls’ Public Day-School Company. By this agency, which
-was commercial as well as educational, High Schools were established
-in most of the important towns of England. There followed the numerous
-independent efforts and companies which have covered the country with
-a network of secondary schools for girls. In 1872, Miss Buss giving
-up her private property in her very successful school, by an act of
-self-sacrifice and generosity made it a public school by placing it in
-trust. A lower school was also established in Camden Town under the same
-management.
-
-Miss Emily Davies also found her work aided by the Commission. She was
-largely instrumental in the opening of Local Examinations to girls. The
-foundation of the first women’s college at a university was laid by her
-when, in 1873, the college she had opened at Hitchin four years earlier
-was removed to Cambridge, where it became known as Girton. This step
-was perhaps even less of a venture, though more startling to the public
-mind, than the first beginning at Hitchin. Of this Miss Maria Hackett had
-written to Miss Beale:—
-
- ‘The proposed Foundation of a College for the Superior
- Education of Women is another most important measure in the
- same direction. I had much correspondence about twenty years
- ago, with your dear father, Mr. Mackenzie, and Mr. Storrs, on
- the subject, but I did not venture upon so extensive a scheme.’
-
-Public examinations for girls necessarily followed the work of the
-Commission, the opening of women’s colleges, and the establishment of
-public schools for girls. Head-mistresses were called upon to face all
-the difficulties and drawbacks of these, as well as to accept their
-advantages, and in some cases also to incur odium, as they worked with
-measures which they knew to be not in themselves the best, but only
-the best attainable. Miss Beale had her own vision of what a public
-examination for girls should be. She had said at Bristol in 1865 that
-parents
-
- ‘are afraid of popular outcry, afraid that their children
- should take a low place, forgetting that (if the examination be
- conducted without any of the improper excitement of publicity),
- it is also a test and means of moral training, since those who
- work from the right motives simply do their best and are not
- overanxious about results. I do not desire that there should be
- a system of competitive examinations, but a general testing of
- the work done, and if this cannot be responded to in a quiet,
- lady-like manner, it does not speak well for the moral training
- of the school.’
-
-She had also said:—
-
- ‘I do not think the plan for admitting girls to the same
- examination with boys in the University local examinations a
- wise one; the subjects seem to me in many respects unsuited for
- girls, and such an examination as the one proposed is likely
- to further a spirit of rivalry most undesirable. I should
- much regret that the desire of distinction should be made in
- any degree a prime motive, for we should ever remember that
- moral training is the end, education the means. The habits of
- obedience to duty, of self-restraint, which the process of
- acquiring knowledge induces, the humility which a thoughtful
- and comprehensive study of the great works in literature and
- science tends to produce, these we would specially cultivate in
- a woman, that she may wear the true woman’s ornament of a meek
- and quiet spirit. As for the pretentiousness and conceit which
- are associated with the name of “blue-stocking,” and which some
- people fancy to be the result of education, they are only an
- evidence of shallowness and vulgarity; we meet with the same
- thing in the dogmatic conceit of the so-called “self-educated
- man,” who has picked up learning, but has not had the benefit
- of a systematic training and a liberal education.’
-
-The formal admission of girls to the Cambridge Local Examinations took
-place in 1865, though they had been informally accepted as candidates as
-early as 1863. Miss Beale did not accept the examination at Cheltenham,
-mainly because its arrangements did not fall in with those of the College
-year; but she closely observed its working, noted each set of questions
-and reports, recognising that with these examinations new impetus had
-been given to the progress of education. She wrote and spoke on the
-subject, holding it to be the duty of the teacher to seek to guide this
-movement, which must increasingly affect girls’ schools.
-
-The following extract from one of her papers is chosen because of its
-bearing on the larger and still unanswered question of university
-degrees:—
-
- ‘Examiners must be prepared not to domineer but to learn that
- the art is yet in its infancy, and their knowledge of what
- girls can or ought to do is at present very slight. They must
- be ready to admit the possibility of a teacher knowing better
- than his judges. The latter are sometimes tempted to exclaim,
- _Quis custodiat ipsos custodes?_ If the school curriculum and
- the examinations are so far out of harmony that a large amount
- of special preparation is required, either the curriculum is
- at fault or the examination an evil.... I know that some make
- a great point of having the actual University examinations
- opened, because a mere “women’s examination” is spoken of
- contemptuously. I believe that in trying to avoid this, we
- should encounter greater evils, and that the wish is connected
- with a misplaced reverence which many women entertain for the
- learning of a “pass man.”’
-
-After some years of consideration a decision was practically forced upon
-Miss Beale. She must choose for her clever girls either to pass a public
-examination which she thought more suited for men, or to fall behind
-in a path which was surely leading in the right direction. She did not
-hesitate, but saw that on this, as on many occasions, it must be her part
-to labour to remove obstructions, to overcome obstacles.
-
-In her interview with the Commissioners, on being asked if she would
-approve of the establishment of a special examination for ladies up to
-the standard of attainment of the London matriculation, she had replied,
-‘Certainly,’ but advocated that it should be made possible for women to
-take German instead of Greek. This examination, she agreed, might be
-taken as a measure, though the measure might not be filled with the same
-subjects as for men. She was soon called upon to act in this matter, for
-in 1869 it was opened to women, and the University of Cambridge also
-instituted an examination for women over eighteen years of age.
-
-Miss Beale accepted both for the College, but for some years there was
-no regular organisation of work for those who were taking the Cambridge
-examination. This was partly due to the higher limit of age. It was
-then thought extraordinary that girls should stay at school after they
-were eighteen. It was difficult to persuade many to do so. Some were
-‘wanted at home,’ some wished to ‘come out’; those who were intending to
-be teachers thought they should be already earning. Then the absorbing
-work for the London examination made it difficult to arrange for much of
-a wholly different character. Consequently, at first, the older pupils
-and the young teachers who sought to pass the Cambridge examination had
-to look after themselves a good deal. Miss Beale would certainly not
-consider this a drawback. They had the additional advantage of lectures
-from herself on literature and history.
-
-The ‘London’ must have seemed better worth while for many reasons. It
-might prove a first step to a definite degree. The degree examinations
-were not opened till ten years later, and might not have followed at all
-had zeal and courage not been shown by women over the matriculation.
-Again, the matriculation certificate enabled men to offer themselves as
-candidates for further examination with a view to certain careers, such
-as the medical profession. This would hold good for women. For it had the
-real advantage of being a recognised standard, while a certificate for an
-examination arranged specially for women would be like ‘foreign coin.’
-
-One cannot too much admire the qualities which bore teacher and pupils
-up that steep initial step of the London examination; for steep it was.
-At that time it demanded a certain knowledge of subjects which were
-generally regarded as the prerogative of men. Hardly any of the girls who
-hoped to pass in them had, when they began their special preparation six
-terms before the examination, learned any Latin, chemistry, geometry,
-algebra, or natural philosophy—this last being a term which embraced
-some acquaintance with optics, statics, dynamics, and hydrostatics.
-Little more than the rudiments of these new subjects had to be mastered,
-for the examination at that time required ‘a collection of minima, a
-smattering of everything, enforced with Procrustean rigour on Philistine
-lines.’ Primarily designed for boys with a grammar-school education, the
-Latin paper included some knowledge of Horace. It is scarcely necessary
-to say that disappointment as well as hope was woven into the strand
-of these brave beginnings. Many failed. Some who were not really equal
-to the work were persuaded to enter. Some who passed, complained that
-they could not retain knowledge which had been acquired too rapidly
-and not assimilated. Not avowedly, not ever consciously to herself—her
-sense of responsibility for the individual was too great for that, and
-she reckoned the training of value even if there were no success at the
-end—but in actual fact, the failures were accepted by Dorothea Beale as a
-necessary complement of victory to be.
-
- ‘Let the victors when they come,
- When the forts of folly fall,
- Find thy body by the wall!’
-
-All the weakness of the position was known to her. And she showed not
-only courage and daring, but patience and humility still harder to
-practise. On one occasion, after a specially difficult Latin paper,
-which had proved too much for many examinees, she wrote to another
-head-mistress whose disappointment was as keen as her own:—
-
- ‘The more I reflect, the more I think any protest unadvisable.
- No doubt some have passed (even in Class I.) in former years,
- who were worse in Latin than one at least who has failed this
- time. But then there are many things that may be urged.
- Perhaps the good have not done themselves justice, and the bad
- more than justice. Besides, I cannot myself, even in looking
- over one set of papers, unless I correct all at a sitting, mark
- them fairly even to my own mind; how much more difficult it
- must be when the examiners change, and the papers come in after
- a year’s interval. We, by submitting ourselves to examination,
- pledge ourselves in some sort to be content. It will never do,
- in my opinion, to impugn the justice of a University, and I
- really think they will do justice. Any expression of discontent
- would tend to throw back the granting of degrees. I believe
- the unification is more likely to take place soon, if we are
- patient. Remember, too, the decision has not been that of one
- individual examiner, but has been in some sort confirmed by the
- Senate.
-
- ‘My impression is that the papers will be very carefully set
- next year, and that we must bear our disappointment this year
- as well as we can. I am very sorry you feel it so much. Your
- candidates have done so well in other subjects, that if they
- should try again next year, you might be certain of a large
- measure of success, and _then_ a protest, or any remarks from
- us would tell so much more. I certainly do not mean to send in
- a large number, but I am pledged to a few, and to those who
- failed, if they like to go in again.’
-
-This conclusion showed special insight, willingness to bear, and
-readiness to learn; for the Latin paper was a far more real test of
-knowledge than any of the others. To have complained of it might have
-been to acknowledge inferiority which did not seek improvement. And
-looking back, it may be seen that the failures and mistakes were not of
-much moment. The real importance and the real triumph lay with the aim
-and effort. Miss Beale early foresaw what has been literally fulfilled.
-
-‘It is clear,’ she said, ‘that it will before long be impossible in
-England, as it is now on the Continent, for any one to obtain employment
-as a teacher without some such attestation,’ _i.e._ as a certificate.
-If she could help it, Miss Beale would not let girls who were intending
-to teach, pass from her without one; she persuaded the pupil, she
-reasoned with the parent, she frequently mastered both; she silently
-bore contradiction and misconception. She refused to be thwarted by any
-obstacle, much as she might wish to change it—such as the time of year at
-which it was held, the difficulty of sending candidates to London, or by
-any hesitation on her own part. She might write to a newspaper, ‘it is to
-some extent an open question what education is most suitable for girls,’
-but she inspired her class to prepare for ‘the London’ with zealous
-drudgery and in the power of self-denial, as the best they could do to
-fit themselves for work.
-
-Yet the College list of successes was from the first good. In 1869,
-the first year of examination, eight in all England went in for the
-matriculation examination, and six failed. The only candidate from
-Cheltenham passed. This was Miss Susan Wood. In the next year, of the
-three who passed from Cheltenham one was the famous Greek scholar, Miss
-Jane Harrison, another bore the name—so dear to its generation—of Marian
-Belcher.
-
-There was plenty of criticism. There were many to repeat the old
-complaint that women were being unfitted for their proper duties. It was
-Miss Beale’s delight to show that those who did well in examinations
-could also excel in domestic duties. She would tell how one successful
-candidate of the London examination proved first a helpful sister, then a
-devoted wife and mother. She would show with pride a letter she received
-from one of whose ability and success she had great reason to be proud,
-signed ‘Yours in flour and dripping.’
-
-It may be mentioned here that there is a home distinction connected with
-the Ladies’ College, Cheltenham. In 1868 it was resolved at an annual
-general meeting that pupils who reached a certain specified standard in
-the College examinations, and whose general conduct was approved, should
-be entitled to receive certificates. The first certificates under this
-resolution were awarded in 1869 to four pupils. In 1875 it was resolved
-at a Council meeting that those who obtained the College certificate
-should be entitled Associates of the Ladies’ College, Cheltenham. These
-associates are, with the consent of the Lady Principal, allowed to attend
-any ordinary classes of the College without the payment of fees.
-
-Following hard upon the introduction of public examinations for girls
-came the cry of overwork. There was some reason in it; but it was
-much, very much due to timidity and want of knowledge, as well as to
-exaggeration. It is not necessary to repeat here the evidence which
-Miss Beale began to collect even before she was a teacher herself,
-and to which she was ever adding, to the effect that idleness and
-_ennui_ have more and sadder victims than even misdirected energy and
-overwork. A healthy prejudice against an empty, self-centred life is
-steadily growing. The movement which its followers have named Christian
-Science—also that which is preferably called Faith Healing—daily bring
-to light instances of self-destruction caused by the slothful mind and
-unruled will. None the less, the cry of overwork was not an empty one.
-When first girls began to work for examinations, it was not known how
-much or how little they could do. Miss Beale’s own opinions upon this,
-as put before the Commission, were quite tentative. Clever teachers did
-not always allow for slower-moving brains than their own. Nor was the
-difference of temperament sufficiently observed and considered. The eager
-and artistic mind would feel strain and fatigue where one less delicately
-balanced might toil unwearied. It was not recognised how willing girls
-are to be pressed, how eager they are to please, how unreasonable they
-often are in their own arrangements for work, or how easy it is for them
-to fall into the insincerity of making protracted hours of reading take
-the place of concentrated mental effort. Head-mistresses and others who
-had mastered difficulties alone, and who still carefully prepared every
-lesson they gave, in spite of the pressure of daily affairs, had to learn
-to reckon with these drawbacks. Examinations when first introduced must
-from their very novelty have been a great anxiety to both teachers and
-pupils. The best way of working for them and of resting before them had
-to be discovered by experience. The pressure was less obvious with those
-actually first in the field, as they would naturally be all of good
-ability. The danger began when girls of smaller brain-power and equal
-ambition, but ignorant of their limitations, dared to follow.
-
-Complaints of overwork came often from homes where there was little
-cultivation or regard for the things of the mind. Girls who could
-produce, in what they called their ‘notes of lectures,’ statements
-concerning ‘_heroic cutlets_’[44] and ‘_Lincoln’s hotel_’[45] had not,
-it may be well understood, much intellectual background. Yet the wholly
-unfounded complaints of the parents of such pupils would receive public
-attention that was little deserved. There were others, whose parents
-would have had them play a pretty part in home life in the afternoon and
-evening, but who naturally did not find enough time for lessons unless
-they sat up late or slurred them over. As it was never Miss Beale’s
-intention that day-pupils should consider themselves to be anything but
-‘in the schoolroom,’ the home work was not arranged to allow time for
-more than the necessary walk or recreation.
-
-The question of overwork is one that still agitates the scholastic
-world. The real difficulty, at Cheltenham as elsewhere, is not with the
-schoolgirl whose life is under supervision, but with the young teachers
-and the elder pupils who have the management of their own time and
-health, and have not yet learned their own limitations, or acquired a due
-measure of self-control.
-
-During the early period of the history of the College, Miss Beale came in
-contact with minds and ideas outside her own school, chiefly by means of
-the Schools’ Inquiry Commission, and the matter of public examinations.
-Those who wished had the opportunity of learning her views through her
-magazine articles and the pamphlets which she began at this time to
-publish. The most notable of these was ‘The Address to Parents.’ Much of
-this valuable little paper—one which in her early years as head-mistress
-made Miss Beale’s ideas widely known among those who cared for real
-education—had been anticipated in her address to the Social Science
-Congress in 1865. Then she pleaded the cause of day-schools, urging for
-them that they offered a training which did not separate children from
-the influence of home.
-
- ‘Of course when children are educated at home, and an anxious
- mother daily sees and suffers from her children’s faults of
- temper and disposition, she will be tempted to think that she
- had better give up the training into other hands, and send them
- away. Doubtless this is sometimes wise, often unavoidable; but
- how frequently without necessity is the burden of parental
- responsibility temporarily cast aside, only to press with
- tenfold weight in later years. How many parents have learned
- bitterly to regret that they removed a daughter from the
- divinely appointed influences of home, and severed by long
- separation those bonds of affection which might have checked
- the young in the hour of temptation, and been the support and
- comfort of their own declining years.’
-
-In 1869, in another address to the same Society, Miss Beale unfolded for
-the first time her ideas of the help which should be given to girls who
-were in need of education they could not afford, more especially to those
-who wished to prepare for a life of teaching. ‘I propose,’ she said, ‘the
-foundation of a new Benevolent Society, which shall be distinguished from
-other societies by its rigid adherence to the principle of giving nothing
-away.’ Instead of gifts, she suggested yearly loans of money, for the use
-of which an exact account and report of work done should be rendered.
-This Society has never been founded, but the work Dorothea Beale wished
-it should do was carried on by herself, quietly and thriftily, but with
-ever-widening operations, to the day of her death.
-
-At one other point did Miss Beale at this period touch opinion outside
-her own sphere. This was by writing for the Kensington Society,—a little
-semi-educational association which during its short life included many
-names of women who were in their day leaders in philanthropic work and
-thought. The topics on which its members wrote or deliberated were such
-as these:—
-
- 17 CUNNINGHAM PLACE, LONDON, N.W.,
- _November 15, 1865_.
-
- _The Kensington Society._
-
- 1. What are the limitations within which it is desirable to
- exercise personal influence?
-
- 2. What are the evils attendant upon philanthropic efforts
- among the poor, and how may they be avoided?
-
- 3. How does the cultivation of artistic taste affect the
- wellbeing of society?
-
-Meanwhile the general work of the Ladies’ College, Cheltenham, was going
-on quietly and steadily, developing in every best way. The valuable time
-of the Principal was no longer taken up with the superintendence of
-lessons and chaperoning music pupils. A larger and gradually improving
-staff enabled her to arrange her own work so that it might be of the
-greatest service to the College. But her increasing interest in education
-at large, her ever-growing sense of having a special place in a large
-movement, were never allowed to distract her mind from the work of the
-hour. Rather, she used them as an inspiration for daily drudgery.
-
-The preparation of lessons, the minute and careful correction of notes of
-lectures,—monotonous work which demands a continuous strain of attention,
-went on week by week. By means of this quiet, diligent toil she and
-her fellow-workers were building the real College, of which the fine
-structure whose first edition was opened in 1873 is but a sign and a
-symbol.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-ORGANISATION
-
- ‘Shepherds of the people had need know the Calendar of Tempests
- in the State; which are commonly greatest when things grow to
- equality, as natural tempests about the equinoctia.’—BACON.
-
-
- ‘With no feeling of exultation should we meet to-day, my
- children. Those of us who have long laboured at the work
- are indeed grateful that we have been permitted to see its
- accomplishment, but we are also deeply sensible that every
- increase of influence means an increase of responsibility;—that
- he who had five talents was required to bring other five.
- With larger numbers there is a stronger sense that we are a
- collective power for good or evil. And shall we doubt which is
- stronger? We dare not be so faithless. There is such a mighty
- prevailing power in the spirit of earnest devotion, that when
- only two or three are gathered together in His Name, for work
- as well as for prayer, His power is felt. What a power might we
- be for good if we were His disciples _indeed_.
-
- ‘Some say our school is Church-like. I am glad, for Churches
- are built to remind us that God is not far away, but very
- near to us, and this is the thought which should keep us from
- evil and fill us with gladness. May His Presence be seen in
- this house, seen in the lives and hearts of His children: May
- they remember that they, too, form one spiritual building.
- As each stone stands here in its appointed place, resting on
- one stone, supporting others; so are we a little community, a
- spiritual building; each is placed in her own niche, each has
- her appointed place, appointed by the Spiritual Architect; each
- is needful for the perfection of His design.
-
- ‘May we ever form part of that spiritual building, whose
- foundations are laid in faith and obedience. “Whoso heareth
- these sayings of mine and doeth them, he is like a man who
- laid the foundation and digged deep, and built his house upon
- a rock.” St. John wished for one of his converts that he
- might “prosper even as his soul prospered.” Let us desire only
- such prosperity. Let us ask for true wisdom, for lowliness of
- heart, that we may esteem others better than ourselves. Let
- us ask, above all, for that most excellent gift of charity,
- without which all else is as sounding brass, or a tinkling
- cymbal. Something of this spirit of love for one another does
- live among us, as we see by those who have come to join their
- prayers with ours to-day. I would ask them not to forget us
- afterwards, but to remember us when they return to their homes;
- and I would fain hope that this bond will last through coming
- years, and that the College, though transplanted to a new
- place, will always be to you “_the old College_.”’
-
-In these words the Lady Principal addressed her staff, pupils, and a
-small sprinkling of friends on the first morning of assembling in the new
-building which, begun in January of previous year, was thus opened on
-March 17, 1873. As the school hours ended on Saturday the 15th, a simple
-order had been given to take home all the books, and to bring them to the
-new College at the usual time on Monday. In the course of the afternoon
-all desks and portable fittings were moved and arranged in order for
-work. The appointment of places in the new hall was, so far as can be
-remembered, a matter of a few minutes only, so quiet and free from fuss
-was all College organisation. There was certainly not half an hour of
-the ordinary lesson time lost. Yet it was a change which made an undying
-impression. The quietness with which it came was wholly in accordance
-with the spirit of the school. The regular work, undisturbed even for an
-hour by the totally new surroundings, spoke emphatically of the response
-of duty to every fresh inspiration and larger freedom.
-
-And how beautiful those new surroundings seemed to the hundred and fifty
-girls who were privileged to experience the change from the square,
-unadorned rooms of Cambray House. Two churches at that time, one with
-its high, fine spire, another with its lavish decoration, were all
-that the town could show of the Gothic Renaissance which followed the
-teachings of Ruskin and Morris. The Ladies’ College was early among
-non-ecclesiastical buildings of this type. To some it may have seemed
-florid, but not to the eyes of youth and hope, which took delight in
-the pierced and patterned stone, the flowers in the coloured glass, the
-arch of the windows, the unusual design of the lecture-rooms. These
-caused teachers and pupils to ignore for the most part the undoubted
-chilliness of the new rooms, and the ‘currents of air,’ about which some
-parents wrote complaining letters, for at that time people were even
-more afraid of draughts than they are to-day. It is worth mentioning, as
-characteristic of Miss Beale’s mind, that she forgot very soon the exact
-date of entrance into the new College; though when reminded of it each
-year by her own birthday, or by the approach of spring and Lady Day, she
-would on some suitable March morning say a few words at prayers: ‘It is
-—— years to-day since we entered,’ etc.
-
-In 1873 the building was but begun. It is a question if Miss Beale
-herself dreamed of all that was to follow. There was as yet no house for
-the Lady Principal, and for a year, while it was being built, she lived
-with Mrs. Fraser, who had one of the three boarding-houses then existing.
-The house completed in 1874, there followed in 1875 the first enlargement
-of the College, the two hundred and twenty pupils for whom it was first
-designed having rapidly become three hundred. At this time a second large
-hall and more classrooms were added. In seven years the College had
-doubled its numbers; hence in 1882 were built the art and music wings and
-the kindergarten rooms, to be followed almost immediately by science
-rooms and laboratories. After this the sound of the hammer was not heard
-for nearly four years; but it is one which has a resounding echo in the
-memories of College life. There were a few peaceful half-hours when it
-was stopped for Scripture lessons, at all other times it was but a too
-persistent reminder of prosperity and growth. A memory also abides of
-crowded doorways and passages, overfull lecture-rooms, and a continual
-looking forward to the increased accommodation which each new enlargement
-would give.
-
-This constant expansion as funds permitted was entirely after Miss
-Beale’s heart. In 1891 she wrote to Miss Arnold:—
-
- ‘Yes, I do hope you will build, a good building is the best
- investment for money, if you have it. Let it be done gradually,
- as ours was. Plan for more than you can do at first, and build
- only what you can afford at the time. Don’t beg: it is much
- better to earn one’s living.’
-
-Strange as it may appear, the building of a fit home for the College had
-not taken place without opposition. Miss Beale relates in her _History_
-that after the site for it had been purchased, the annual general meeting
-of proprietors in 1871 voted by a majority interested in the Cambray
-property that it should be re-sold. Dr. Jex-Blake, the Principal of the
-Cheltenham College, and a member of the Ladies’ College Council, came to
-the rescue, and in a special meeting of the same year spoke earnestly in
-support of the plan for building. ‘Teachers so able and energetic and
-successful have a right to the greatest consideration, and the very best
-arrangements for teaching. A Ladies’ College so distinguished, second
-to none in England, has a right to every advantage that can be secured
-for it, a right to be lodged in a building of its own, a building
-perfect in its internal arrangements, and outwardly of some architectural
-attractiveness; one that should be a College, and should look like a
-College. It is quite right to say, “Let well alone,” but that does not
-involve letting _ill_ alone. The College has achieved brilliant success,
-but that was not due to its having been cramped for room; and when no
-longer cramped, its success will be greater.’ The resolution of the
-earlier meeting was rescinded by fifty-nine votes to nine, and two months
-later a contract was accepted for building from Mr. John Middleton’s
-design. The site, for which £800 was given, was a part of the old Well
-Walk where, between their glasses, George the Third and other famous
-water-drinkers had once taken their daily constitutional.
-
-In the matter of the building, Miss Beale had a struggle to get her
-bold and comprehensive ideas carried out, but eventually she won the
-day. It was hard for her, at the very moment when she seemed about to
-realise her dreams for the expansion of the work of the College, to
-receive orders which she felt to be new limitations. She had constantly
-to explain her reasons and requirements to those who had a deep interest
-in the welfare of the school, but who had not also the knowledge needed
-for arrangements which Miss Beale felt and intended should be in the
-hands of the Principal alone. The following letter which she wrote to a
-member of the Council suggests some of her difficulties, and also her
-method of skilfully and apparently accidentally stating the inconvenience
-or disaster which would ensue if another arrangement than her own were
-adopted:—
-
- ‘I have drawn up a ground-plan and tables, by the help of which
- I hope I may succeed in making clear to you the impossibility
- of conducting the College without the use of four class-rooms.
- I have never in the slightest degree departed from my original
- intention. Time-tables, classes, teachers, furniture, and
- building were all arranged to harmonise. It never occurred
- to me that any one would wish to interfere in the internal
- management, as it had never been done during the fifteen years
- I have been here. Great, therefore, was my surprise to receive
- a letter saying,—“I have had strict injunctions not to have
- desks put back into room 2.” If it is thought well to reduce
- the number of pupils, it can be done after Midsummer but not
- now, and to give up two class-rooms we must reduce our numbers
- not by twenty, but by fifty, _i.e._ by two whole classes. Our
- Hall is only ten feet longer than that in Cambray, and we then
- had the use of four class-rooms and one supplementary room,
- besides that assigned to Drawing and Callisthenics. With fifty
- additional pupils we cannot do with less, even though the
- class-rooms are larger. It is not impossible to teach a class
- sitting on chairs, I should not, therefore, insist on having
- desks, but they will certainly be much more convenient, and
- much more sightly; chairs will always look untidy. The desks I
- have match the furniture, the room was built to fit them, for
- examinations. I am therefore unwilling to have them sold for
- nothing. It is certainly necessary for the well-being of the
- College that the internal arrangements should be in the hands
- of one person; if this is not done, I can only foresee the
- occurrence of such disasters as we are familiar with, when the
- Head Master of a public school is interfered with by those who
- cannot see the daily working, and know all the complications.’
-
-The new building was not the only cause of difference. The Lady
-Principal, with her advanced ideas on women’s examinations, her desire
-to help teachers, to increase the number of the pupils, seemed to some
-members of the Council to be pushing the work into other fields than
-those for which it was intended when first the Proprietary College for
-Ladies was founded. ‘Local interest,’ a term not ominous of good in the
-ears of great educators, demanded a good day-school for the daughters
-of gentlemen, and nothing more. Some felt that, in the pursuit of
-mathematical and scientific attainments for which special teachers and
-classrooms were required, accomplishments such as drawing and painting
-would be neglected. Some, who had watched the growth of the infant
-College, and looked upon it almost as their own, interfered in small
-ways, as in the arrangements of seats and rooms. The gossip mentioned
-already was at its height during the first year in the new College, and
-Miss Beale thought that it might have been prevented or much minimised
-had all connected followed her counsel of perfection by being superior to
-town talk.
-
-More than all she felt the need of a larger outlook. The Council
-should in her view include some members whose personal acquaintance
-with the College and the needs of the town would give them a special
-interest in it; but she desired to unite with these men and women of
-intellectual power and large views whose experience would rank them among
-educationists. And for the management of the boarding-houses, which were
-now becoming each year a more important element in the College life,
-opinion which could be untouched by local prejudices was needed.
-
-Some of the anxieties of this time were expressed by Miss Beale in a
-paper which she may have thought of reading to the Council. It began
-thus:—
-
- ‘Until we moved into the new College a year ago, I had been
- singularly free from interference. The lesson learned when
- Miss Procter resigned and our College was nearly wrecked,
- had not been forgotten. Besides, we were poor, so there was
- little to quarrel about. With the removal to Bays Hill our
- real difficulties began. I had drawn the ground-plan with the
- greatest regard to economy of space. I was told the porch must
- not be used for entrance, and I was obliged to show we could
- not do without it.... Then I was asked to do with two instead
- of four or five lecture-rooms, and so on. I was obliged to
- prepare elaborate documents with ground-plans, etc., ere I
- could get leave to use the space provided, and without which
- the College could not be carried on.’
-
-There were perhaps others who cared for the College, who realised no
-less strongly than Miss Beale the advantage it would be to bring on to
-the Council those who were less interested in it as a local institution
-than as one of educational value for the country at large, but it was she
-who undoubtedly took the lead in the steps made to this end. In this she
-showed courage, for even those members of the Council who best understood
-her views hesitated to support them, fearing an abrupt change which would
-do more harm than good. They wrote to caution her:—
-
- ‘You must not expect men of Mr. Lowe’s mark to work on the
- C.L.C. Council; and you must not expect to see all go as
- you would wish at the meeting. You will find no member of
- Council but myself anxious to increase the powers of the Lady
- Principal, and probably they will not be much increased. And
- if you secure the majority of Council being non-local, which
- will be hard to secure, you will not secure their attendance at
- meetings held out of London.
-
- ‘And to get a satisfactory List to propose to Shareholders will
- be hard, for the best-known men in England will not join; and
- those who will join will not command votes largely; and so I
- advise moderation. I did my best at this last Council meeting
- to prepare the way for a “bloodless revolution” or quiet
- transition ... and I have seen Mr. Verrall. He is very friendly
- to you and to the College, and is a man of very good judgment
- as well as energy, and you are safe in talking or writing to
- him. For myself I feel less and less inclined to advise strong
- measures; and I do not see my way to getting the College on
- as broad a basis as I think it should stand on.... I advise
- you to think well and long before you get into an inextricable
- difficulty; and I think you will find your best friend and best
- support in one who for fifteen years (or nearly) has given much
- time and thought to the College, Mr. Brancker.
-
- ‘At the last Council meeting you showed great wisdom in
- accepting the adverse Resolution with equanimity.’
-
-Differences of this kind pointed to a change of administration. As early
-as 1865, in her address at Bristol, Miss Beale had pointed out the
-difficulties besetting a school organised on the lines of Cheltenham:—
-
- ‘The machinery of proprietary colleges is somewhat complicated,
- and it is liable to get out of order. Thus, for example, if
- the shareholders agitate when a measure does not at once
- commend itself to their judgment, they may interfere with the
- efficiency, and endanger the existence of the institution.
- Secondly, none must attempt to carry out reforms in education,
- unless they have faith enough in their own system to work on
- quietly for a time, in the face of popular opposition, and
- unless they have a capital to fall back upon.’
-
-Union for the general good—a single purpose in Principal, Council,
-shareholders alike—this alone could prevent all serious and hindering
-differences of opinion among them. It was for this union Miss Beale was
-specially striving now. Her paper to the Council went on thus:—
-
- ‘ ... I should like this and other matters fixed, not in
- reference to my personal wishes, but according to what the
- most experienced persons think best. I shall see the Heads of
- all the principal Girls’ Schools probably when I am in London,
- and probably also an Endowed Schools’ Committee, and I shall
- learn from Mrs. William Grey what has been done at the Board
- of the Girls’ Day School Company; perhaps this may modify my
- views. Meanwhile I enclose a few suggestions I sent to Mr.
- Verrall.... I feel very strongly with you that if the College
- is at all to go on doing good work, it must not be governed
- by local members, and that it is a matter of the greatest
- importance that we should have upon our Board men of experience
- and judgment in educational matters. I would not keep more than
- two or three members of the present Council. It should be made
- a rule that no person who derives pecuniary profit, either
- directly or indirectly, should be a member of it. The point on
- which I feel most strongly just now is that the Principal must
- be able to select her fellow-workers, to appoint and dismiss.’
-
-There is also an interesting letter to Mr. Verrall on the subject of her
-authority:—
-
- ‘Of course, you are more likely than I am to know what is best
- in matters of government, still I think it may be well to
- express, as clearly as I can, what I feel in reference to the
- subject of my authority.
-
- ‘It does not seem to me as if things would be likely to go
- on long without revolutions in an institution governed by
- two irresponsible powers. The authority of an irresponsible
- Principal must of course be checked in _some way_, if not by
- constitutional means, then by a Russian system. It may be that
- the Czarina has been trying to carry out some good reforms,
- but if her plans differ from those of the Councillors, there
- is an end of them. Our present Councillors are now afraid of
- being in their turn made an end of by a shareholders’ meeting,
- but if the constitution, as I understood it, were carried,
- the shareholders would be powerless, and the Council might,
- for mere personal dislike, get rid of a Principal who opposed
- what was wrong. Of course, it will not do for a Committee
- to interfere with the Principal’s choice of teachers, and
- there will be anarchy unless she has the power of dismissal;
- but virtually there will always be a power of appeal to the
- Committee inasmuch as they _would_, if partisans of any
- official, dismiss the Principal to reinstate her.’
-
-Many members of the College Council desired change and enlargement. One
-wrote: ‘I cannot think it right to leave Miss Beale or any other Lady
-Principal to the mercies of a purely local Council ... for I think with
-such a Council no good Lady Principal could long agree.’
-
-Among those whom Miss Beale consulted at this crisis, and from whom she
-received sympathy, were Dr. Jex-Blake, then head-master of Rugby, and Sir
-Joshua Fitch, who later on became a member of the Council.
-
-The desired reform was brought about in 1875, when at a general meeting
-in March the relative powers of the proprietors, Council, and Principal
-were more clearly defined and the number of the governing body
-increased. The Council then elected consisted of the following:—
-
- LIFE MEMBERS
-
- The Right Hon. Earl Granville, K.G., D.C.L., F.R.S., Chancellor
- of the University of London.
-
- The Right Hon. Lord Lyttelton.
-
- The Right Hon. Sir Edward Ryan, M.A., F.R.S.
-
- J. Storrar, Esq., M.D., Chairman of Convocation of the
- University of London.
-
- The Rev. H. Walford Bellairs, Rector of Nuneaton.
-
- The Rev. Canon Barry, Principal of King’s College, London.
-
- Miss Buss, Principal of the North London Collegiate School for
- Girls.
-
- W. Dunn, Esq., Cheltenham.
-
- H. Verrall, Esq., Brighton.
-
- T. Marriott, Esq., Victoria Street, Westminster.
-
- S. S. Johnson, Esq., Nottingham.
-
- ORDINARY MEMBERS
-
- The Rev. Herbert Kynaston, Principal of the Cheltenham College.
-
- The Rev. W. Wilberforce Gedge, Malvern Wells.
-
- The Rev. Dr. Morton Brown, Cheltenham.
-
- E. T. Wilson, Esq., M.B. (Oxon.), Cheltenham.
-
- General M’Causland, Cheltenham.
-
- F. D. Longe, Esq., Cheltenham.
-
- John Middleton, Esq., Cheltenham.
-
- T. Morley Rooke, Esq., M.D. (London), Cheltenham.
-
- Miss Mary Gurney, London.
-
- Miss Lucy March Phillipps, Cheltenham.
-
- Mrs. James Owen, Cheltenham.
-
- Miss Catherine Winkworth, Clifton.
-
-Much was gained by this remodelling, but the period of uneasy development
-was not yet over. One annual meeting which discussed the constitution
-of the College appears in private notes made by the Principal for her
-_History_ as ‘Bear Garden.’ Reorganisation was seen to be essential.
-The College, founded in 1853 as a voluntary association, had by 1880
-grown far beyond the calculations of its founders. Besides the school
-buildings and the Lady Principal’s house, it possessed Fauconberg House
-and the sanatorium at Leckhampton. To give it a safe legal foundation it
-was therefore registered ‘with limited liability’ under the Companies’
-Acts of 1862 and 1867, without the addition of the word ‘limited’ to its
-name. New regulations concerning the holding of shares and property—the
-appointment of officers—were also made.
-
- ‘The Shareholders formally renounced all interest on their
- shares, and on January 31, 1880, the College was duly
- incorporated. On May 1 of the same year, the Lady Principal and
- other officials were formally re-elected.
-
- ‘The new Constitution provided for a Governing Body of
- twenty-four Members, of whom eighteen, namely twelve men and
- six women, were to be Members elected by the Shareholders,
- and the remaining six Representative Members, each holding
- office for six years. The six Representative Members were to be
- appointed by: (1) The Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol; (2) The
- Hebdomadal Council of the University of Oxford; (3) The Council
- of the Senate of the University of Cambridge; (4) The Senate of
- the University of London; (5) The Lady Principal; and (6) The
- Teachers.
-
-Miss Beale did not often speak of the difficulties which necessarily
-she had to meet, as one called upon to direct the development of a
-great institution. But she had counsel and sympathy for those who were
-similarly placed. Miss Buss wrote thus to Miss Ridley of help she
-obtained from her:—
-
- ‘I had a long and grave talk to Miss Beale, who counsels fight,
- but not on any personal ground. She says, “Resign, if there is
- interference with the mistress’ liberty of action. That is a
- public question, and one of public interest.” She was so good
- and loving; she was so tender; and she is so wise and calm. She
- told me some of her own worries, and said that sometimes she
- quivered in every nerve at her own Council meetings. People
- came in and asked for information, involving hours of work for
- no result; ignored all that had been done, and talked as if
- they alone had done everything and knew everything. She urged
- me to try and be _im_personal, so to speak; to remember that
- these and similar difficulties would always occur where there
- are several people. She said that _women_ were always accused
- of being _too personal_, and harm was done by giving a handle
- to such an assertion.’[46]
-
-The first efforts of the new Council to grapple with their task
-revealed that one source of difficulty lay in the government of the
-boarding-houses. The early founders had foreseen this when, in their
-first prospectus, they announced that they would not be responsible for
-any houses. Experience, however, soon showed that by this policy, grave
-dangers were at the same time incurred. Into Miss Beale’s early struggle
-for pupils the question of boarding-houses scarcely entered, though
-for the want of them she often had sadly to witness the loss of good
-pupils to the College. There were among the day-pupils many children of
-Anglo-Indians in England for a time. On the return of these parents to
-India, they were forced to make boarding arrangements for the children
-left behind. It was not till 1864 that the first regularly constituted
-boarding-house was opened under Miss Caines. This was at 24 Lansdown
-Place, now joined to No. 25, and known as St. Helen’s. In 1870 Miss
-Caines removed to Fauconberg House, the first property purchased by the
-College.
-
-It was only through actual experience that the position of the
-boarding-house and its head could be defined. In point of fact, this
-situation had to grow and develop according to the requirements of
-the College, which as formerly had to constitute precedents and make
-experiments. It is but seldom that the details of any great scheme can
-be arranged beforehand with deliberate judgment, that all difficulties
-can be foreseen, and occasions of conflict avoided. They are more
-often worked out by single-minded intention which can endure through
-small errors and trifling disputes. The Lady Principal’s position was
-rendered more difficult by the tacit opposition of ‘local interest’ to
-the extension of boarding-house accommodation. The very existence of the
-College had been for many years precarious. Few people in Cheltenham
-wished it to become anything more than a suitable day-school for the
-sisters of boys at the College. Consequently a lady who took boarders was
-regarded with no special favour, and her actions were very often severely
-criticised.
-
-In the difficult work of forming and increasing boarding-houses, mistakes
-were made by many. Miss Beale’s own belief in others, her habit of
-accepting people at their own estimate, of believing they were what she
-wished them to be, of judging character from her wide experience of books
-rather than from that of life, sometimes led her astray in her choice
-of fellow-workers. She who in her lonely position often felt the need
-of sympathy, to which she was ever responsive, was anxious to give it,
-even where she could not understand. This made her slow to bring about
-a change, lest sufficient opportunity for amendment had not been given.
-On the other hand, sometimes she could see that a change should be made
-promptly, but as she could not act alone a dangerous delay would ensue.
-
-At first the position of a head of a boarding-house was little defined,
-and it was hard sometimes for a clever, well-intentioned woman, anxious
-to do the best for the children in her care, not to regard the work of
-the house as primary, that of the College as secondary only. One lady,
-who was extremely capable and interested in her work, was ambitious to
-make her boarding-house a complete institution in itself, rather than an
-integral part of the College. Many of the girls in her charge came as
-her own relations or friends; she chose to adopt the position that it
-was right for her to decide whether they should be taught at her house
-or sent to College, and she denied the right of any one to interfere in
-her management. She also claimed the right to take another house for
-herself and her own children, where she could receive and entertain her
-friends. As soon as Miss Beale’s eyes were opened to the danger of such
-independent action, she did not hesitate a moment on the right course to
-be pursued with regard to the boarding-house management. She perceived
-that in this matter, as in the work of the school, there was no standing
-ground between obedience and independence. ‘I am so sorry for Miss
-Beale,’ wrote Mrs. William Grey to Miss Buss, ‘and so glad our Council
-determined to have nothing to do with Boarding-Houses. I cannot help
-thinking that the wisest course for the Cheltenham Council would be to
-wash their hands of them, only reserving to themselves, as we have, the
-right to refuse pupils from a house they disapprove of. There seems to me
-no tolerable alternative between this and the hostelry system.’
-
-It may be safely said that never, even in moments of worst annoyance,
-did Miss Beale ever propose to ‘wash her hands’ of the boarding-houses.
-She felt they should be ‘organically related’ to the College life, a
-part of it which she could not do without, one which had in it great
-possibilities for extending and strengthening the influence of the
-College teaching, one which, neglected, must be an infinite source
-of difficulty, by which the standard of the corporate life might be
-lowered, and its best work hindered.
-
-So she persisted, lending her whole mind and strength to help in the
-evolution of a system which should be fair to individuals and the best
-for the College as a body. In 1890, after she had won her point, she
-wrote to Miss Arnold, then head-mistress of the Truro High School, who
-had consulted her on the subject:—
-
- ‘I think I told you that after many years, I have prevailed on
- our Council to take the whole risk of the boarding-houses,—the
- pecuniary risk is of course very great, and in case of war
- or sudden depression, I don’t exactly see how we should meet
- it, but one must have risks, and we find the moral risks of
- not taking pecuniary ones so great that we decided for the
- latter—and indeed we had to pay pretty considerable sums in
- law expenses and to get rid of unjust claims too. We could not
- _prove_ that these ladies had not lost money, if they said they
- had—and if they were bad managers they did perhaps lose—and an
- outcry was raised that we ruined poor ladies!’
-
-But the difficulties to be encountered on the way to this consummation
-were by no means slight, and involved great personal anxiety and pain. It
-was especially hard to her that she should be known by her own pupils to
-be in opposition to any who had been set over them. It was hard to feel
-that many with their partial knowledge of facts must misunderstand her,
-or childishly attribute her actions to commonplace motives of jealousy
-and love of power. Some part of these difficulties became fully public
-in 1882, when the College was involved in a libel case, and a lawsuit
-which was settled by arbitration. Exoneration from all blame followed in
-both instances. In the arbitration case the judgment was delivered by
-Mr. Justice Charles, and placed in a sealed envelope with the injunction
-that either party might open it on payment of £350. The Council did not
-think it necessary to pay this money. Eventually those who had brought
-the action against the College did so, to find that the judgment had been
-pronounced against them on every count. It was a victory for the College
-and the Principal, but it had not been achieved without great toil and
-suffering on Miss Beale’s part. She dreaded the cross-examination with
-all the nervousness of a sensitive nature. Speaking of it afterwards, and
-of all it had cost her, she ever associated with the pain the remembrance
-of the immense help and sympathy she had received from her friend Mrs.
-James Owen, then a member of the Council, and would say, ‘Mrs. Owen
-said I should not be scorched in the fire.’ She was also upborne by
-the loyalty of her fellow-workers, both teachers and boarding-house
-mistresses, who signed a joint expression of their sympathy with her in
-her time of anxiety. Miss Buss gave more than words of sympathy, she was
-present herself in the arbitration-room when the case was tried. When it
-was over she wrote to her friend to this effect: ‘Yesterday I made the
-personal acquaintance of Miss ——. I fell in love with her because she is
-so intensely loyal to Cheltenham and to “dear Miss Beale.” I think if you
-could have heard her talk, unknown to her, you would have felt that the
-severe trial you have had to go through was more than compensated for by
-the love and loyalty it has called out to you and the College.’
-
-The increase in the number of the boarding-houses, with their slightly
-different characteristics, brought an obvious advantage to the College.
-It led the way to still cheaper houses, and to the promotion of that
-work so dear always to Miss Beale, helping poor students and training
-teachers. Never heartily sympathetic with what is generally called
-charitable work, afraid of seeing money given without a really
-equivalent return in usefulness and good work, there was one appeal to
-which she never turned a deaf ear. Probably she never knew any case of a
-girl honestly trying to improve herself, and failing in the effort for
-want of means, without trying to help her. Her usual plan was to advance
-money, which she found was almost invariably returned to her in the
-course of time. She would, wherever it seemed right, ask for its return
-on the ground that it might be of use to others, and because she was ever
-careful to make those she helped recognise that the possession of money
-is a stewardship only. But it was offered and lent and sometimes given
-in such a way that there should be no personal feeling of obligation
-and debt. ‘There is a loan fund,’ she would say when there occurred a
-question of the removal of a promising pupil from the College on the
-score of expense. And hardly any one ever heard her say more than this of
-the large system of help which she initiated and to a very great extent
-sustained alone. Some of the boarding-house mistresses generously took
-one girl free, or for very low terms, but the work was quietly done,
-known only to few.
-
-The establishment of scholarships did not fit into Miss Beale’s
-educational schemes. She was not wholly opposed to them. One, in 1870,
-was accepted for the College, when Colonel Pearce bestowed a gift of
-£1000 to found the Pearce Scholarship for the daughter of an army
-officer, and Miss Beale in the last year of her life established one for
-Casterton. But she had a great horror of a system by which one school or
-college could buy promising pupils from others, and she held that it was
-hard on earnest students who were not naturally quick to see assistance
-given only to ability. ‘I have refused,’ she said at a later period,
-‘all scholarships except one, the chief condition of which is poverty.
-Three scholarships have been offered unasked, and an endowment for two
-prizes, which would have formed a good advertisement, every year, but I
-have refused all.’
-
-As the College grew, Miss Beale felt more and more the need of a house
-where those who were trying to train themselves to be teachers could
-board inexpensively, and in 1876 was made that beginning which, as she
-said, was ‘full of blessing to the College, and of much use beyond its
-bounds.’ This was before the Maria Grey Training College was opened,
-and when there was no institution at all in which women could receive
-definite preparation for becoming teachers in secondary schools.
-
-Miss Mary Margaretta Newman, member of a family which had shown itself
-sympathetic and interested in Miss Beale’s work from the first, offered
-to take a furnished house for a small number of students, to give her
-services, and contribute besides £75 a year towards expenses. Miss Newman
-had seen, whilst helping Miss Selwyn in her school at Sandwell, how much
-some such assistance was needed; how many girls of good social standing
-were struggling to obtain the training necessary to fit them to earn
-their living as teachers. She therefore provided a home for a few, and
-by her quiet, gentle influence supplemented the College work, and won
-the affections of her household. ‘What we felt most was the simplicity
-with which she gave so much. She seemed unconscious that she was doing
-anything remarkable in going to live in a small house, with one servant,
-and undertaking all the labour such an economy implied.’[47]
-
-Miss Newman’s work went on for scarcely a year, for at the end of 1877,
-after a very short illness, aggravated by the burden she had willingly
-laid upon herself, she died, leaving the work but just begun indeed,
-yet full of promise, and rendered by her sacrifice and death a sacred
-charge to the College and the Lady Principal. So indeed Miss Beale felt
-it to be, and in after years she would remember the life given in the
-cause she herself had so much at heart, and would write in her diary on
-December 31: ‘I think of Miss Newman’s death. Shall I not follow her
-example?’ Then for the first time Miss Beale, who had always maintained
-and acted on the principle that the College should earn its own living,
-asked for money to buy and furnish a suitable house for girls who could
-not afford the terms of the boarding-houses. She could not bear to refuse
-the many applications she received from those who were too poor to
-help themselves. About £1200 was immediately collected, one half being
-contributed by the College staff.
-
-The work thus begun extended so rapidly that in little more than five
-years it was seen to be necessary that it should have a building of
-its own, and the trustees who had the management of the funds decided
-to build a residential College. This was opened under the name of St.
-Hilda’s in 1885.
-
-The first ten years in the new buildings were a time of larger
-development for the College than any other in its history. Miss Beale’s
-own active life was also more full, and not less anxious, than it had
-ever been. There was never again a time of depression such as the year
-1871 had been, when the College seemed to be almost losing ground, when
-in the whole course of the year only three fresh pupils entered. But
-the rapid increase on every hand of new, good, cheap schools naturally
-fed her anxiety at a period when she had to justify to the Council her
-constant demand for more classrooms, music-rooms, halls, laboratories.
-She saw the immense importance of keeping ahead in these things. Other
-schools had endowments or guaranteed capital, the College could only
-increase and improve its plant out of the fees paid by the pupils. The
-Lady Principal did not wish it otherwise; but the constant remembrance
-of this made her very careful in expenditure, and ever desirous that all
-individual interest should be lost to sight in regard for the common
-welfare. There was something sharper than anxiety to bear over the
-boarding-house difficulties and the reconstitution of the Council. So
-much patience was needed, so much judgment in decisions, in avoiding
-mistakes, in retrieving them when made, that time and thought might well
-have been occupied with the care of actualities alone.
-
-Yet it will not be surprising to some to know that it was just in these
-years that her inner life also became more full and more active, and that
-she was called upon to go through mental crises of great moment. The
-habit of prayer, difficult to maintain in a busy life, was strengthened
-by attendance at Retreats; a practice begun in 1877 to be continued
-yearly. Reading of every kind, with the exception of fiction, was
-diligently kept up, and thought was never more active.
-
-The intellectual and spiritual struggles of this time permanently
-affected Miss Beale’s work and teaching. They cannot be passed over.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-DE PROFUNDIS
-
- ‘Es sind die, so viel erlitten
- Trübsal, Schmerzen, Angst, und Noth,
- Im Gebet auch oft gestritten
- Mit dem hochgelobten Gott.’
-
- THEODOR SCHENK.
-
-
-Dorothea Beale—largely owing to her sensitive nature and high ideals—had
-had her full share of the sufferings and disappointments of youth. And
-when she had gained the experience and habits of more mature years,
-when she had schooled herself to bear, when her position was assured,
-when she was free to associate largely with those most sympathetic to
-her, her zeal for the best ever caused a pressing sense of effort and
-strain. Certain commonplace troubles she had not known, as, for example,
-the want of money—a need which in fact she never experienced, and never
-really understood in others. And on the whole her health had been good.
-She regarded it as one of her first duties to consider this, and except
-for the fact that she had an inherent indifference to the character of
-the food she ate, the duty was not neglected. But in 1878 she was called
-upon to go through a period of weakness and anxiety which limited her
-powers for the time. In spite of her great self-control she was obliged
-to relax a little, to take more rest, while the effort to preserve that
-self-control made her seem, to some who knew nothing of it, hard and
-unsympathetic. Very little indeed did she say of what she went through
-at this time, because she thought it best for others that she should be
-reserved and silent on the subject. The College and Miss Beale seemed to
-have a stability which could not be touched or changed, and she knew the
-value of this characteristic to her work. Probably no one in the College,
-and hardly any one outside it, perhaps none except her sisters and Miss
-Clarke, knew how near she was at this time to an absolute breakdown. The
-diary, still persistently kept, continued to be little more than a record
-of struggle against particular faults; yet here, from an occasional word
-and expression, the weariness and anxiety of the time may be gauged.
-
-The year opened for Miss Beale with a special renewal of effort. Canon
-Body’s addresses at a Retreat she attended in Warrington Crescent in
-the first days of January were full of inspiration to her. This meant
-actively fresh effort, keener self-scrutiny, more watchfulness. ‘I
-remember,’ she wrote on January 24, the opening day of College, ‘I
-remember with grief the many neglects of the past. Forsake me not,
-neither reward me after my deserts.’
-
-The next few weeks show a pathetic struggle against a growing sense of
-weakness. At first she blamed herself if duty was neglected, then as
-she knew herself to be ill, still felt that more might have been done,
-refusing to take sickness as an excuse. There are many living who were
-at College at this period, and to them the picture of this effort and
-suffering going on in the background of all that then seemed unfailingly
-vital and positive must have a double interest,—increasing tenderness for
-the memory of her who for their sakes was bearing a daily burden of pain,
-encouraging to fresh zeal by showing what a brave spirit may do even in
-weakness and depression. A few extracts to show this follow:—
-
- ‘Jan. 26. Nothing of real work done since school, and but
- little in the morning.
-
- ” 31. Inattentive. Spoke unkindly without cause. Irritable.
-
- Feb. 3. Did not do best for literature class. Felt feeble and
- did not try as I ought.
-
- ” 9. [There] ought to be more industry in writing for
- Saturday lectures. The night cometh.
-
- ” 11. I grieve for the stupid lesson I gave Division III.,
- because not well prepared.
-
- ” 14. Still great waste of time. How much have I to
- learn in this little time of life left to me.
-
- ” 15. Too much depressed, feeling I _can’t_. Perhaps more
- variety and exercise wanted. Certainly more trust
- and energy.
-
- ” 16. More than one hour wasted in idle thoughts, 5-6 A.M.,
- and yet I have work for others which I ought to
- have thought of, and lessons. I deserve to be left
- without help. _Evening._ Not much matter or order
- in lessons. Tired and discontented with self. Neglect
- of books. More trust and energy wanted.
-
- ” 26. I have idled away precious time, neglected individual
- work. Because my own will is weak, I could
- not strengthen [another].
-
- ” 27. In bed all day. There are duties still undone,
- though I see death near.
-
- ” 28. Not in College. Much time wasted and [I was]
- disobedient to the voice of duty.
-
- March 1. Still great waste of energy in idle thoughts. Talk
- of zeal but no religious work done to-day, though
- there are so many individuals I am ever putting off.
-
- ” 2. Omitted teachers’ class, which with less of idle
- thoughts I might have done.
-
- ” 5. Too exhausted to do much. Give me true contrition
- for the past.
-
- ” 6. Time not well used in afternoon. Letter to Miss
- Clarke.
-
- ” 14. Was ill last night. Almost no individual work.
-
- ” 15. A little more work for my children to-day. I thank
- Thee for some help. May I consecrate time and
- energies to Thee.
-
- ” 17. Have not prayed well for to-morrow—was tired,
- but did waste some time. Not attentive enough at
- Church.... Surely to-day’s negligence might
- humble me!
-
- ” 18. Rose thirty-five minutes late through carelessness.
-
- ” 19. Back to College. Shall I patiently resign my work
- as soon as He bids?
-
- ” 20. Evening examination shortened because delayed.
- It was not necessary, though I am idle. Ordered
- away. Thy will be done.
-
- ” 21. Sent to Hyde. Forty-seven. (This was her birthday.)
- For the grievous neglect of past time enter
- not into judgment. Sanctify the future!
-
- ” 22. Make me ever more constant to resign to Thee
- my will.
-
- ” 23. More ill, so tried to be idle, but did what thought
- I could. Vain thoughts of self-pity.
-
- ” 24. No Church. Have wasted time. Great inattention
- at prayer.
-
- ” 25. Talking, and therefore late, at least half an hour.
- Miss Belcher came.
-
- ” 27. George came. Was ill most of afternoon. Did
- nothing.
-
- ” 28. I thank Thee for hopes of more work. Make me
- more restful and faithful. Power of prayer fails.
- Grant me the spirit of holy fear.
-
- April 2. Back at Cheltenham.
-
- ” 3. I ought to have specially husbanded strength.
-
- ” 5. Tried, but not successfully, with my Confirmation
- children. Feeling too ill to do well. Thy will be
- done.
-
- ” 7. Holy Eucharist. Ill at night. The Lord thy
- refuge, and underneath the everlasting arms.
-
- ” 8. Better class. Was helped.
-
- ” 13. Not punctual because sleepless. Read Mr. Hinton’s
- _Life_ and was helped by it. Confirmation at Christchurch.
- _Summary_ [of the term]. Time wasted, idle prayer,
- boasting. Intercessions [neglected] because too selfish.
-
- ” 16. Came to Hyde [for the holidays].’
-
-So ended a term of great anxiety. One medical opinion, doubtless referred
-to in her diary of March 20, was of such a nature, that Miss Beale
-thought she must resign her work at once. At Hyde her sisters persuaded
-her to rest and to see another doctor, who took a more hopeful view,
-which was wholly justified by her gradual return to health.
-
-Among the few who knew of this sorrow was the old pupil and friend,
-Miss Margaret Clarke. To her Miss Beale wrote from Hyde before she had
-received the second medical opinion, and the reply shows, far more than
-the diary can tell us, how deep was the gloom which hung over her way at
-this time. It might well have been written three years later, when Miss
-Beale was called upon to undergo greater suffering than any bodily pain
-alone can give, and suggests to those who read it now, that the darkness
-of that later time was shadowing her spirit even as early as this. The
-interest of it is the greater because it shows another who like Dorothea
-Beale, while faithful to her work, unsparing in care and thought for her
-children, had been called upon personally to know spiritual anguish. Such
-suffering, such loss, such deeper realisation of Divine love as are read
-in this letter are surely the portion of those who, having given much and
-helped many, are called to some further work of sympathy, needing perhaps
-‘heart’s blood.’
-
- ‘MY VERY DEAR FRIEND,—Your letter touches me so nearly, and
- calls out such true sympathy, that I cannot help yielding
- myself to the impulse to answer you, as one who, by her own
- experience, knows the pain and suffering you are now passing
- through. Last year at this time I was in it, and possibly just
- where you are now, where my complete faith in all that was most
- dear to me was tested; yes, tested and sifted, till all human
- longings and cravings, even those the most lawful, were laid
- low; God Himself seemed to draw near, and strip the soul of all
- it prized, and was proud of, asking one thing after another
- of it, and last of all the heart, whole and unshared, until,
- when Good Friday came, it could sympathise with the Crucified,
- as it had never done before. Not that all that had not been
- done before as I believed, but this was in a way deeper, more
- searching than the soul had yet realised. I do not know if I
- am making myself clear to you, for it is difficult to put it
- into words. It was the unlearning human wisdom, and the getting
- ready to be “a little child,” to learn Divine Wisdom, in the
- school of the Kingdom of the Incarnate Word.
-
- ‘And then, when all was yielded, at least in will, then came a
- desolation time, which none but those who have passed through
- it can know—a living death, as it were; the soul having just
- power to cling to the Invisible Cross, and say the Creed, as a
- witness perhaps more to itself, that faith was alive, than to
- God as an act of faith in Him. I never slept, (I was for) whole
- nights awake, (the) brain always at work trying to solve the
- difficult problems of God’s wisdom, and circumstances in my own
- life, and to find out what _was_ right, what _was_ His Will. At
- last I was given a simple faith _blindly_ to give myself to God
- for whatever He wished for me. To let go reasonings and what
- I thought, etc., and say just as a little child “Our Father”
- with intention for what He willed. I did not know what it might
- be, but He knew, and I would trust Him, and then I went on to
- (think of) that seventeenth chapter of St. John, and claimed
- my share in the benefits of that prayer, in the answer that is
- ever coming to each separate member of Christ’s Body all along
- the years since it was prayed.
-
- ‘And so, gradually, the passage was made into a nearer region,
- a nearer relationship to God, if I may so express myself. But
- I must not go on writing in this way. I can only tell you that
- what was then only a trembling venture of Faith has become a
- substantial reality in the life of the soul; the whole being,
- body, soul and spirit being penetrated by it, and the whole of
- life transformed by the “sunshine” which makes itself felt,
- even through stray clouds, which must come sometimes, and there
- is rest and peace in the soul—divine peace.
-
- ‘Forgive me, dear Miss Beale, for writing in a way I scarcely
- ever do to any one.
-
- ‘I know how impossible it will be for you to rest, but do try
- to do so, as long as you can.’
-
-After the Easter holidays Miss Beale was much better in health, and
-though her work through the summer was carried on with a good deal of
-strain and weariness, she was able to do it as fully as usual. The summer
-holidays were spent partly at Hyde Court with her mother, and partly at
-Cheltenham, and by the end of them she was much rested and again able
-to take the walks she enjoyed. The opening day of the autumn term was
-September 17. ‘Help me not to disgrace my profession!’ she exclaimed in
-her diary of that day.
-
-Two years after this date Hyde Court ceased to be the regular holiday
-home, for in November 1881 Mrs. Beale died. In one of her later letters
-to her ‘Principal’ daughter she had written: ‘I hunger to see you, my
-darling. You have been so good to me always, your reward will come.’
-Such words of praise are dear indeed when the lips that spoke them are
-cold. They were treasured by Miss Beale. But in this bereavement, as in
-all times when made conscious of the shadow of death, specially of her
-own, she tried to face the mystery with clear-sighted gaze, to realise
-sincerely the impression it was meant to produce. She would not let
-expressions of comfort and hope, which she welcomed and accepted to the
-full, or any brightness brought by the kindness of the living, hide for
-her the penitential aspect of death.
-
-The following fragmentary thoughts seem to come from the very chamber of
-death, and were written on the day of the month which was to be the date
-of her own death, twenty-five years later:—
-
- ‘_November 9, 1881._
-
- ‘At first death seemed, as I looked at that pale face, simply
- terrible—how could I die? This morning I went again and touched
- the cold hand, and gazed into the face, so calm and wax-like.
- She who had rejoiced over my birth fifty years ago was now
- perhaps watching me. Does the spirit linger round its earthly
- tabernacle for a while? The memory of old times came back—not
- only the love and unselfishness, but the harshness too, the
- faults, the sins, I find in myself—surely she feels it now as
- the light shines on her. Does she not see herself more as God
- sees her? For every sinful word we shall give account. Surely
- this sorrow is a purifying fire, and the words are true, if we
- would judge ourselves here we shall not be judged.
-
- ‘Here, where we have partaken together of His Body and Blood,
- I kneel near that empty tabernacle—but a spiritual Presence is
- with us—purifying us both and drawing us nearer to Him in Whom
- living and dead are one.
-
- ‘Bless and purify our spirits, O Lord, with the dew of Thy
- grace, make us gentler and holier. Through the veil we seem to
- see Thee nearer. Longing, praying that we may not, as the rich
- man, have to feel the burning shame for our unloving spirit,
- now that we see His love, His tender, searching eye.
-
- ‘It becomes to me a sacred chapel, I can scarcely bear to part.
- The room is fragrant with the gifts of tender flowers from
- loving friends, and there is a peace here abiding in the sense
- of God’s continued, loving, healing discipline. “I change not!”’
-
-During these years outside interests multiplied. New friendships were
-formed; some old ones were strengthened. The College Magazine, the first
-definite link forged with old pupils, was begun in 1880. Miss Beale made
-more acquaintances outside the College. In London she met many who shared
-her educational interests. In Cheltenham she attended, and often read
-and spoke at, a small literary gathering called the Society of Friends,
-which met from time to time at different houses. The diary becomes full
-of reference to Mrs. Middleton and Mrs. Owen. Through Mrs. Middleton
-she came to know Mr. Wilkinson’s[48] great evangelistic work in his
-fashionable London parish. She often went to hear him preach, read his
-books, and showed them to others. Mrs. Owen introduced her to the _Life_
-and philosophy of James Hinton, which made a very deep impression. At
-Mr. Owen’s house she met many earnest social workers and thinkers. Among
-these was Miss Ellice Hopkins, whose devoted work revived in tenfold
-force her early pity for those who need to be ‘found.’ The increasing
-vigour of the College life and work was ever bringing in new ideas. Men
-who were making their mark as thinkers and teachers of their own special
-subjects often came to lecture. Among the most enthralled listeners to
-the eloquence of Professor William Knight, to the marvellous fairy-tales
-of science told by Professor Barrett, was the Lady Principal herself.
-Teachers and educationists of widely different views came to see the work
-of the school, often to find that the successful head-mistress who was
-able to show them so much was willing and eager to learn from them, and
-to see matters from their standpoint. Meanwhile she was reading as widely
-and eagerly as ever.
-
-It was a time when long-accepted opinions were unsettled for many, by new
-scientific theories, or by a greater sensitiveness to the mystery of pain
-and the apparent indifference of a part of the so-called religious world
-in presence of the deepest wrongs and suffering. Dorothea Beale had to
-take her part in the special difficulties of her own day. The battle has
-been shifted to another ground for this generation, which scarcely knows
-what resistance was made, what suffering was endured by some heroic souls
-in the last, and at what a price a larger spiritual consciousness was
-bought.
-
-The contact with so many minds, the widening circle of acquaintance with
-workers of different views and methods, and especially the appeal for
-aid in religious perplexity constantly made by those who came under her
-influence, doubtless helped to precipitate that sorrow, which, though in
-its acutest phase of short duration, was the sharpest trial Miss Beale
-was ever called upon to experience; one on which she never ceased to look
-back with horror. She who had said that she ‘could truly take to herself
-the words of Faber,’[49] who had been from earliest childhood conscious
-of a protecting Presence, and had even then ‘found prayer a joy,’ now in
-late middle life felt herself, as it were, cast out. At an age when the
-inexperienced questionings of youth were over, when she hoped to find
-faith and hope strengthened by knowledge, it seemed for a moment as if
-they had died down altogether.
-
- ‘Nel mezzo cammin di nostra vita
- Mi ritrovai per una selva oscura
- Che la diritta via era smarrita.’
-
-To write of it is to turn a page of soul-history so intimate, and for a
-moment so painful, that it may well be thought it should be passed over
-in silence. But to omit it would not be wholly faithful to the memory
-of one who wished certainly that this story of her inner life should be
-known to all who could be helped by it. To tell it, moreover, is to use
-her own words, for she wrote of it herself, more than once or twice.
-She felt, when she looked back on it afterwards, that she was obliged
-to go through this time of suffering in order that she might be better
-fitted to do the work given her, in order that others who had lost faith
-and hope might be helped to regain them, by knowing how she herself had
-passed from destruction and despair to hope and rebuilding.
-
-The diary of this whole period is more than ever indicative of inward
-strife and unrest from which she would not by her own will escape to any
-comfort other than the highest. Among the entries, which are for the most
-part self-analytical and depressed, it is curious to find this: ‘Letter
-from —— Some vanity perhaps in the refusal.’
-
-It was an offer of marriage from an old friend.
-
-Once or twice there is a hint of coming sorrow before she was
-conscious what its nature would be. Once, when marking the anniversary
-of a friend’s death, she noted herself as ‘perplexed with the
-Incomprehensible.’ On June 27, 1881, a year before the darkness closed
-in, she wrote: ‘A great dread of coming sorrow, as of a calvary before
-me. If some bitter cup is to be poured out, Thy will be done. Only
-forsake me not! _Salvator Mundi!_’
-
-The new year (of 1882) opened as usual with renewed self-dedication; but
-she mentions that she came back to Cheltenham on January 14, after the
-annual Retreat, ‘very broken.’ Though a persistent effort to keep up
-her religious rule was maintained, the clear shining of faith was much
-clouded. One who went to her for help at that time writes of it thus:—
-
- ‘I went to her in sore trouble at the beginning of 1882, in one
- of the overwhelming griefs of extreme youth, when the whole
- aspect of life has suddenly changed from a lovely rose-garden
- ... to a hideous waste. The very things which made it lovely
- seemed to be shining and horrible shams, with undreamed-of
- treachery and horror lurking behind everything. It was the
- culminating disillusionment to turn to her who had been such
- a tower of patient strength all through school-life, and find
- _nothing_, no help, no comfort, no explanation, no hope to
- give! Yet while there were many at that time whom I could not
- endure to see, or do with because of the feeling of betrayal
- all round, there was never that with her. It never dawned on my
- _mind_ for a moment that she was herself in the horrible mire,
- but I understood, I suppose, in my heart. I felt sorry for her
- and loved her better than ever before, and I never understood
- till now the reason of the tender intimacy of that time, which
- lay under the apparent disappointment of finding no help or
- comfort where I had made sure of it.’
-
-This powerlessness to help those who turned to her in their spiritual
-need made more poignant the sense of loss to one who loved to give
-freely as a mother to her children. ‘Then others came,’ she wrote
-afterwards of this time, ‘and one felt like the starving mother who saw
-the babe at her empty breast. I had no simple truths, no milk of the word
-to give them that they might grow thereby.’
-
-A letter to a friend mentions books which had a destructive effect as
-read at this time. It was not Miss Beale’s habit deliberately to read a
-book which was likely to disturb or weaken faith. To an old pupil who
-once wrote to her of Strauss’s book, _The Old Faith and the New_, she had
-replied:—
-
- ‘_September 1873._
-
- ‘I feel sorry you have read Strauss, but, of course, if you
- felt it your duty to do so, you _were_ right. Still, I do not
- think one is bound to read everything, any more than one is to
- listen to all that can be said against all one’s friends. I
- mean a person might be ever so good, yet if we were constantly
- to listen to insinuations against them, if we were frequently
- _with_ those who disbelieved in their goodness, and looked
- contemptuous when we trusted, a most well-founded confidence
- might result in doubt and distrust. I think we should act in
- religious matters as we ought in a case of friendship—refuse
- to hear insinuations, but ask for the grounds, arguments—not
- let our mind be biassed against our will and better judgment. I
- believe with many that these doubts are “spectres of the cave,”
- that if we have courage to face them, we shall see them fade
- away. But then we must be very much in earnest, spend time and
- labour and much thought upon this, as upon other subjects, and
- pray for the spirit of truth. I have not read Strauss, I know
- the general line of his arguments, but as you say he gives none
- here, I need not get the book to meet them.’
-
-Now, in this period of doubt and anxiety, books by any whom Miss Beale
-thought to be earnest seekers for truth, whether they were orthodox or
-not, were freely read.
-
-The sense of loss and discomfort seems to have grown gradually all the
-year. ‘Poor lesson because depressed,’ she notes on a day in February.
-A fortnight later in church she was ‘wrestling like Jacob; Tell me Thy
-Name.’ Palm Sunday, however, brought some peace. ‘I think I touched His
-garment’s hem.’ Each day in that Holy Week she was at an early service
-before school hours began, and on Easter Day wrote: ‘This Lent has been
-blessed.’ In Easter week she notes that she finished reading Jukes’s _New
-Man_, ‘a beautiful book.’
-
-But before the holidays were over there was ‘a dread of coming sorrow,’
-a renewed feeling of deadness and want of devotion, only ‘passive
-following the inward guide.’ ‘Much troubled this morning,’ she wrote
-on Whit-Sunday, and the need for a ‘new life-pulse’ grew larger as the
-summer term wore on. Yet she persisted in striving to keep her devotional
-rules, and for her apparent want of zeal blamed only herself. At the
-end of that busy term, so full of work and interests and anxieties, she
-wrote: ‘Be with me in the holidays. I fear them.’
-
-Of the suffering of that time she afterwards wrote fully, tracing the
-steps by which she was gradually led to think that the historical
-evidence on which she thought her faith rested was of no value. An
-extract from one account is given:—
-
- ‘Even if historical evidence were there, it could not be for
- all. And was it there?
-
- ‘No, [only] fragments by nobodies, inconsistent versions. If
- God gave a perfect Man, He could not be for an age, but for all
- time, and how if His life passed, and we have no writing, only
- untrustworthy accounts? Surely, then, the life was worthless
- which God did not care to save for us. He stored up coal and
- light, our physical life, but He cared not to preserve Jesus,
- the spiritual life, He who had been called the Light of the
- world. Then it must be a delusion that He was, and God has
- deceived us, and we were deceived. The Pharisees were right in
- testing His claims. They watched Him on the Cross and there
- bade Him cry to the God Whom He had claimed as Father,—and He
- cried as the fabled prophet of old, Eli! Eli! and God disowned
- Him, and the words followed which proved that He was forsaken,
- that the thirst of soul was unappeased and His life was indeed
- over. And so the darkness gathered round the Cross, ever
- darkening as I listened to the cry. Was God indeed mocking our
- hopes? The old pagan vision rose before me. The symbols of
- the Christ were confounded with grotesque forms. I could not
- utter the Creeds of the Church. Yet strange to say I yet clung
- to a consciousness of a Father of the visible. In my troubled
- dreams, which haunted me day and night, I still seemed to feel
- there was a God, though no voice was heard for me among the
- trees of the garden.[50]
-
- ‘I said I will not give up my trust in God, I must reconstruct.
- I will not, as some who have lost faith in Christ and the
- eternal, give away the trust in a Father. This I thought
- would survive without, but with that (my faith in Christ)
- went all belief in the existence of any other. As I listened
- to the voice of creation unharmonised by the interpretation
- of generous love proceeding from the soul, it seemed simply
- horrible: the martyr slowly consuming in the fire, God looking
- on, refusing to interfere with natural causes. I had seen this
- before, but, as in that beautiful parable of the Septuagint, I
- had seen God was with him, and the joy overpowered the pain,
- and the true life was purified, and they thanked God in the
- fires. Now I saw no immortal hope, no resurrection; all was
- dark horror and amazement. No; could I keep belief in a God who
- had deceived mankind? Should I trust Him, pray “to Him”?[51]
-
- ‘For months I read and thought of nothing else; whenever the
- pressing claims of work left me for a moment, I felt the light
- was gone from my life. Sometimes a deeper sympathy filled
- me,—as I seemed like a gladiator standing with my fellows.
- _Morituri te salutant._ But generally I felt myself growing
- hardened by the want of power to find sympathy in my sorrow,
- nor could I pray. I did not often, and when I did, it was one
- cry—“Why, why hast Thou left us, O God—without answer to our
- cries? Why hast Thou uttered no word of consolation to all the
- groans of earth? If Thou hast not heard Jesus, none of us need
- pray.” He trusted in God that He would deliver Him, and was
- forsaken, and men have waited through the ages, as a little
- child would wait, shut up in prison by some cruel father, and
- would not at first believe that he was to be starved to death.
- And at last they realised that God for them was not,—only the
- prison-house He had built, in which they passed away their
- lives, in which, like a starving man, they dreamed of palaces
- and feasts, the delusions of their fevered brain.
-
- ‘How that old passage came home to one’s fevered soul,—“the
- desert shall blossom as the rose”—as the thought of one’s old
- Christian faith came back. What would one not give, I thought,
- to believe it true once more! For that lighted up the whole
- world, then there were living waters, consolation in every
- sorrow, a well-spring of divine sympathy, inexhaustible,—wells
- from which one could drink for ever, and pour out of one’s
- abundance.
-
- ‘Sometimes one did look up to the parched heavens, and though
- no rain fell, each time there was a little refreshing dew,
- as if God were answering when one let Him speak, instead of
- running into desert places, crying with Io, forsaken and
- maddened by a cruel God. Sometimes the words came then, “I will
- see you again.”
-
- ‘But the vision of green pasture, of waters that would quench
- the parching thirst of the desert, it seemed a mirage,—and no
- good Shepherd waded out to me in my desert. Sometimes I found
- other wanderers, who asked of me the waters, and this seemed to
- fill my heart with deeper anguish; like Hagar, I could die in
- the wilderness, but I could not see my child die. So I tried to
- escape, but I could not, and I was obliged to lift my eyes to
- Heaven for their sakes. I did not tell them that what I took
- for mirage was real,—I did not try to turn stones into bread,
- I could only tell them of what I felt must be the creed of
- Goethe, that creation is the garment of God, and these shores
- of earth could not be all; there must be something true and
- substantial behind the phenomenal. The philosophy of St. John
- interpreted by Browning, the consciousness of love in my own
- nature, bore witness to the greater love of God. The Spirit
- within bore witness that there was a Father of spiritual life,
- and therefore that a divine sonship was possible for us. And as
- in our desolation we looked up together, it seemed as if the
- old truth _was_ coming back to us, but in a new way. Jesus had
- taught it, only we had not seen it before.... If we felt the
- witness of the Spirit prompting us to cry, Abba Father, and if
- there was a Father, this prompting must come from Him. And so
- I listened once more for this Voice. And I was not left alone
- in the desert, as I waited in my first grief. God sent to me
- messengers when I had lain down there in the stupefaction of
- spiritual sleep. They offered me angels’ food. I watered it
- with tears, but I took it,—I ate it, whilst praying that God
- would take away my life,—take it, lest I should tempt others
- into the stony desert. Yes, I, who had refused to take others
- to the Lord’s Table, because they were faint and hungry, and
- in the highways of the world,—I, who had thought it profane,
- thought now that my mere hunger gave me a right to come. If He
- was indeed there, He might fill the empty cruse with oil. He
- might hear me as I said, “We have no wine.” And I remembered as
- I dared to come in my unbelief, the words I had been taught,
- of the hungry being filled. I thought I had once been of the
- mighty and rich, now I knew I was weak and hungry, so I came.
- But I saw not the Master, only a stranger whom I knew not, for
- my eyes were holden, and I did not recognise Him.
-
- ‘Oh how often did I pine for death, not but that I could have
- taken the suffering. I thought that was possible, if I could
- have borne it alone. The grief was to feel that I should
- lead others away, whether I spoke or was silent. This only
- was right, never to say an untrue word, to teach what truth
- I had. But I was pledged like a clergyman. Still I did not
- yet know what I thought. I might read a little, for if I must
- find Christ was dead, I hoped, begged, God would take my life,
- that others might not die through me. With what joy did I see
- sickness come, and what disappointment there was when it was
- not unto death.
-
- ‘Sometimes I thought I would take some spiritual opiate,—think
- no more, but try to kill self into a state in which probability
- should content me. But I could not work nor pray by such
- means. And if I could content myself by a sedative, could I my
- children? No; I must go on till I could feel the truth of those
- words ever recurring to me, “And dying rise, and rising with
- Him, raise His brethren, ransomed by His own dear life.”
-
- ‘In darkness, I thought, “He descended into hell,” and I felt I
- would not rise unless I could bring my children too with me.
-
- ‘What was the state of thought [at that time]? One could only
- look and read and see amongst the most intellectual the loss of
- hold on Christianity, and with those who believed, one felt it
- had been as with oneself, the belief would not bear the strain
- that would come; the tints were put on, were not our life
- through assimilation.’[52]
-
-Probably those to whom Miss Beale turned at first realised little of the
-distress that prompted her questions.
-
- ‘I said, “Surely there must be some one who can help where I am
- too weak and ignorant,” so I went to a distinguished [teacher]
- whom I thought so able and strong, and his concluding words
- sounded like a knell. “Nothing can be done.”’[53]
-
-The darkest hour came during the early days of August when staying with
-friends, from whom she vainly hoped to conceal her sorrow.
-
- ‘At first I was silent, but as I could only weep day and night,
- I was obliged to tell them.... They kept me when I could not
- pay other visits. Whilst wondering at my misery they tried to
- help me by getting [books].’[54]
-
-It was perhaps some relief—as of one who faces the worst—to note in her
-diary each fresh incoming wave of sorrowful thought.
-
- ‘_1882, August 6, Sunday._ At church. A nice sermon on the
- parable of the Unjust Steward. Talk of Newman’s books. J. said
- A. had some. I, thinking of J. H. N., asked to borrow. [The
- book] proved to be by the brother, F. Newman.
-
- ‘_Monday, August 7._ Read some [of F. Newman’s book]. Pitied
- him much.
-
- ‘_Tuesday, August 8._ 6 A.M.-8, read more. Miserable. After
- breakfast walked alone. No letter. Could not go to dinner.
- Terrible neuralgia. Wept nearly all day.
-
- ‘_Wednesday, August 9._ Awake at 4 A.M. Not up to breakfast.
- Decided must write [my resignation]. All is dark. “Such clouds
- of nameless sorrow cross, All night before my darkened eyes.”
- The light has gone out of the heavens. Why [does] God leave us
- without one word, His children orphans? Can He have left us to
- delusions? Tears are my meat day and night. I cannot live an
- untrue life. If Jesus be what I once believed Him, He would not
- wish it. “Every one that is of the truth heareth My Voice.”
- Tried to pray harder. Woke [as] in a dreary pine forest with
- beautiful ferns. Felt there must be a presence behind them.
- Then the trouble revived once more.
-
- ‘_Thursday, August 10._ Wrote my resignation. May my children
- never know this sorrow. Christian teaching spiritualised, as I
- have seen it, is the holiest and purest. Their souls need not
- be orphaned as mine. [I] cannot stay [with them]. I could not
- play the hypocrite, I should hate myself. Without Christ, I
- should not be what I was. If I could attempt to go on, which I
- could not for a moment contemplate since it is untrue, think if
- I were found out, the moral blow for my children. They would
- think I had been false when teaching them my deepest faith,—the
- joy of my life,—that which made all the suffering bearable, and
- all gladness double, the love of Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom
- I would suffer the loss of all things if I might win Christ and
- be found in Him.
-
- ‘O Lord, Thou hast deceived me, and I was deceived.’
-
-The immediate sequel to the story of these few days was told in a letter
-to a friend:—
-
- ‘_August 1882._
-
- ‘I was engaged to attend a religious conference at the end of
- a week. I did not quite like to give it up, for there might
- _possibly_ be some hope of help, though I felt there was
- none. My friends begged me to go,—there was just a chance. I
- went,—but almost turned back after I had started, for I was so
- broken down I could not restrain my tears, and I was ashamed to
- be seen. Well, I met there [some] men of powerful mind, leaders
- of thought in their different departments, who had gone through
- periods of darkness, but had waited for the dawn, and now they
- believed.... After two days I told my grief to a sympathising
- friend, who was surprised at my wretchedness, and her calm
- faith gave me a little calmness too. So the day before we were
- to leave I ventured to tell all my trouble to the clergyman
- who had invited me. I think I may dare to say that my faith
- has come back—not as it was before, but more spiritual; once
- more I can say the Creed, and I think I shall be able to teach
- again....’
-
-The ‘religious conference’ was at Stoke, a little village in Shropshire,
-where the rector, the Rev. Rowland Corbet, was in the habit of gathering
-some who were earnestly studying the difficult questions of the day.
-Miss Beale wrote of these gatherings in the letter already quoted:—
-
- ‘There are only about twelve staying in the house. No one is
- put out of the synagogue for not seeing the truth, and they are
- not afraid to ask questions, but none are invited who are not
- supposed to be seeking for the light.’
-
-That a door to the light was at this conference quickly opened for Miss
-Beale may be seen in the letters she wrote, on her return to Cheltenham
-after it was over, to the friends who had helped her so much:—
-
- ‘_August 19, 1882._
-
- ‘DEAR MR. CORBET,—I could not say one word of thanks this
- morning: I think you understood.
-
- ‘It is good for us tempest-tossed people to see the restful
- faith of the veterans who come to help us. Certainly the old
- ship in which I have somehow sailed upon the waves for so many
- years is a wreck. I must try to believe He will set my feet
- upon a rock.
-
- ‘Yesterday things began to get clearer: your kind and patient
- explanations of the alphabet of the spiritual made me follow
- the discussion better afterwards, and I felt I could begin
- again to join in the Church’s Creed with a deeper meaning than
- before. I suppose one can’t expect to come out of the grave at
- once,—but how different is this Saturday from last, it seems
- as if some æon had gone by. I don’t know yet what I think,
- except that I believe I shall see the light and rise and always
- remain, yours very gratefully,
-
- D. BEALE.’
-
-To Mrs. Russell Gurney:—
-
- ‘_August 27, 1882._
-
- ‘DEAR MRS. RUSSELL GURNEY,—I have had such a happy Sunday,—I
- can hardly believe it is the same earth that seemed to me
- so dead the week before, when I could not go to Church, but
- wandered about quite desolate.
-
- ‘Three weeks ago, if any one had spoken, as I am doing now, I
- should have thought it superstitious, and I don’t think it will
- be well either for myself or others to speak much of it now,
- only to one who, like you, understands—and who helped to take
- off the “grave-clothes.”
-
- ‘I want to use my limbs first, to get back to my old work now,
- and see if there is really a new life; I want to see if I can
- help some for whom I could do nothing before.
-
- ‘I am with delightful people. Mr. Webb is just a living picture
- of Chaucer’s Good Parson and well known in the scientific
- world: his special field is astronomy. He showed us a wonderful
- gas-nebula on Saturday night. He quite believes in spiritual
- manifestations, and seems to think with Professor Barrett about
- the ether.
-
- ‘I have to thank you much, dear Mrs. Gurney, for your sympathy.
- It was such a help to me to be able to speak to you. I meant to
- say nothing to _any one_, but I could not help it. The story
- of your own vision helped me, as it was something like my own:
- it is so much what Browning describes at the end of “Saul,”
- when David has realised the Divine love, and feels the living
- pulse beating in all nature. Everybody helped me in some way,
- but especially Mr. Corbet’s teaching, which seems wonderfully
- beautiful.
-
- ‘I dare say it was the same last year; but different to me,
- because I was comparatively satisfied then, not poor and needy
- (as I came this time), and therefore ready to understand.
-
- ‘“I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice”: my text
- for to-day.’
-
-She felt like one set free from prison, but the newly recovered liberty
-was used with caution. ‘You will like to know,’ she wrote to a friend
-in the following year, ‘that the fitful gleams of sunlight, which used
-to come after the dark night, have become now something like a steady
-shining. I was able to get a few quiet days at Christmas, and then first
-I began to feel that I should be able to give thanks for this terrible
-experience, and the thankfulness has grown ever since.’
-
-As she said, the thankfulness grew. But in the very heart of the fire she
-had felt no regret, known no complaining. She was willing to suffer, if
-by that means she might help the more. On August 15, just a week after
-the day she always remembered as ‘Tuesday the 8th,’ she wrote of one
-whose calling in life was to teach others: ‘You say he has been reading
-sceptical books; I want him to go on doing so. He must know how deep the
-questions go, or he will be fighting windmills, as I have done.’
-
-It will be asked by what steps the ascent was made, and what the
-height from which the new spiritual horizons were discerned; what was
-the train of thought which brought back the possibility of saying the
-Church’s Creed? The mental process, if it can be disentangled from
-an exercise which engaged all the faculties of soul and spirit, was
-probably that suggested in the words of Amiel: ‘Chacun ne comprend que
-ce qu’il retrouve en soi.’ But the research and the retrieval were not
-simply individual and within, they involved the scrutiny of widespread
-religious instincts, cravings and needs. They were aided above all by
-the contemplation of martyr deaths and martyr lives, which in their
-continuous and abiding witness to the faith are seen to constitute a
-claim to authority.
-
-Miss Beale herself strove to show how the doubting spirit was silenced by
-an answer of faith, in a little paper called ‘Building,’ which is dated
-September 8. Here she wrote:—
-
- ‘Sweep away external proofs, we must believe in a God and in
- His love.
-
- ‘We see He speaks to His children through the wondrous language
- of Nature, drawing them to His Heart and teaching ever new
- trust through it.
-
- ‘He shows His Father Heart in the love of the human,
- ignorant,—for the child.
-
- ‘In all ages He has made man feel His Presence in the heart and
- yearn after Him.
-
- ‘There is a long witness down the ages that to those who long
- for His Presence and follow holiness, He gives the great reward
- of His conscious sympathy, speaking in their hearts, so that
- they know it is His Voice. In different ages, in different
- ways, as men need the language they understand.
-
- ‘To Abraham and the prophets, to Socrates, to Buddha teaching
- the Karma, to Moses the divine writing,—to saints who sought
- Him in later times.
-
- ‘Why impeach the testimony of Christendom as to the
- Resurrection, if it is what we must believe in, if it is just
- the good news for which the world was then dying? We know Paul
- and John believed it, and men believed them then; and the
- miracle of the Christian Church which is before our eyes, and
- the teaching of the Christ is found to be the food of the soul,
- and in prayer as men drink it in, they hand on Sacramental
- life, which is its own witness. We want that!
-
- ‘We can believe that for some inscrutable reason the Eternal
- educates His children in time.
-
- ‘Perhaps we have to go through these depths of blankness that
- we may not bottle up the spiritual to one time or church or
- country, but believe God is really eternal, omnipresent; that
- He does dwell with him who is of a contrite and humble spirit,
- and who trembles at His Presence felt in the darkness. We have
- to learn to see the Spirit of Christ dwelling in each man,
- regenerating him to the true and higher life.
-
- ‘We have to see it is God’s method to work through the
- man,—therefore the treasure is in earthen vessels,—the light is
- dimmed by the medium. But if it were given whole and complete
- by angels, the moral nature could no more be drawn out than the
- intellect could have been, had God revealed the kalendars and
- Kepler’s Laws.
-
- ‘So through the Man Christ Jesus, Who emptied Himself ere He
- could speak to man, Who, as His wondrous teaching, life and
- resurrection testify, stood in some different relation to God
- than other men, God has spoken to the whole world.’
-
-Another paper of this period, entitled ‘Of my Religious Opinions,’
-concludes thus:—
-
- ‘Yes, it was this. The consciousness of a universal life of
- God in man which lifted me up once more to see God in Christ,
- to see the New Man coming to the birth in all for whom Christ
- lived, and the whole world existed that this might be, that the
- whole being of the creature might be lifted into responsive
- sympathy with a sympathetic Father, and those followers of
- Christ Who was ever preaching the religion of Humanity were to
- lift the imperfect yet real Church of Christ to a higher life.
- Upon a world which seemed dead, which no prophet staff could
- restore, they were to stretch themselves, heart to heart, their
- own warm palpitating life was to rouse, and the power of love
- could raise the dead. We must learn that old lesson that no
- creature is common or unclean. We must enter as never before
- into the full meaning of the Name by which God was known to
- Abraham—I AM,—the Eternal. Ours has been a God of time, He is
- the Living God, lighting every man that cometh into the world.
- But here, light is struggling with darkness. There shall be no
- night there in that day dawn beyond the tomb.
-
- ‘Have you not been taught that the written word is imperfect
- without the heavenly interpretation, and does not your own
- experience confirm this, and the history of the records of the
- Christ bear it out? Enough we have as a foundation, but we must
- build thereon, or there will be no home for our soul. This is
- the method of God, revealing to us that we can only _help_ one
- another. God must _teach_ us all. They shall be all taught of
- God, here and hereafter.
-
- ‘Here the phenomenal and the imperfect is the only possible
- revelation to man, but through these he is being educated for
- the real, the actual. He will one day know God.’
-
-The writer of these words might indeed have sung, ‘Thou hast set my feet
-in a large room.’ But the daily journal shows no trace of exultation,
-far less of relaxing watchfulness. It is surely impossible to exaggerate
-the importance of the jealous care with which devotional rules were
-guarded. More than all the high thoughts and noble imaginings with which
-she was so wonderfully gifted, this lifelong obedience came to her aid
-in the great crisis. Habits of prayer, daily acts of self-sacrifice and
-self-consecration, had been maintained even when their meaning seemed to
-be clouded. When sight was restored, when a greater sense of spaciousness
-came into her life, they were there to protect her in the newly found
-liberty. The tale of them remains to show that the doubts of this dark
-year were akin to that thirst for God which in all ages has been the
-portion of the saints.
-
-May it not be said that they were the outcome of a passionate desire to
-help; that this descent into darkness as of the grave was necessary to
-one who yearned to give herself utterly to aid others to find the way to
-the light? ‘Can ye drink indeed?’ was asked of those who willed to share
-the divine work and joy, and in all times it has been given to a few to
-be brought through suffering into that region of consciousness in which
-they are made ‘able.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE GUILD
-
- ‘We have a picture which gives the ideal of a College—the
- Golden Staircase—whence each should go forth into the great
- world carrying some beautiful instrument with which to utter
- the music which is in her heart.’—D. BEALE, Guild Address, 1894.
-
-
-Miss Beale’s circle of influence definitely widened beyond the College
-itself in 1880 when the first number of the Magazine appeared. It opened
-with a characteristic introduction from the Lady Principal, who up to her
-death remained the editor.
-
-The Magazine was started, said Miss Beale, in order that past and
-present members of the College might enrich each other by interchange
-of thoughts. Mere information concerning the temporary doings of one’s
-friends was a secondary consideration, the value of which was, however,
-fortunately seen by sub-editors and others. A column of births, deaths,
-and marriages became established in the Magazine as early as the second
-number. This naturally in time developed in interest. The obituary column
-came to include all who had the slightest connection with the College;
-newspaper accounts of those who were in any way distinguished were also
-added.
-
-In 1887 the first Chronicle of passing events belonging to the College
-and its old members was inserted, though the space for it was grudgingly
-afforded by the editor, who could not bear to limit her space for the
-budding ideas she loved to foster. Soon, however, she came to value what
-was practically a contemporary history of the College, and as her pride
-in her old pupils increased with years, it became a great pleasure to
-notice all their doings in varied walks of life. Engaged in philanthropic
-work, in literature, in art or society, they were all of interest to her,
-and not among the least dear were those whose homes lay in foreign parts,
-those closely connected with the diplomatic service and the growth of the
-British Empire.[55] The Chronicle was a portion of the Magazine sure of
-finding readers, but there was no page more welcome to all than the brief
-but pithy preface in which the editor named the chief contents, touched
-on some matter of note to the readers, or urged forward the lagging
-subscriber.
-
-As the College interest widened with the ever-increasing number of old
-pupils, the Chronicle became too limited a record to stand alone. When
-the Magazine was about seventeen years old ‘Parerga’ appeared for the
-first time, telling of activities which lay outside the immediate scope
-of College work, yet were due in part to the influence of the Alma Mater,
-to ‘the spiritual force, the higher volition and action.’ Miss Beale,
-who found in the Magazine a strong link with her large scattered family,
-also in later years freely printed letters she received from various
-members abroad. She did not care much for articles on travel, writing on
-one occasion that she received too many descriptions, and would like in
-their place to have more records of observation in the fields of natural
-history and other sciences. But she treasured letters, and showed them
-widely. Indeed, it was sometimes startling for the writer of a private
-letter to Miss Beale to find whole extracts published in the Magazine for
-all the world to see.
-
-Almost from the beginning there were reviews of books. These were
-generally written by the editor. There were also notices of books by old
-pupils. Of these Miss Beale was proud, and she never failed to mention
-them, often reprinting portions of reviews by the press; but she would
-not review them herself, saying, ‘Books by old pupils claim our _notice_;
-we must leave criticism to those less interested in the writers.’
-
-Fortunately Miss Beale was not content with merely reviewing and editing.
-Many a number of the Magazine contained a long contribution from herself,
-such as an article reprinted from another periodical, an address given
-at a gathering of old pupils, or at some more general meeting. The first
-two editions of the _History of the College_ were also printed here. Of
-her articles which were not of special College interest, the most notable
-were those upon Browning. One of these, written in spring 1890, shortly
-after the poet’s death, contains a brief clear statement of the value of
-his philosophy. The other writers of the Magazine have been chiefly old
-pupils, some of whose names, as, for example, those of Jane Harrison,
-Beatrice Harraden, Bertha Synge, May Sinclair, are known in wider
-fields of literature. But any who made a sincere effort were welcomed,
-encouraged, and—edited. Present pupils have rarely written, but of late
-an attempt has been made to secure more contributions from these. Members
-of the Council, and others connected with the College by the ties of
-friendship or work, frequently helped the Magazine with papers or
-verses. For years every number was enriched with a poem or article from
-the pen of Mrs. James Owen, that friend whose keen intellectual interests
-and strong sympathy were put so largely at Miss Beale’s service when this
-literary venture was first made.
-
-To find contributors Miss Beale went even beyond the outer circle of the
-College. ‘We always hope to have some good writing in our Magazine, thus
-to maintain a high standard,’ she had said at the beginning. She liked
-to gain the notice of those who were eminent in literature or science
-for this dearly loved literary child, and as occasion brought her in
-contact with any who were distinguished for the things she appreciated
-she would send them the Magazine, often asking for a paper. Letters
-from people of widely differing thought and position, acknowledging the
-receipt of the Magazine, are now in the College archives. They vary in
-warmth and interest. The late Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol wrote in
-1889: ‘However busy I may be, I always find time to read portions of
-[the Magazine], and I am always thankful to recognise not merely the
-cultivated, but the wise and—what we men specially value—the womanly
-tone that characterises it. I read with much interest your article on
-the Sorbonne gathering.’ Bishop Westcott in 1890 wrote, on receiving
-the number containing Miss Beale’s ‘In Memoriam’ article on Browning:
-‘May I confess that when the copy of the Ladies’ College Magazine
-came this morning with the letters, my correspondence was at once
-interrupted? I felt constrained to read your words on Browning, just and
-wise and helpful and suggestive.’ Some notes are little more than the
-acknowledgment of a polite friend who had ‘already cut the pages.’ The
-request for contributions was not always granted; sometimes it was won
-by a little importunity. It brought about rather an amusing incident with
-Mr. Ruskin, whose letters on the subject and on some of Miss Beale’s own
-Magazine articles are too characteristic to be omitted.
-
-Miss Beale sent him the number containing her paper on ‘Britomart.’ He
-replied at once:—
-
- ‘_March 12, 1887._
-
- ‘Have you not yet to add to your Britomart, at p. 219,
- due justification of Feminine—may we not rather call it
- Disguise—than Lie? And, for myself, may I say that I think
- Britomart should have sung to the Red Knight, not he to
- Britomart.—Ever faithfully yours,
-
- J. RUSKIN.’
-
-Five days later he wrote:—
-
- ‘But I much more than like your essay on Britomart.
-
- ‘I am most thankful to have found the head of a Girls’ College
- able to do such a piece of work, and having such convictions
- and aspirations, and can only assure you how glad I shall be to
- find myself capable of aiding you in anything.... I trespass
- no further on you to-day, but have something to say concerning
- ball-play as a Britomartian exercise, before saying which,
- however, I will inquire of the Librarian what _ground_ spaces
- the College commands, being so limited in its bookshelves.—And
- believe me, ever your faithful servt.,
-
- JOHN RUSKIN.’
-
-Miss Beale replied to this by sending her paper on ‘Lear,’ to which came
-this response:—
-
- ‘_March 22, 1887._
-
- ‘I am entirely glad to hear of the Oxford plan, which seems
- faultless, and am most happy to get the King Lear, though I
- hope you have never learned as much of human life as to be
- able to read him as you can Britomart. What I want to know is
- whether Cordelia was ever so little in love—with _any_ body,
- except her Father.’
-
-Two days later came the following:—
-
- ‘_March 24, 1887._
-
- ‘I have been reading your Lear with very great interest. It is
- one of the subtlest and truest pieces of Shakespeare criticism
- I ever saw, but just as I guessed—misses the key note. You
- never enter on the question what it is that drives Lear mad!
- And throughout you fall into the fault which women nearly
- always commit if they don’t err on the other side,—of always
- talking of love as if it had nothing to do with sex.... I
- am extremely glad to note your interest in and knowledge of
- music.—Ever faithfully and respectfully yours,
-
- J. RUSKIN.’
-
-After this letter there was a pause in a correspondence which had been
-kept up pretty briskly on various subjects. In June, however, Miss Beale
-wrote again,—the purport of her letter may be gathered from the answer.
-
- ‘_June 8, 1887._
-
- ‘I never have been ill this year; the reports you heard or saw
- in papers were variously malicious or interested. But I have
- been busy, in very painful or sorrowful business—at Oxford or
- at home—nor even in the usual tenor of spring occupation could
- I have answered rightly the different questions you sent me.
- Especially, I could not tell you anything of your paper on
- Lear, because I think women should never write on Shakespeare,
- or Homer, or Æschylus, or Dante, or any of the greater powers
- in literature. Spenser, or Chaucer, or Molière, or any of the
- second and third order of classics—but not the leaders. And you
- really had missed much more in Lear than I should like to tell
- you.
-
- ‘I really thought I had given the College my books—but if I
- haven’t, I won’t—not even if you set the Librarian to ask me;
- for it does seem to me such a shame that a girl can always give
- her dentist a guinea for an hour’s work, and her physician for
- an opinion; and she can’t give me one for what has cost me half
- my life to learn, and will help her till the end of hers to
- know.
-
- ‘Please go on with your book exactly as you like to have it.
- I have neither mind nor time for reading just now.—Ever most
- truly yrs.,
-
- J. RUSKIN.’
-
-Mr. Ruskin permitted the reprint of a few extracts from his own writings
-in the Magazine, on which his criticism as a whole was not very
-encouraging. One of his letters, indeed, called forth a protest from Miss
-Beale, to which he replied thus:—
-
- ‘_June 15, 1887._
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—I am grieved very deeply to have written
- what I did of your dear friend’s verses. If you knew how full
- my own life has been of sorrow, how every day of it begins
- with a death-knell, you would bear with me in what I will yet
- venture to say to you as the head of a noble school of woman’s
- thought, that no personal feelings should ever be allowed to
- influence you in what you permit your scholars either to read
- or to publish.’
-
-And again a few days later:—
-
- ‘BRANTWOOD, CONISTON, LANCASHIRE, _June 19, 1887_.
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—So many thanks, and again and again I ask
- your pardon for the pain I gave you. I had no idea of the kind
- of person you were, I thought you were merely clever and proud.
-
- ‘These substituted verses are lovely.—Ever gratefully (1) yrs.,
-
- ‘J. R.
-
- ‘(1) I mean, for the way you have borne with my letters. You
- will not think it was because I did not like my own work to
- have the other with it that I spoke as I did.’
-
-Mr. Shorthouse also once contributed to the Magazine, sending a little
-story called ‘An Apologue.’
-
-The work entailed by the Magazine was, on the whole, pleasant and
-interesting to its editor. But she was grieved sometimes if she thought
-old pupils did not appreciate it, or if contributions fell short. It was
-not always easy to get enough articles of the kind she desired, and the
-difficulty was increased by the severe censorship she exercised. ‘About
-one hour wasted in fretting over Magazine,’ runs the diary of April 2,
-1891.
-
-The Magazine was not without its faults. ‘How bad the best of us!’
-says _Punch_, according to Ruskin. But it had the conspicuous merit
-of offering encouragement to young writers, of promoting a spirit of
-unity, and fostering sympathetic interest among those whose lives were
-necessarily far apart. ‘We hope,’ Miss Beale had said in her first
-preface, ‘that the papers on work may be helpful in suggesting ways of
-usefulness.’[56] This hope was practically realised. How far the young
-writers profited by each other’s thoughts can be less easily gauged;
-but doubtless some learned at least one lesson the Magazine was meant
-to teach, that if they intended to work, they ‘must not shrink from the
-hardest and most fruitful work, i.e. _thinking_.’[57]
-
-Miss Beale’s influence was again extended in manifold and ever-developing
-ways when, in 1883, the first meeting of former pupils was held in the
-College.
-
-At this date the number of regular pupils was five hundred. Only six
-years before a proposal had been made to limit the numbers to three
-hundred, but each year saw an increase, and a consequent addition to the
-ranks of those who carried the influence of the College into the larger
-world outside.
-
-It had been felt for some time by the Principal and others to whom the
-College was dear, that an association of old pupils should be formed, but
-of what nature and name could not be determined without a representative
-meeting. A suitable occasion for this presented itself in 1883, which
-was a sort of Jubilee year for the College, Miss Beale having then been
-its Principal for twenty-five years. Many old pupils expressed a wish
-to mark the great occasion by a personal gift to Miss Beale; she, as
-was to be expected, asked that it might be given to her ‘husband,’ the
-College. It was a moment of almost unsullied prosperity, as could be
-seen by the buildings which were constantly growing more stately and
-suitable. In the previous year they had been much enlarged, and the
-whole College life benefited by the addition of the Music and Art wing.
-The old music-rooms were little better than cupboards, the new ones
-contained light, air, and space, as well as the necessary pianoforte. The
-first drawing-room was but an insufficient classroom, in which a cast of
-any size could not be placed. The new studio was spacious and properly
-lighted. Both additions at this period spoke of Miss Beale’s method in
-educational development, also of the order in which her own full mental
-life unfolded. First she would have the exact, the severe, the discipline
-of grammar and rule, then the expansion of beauty in thought and symbol.
-
-And the gift of the old pupils could not have been better chosen. It
-took the form of an organ for what was then the largest hall, the First
-Division Room. Here the daily prayers of the three divisions took place.
-Sir Walter Parratt settled the specifications for the organ, which was
-placed above the Lady Principal’s dais.
-
-The choir, which up to this time had been dependent on the aid of a
-harmonium, was augmented and improved, and the daily music at the school
-prayers became a feature of College life in which Miss Beale took
-delight. Occasionally her directions to the choir were embarrassing. She
-liked music to be very _piano_, and required a great deal of expression
-to bring out the full meaning of the words sung.
-
-Mr. Ruskin was also momentarily interested by it. He was as suggestive
-and dogmatic on the subject as on any other that he touched. Once he
-wrote to Miss Beale, ‘All music properly so called is of the Celestial
-Spheres. It aids and gives law to Joy, or it ennobles and comforts
-Sorrow.’ On hearing of the organ and ‘girl-organist,’ he hoped ‘to be
-able to work out some old plans with her,’ and unfolded them thus:—
-
- ‘I think _you_ may be willing to help _me_ in the plan chiefly
- for the last four or five years in my mind, of getting a
- girls’ choral service well organised in a college chapel. The
- most beautiful service I have ever heard in any church of any
- country is that of the Convent of the Trinità at Rome, entirely
- sung by the sisters, unseen; and quite my primary idea in girl
- education—peasant or princess, is to get the voice perfectly
- trained in the simplest music of noblest schools. Finding your
- organist is a girl, and that she is interested in the book on
- Plain Chant I sent her, it seems to me my time has come, and I
- am going to write to Miss Lefevre at Somerville, Miss Gladstone
- at Newnham, and Miss Welch at Girton, to beg them to consider
- with you what steps they could take to this end. If _you_ could
- begin by giving enough time for the training of the younger
- girls, I think I could, with that foundation, press for a more
- advanced action in the matter at Cambridge and Oxford.’
-
-Miss Beale obviously replied to this with some questions about the
-training of the choir, for Mr. Ruskin’s next and rapidly following letter
-closes thus:—
-
- ‘As for the choir, nothing is necessary but a due attention
- to girls’ singing, as well as their dancing. It ought to
- be as great a shame for a girl not to be able to sing, up
- to the faculty of her voice, might I say, as to speak bad
- grammar. You could never rival the Trinità di Monte, but could
- always command the chanting of the psalms with sweetness and
- clearness, and a graceful Te Deum and Magnificat.’
-
-Besides the organ, Miss Beale’s wedding gifts included the first light of
-a stained-glass window above the new grand staircase. This was drawn by
-Miss Thompson, and executed by Clayton and Bell. Miss Beale herself chose
-the subject for the whole—a series of scenes from her beloved story of
-‘Britomart.’
-
-Over and above the opening of the new buildings, and the installation of
-the wedding gifts, there was in the early part of the summer term some
-excitement and much pleasant sense of preparation for the gathering of
-old pupils fixed for the 6th and 7th of July.
-
-Then, into the midst of the glad anticipation, came as with transcendent
-suddenness Mrs. Owen’s death on June 19. Hers was indeed
-
- ‘a spirit that went forth
- And left upon the mountain-tops of death
- A light that made them lovely.’
-
-But for many the happiness of the coming meeting was marred, most of all
-for her in whose honour it had been largely arranged. Miss Beale made no
-change, but went through all the proceedings as they had been planned,
-dwelling never for a moment on her sense of bereavement and loss, but
-speaking calmly even in public of the life that had passed out of sight.
-
-The first meeting, on the evening of July 6, was a conversazione in
-the Upper or Second Division Hall. An unexpectedly large number of old
-pupils were present, and on the next day at the ordinary College prayers
-Miss Beale gave what was practically the first Guild address. Though
-made on an occasion of so much personal interest and gratification to
-herself, this address was remarkable not only for the piercing insight
-with which she ever penetrated below what was apparent or obvious, but
-also for what, for want of a better word, must be called its soberness.
-Touched, emotional as the speaker always was, keenly alive to the sense
-of union and communion with all lives that in the highest sense had come
-in contact with her own, happy in recognising the College to be a step
-by which souls might ascend out of mere material interests, marking with
-joy its noble work in the progress of the ‘higher education’ of women,
-she chastened all excess of feeling by the calm sincerity with which she
-could contemplate ‘Even in the green, the faded tree.’ ‘Schools too,’ she
-said, ‘like the members of which they are composed, have their period
-of growth, manhood, and decay. Some tell us the first is over for us,
-and that we, too, have settled down into vigorous manhood. I am not so
-sure that we have quite done with growth, even in the outside body; but
-however that may be, I trust there is that among us, which is not even
-like the most substantial building, not like the outward form, liable to
-decay and death.’
-
-Thus quietly she spoke, marking for all that heard her that there was no
-commonplace elation or poor ambition in her thoughts and feelings for
-her school. On this really momentous occasion for the College, when its
-members as a whole were summoned to catch a glimpse of all it could be
-of help and blessing in a far larger world than its own, the Principal
-spoke less of work accomplished than of growth, and ‘the silent witness
-of a beautiful life as a power to bless.’ She said less about the gifts
-with which the College had been enriched, than of some visible sacraments
-of Nature with which these gifts should bring them into touch. She dwelt
-specially on the great meanings of music. ‘In the Psalm of Life each is
-necessary to the perfection of that glorious music, which we shall hear
-and understand when the discords of earth have been resolved.’
-
-In conclusion Miss Beale sketched the possibility of an association of
-old pupils, such as already existed in some boys’ schools, and was not
-wholly unknown among girls. ‘When I read of meetings of old Etonians,
-Rugbeians, Marlburians, and of works undertaken by them in common, and
-know how strong is the tie of affection which binds many of our old
-pupils to their Alma Mater, I have often wished there were some means of
-uniting us into an association.’ She named also the uses and aims of such
-an association. It is needless to say that though its members strive to
-bear in mind the objects their Principal and President put before them,
-rules, precisely to embody them, could not be framed.
-
- ‘Members should consider themselves united together to help
- in sustaining, especially in distant countries, as high an
- intellectual and social standard as possible, first amongst
- those of their own class. Thus reading societies, mutual
- improvement societies, libraries, etc., would be helped on
- by them. They would bear in mind the College motto, “Let no
- man think or maintain that a man can search too far or be too
- well studied in the Book of God’s Word, or in the Book of
- God’s Works; but rather let men endeavour an endless progress
- and proficiency in both; only let men beware that they apply
- both to charity and not to grovelling; to use and not to
- ostentation.”[58] Some articles of their creed would be—(_a_)
- that influence radiates from a centre, and hence it is a duty
- all through life to continue one’s own education; (_b_) that
- the nearer we stand in intellectual and social position,
- the stronger are our ties to any, and the greater are our
- duties; (_c_) that the worst thing one can do with any talent
- one possesses is to bury it. Rules would have to be framed
- concerning admission.’
-
-Miss Beale added that secretaries to the proposed association had already
-been appointed: Mrs. Ashley Smith for the general work and organisation,
-Miss Flora Ker as local secretary. This announcement of her appointment
-to what proved to be a very strenuous work was the first suggestion that
-Mrs. Smith received that she should even undertake it. In an article in
-the next Magazine Miss Beale unfolded her plan more fully, suggesting a
-few rules. She proposed further that the badge of the association should
-be a little brooch engraved with a figure of her beloved Britomart.
-
-The idea of a guild of old pupils was eagerly received, and a committee
-at once formed to deal with its organisation. In all these arrangements
-Miss Beale showed great strength of mind and self-control in being able
-to stand aside and let others work out the details of the scheme, even
-submitting her own judgment to that of the younger ones, whom she thought
-called upon to do the work. Yet she was in a true sense President of the
-Guild, guiding and directing where she would not command. Indeed, this
-ever-growing society which multiplied interests for her was largely her
-own inception, at a time when her special work, the College, was also
-increasing rapidly. The power of mind which could keep the right hold on
-both is certainly rare.
-
-The first committee consisted of associates of the College and a few
-other old pupils. Meetings were held to draw up the organisation of the
-new society, and this was made known at large in a delightful article
-by Mrs. Ashley Smith in the Magazine for spring 1884. In this the
-writer adventured far enough into the future to be able to suggest the
-possibility, at no very distant date, of some corporate work, ‘such as
-is done by many boys’ schools,’ but in 1884 the time for this had not
-arrived for Cheltenham girls.
-
-[Illustration: _The Lower Hall, Ladies’ College Cheltenham_
-
-_from a photograph by Miss Bertha Synge._]
-
-The second large gathering of old pupils, which took place on July 8
-and 9, 1884, is always reckoned as the first meeting of the Guild, the
-association being on that occasion formally founded under the name of
-‘The Guild of the Cheltenham Ladies’ College.’ It is interesting to
-note that what then seemed a large gathering really included less than
-eighty former pupils of the College; ten years later, at the fourth Guild
-meeting, there were nearly five hundred, and the number has increased
-ever since. The daisy was chosen as an emblem for the Guild: its choice
-and its significance were explained by the President in her address on
-Saturday, July 9. In a second address at this time, given after the
-candidates for Guild membership had received their ‘Masonic sign,’ Miss
-Beale dwelt chiefly on the practical questions arising out of the
-existence of the new association. She spoke of the difficulty of decision
-among the many opinions which must necessarily exist in a large college;
-she hoped that ‘whatever decision might finally be arrived at, all would
-cheerfully submit to it, and if their own individual tastes were not in
-every case gratified, would find their satisfaction in giving up their
-own wishes for the sake of the majority. She herself had had to submit,
-she hoped cheerfully, to an adverse vote.’ The rules were then read. Of
-these it is sufficient to say here that they made it difficult for any
-one whose life was spent in a mere pleasure-seeking spirit to be a member
-of the Guild. The rules were accepted for two years, and two courses of
-study were suggested for junior members.
-
-In the year following these meetings, Mrs. Ashley Smith wrote an article
-for the Magazine on the reports received from various members and on the
-general working of the Guild, which by the end of 1885 numbered nearly
-two hundred members. This is now an old story, nor is there anything
-specially remarkable in the many details of work in Sunday-schools and
-coffee-clubs. Yet even at the time when the Guild, compared with its
-present self, looked little more than ‘seven maids with seven mops,’ the
-tale of individual work done shows that already much quiet persistent
-effort was being made by Miss Beale’s old girls. This association,
-founded on principles rather than rules, was indicative of its origin in
-a mind which habitually dwelt rather on _being_ than _doing_. The small
-beginning, the gradual steady growth, the outcome of ideals and thoughts,
-were consistent with the whole of the College history. And to re-read the
-story of the foundation of the Guild is to remember once more how many
-quiet, unobtrusive, untiring workers have helped to make that history.
-In especial, the immense work and patience of the secretaries can
-perhaps never be adequately recognised: the labour of merely reading and
-tabulating the reports was considerable.
-
- ‘The General Secretary,’ wrote Mrs. Ashley Smith on one
- occasion, ‘on receiving the reports enters under more than
- sixty different headings the occupations of all the Guild
- members. It will be easily understood that the task of reducing
- to order and collating a chaotic mass of miscellaneous
- information on all subjects, from the keeping of poultry to the
- study of Hebrew, from making the beds to organising institutes,
- is not a very simple affair, and that therefore an immense
- saving of time and trouble is effected when the proper form is
- used, and it does not become necessary to wade through a letter
- full of apologies and exculpatory remarks, before one can
- arrive at the gist of the report.’
-
-On another occasion, after enumerating the different charitable and
-self-improving societies to which Guild members belonged, she said:
-
- ‘It almost gives one a headache to read this long list
- of occupations; and when at the end, hoping for a little
- breathing space, we come to an “odd minute society,” it
- puts the finishing touch to the bewildering sensation
- of restless activity, and one begins to wish for a
- “Sit-down-in-peace-and-calm-yourself Society.”’
-
-The reports, a matter of obligation to the junior members of the
-Guild, were often looked over by the President, who would surprise the
-secretaries by her detailed knowledge of the home surroundings and
-characters of girls whom she hardly knew by sight. ‘What is so-and-so
-doing now?’ she would ask, and on being told, would say, ‘She ought to
-be doing more,’ or ‘less,’ and perhaps make some other criticism. Not
-less surprising was her memory of former discussions. ‘She never forgot,’
-writes Mrs. Griffith, ‘what had been said. Sometimes she began again,
-continuing the conversation just where we left off, after a three months’
-interval.’
-
-The secretaries were also impressed by the way in which the President
-held herself bound by its smallest rules. Miss Helen Mugliston, who
-succeeded Mrs. Griffith as General Secretary in 1898, said Miss Beale
-was ‘perfect to work under. Having given you the task, she gave also her
-absolute trust and support throughout the whole of it.’
-
-The second meeting of the Guild was held in June 1886, lasting from a
-Friday evening to the following Tuesday morning. The President’s opening
-address dealt with work and duty. This year, for the first time, the
-Guild was also addressed by an outside speaker, the Dean of Gloucester.
-Mrs. Ashley Smith, in summing up her impressions of the gatherings of
-this year, rejoiced in the interest the members took in the proceedings.
-‘We cannot,’ she added, ‘certainly be accused of a servile unanimity
-in opinions or in the expression of them; but I hope we are united in
-underlying principles.’
-
-It was not until two years later that the sense of fellowship was
-strengthened, and the individual desires to help others directed by the
-resolve to organise a corporate work, a work in which not only all Guild
-members might help according to their opportunities, but in which also
-all old pupils and others connected with the College might be invited to
-join. This was formally proposed at the Guild meeting of 1888, and an
-idea as to what shape it might take was thrown out in a paper then read,
-which told for the first time something of what Miss Beale had done by
-means of the Loan Fund.
-
-To say that Miss Beale wished the corporate work to be of such a nature
-as to carry on that which she had long been doing for impecunious
-students, but feebly expresses what was really an earnest desire and
-hope. The claim she had upon the Guild, the importance that must attach
-to her lightest wish, was recognised; and yet,—yet, many felt that there
-were stronger reasons still why another kind of work should be chosen.
-Consequently no decision could be made at once, and those who had heard
-and discussed the paper parted after merely voting that the Guild
-‘should undertake some corporate work.’ Among so many workers there were
-necessarily many ideas; the question was too important to be hastily
-decided, and it was resolved to give time for suggestions to be made
-and considered before anything final was done. The Committee appointed
-to consider these reduced them to three schemes of work, on which all
-members were asked to vote. These were:—
-
- 1. A scheme for educating at College a few pupils who were
- worthy of education, but unable to pay the fees.
-
- 2. A scheme for taking over an elementary school in order to
- work it through teachers who had been trained in College.
-
- 3. The third scheme, which was carried, was submitted to the
- Guild in these words: ‘That the corporate fund be devoted to
- starting and supporting a mission in one of our large towns,
- the place to be decided by the votes of the Guild Members.’
-
-It was but natural that President and members should have different ideas
-on such an occasion. Dorothea Beale, who had never ceased to hear and
-obey the call she had received as a girl to help women, and with them the
-race, by means of improved education, longed to see those she had taught
-and trained freely sharing with others the very same advantages they had
-received. The difficulties which beset her own youth were still fresh in
-her mind. The need for good teachers still existed. She had seen the work
-she wanted the Guild to take up in operation for years, knew that it did
-not pauperise, that it blessed giver and receiver, and was increasingly
-fruitful, like good seed in good ground. On the other hand, she had a
-profound suspicion of much charitable work of the day, thinking that
-‘it will quickly perish because it does not aim at developing energy,
-inward power. To do for others what they ought to do for themselves is
-to degrade them in the order of creation.’[59] She could far more easily
-bear to see people suffering from hunger and nakedness than from loss of
-will power and sense of responsibility. This was partly, perhaps, because
-she did not know nor in the least realise the miseries and difficulties
-of extreme poverty.
-
-Miss Beale’s misgivings about the East End work were probably never quite
-set at rest. Writing to Mrs. Charles Robinson in 1899, she said: ‘I shall
-perhaps sleep two nights at St. Hilda’s East. I feel the whole question
-of Settlements most difficult. It was undertaken against my judgment, and
-yet the guidance all the way seems to point to its being right. Sisters
-and Deaconesses are much better for this work, yet there are some whom we
-can enlist who will never join and could not join “Orders.”’
-
-The Guild members who had been trained by their head not always
-acquiescingly to ‘do the next thing,’ but to think out questions, to plan
-carefully for the best if hardest, belonged to a new generation and had
-received another call. They saw how greatly educated women were needed to
-deal with charity organisation, with labour problems, with the children
-of the poor in schools and workhouses. Many of them were already at work
-for these. They felt, too, that they should take their part in helping to
-rouse others to study and work for the poor. On the other hand, they saw
-the need for cheap, good girls’ education to be one which was lessening
-every year. They had never felt it themselves, had had no struggle for
-training under pressure of adverse circumstances. Finally, they must
-have known that it was work which Miss Beale would not fail to carry on,
-meeting every necessity which was brought to her personal notice.
-
-On May 6, 1889, a general meeting of the Guild was held in London to
-consider further the lines on which the adopted scheme should be carried
-out. It was decided that the Guild Settlement should be made in London,
-in the parish of St. John’s, Bethnal Green, described by its vicar, the
-Rev. G. Bromby, who warmly welcomed the Cheltenham workers, as a ‘typical
-East End parish of the better sort.’
-
-At this meeting the President introduced the subject by saying:
-
- ‘I trust we shall be able to try to win harmony out of notes
- not altogether concordant. Some of us come with a feeling of
- disappointment that the scheme we desired has been rejected;—I
- am one of these. I not only accept my defeat, I feel sure that
- you have sought guidance of that inward oracle which must ever
- be our supreme ruler, you have done what conscience bade, and
- so it is right. As regards my own scheme, I only allude to it
- to say, that having now to continue it single-handed, I cannot
- help you as much as I could wish, and I just refer to it to-day
- in the hope that you will remember it when I am no longer here.’
-
-In these few words only did Miss Beale at the time announce her own
-disappointment and anxiety. There was much more she might have said,
-which she did in effect say in an early draft of her speech, which she
-fortunately did not destroy. Here her misgivings show themselves plainly.
-They were due to her foresight and judgment, yet it is likely that in
-some ways the untried workers, whom she feared were lightly taking upon
-themselves responsibilities to which they might prove unequal, really
-knew more than herself of the scope and details of the actual task before
-them.
-
-This is what Miss Beale wrote but did not say:—
-
- ‘It is no use concealing from you, for I could not, that I am
- greatly disappointed. But when I have said that, I have done;
- I accept the defeat. Others whose schemes have equally been
- rejected are suffering, thinking, perhaps, it is hard they have
- been met with so little sympathy. If they do not think well to
- join in this, no one will blame them, I hope, but will believe
- that they refuse because they ought not to give except as
- conscience requires, but let them give or spend in the best way
- they can all they would have bestowed on the Guild scheme of
- their heart’s choice.
-
- ‘This matter has brought before me many things which seem to
- show that our organisation needs some more distinct ideal.
- Like some “Topsy,” it could say in its infancy, “’spects I
- growed!” But when it undertakes to do something on its own
- account, then questions of power and how much power it should
- exercise, the questions of law and liberty which need to be
- faced, and which we shall, I trust, grow stronger and wiser in
- facing,—these have come before me with painful strength because
- as your President I had to face them. I was strongly opposed
- to the London scheme; I felt we were far too young, both in
- the age of the majority of our members, and also in the age of
- our organisation, to undertake such a great scheme. I had the
- strongest dislike to fashions in philanthropy, and especially
- is it most undesirable to familiarise the young with lives led
- in the slums of heathen London. Only those whose faith has had
- years to grow strong seem called to such work.
-
- ‘I could not see the Head whom I could trust with its
- management, and such a centre of work could not be ruled
- by several equal Heads, or by a committee with almost no
- experience and but little _individual_ responsibility. The
- whole thing seemed to me a mistake, and my heart sank as I
- thought of myself as President over our Guild, working what
- seemed an impossible scheme. Yet it is one of the first
- principles of education to let children who are not grounded
- properly make mistakes and so learn where they fail.’
-
-Much happened to reconcile Miss Beale to the Settlement scheme. Miss
-Catherine Newman, as her sister had done ten years before in aid of
-poor students, volunteered to undertake the management of the work
-gratuitously, and to pay her own expenses. Miss Newman was an old College
-pupil and a member of the Guild. She was also a trained nurse, with
-long experience of work among the poor. Miss Newman’s offer and the
-appeal of her old friend, Mr. Bromby, had weight with Miss Beale. She
-felt less anxious about the efforts of her ‘children’ if safe-guarded
-by the experience of those she knew and trusted. Miss Newman could also
-sympathise with Miss Beale’s own disappointment and anxiety, while
-she was confident of her large-mindedness in this matter. This may be
-gathered from a letter she wrote to her in the course of the proceedings
-at this time:—
-
- ‘ ... It is very good of you to set aside your own wishes and
- to throw yourself into this scheme. I have thought many times
- since the corporate work was talked about, that the freedom
- both teachers and old pupils felt in proposing schemes of work
- spoke volumes for their confidence in your generosity. Several
- members of the Guild who felt drawn towards the mission scheme
- said to me, “If I thought Miss Beale would wish me to vote
- for the Loan Fund because it was her scheme I would do so,
- but I believe that she would prefer that we should think for
- ourselves and vote for the scheme which most commends itself to
- us individually.” This confidence in your generosity and sense
- of justice struck me greatly; they knew you too well to fear
- for an instant that you might resent their taking a different
- line, and I felt sure from all I had ever known or seen of you
- that their confidence was not misplaced. Had you been able to
- unfold your scheme to them the result might have been very
- different, but of course it is too late now. If we were to
- renounce the idea of the Home for workers in the East-end, the
- elementary school would certainly take its place, and I am sure
- that you have realised ere now that it would be unjust both to
- the workers and the parish in which the Settlement is made to
- make it a temporary thing. Either it must be the corporate work
- of the Guild or it must be given up altogether,—at least so
- it seems to me. We could not expect enthusiasm either to work
- or support if it might be withdrawn at any moment. As regards
- your scheme, dear Miss Beale, I am truly sorry that it had
- not really a fair chance from the accident of its not being
- ripe yet for publicity. Two years hence might have been soon
- enough, yet I need not remind you that the “corporate work” was
- suggested by _yourself_. I am not afraid to say, however, that
- your scheme is sure of support and success, and this I trust
- while your powers are still unimpaired; but if, unfortunately,
- your strength should oblige you to limit your useful labour
- before it is fairly launched, I have every confidence that your
- friends and “children” would look upon it as a sacred legacy,
- which it would be their pride and pleasure to inherit from you.’
-
-At the very moment that the Cheltenham Settlement was about to be opened
-in Bethnal Green, the ladies of Oxford were prepared to start one in the
-same district. For the convenience of both, an arrangement was made by
-which the two sets of workers could live together for a time, under one
-head, Miss Newman, until the resources of each, and the work they were
-called upon to do, were better known. Mayfield House, close to St. John’s
-Church, was therefore taken and formally opened as a Ladies’ Settlement
-(at that time the second in London), on October 26, 1889. Four years
-later, as suddenly as her sister at Jersey House, Miss Newman died at her
-post. ‘What can one feel,’ wrote a friend to Miss Beale, ‘except that her
-death seems to seal the whole life with the heroism of _service_.’
-
-This trouble was the first link in a chain of circumstances which led,
-in the course of three or four years, to the removal of the Settlement
-to Shoreditch, where it became an important branch of that work to which
-Miss Beale gave the title of St. Hilda’s.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-ST. HILDA’S WORK
-
- ‘Thy kindred with the great of old.’
-
- TENNYSON, _In Memoriam_, lxxiv.
-
-
-Those who had often the advantage of hearing Miss Beale speak, either
-in general addresses to present or past pupils, or in the more regular
-course of literature lessons, soon learned that there were certain heroic
-names which had for her an almost romantic fascination. Among those of
-great women who influenced her imagination are specially to be remembered
-St. Hilda, St. Catherine of Siena, la Mère Angélique, Mme. Guyon. Of
-these the most dominant, the most inspiring was that of the great
-Northumbrian abbess, known to those whom she taught and ruled by the name
-of ‘Mother,’ not by virtue of her office, but on account of her signal
-piety and grace.[60] Hilda, the earnest student who ‘had been diligently
-instructed by learned men, who so loved order that she immediately began
-to reduce all things to a regular system.’ Hilda, the patron of the first
-English religious poet, ‘who obliged those under her to attend much to
-the reading of the Holy Scriptures; who taught the strict observance of
-justice and other virtues, particularly of peace and charity.’[61] This
-great Hilda and her work were to Dorothea Beale not merely romantic
-names, they were an ideal, an inspiration. And when the due time came,
-though for the sake of Miss Newman she hesitated for a moment over the
-alternative title of St. Margaret’s Hall, the name of St. Hilda was the
-one she chose to grace her own foundations. There are, possibly, members
-of the Ladies’ College who felt a pang of envy when the Students’ House
-became St. Hilda’s College. They could have borne to exchange the prim
-early Victorian title bestowed by the godfathers of 1856 for this more
-inspiring name. There is, however, consolation in the thought that the
-Ladies’ College is still free to adopt the name of its second founder.
-
-St. Hilda’s Hall, as it was at first called, was formally opened on
-November 27, 1886; but its real building was a much longer process, even
-if dated only from Miss Margaret Newman’s death at the close of 1877.
-Miss Beale thought much and anxiously how she could best lay out the
-money which she and her staff and some friends had given in order that
-Miss Newman’s work might be carried on and enlarged. She advised with a
-few who cared for education and for the College. Among those who helped
-and counselled were Miss Soames, who subscribed largely to St. Hilda’s,
-and Mr. Brancker, some of whose letters on the subject remain. If there
-seems now to be little that is original in the suggestions and plans
-discussed by Miss Beale and Mr. Brancker, it is because they were to a
-great extent pioneers, and among the first to bring about a real system
-for attaining the educational objects they had at heart. In 1878 Mr.
-Brancker wrote:—
-
- ‘The object you advocate is a very desirable one, and one I
- have longed for many a time as an adjunct of the Ladies’
- College—but while we were struggling upwards I could never see
- an opportune time to advocate my ideas on the subject. The
- means you suggest are very undesirable, to my mind at least, as
- partaking too much of the “charitable object” idea to commend
- themselves to me.
-
- ‘So necessary do I consider the future training of those who
- in their turns have to teach that for the present I should be
- inclined to treat every case on its own merits; as there may
- be many who may be anxious to get their education on such easy
- terms and yet have not the very least idea of imparting that
- knowledge to others, and in such cases the object you seek is
- not attained.
-
- ‘My idea, which is perhaps a crude one, would be that the
- capabilities of each pupil as regards teaching should be
- tested, and if she showed suitable powers she should be drafted
- into one of the boarding-houses, or if thought better into a
- separate house; that the fees of the College in her case be
- remitted, and that the expense of her board be paid all or
- in part by the College. That for this she should engage to
- become a regular teacher; that the College should have the
- first claim on her services, and that she should pass all
- the necessary examinations appointed by the College. If in a
- boarding-house she might assist in keeping order and authority,
- not as a governess but as an elder pupil,—not as a spy but by
- moral power, keep her position, something like a præpostor in
- a public school; a great deal of evil might then be prevented
- by being nipped in the bud. Should she eventually wish to take
- a College degree she should be assisted by the College if she
- remained with them or under their control. My great object
- would be to get ladies to accept such a position, as there
- must be many who would come within the rules of the College
- as to position who would be very glad to have such a vocation
- in prospect, and the College ought to be in a position now,
- unless the funds have been unnecessarily squandered, to afford
- to assist such cases in the hope that in the future they would
- help it.
-
- ‘Such are my rough ideas on the subject, as I do not believe in
- the isolation of those who want a practical knowledge of human
- nature to enable them to become teachers worth their salt.’
-
-In a second letter on the same subject Mr. Brancker said:—
-
- ‘I _quite_ understand what you feel about this matter relating
- to the governess of the future, and it was only my fear that
- you might be unwittingly getting into troubled waters that
- induced me to write you at once about it. It is a _very_
- difficult question to solve, and one that wants a good deal
- more thought so that no mistake may be made. My plan is to
- take up the idea of a “pupil teacher” in Government Schools,
- and from that form some plan for the education of those who
- aspire to be the teachers of the future. I should then carry
- out the idea I have always entertained of giving a preference
- to our own pupils, and working them up to our standard. I
- have always regretted that we missed Bessie Calrow, as she
- was a born teacher and would have delighted in the work. It
- seems to me that as you do not take these pupils until they
- are seventeen, you have a great chance among your own pupils,
- and would certainly know their own character better than any
- stranger; therefore, to any one who had passed through the
- College—could pass the necessary examination, and was willing
- to be such pupil teacher—I would pay the College fees and half
- the boarding-house expenses, or all if you like, and would give
- her a fair trial, and if at the end of twelve months, or longer
- as might be thought desirable, it was not satisfactory to all
- parties, let her depart and no harm would be done. This is a
- far better and more dignified position than being educated by
- _charity_; and the person enjoying it would lose nothing of her
- dignity, if it was not even added to by the position. If the
- plan is to do any good it must be grafted on to the College,
- and I for one should be very sorry to see that obliged to go to
- the public for any funds it requires to do good. I would make
- the pupils sign nothing on my plan, my hold upon them would be
- their association with the College. I can quite understand the
- difficulties raised by the boarding-houses about new pupils at
- that age, but with old ones that difficulty is at once removed;
- as, like the præpostors, they would have certain privileges,
- but at the same time they must submit to the discipline of the
- house. My plan may be, and no doubt is very crude, but these
- are the lines I should start from and feel my way tentatively,
- so as not to destroy the independence of the individual. Look
- where you get the best masters of public schools:—The man who
- succeeds is a scholar and very likely Fellow of his College;
- he may have been Bible-clerk, sizar, or undergraduate, and so
- has worked his way upwards and obtained his position from hard
- work, thus adding to his dignity and power of teaching. And I
- should follow as much as possible in these tracks.’
-
-Eventually the ideas expressed in these letters were carried out in
-the arrangement of St. Hilda’s, which became not only a home for pupils
-who could not afford the normal boarding fees, but also a residence for
-senior students who needed more liberty than they could have in the other
-houses. By this means the house was put on a self-supporting basis. Miss
-Beale could have borne with no other. The Loan Fund, up to this time,
-had been the means of assisting over a hundred students. Miss Beale now
-asked a few personal friends to support it, pointing out that such a
-means of help was far better than any system of scholarships, which she
-never ceased to dislike, and against which she continually spoke and
-wrote. Her chief objections to scholarships have been already noted.[62]
-She was moreover opposed to the principle of material giving involved
-in the system. She only cared, at any time, to give what would embrace
-and ennoble character. She thought it best that people should pay for
-advantages received, thought they would value them more, thought it made
-girls more careful and self-denying when first the management of money
-came into their own hands, to feel that it was not their own to do as
-they pleased with. A mere gift seemed to her like a dead thing compared
-with the money which, lent and returned and then lent to others, was
-thus used over and over again. Yet the want of response to appeals for
-the Loan Fund must have been partly due to a difference of opinion on
-its method rather than to want of sympathy with Miss Beale’s aims. There
-are many who feel an objection to saddling with a loan a young teacher
-starting on her work, or who recognise that an unpaid loan may help to
-lower the standard in money affairs, and on that account shrink from
-giving help in this way. There are few indeed who could lend money
-so successfully as Miss Beale could, because there are few who could
-so successfully command repayment. Of the first £500 advanced by the
-Loan Fund, £495 was repaid in a very few years. The pressure she would
-exercise for repayment sometimes led to the wrong notion that she cared
-for money for its own sake. She had at all times great skill in wringing
-the utmost use out of a sum of money to promote those ends for which
-she lived; but in the ordinary commonplace sense she was indifferent to
-money and the things for which it is usually exchanged. Her own personal
-life was as bare of luxury when she was a rich woman as it was when
-her capital was reckoned in hundreds only. But she did care deeply for
-character, and anxiously avoided all forms of easy generosity which might
-injure those she sought to help.
-
-For several years before a turf was cut for St. Hilda’s College, Miss
-Beale was, as she would herself have expressed it, building it: student
-teachers were being trained in the College, and in 1881 one of these
-passed the Cambridge Examination in the Theory and Practice of Education.
-Gradually she gathered an increasing body of students in a separate
-house—a house which was as unlike as any could possibly be to the
-beautiful home which was shortly to be opened. She waited year after year
-for money with which to build without interrupting the work she had begun
-in assisted education, and for the reasons named made no public appeal
-for it. It was enough, she maintained, to state the real needs—to show
-the value of a work by the way it was done—and thus let it make its own
-appeal for support. She had a horror of _plant_ which might be a mere
-empty shell, or which in its establishment might become a diversion of
-energy from spiritual work. She felt this especially in the matter of
-church building, as may be seen in the following extract from a letter:
-‘What I disapproved of was the amount of begging for the Cathedral. I do
-not disapprove of _it_, but I think you know what I felt. However, the
-Bishop will do all he can to make it a strong spiritual centre. I can
-never get over the feeling of spiritual destitution at one very beautiful
-cathedral.’ It was also, perhaps less consciously, a principle not to
-take money except from those who were willing for her to carry out her
-own ideas. She wrote to one friend in 1888:—
-
- ‘As regards our Students’ Home, I have given up the idea of
- a public meeting. It seemed not right to refuse the offer
- at first. But I shall go on with the work, and I doubt not
- the money will come. There is such a great need for training
- teachers. If we had a meeting things might be said and money be
- given in a way which would pledge us, or be thought to pledge
- us, and now we shall be free.’
-
-And again in 1884 to one who helped her Oxford scheme:—
-
- ‘I grieve over that Protestant spirit which forbids people
- to read books, to associate with people, who do not think
- precisely in their way. Is this done in Science? No; we put
- various theories before the student and show _why_ we accept
- them. But we don’t ever want to impose our beliefs; so I want
- not to impose mine in religion, but to bring the learner to
- the “fountain of living water.” Any transferred opinion is
- without root, and cannot endure the storm. Teachers must, if
- they are to help, gain the sympathy they need by entering into
- the religious modes of seeing and feeling of many different
- souls. I think in a University town they would come in contact
- with various influences, and in a house like St. Hilda’s I
- should want thoughtful people who have gone through some of the
- experience of life,—old teachers to help the young. There is a
- little more of my dream, but I am quite content to wait. If it
- be God’s will that such a house should grow up, the way will
- be pointed out. I felt I could not say all this to you when we
- meet, and I have got to care that you should not misunderstand
- me.’
-
-As the time to begin the actual erection of the house drew near she had
-no exultation over the fulfilment of a dream. Yet in the beginning of
-August 1885, surrounded by young teachers from her own and other schools
-drawn together for a Retreat and a brief educational conference, her mind
-was naturally full of that dream. Some few of her own thoughts about it
-she wrote down; such as the following, with their characteristic heading:—
-
- ‘_Sunday, Aug. 2, 1885_—on St. Hilda’s. Some thoughts at church.
-
- ‘God fulfils Himself in many ways. Lest one good custom should
- corrupt the world.
-
- ‘How often have we seen endowments thus rendered injurious, not
- helpful. So it is with many of the institutions around us. Can
- we hope better things from this one? No, we can only hope for
- it not a perfection but a temporary usefulness. “He, after he
- had served his generation according to the will of God, fell
- on sleep”;—so it is with men, so with institutions, they need
- not a body but a spirit. As long as the spirit lives the body
- is the instrument of all good works. When the spirit dies, the
- body becomes the source of disease and corruption. For this
- reason I have cared more to awaken the spirit than to gather
- funds and build first. The spirit will, I hope, shape the body.
-
- ‘Now what we want is a body of women whose one desire is to
- consecrate themselves to the ministry of teaching.
-
- ‘“Get work in this world.
-
- ‘Be sure ’tis better than what you work to get.”
-
- ‘Ye are the salt of the earth,—light of the world, said the
- Lord to the teachers He sent forth.’
-
-The first stone of St. Hilda’s College was quietly laid by Canon Medd
-(one of the trustees and a member of the Ladies’ College Council) in
-1884. The opening, which took place on November 27, 1885, was far more
-dignified than that its illustrious parent had known in 1856.
-
-‘The ceremony of opening the institution,’ so ran the account in the
-Cheltenham _Examiner_, ‘which was performed by the Bishop of the diocese,
-took place at three o’clock, and was attended by a large and influential
-company, who assembled in the study, a spacious—but on this occasion
-none too spacious—apartment on the ground floor.’ Among those present
-were the Dean of Winchester,[63] then Chairman of the College Council,
-who conducted the short service, the late Bishop of Ely, and many of the
-clergy of the town, besides the friends and benefactors of St. Hilda’s.
-On entering the study the eye was caught at once by the words which
-Miss Beale quoted so often that they seemed like the motto of her work:
-‘Knowledge puffeth up, but charity buildeth up.’ Here, in this ‘Godly
-Place,’ as he called the house, the Bishop of Gloucester, who since 1875
-had been both nominally and actually Visitor of the Ladies’ College, gave
-an address full of sympathy for the ideals of the founder.
-
-Thus the first resident Training College for teachers, other than
-elementary, was planned, and built, and opened. In order to make its
-position more permanent it was constituted into a separate College with
-a Council of its own. In 1886 a statue of St. Hilda was presented and
-placed in the hall. On unveiling it, Miss Beale spoke of the Saint’s
-life, and especially of her work as a teacher. She concluded with a
-thought, the deeper for the personal touch in it, of memory of what
-she had had to bear in the past, and indeed in later years also, of
-misconception and misrepresentation.
-
- ‘Shall I touch in conclusion upon the mythical elements in St.
- Hilda’s story? Myths are truths expressed in poetry. You see
- the ammonite at her feet, one of the serpents that she, like
- St. Patrick, is fabled to have turned into stone. There may
- have been, once, at Whitby, serpents who, with the poisoned
- tooth of calumny and evil-speaking, wounded and slew. I think
- she turned them into stone with her look of sorrow. We have not
- represented the wild geese, whom she is said to have destroyed
- because they wasted her lands. I half believe that story too; I
- feel sure that all these disappeared from her abbey lands, but
- perhaps they were turned into swans.’
-
-St. Hilda’s College was scarcely built and opened before it was necessary
-to enlarge it by adding a new wing. It was not until this had been done
-that Miss Beale felt free to devote herself to another foundation, which
-also was to bear the name of the sainted Abbess.
-
-As early as the year 1882 Miss Beale, attracted by the increasing
-facilities offered to women by the elder universities, had purchased
-three acres of land in north Oxford. These she retained for building
-uses should the right moment or a definite reason for such a purpose
-occur. But no one showed much sympathy with the scheme, there was no
-offer of money, and for long much of her own capital was absorbed in St.
-Hilda’s, Cheltenham. Impulsive to a fault as she often was, Miss Beale
-could school herself to wait. After five years came an opportunity of
-purchasing a ready-made college in Dr. Child’s beautiful house on the
-Cherwell. It seemed well to accept this, and begin there the new house of
-education.
-
-There were many reasons why Miss Beale allowed so long a time to elapse
-between her purpose and her act. Her own ideas and her aims for her Hall
-at Oxford shaped themselves but gradually. Somerville College[64] and
-Lady Margaret Hall were still in their first youth. Miss Beale’s scheme
-seemed uncalled for where there were already so many workers for the
-cause of women’s education in the field. Her educational experience
-had been different from that of those whose minds had developed among
-university surroundings; her methods were unacademic, unconventional.
-Consequently there were some to warn her as she prepared to take her new
-step: ‘The University may easily receive a shock from which it will take
-long to recover.’
-
-It may well be asked even now, as it was often asked at the time, why
-Miss Beale wanted to come to Oxford at all, and particularly while she
-was uncertain of the value of University Examinations for women. But
-she valued even more than the certificate gained by taking schools
-the atmosphere of Oxford. She saw that the students of St. Hilda’s,
-Cheltenham, missed this. When she founded that institution she had
-written of it, that she hoped it ‘would be a Hall similar to the Halls
-at Oxford and Cambridge.’ Now she felt the need of what only the older
-universities could give. She hoped her new house might become a place of
-intellectual enlargement and refreshment such as Oxford could best supply
-to some who had already begun their work of teaching, and who needed new
-thoughts and inspiration, more time for thought, a higher intellectual
-standard. She thought that a year at Oxford could supply that feature in
-education which is sometimes more developed at home.
-
- ‘I have often felt ... that a year in which they should be
- allowed to expatiate in intellectual pastures in a way that
- we older women used to do before examinations for women
- existed, would be of great value. And they can do this best
- in some University town, where they can have libraries and
- museums and such lectures and private help as they most
- require—both hearing and asking questions, rather than being
- asked and answering.... Many could take one year who could
- not take three.... The students of St. Hilda’s (Oxford)
- will have the same opportunities of attending lectures and
- offering themselves for examinations as at the other Ladies’
- Colleges—but we should not press examination upon any who can
- do better work without. Of course we must be assured that those
- who come to us will work seriously.’
-
-Yet these reasons were secondary. The purchase of three acres of ground
-at Oxford was a definite result of her own suffering of mind in 1882. As
-she emerged from that she at once began to build in vision a house where
-teachers should be established in the faith, where they should learn to
-feel that their calling was not to do mere journeyman work, but to deal
-with the deep problems of life.
-
-Finally, it may be added that, whether conscious of it or not, she could
-not keep herself out of the great movement which was enabling women
-to share with men many of the incomparable advantages of University
-life, she had also her own conception of what University life might do
-for women, and by means of a College at Oxford for her own College at
-Cheltenham. For Cheltenham the connection would be of great value. Seeing
-all that might be won by a well-placed move, she planned that move,
-waited, then made it at the right moment. ‘I bewail your news,’ wrote
-an Oxford friend to whom she communicated the fact that St. Hilda’s was
-about to be opened, ‘and disclaim all responsibility for your mistake.’
-Miss Beale opened her Hall and begged the students to accept the words
-_Non frustra vixi_ as their motto, that being the thought which the
-ammonite at the feet of St. Hilda’s statue now suggested to her.
-
-In October 1893 seven students took up their residence at St. Hilda’s.
-Mrs. Burrows, who had had a College boarding-house at Cheltenham, came to
-be head of the new Hall, assisted by her daughter, who had been a student
-at Lady Margaret Hall. The house was formally but quietly opened on
-November 6 by the Bishop of the diocese, Dr. Stubbs, who placed himself
-at Miss Beale’s disposal for all arrangements. ‘I will keep,’ he wrote,
-‘November 6 free for Miss Beale, but she must let me hear what, when, and
-how what is to be done’; and to Miss Beale, ‘You do not want me to bring
-robes on the 6th, do you? A line to reassure me would be grateful.’
-
-On the occasion of the opening, after the little service conducted by the
-Dean of Winchester, the Bishop of Oxford spoke a few ‘grave and weighty
-words’ on the duty of ‘self-culture of the whole mind, soul, and spirit.’
-The Dean, who thanked him for his address, said that ‘the new venture of
-the Cheltenham Ladies’ College was by no means so ambitious as the Bishop
-seemed to think.’ He spoke of the way in which it might prepare women
-to be of real service in their generation, and added: ‘One cannot think
-of this opening day for the Oxford St. Hilda’s without strong emotions
-of gratitude and hope. This is the crown and highest result of all that
-work for women’s education which has been carried on under Miss Beale’s
-wise rule at Cheltenham these many years past; the College, with its
-varieties of activity, and its eight hundred students, justly claims to
-be represented here in the home of highest education.’
-
-[Illustration: _Photo. W. H. Rogers_
-
-_S. Hilda’s Hall, Oxford._]
-
-Among the friends gathered for this opening ceremony was the founder of
-the Ladies’ College, Cheltenham, Canon Bellairs. He welcomed this house
-in Oxford, though he would have named it differently.
-
- ‘I am very glad to hear,’ he had written a month before, ‘that
- you are starting what will no doubt become a veritable College.
- You should christen it at once. St. Clare would be appropriate.
- She founded an Order, and your College will be the foundation
- of an order. I do hope the G. W. R. will alter its time-table
- to suit your convenience. It would do so if it had as high an
- opinion of your excellence as the Father of your College, and
- your Pupils and all that know you have. Fancy, thirty-five
- years since we first met! What a period for evolution.... I
- should like very much to have a chat with you to see where you
- are now.’
-
-After five years, St. Hilda’s, Oxford, was recognised by the Association
-for the Education of Women in Oxford as St. Hilda’s Hall. Miss Beale
-finally, in 1900, connected it with St. Hilda’s, Cheltenham, by
-presenting it to the Association of that College.
-
-That Miss Beale was fully alive to changes that must come in the course
-of time to such an institution as St. Hilda’s Hall, and could be content
-to see her own personal wishes set aside in everything that did not
-affect the essential life of the place, is clear from the following
-letter to Mrs. Wells in January 1903:—
-
- ‘Thanks for your nice letter and the suggestions. I think
- with you that the giving of scholarships will have to be
- reconsidered, and some clear rules made. I am, however, no less
- strongly opposed to the modern slave trade than before, and
- should be much grieved if we entered upon it. I see you would
- limit the giving to those who need help. Of course I see that
- I can no longer have the freedom I had in choosing scholars
- when the house was mine, and I alone was responsible for all
- expenses, and Mrs. Hay allowed me to dispose of her gifts, but
- I do hope we shall go on somewhat the same lines.
-
- ‘1. That we shall not ask for money.
-
- ‘2. That we shall not advertise in order to get scholars.
-
- ‘3. That we shall not pledge ourselves to choose merely by
- intellectual pre-eminence.
-
- ‘4. I think we are justified in giving the preference to
- Cheltenham girls.
-
- ‘Might we not say that a scholarship should be offered on
- certain fixed conditions to certain girls, say to associates
- and to those who, not having been long enough to gain this,
- should have taken a high rank in the Cambridge room.’
-
-The year marked by this crown and result of labour was saddened by the
-death of Miss Catherine Newman at Mayfield House. It was a death which
-caused not only personal sorrow, but extreme perplexity and loss to all
-connected with the Mission. They found themselves at the end of four
-years’ trial of their scheme without a head, with a scattered band of
-workers, and an insanitary house. No one felt the sorrow of it all more
-than Miss Beale; no one was more courageous in meeting it. The necessary,
-difficult, and toilsome work which was the result of the crisis did not
-indeed fall to her share, but to that of some members of the committee
-on whom the responsibility specially pressed. But such difficulties to
-be met, such a death for a cause, were exactly what roused Miss Beale to
-feel the worth of it as she had never done before.
-
-A small untiring sub-committee was formed, with Mrs. Batten as secretary,
-to re-arrange the work. The cost of efficient drainage operations was
-so heavy that at first it seemed better to seek a new house for the
-Settlement than to undertake such a great expense. A long search in the
-neighbourhood for such a house proved fruitless. It therefore became a
-question whether the Guild members should move their work from the place
-they had deliberately chosen at a large general meeting, or go to the
-expense required for making Mayfield House fit for habitation. However,
-an appeal to the surveyor resulted in the cost of the drainage work
-being thrown upon the landlord, who consequently made harder terms for
-his tenants. The question whether to stay or go came before the Guild in
-1894, and a vote for continuing the work at Mayfield House was passed
-by a large majority. After an interval of some months the house was
-re-opened under a new Lady Warden, Miss Corbett,—no Cheltenham worker
-having been found to undertake it.
-
-In her first report Miss Corbett was able to show a full complement of
-workers. There was no falling off, but in less than two years it became
-evident that a more complete change must be made. The Oxford workers, who
-by a temporary arrangement lived at first in Mayfield House, had now a
-prosperous Settlement of their own—St. Margaret’s—in the very same square
-as Mayfield House. This Settlement of the Ladies’ Branch of the Oxford
-House could not well be in any other neighbourhood. It was seen to be
-ludicrous that two large communities of women workers should concentrate
-their energies on one small corner of the vast field of London work.
-Added to this, the high rent and rates of Mayfield House pointed to the
-need of a change, and at the Guild meeting of 1896 it was definitely
-proposed to move either to East Ham or Lambeth. Finally, however,
-Shoreditch was chosen, a district having sore needs, and near enough to
-Bethnal Green to enable those members of the Settlement engaged there in
-Board School management, charity organisation, and other extra parochial
-work still to carry it on.
-
-Then came the question of a house. There was none. It was clearly
-necessary to build, but for so large an undertaking the reserve fund was
-insufficient. Miss Beale, always averse to begging for money, refused to
-make any definite appeal for charity, but as a happy inspiration, the
-idea came to her that the Guild should meet the difficulty with the same
-kind of means used by Mrs. Grey in starting high schools in 1874. This
-idea took shape in February 1897. Miss Verrall, who had been Treasurer
-of the Settlement from the beginning, sent out notices to members of the
-Guild to inquire whether shares for £3000 would be taken up, and a ready
-response was given, all the shares being quickly appropriated within
-a fortnight. This, which seems to be a mere business transaction, was
-really a great deal more. It was rather a channel for interest and help
-which had been so far unable to force their way freely. The money was
-subscribed in the form of debenture stock at three per cent., repayable
-at the end of eighty years. £3800 was subscribed within a fortnight by
-310 subscribers. A large part came from women to whom the sacrifice of
-control or recovery of the capital made it practically a gift. To most
-the yearly-paid few shillings of interest meant little in comparison
-with a few pounds available for immediate expenditure. Of the money
-subscribed, over £400 has now been released by gift from the holders.
-Other holders have authorised the Council of St. Hilda’s East to retain
-their interest. This brings in about £30 a year. The transaction was a
-fine example of Miss Beale’s use of this world’s goods, as means to great
-ends, and a fine instance of the response she could command from those
-she had led to her own point of view. Generous aid came also from Mr.
-Dutton, whose sister was an old Cheltonian,[65] and who undertook all
-the legal business gratuitously; also from the honorary architect, Mr.
-Philip Day, the husband of an old pupil, who volunteered his services for
-the new house. The workers found temporary quarters during the building,
-which took less than a year; and on April 26, 1898, the house was opened
-by Dr. Creighton, the Bishop of London, under the name of St. Hilda’s,
-Shoreditch. For Miss Beale remained faithful to the name and all the
-ideas it implied for her. On the letter of a friend who wrote, ‘Could
-not the new house be called Cheltenham House or some such, binding it to
-the College? It would be better than a picturesque saint’—she wrote, ‘I
-disagree.’ Mrs. Reynolds, an old pupil, became head of the Settlement
-during the busy time of furnishing and organisation of work in a new
-centre. A year later she was succeeded by another old pupil, Miss Bruce,
-the present Lady Warden, who had worked in the Settlement from the first.
-Since that time the house has twice been enlarged. The growth of the
-Settlement, as its beginning had been, was marked by the loss through
-death of an enthusiastic worker when Mrs. Moyle, who was for a time its
-secretary, died in July 1899.
-
-As the permanence of the Settlement became assured, and the interest
-of both past and present pupils increased, being augmented by the
-organisation of shares, and by the formation of St. Hilda’s Association,
-Miss Beale’s own interest in the work grew. She regarded St. Hilda’s East
-less as a centre of help for the poor than as a place of training for
-workers. In this aspect it appealed to her as rightly an integral part of
-the work of the College. In the year 1898, which she said might be called
-for the College an _annus mirabilis_, she was able to point to the three
-institutions bearing the name of St. Hilda, each firmly established,
-flourishing, and full of promise of future usefulness.
-
- ‘This year St. Hilda’s, enlarged from six to sixty students, is
- full and free from debt.
-
- ‘This year the link with the University of Oxford, so early
- formed, has been made permanent by St. Hilda’s, Oxford,
- becoming a Hall of the University.
-
- ‘Above all, this year St. Hilda’s East has been built by the
- spontaneous co-operation of past and present girls, and this
- has specially cheered us, that those who have left us for other
- spheres, the Heads of other great Schools, still stretch out
- their hands to us, work with us in the Guild and the Mission,
- and the old ties are not broken.’
-
-But the three great institutions bearing the name of St. Hilda by no
-means included all that thought-training work which was what Miss Beale
-specially associated with it.
-
-The existence of St. Hilda’s College at Cheltenham made it convenient,
-if not imperative, to find exercise for the energy there inspired and
-directed, and to supply classes for practice. To keep this stream of
-energy within her own guidance for a longer period than the time of
-training involved, it was necessary to have scope for it at hand. Even
-the great and growing College was not large enough to employ all the
-workers it trained, and the Principal was ever alive to the necessity
-of having a certain number of teachers from outside, bringing with them
-fresh ideas and methods.
-
-The Kindergarten was the first addition to the Ladies’ College proper
-to need such young helpers as Miss Beale now had at her disposal. It
-began, like Miss Beale’s other creations, without a local habitation of
-its own in 1876. The College, owing to the quick perception of its Lady
-Principal, who was sensitive to each fresh tendency in education, was
-one of the first schools in England to avail itself of the Kindergarten
-mistresses trained by Madame Michaelis, who began her work in her own
-house at Croydon as early as 1874.
-
-Miss Beale at once secured a mistress, and on her arrival a number of
-little boys and girls were immediately found to constitute a Kindergarten
-in Miss Beale’s own drawing-room. ‘The’ drawing-room, as she always
-called it, did not well bear out its title. As a baby-class room it
-looked well. Morris’s daisy and columbine paper, then a new thing, was
-on the walls, to suggest the thought, which was probably correct, that
-in first choosing it Miss Beale had already an intention of beginning a
-Kindergarten, though she did not find it advisable to mention it then to
-the Council. Some of the younger teachers in College helped a little with
-this baby-class. The system and organisation, the carefully trained head,
-all seemed rather alarming in those days when Froebelian ideas and German
-methods were little known in England.
-
-As early as 1876 there were twenty-five children in the Kindergarten, for
-which a classroom had to be found in the College. In 1881 Miss Welldon
-came to Cheltenham as head of the Kindergarten. Hers was one of the first
-appointments made by the Croydon Kindergarten Company, which had been
-founded in 1876, with Madame Michaelis as Principal.
-
-In 1882 the new room, purposely built and fitted for a Kindergarten,
-was opened. It was much enlarged in 1887. But soon again more scope was
-needed for the large number of students who now flocked to Cheltenham.
-Miss Beale could not bear to let one of these escape her. She recognised
-their needs, she saw their possible value. There were then very
-few places in England where they could be trained; the demand for
-Kindergarten mistresses daily increased. The immediate difficulty was
-met in 1889 by the establishment of a Kindergarten school in connection
-with St. Stephen’s Church in Cheltenham, supported by the vicar of the
-parish and a few voluntary contributors. This was staffed by Kindergarten
-students of the Ladies’ College. Fifty-seven children actually appeared
-in the school the first day, and the numbers rapidly increased in spite
-of the fact that each child paid twopence weekly. Five years later
-College students penetrated into a still poorer school at Naunton, a
-hamlet adjoining the town of Cheltenham. In 1896 the infant school of
-the parish of Holy Trinity in the town invited teachers from the College.
-
-In 1889 Cambray House was offered for sale. Miss Beale, who had a strong
-lingering affection for this first home of her school, had with regret
-seen it ‘alienated to barbarian boys,’ the trees cut down, and the garden
-turned into an asphalted playground. The building was well fitted for
-the school purposes for which it had been adapted and long used. There
-was enough space in the part which had not been altered, and which was
-not wanted for a day-school, to be utilised as a boarding-house. Miss
-Beale seized the chance she saw of opening a school which should serve
-the double purpose of taking overflow pupils or others for whom, for
-many reasons, the Ladies’ College was not suited, and of affording an
-opening under her own eye for some of the teachers she was training. The
-rules for admission, discipline, etc., were identical with those of the
-College. By this time, too, she saw the use of the racquet-courts and
-tennis-grounds. It was a great satisfaction to get back this house. She
-wrote of it to Miss Arnold:—
-
- ‘I dare not take any extra fatigue, as I have so much on my
- hands—I must try to be alone for a while. I have just bought
- back the old Cambray House in which I began thirty-one years
- ago. I want a second Miss Wilderspin, I have got to put it in
- order and furnish by May.... I heard Canon Body at All Saints,
- Margaret Street, last Friday. It was a very good sermon, and
- seemed to fit in well with the thoughts that came to me, as
- I had just got my offer for Cambray accepted, rather to my
- surprise.’
-
-In 1895 Cambray was enlarged at a cost of about £2000, and in October
-1897 Miss Beale, by deed of gift, made over the property to the Ladies’
-College, though it was arranged that she should still continue there
-the school and boarding-house. Miss Beale marked this return of Cambray
-House, ‘enlarged and alive again with girls,’ into the possession of the
-College, as another notable event of the _annus mirabilis_.
-
-Cambray House, on its acquisition by the College through the gift
-of Miss Beale, was leased to her for a nominal rent; the school and
-boarding-house being carried on as a private venture until 1906, when
-their existence was recognised in the College prospectus for the first
-time. Miss Beale spent another £2000 out of her own income upon additions
-and improvements after she had made over the house to the College. This
-was a large sum, but even from a financial point of view by no means
-wasted. In five years the profits of school and boarding-house amounted
-to £1000, for which Miss Beale planned further fruitful use.
-
-Cambray School, or, to give it its true title, Cheltenham Ladies’ College
-School, and Cambray boarding-house, which took pupils belonging to both
-the new school and the College, was not the only undertaking for which
-Miss Beale made herself personally responsible. She also started, and
-placed in a good financial position, two cheap boarding-houses, St.
-Helen’s and St. Austin’s, and in course of time presented them to the
-College. Her position in regard to all these institutions was surely
-very unusual, not to say unique. The foundation of a school of over one
-hundred pupils, and of houses containing the same number of boarders,
-would be a respectable life’s work for many a woman. This work appears
-to have been only one of the many occupations Miss Beale found for
-the little leisure left her by the cares of the great College and its
-ever-multiplying interests.
-
-It was perhaps primarily interest in young teachers which led Miss Beale
-to join a movement made in 1897 to induce ladies to take up work in
-elementary schools. Miss Beale was present at a large meeting held that
-year in Westminster Town Hall, when the need and importance of this work
-were set forth in speeches by the Bishop of Stepney,[66] Sir Joshua
-Fitch, and others. As a result a Government Training Department was at
-once formed at the Ladies’ College, and work began with seven students,
-who in the same year were encouraged by addresses from Sir H. E. Oakeley,
-H.M.I., and Sir Joshua Fitch. The field of practice for these students
-was found in All Saints’ Schools, where there were four departments
-all supplied with the best apparatus. Other schools in the town were
-also glad at different times to receive these teachers. Miss Beale
-became much interested in the work, and proposed to build a practising
-school of her own for the elementary department of the College, engaged
-a head-mistress, and bought land for building. Then in 1901 came the
-regulations for local education committees, which would have put Miss
-Beale’s school under local control. She therefore gave up the idea of
-building and sold her land. Later regulations made her find it impossible
-to continue the elementary work on the lines she wished. The Government
-demands proved a fetter to one who felt she should be free to work
-towards her ideal. To her mind the real progress of elementary education
-in the country depended, not on the ‘introduction of new subjects of
-instruction, which must impose new and burdensome labour on teachers
-and children. It should be gained by the better training of teachers,
-by the adoption of better methods, by a wiser economy of time, and by
-showing teachers how to put more knowledge, more skill, more thought,
-more love, and more enthusiasm into their work.’ The legislation of
-1901 made her feel that ‘My Lords’ did not recognise these principles as
-all-important; that they undervalued such an effort as she was making at
-Cheltenham; that they were unjust to voluntary schools. She felt as if
-she were playing an unfair game, and declined any longer to help forward
-a movement of which she could not see the goal. It may be marked also
-that she could never feel full sympathy for _free_ education. From this
-time she again limited herself to training secondary teachers. Conditions
-which made elementary training the one serious work which Miss Beale took
-up only to abandon it, are indeed to be regretted. The magnificent plant,
-the fine opportunities for learning and practising, such as the Ladies’
-College could supply, above all the large-minded teaching, the sense of
-real education which the Lady Principal would give, were thus lost to a
-cause which affects the wellbeing of the whole nation.
-
-The Secondary Training Department became a recognised division of the
-College in 1885. So high a value did Miss Beale put upon this that she
-wrote of the work of the mistress in whose charge it was, as ‘only second
-in importance to that of the Head.’
-
-St. Hilda’s work, using the term which Miss Beale herself would have
-used, meant much more than teaching definite subjects and preparing for
-examinations: it meant inspiration and the leading out of minds. It
-demanded unlimited devotion to a cause. It is probable that Miss Beale
-had for long cherished, and had only gradually relinquished a hope,
-though she never formed any definite plan, of seeing arise out of her
-work for education a body of women willing to form a teaching order.
-Opposed to sisterhood schools as she was, chiefly because her ideal of
-education was so high and apart, that she could not bear to see it
-receive in any way a secondary place, she recognised the immense value
-that some kind of rule would have, if voluntarily imposed _for the sake
-of education_. In other words, while she did not like to see people
-taking up teachers’ work because they were Sisters, she would have liked
-to see those she inspired and trained voluntarily take upon themselves
-some of the restrictions of a Sister’s life because they were teachers.
-The thought may have come to her first when, in 1856 and 1858, Mrs.
-Lancaster pressed her to undertake penitentiary work under rule. It
-was this which led to the severity of her dress and grave demeanour at
-Casterton, this which was echoed in a half-expressed wish that her staff
-at Cheltenham should wear black. When, after long years of waiting, it
-became her part to train women for the work of education, the aim of
-inducing them to adopt a separate devoted life, with or without visible
-signs of it, was ever before her.
-
-Now that St. Hilda’s work may be witnessed in the three great
-institutions bearing this name, it is of no common interest to trace Miss
-Beale’s own plan for its development. The plan itself and the noble ideal
-behind it are not more remarkable than the ability with which she waited,
-resigned her individual fancy, and became an agent rather than an author.
-The following extract (_circa_ 1884) states her first design:—
-
- ‘It is thought that a protest in act is specially needed in
- these days, now that teachers are so highly paid, and that an
- association of teachers who should be ready to take up any work
- required, whether it was paid or not, would be able to carry on
- work more effectively and continuously than an unorganised body
- of women.
-
- ‘It is proposed, therefore, that after three years,—ten of
- those who agree in this general principle should unite together
- as members of the Society of St. Hilda,—that they should pay,
- if young, into the funds of the Society whatever they earn
- from that time (but keeping complete control over any invested
- property), the Society providing them a fixed salary, a home
- when disengaged or out of health, but holding a right to send
- them out to any work which seems needed. The community may, if
- two-thirds agree, reject any member on returning to her what
- she has paid in, minus a fair sum for her maintenance. A member
- may withdraw with half any calculated surplus of earnings over
- expenditure, on giving one year’s notice. Some members might
- reside permanently and assist in various ways as writers and
- editors.
-
- ‘It is proposed that the members contributing the money should
- form the governing body,—elect a Superior,—that the votes
- should be in proportion to the money contributed. That all the
- money should, after paying maintenance, be expended, after
- leaving a moderate reserve fund, on providing some charitable
- work, and that the members should, at the will of the Superior,
- be assigned to any post she may think fit.
-
- ‘The work should be primarily teaching or assisting in some way
- in educational work amongst rich or poor, specially religious
- teaching, to which, it is hoped, some members will chiefly
- devote themselves, _e.g._ by lectures, by corresponding with
- those who need advice or help in religious matters, opening the
- house to receive as visitors any who need a time of quiet and
- retreat doing mission work at home and abroad. There should be
- only a very simple rule to be signed by the workers. Prayer at
- morning, evening, and midday; and such special rules as seem
- desirable. A holiday in proportion to the character of the
- work. The dress should be simple, but not conspicuous, and some
- badge should be worn by the members.’
-
-In this connection it is interesting to read this extract from a letter
-written to a teacher who was unsettled as to her vocation, and was
-contemplating entering a sisterhood:—
-
- ‘_April 89._
-
- ‘I was much interested in your letter. I feel strongly that
- when in God’s Providence we have been trained for one work,
- we should not lightly turn to another. As you say, there is
- more scope in a large sisterhood. Miss —— is very happy at
- Clewer. Still, I think the rules of an ordinary sisterhood are
- difficult to combine with the life of a teacher. I cannot help
- thinking that out of the Society of the Holy Name may grow up
- a somewhat freer teaching sisterhood.... I hold strongly that
- there ought to be some women, whose energies should be devoted
- to sending out young teachers, with a true sense of their
- vocation. You have gifts as a teacher; you ought not, it seems
- to me, to bury them....’
-
-Among the women whose saintly lives were a source of inspiration to
-Dorothea Beale, there was one whose acquaintance (so to speak) she did
-not make until herself in mature life. None the less did the name of Mary
-Astell become a thought of encouragement and hope to one whose heart
-was ever fresh. When in 1890, after various unsuccessful experiments,
-a properly managed house was opened for the regular teachers in the
-College, Miss Beale named it Astell House, after the lady who, in the
-reign of Anne, put forth ‘a plan of a College for the higher education
-of woman, which should be at the same time a religious house. The ladies
-were to spend some time in study as well as prayer, Mrs. Astell holding
-that they had as much right as men to improve their minds.... Their
-special work was to be the education of girls of the higher class, and
-also, if their means would admit, of the daughters of poor gentlemen,
-who must otherwise remain untaught.... Mrs. Astell’s scheme aroused
-considerable interest, and an unnamed lady (supposed to be the Queen)
-was ready to give £10,000 for the foundation of such an institution;
-but Bishop Burnet, who seems to have been consulted in the matter, put
-an end to the plan, saying it would be too much like a nunnery.’ Miss
-Beale certainly wanted a nunnery no more than did the timorous Bishop. As
-time went on she cared less for the outward shape the spirit she strove
-to foster might adopt; but she grew more and more earnest and active in
-seeking to influence young teachers to become serious and high-minded
-and self-sacrificing. The Quiet Days, which were instituted chiefly to
-this end, affected many wholly outside the College. They are therefore
-better mentioned in connection with those other interests which, to
-borrow her own nomenclature in the Magazine, may be included under the
-title of ‘Parerga.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-TEACHER AND PRINCIPAL
-
- ‘Languor is not in your heart,
- Weakness is not in your word,
- Weariness not on your brow.’
-
- M. ARNOLD, ‘Rugby Chapel.’
-
-
-A true history of the Cheltenham Ladies’ College would not be merely a
-faithful record of dated events, of building, enlargement, expansion, of
-the introduction of examinations, of distinctions gained; it must also
-suggest, if only in outline, the working of the spirit which informed the
-whole, that by which it grew and became, in spite of its size and the
-different elements it embraced, homogeneous in itself and full of force.
-
-[Illustration: _Photo. G. H. Martyn & Sons._
-
-_Ladies’ College and Garden 1908._]
-
-That she was but one worker among many, that she was only part of an
-‘order’ which must be temporary, were facts ever before Miss Beale’s
-eyes. Those who remember their school-days at Cheltenham with love
-and gratitude think not only of the Principal, but of many others,
-some of whom passed out of sight before her, some of whom are still
-faithfully carrying out the ideas she inspired, but whose influence,
-like her own, left an abiding impression. One spirit, one aim, an equal
-strenuous effort were what she strove before all things to gain for her
-fellow-labourers, and did undoubtedly to a marvellous extent produce
-throughout the College. Though Miss Beale did occasionally make mistakes
-in her choice of workers, expecting too much, or perhaps taking too much
-for granted, this was very rarely the case where class-teachers were
-concerned. These, who had the responsibility of forming character as well
-as of giving instruction, were always teachers whom she thoroughly knew
-and trusted, and had generally trained herself. By these, the thought and
-inspiration of the Head were handed on. But beyond this, all who passed
-through the College, even if they did not have the opportunity of knowing
-Miss Beale personally, came in contact with her in one way or another.
-Even the youngest heard her Scripture lessons; all the pupils in Division
-I. had their marks read by her, and thus came individually before her.
-Those who were confirmed while at school were brought into closer touch
-with her, and many through some incident in their school career, or
-through peculiar circumstances of home life, learned to know her as a
-friend. The highest class in College, and the pupils who were hopefully
-named B.A.’s, saw a good deal of her even to the end. And from first to
-last in her long headship, it was possible for any child, big or little,
-in any part of the College, to know the Principal,—by herself taking
-notice of her. Miss Beale’s fastidious honesty, which led her to dread
-even the least appearance of stealing hearts away from home, largely held
-her back from making personal friends among the girls still at College.
-‘Yearned to be loved,’ she wrote once in her diary; but consistently
-brought to her work a special gift of self-sacrifice in never seeking
-affection for herself personally. She had, moreover, a horror of the
-unhealthy attachments which are often a source of danger in girls’
-schools. In this connection may be read one of her many letters to Miss
-Clara Arnold:[67]—
-
- ‘Yes, you are right, that does point to a fatal error. If we
- make our children lean on us (broken reeds), they will not
- stand long. If they make an idol of any human being, when the
- idol is broken their faith goes too. We must try to bid them
- fly upwards into the sunlight; they must not tumble about on
- the ground like those poor birds whose wings are clipped. They
- must look up, not to us, but with us, to our common Lord. What
- miserable, weak, sickly creatures many women are, who must
- always have a Pope. The children should give you respect and
- esteem, and you can give them sympathy and affection too, and
- as they are children they may have a helping hand, but make
- them give up, if possible, sentimental worship. They must not
- do right for love of you, but because it is right.
-
- ‘How fight against this? Well, tell the children some of these
- things, and talk it over with Miss —— and the other teachers.
- There must be harmony of action. I speak strongly, because I
- have seen this spirit eat away the higher life of one large
- school. I have such a dread of its getting in here.
-
- ‘I know there must be a certain amount of hero-worship in the
- young. They need help from parents and teacher, but we must
- train them out of dependence. This sort of thing, too, leads
- to injustice to those who are not worshipped. They are “puffed
- up _for_ one, against another.” They waste time and strength
- in day-dreams about their idol. When a little older they are
- always fancying themselves in love, because they have got used
- to an excitement of feeling.
-
- ‘I feel inclined to say I wish I could help you more; always
- ask me if you think I can. But I advise you chiefly to make
- this a subject of prayer. I say daily that Collect for
- Whitsunday, about a “right judgment in all things.” Then I
- think I should see where the evil is most apparent, not speak
- to the whole class but to some few. Very likely, if you try
- to prevent this wrong worship, you will create an antagonism
- which will give you much trouble; such affection easily turns
- to hatred.... This sort of thing does make homes so unhappy
- because the wife takes “tiffs.” Try earnestly to brace them, my
- dear child.’
-
-Miss Beale’s own shyness also stood in the way of her personal intimacy
-with her pupils. She liked to be met more than half-way. She liked the
-birthday-book brought to her to sign,[68] the rare wild-flower found and
-gathered for her, the little note of sympathy or inquiry or thanks. A
-hundred reasons would keep most girls back from taking the simple steps
-which would have led them early to find a friend in Miss Beale. While
-they were reverencing in silence and at a distance there would come along
-some bright thing of quick perception, accustomed to society and to be
-welcome everywhere, untroubled by self-consciousness, who would approach
-the throne with no ‘unaccustomed awe,’ but stand, and chat, and smile,
-and be obviously acceptable to the lonely sovereign. ‘You know, A.,’ she
-said once to an old girl, ‘it was your freedom from shyness with me that
-first drew me to you.’ And, as a matter of fact, Miss Beale was really
-the most accessible of sovereigns. She longed to know all her children,
-and to help each personally. It was only a girl whose career was very
-short or wholly uneventful, and led in the lower classes of the school,
-who could remain wholly unacquainted with her. Even then, it would be
-found that the ten minutes’ individual talk which the Principal had with
-each as she left the College finally, impressed itself on the mind of the
-hearer. Her sympathies were ever most readily drawn out by those likely
-in after years to exercise influence—in some prominent, possibly Imperial
-position, or as teachers.
-
-At all times a silent, strong, unconscious impression was produced upon
-most by Miss Beale’s rare absence from her post, her minute attention
-to her own share of the work of the College, her obvious self-devotion.
-‘I can’t picture the College without her, she always seemed to be
-everywhere,’ one wrote after her death. Another said, ‘Although she might
-never speak to you, still the fact that she was not there on any day
-always made the College feel strange and empty.’
-
-Her memory for all who had passed through the College was simply
-extraordinary. A married pupil, visiting Cheltenham after many years’
-interval, writes of her amazement at finding that Miss Beale could tell
-her of every girl she had been with in class, and in many cases by whom
-she had sat, whom she had liked, and so on. Another, who was for two
-years at the College, only spoke twice to the Principal during that
-period, and left without the least idea that Miss Beale could know her
-as an individual. Two years after leaving the first great sorrow of
-her life came, in the death of her class-teacher, Miss Aitken. ‘That
-friendship,’ she writes, ‘had never degenerated into any foolish or
-selfish attachment. I still count it as one of the strongest motives of
-my life.’ In the deep grief over her friend’s death came a letter from
-Miss Beale: ‘Just the fact that she remembered and understood was like a
-revelation. It was through that that I first realised the possibility of
-the individual love and care of God.’
-
-Naturally, it was in the earliest days, when the first class was small
-and Miss Beale taught many subjects herself, that an intimate tie between
-the head and the pupil was most easily formed. But Miss Beale’s wonderful
-freshness of mind and heart enabled her to continue not only the old
-friendships so made, but yearly to make new ones. She had a wonderful
-way, too, of maintaining friendship. A girl might pass through the school
-knowing her but a little, but loyalty to College fostered by the Guild
-meetings would each year bring her into closer touch with the Principal.
-‘I hope we may meet again,’ she wrote in 1876 to one who had had a deep
-love and reverence for her, but not much more than a slight acquaintance
-with her in College. Twenty years after, when events drew them together
-again, a close mutual friendship which greatly brightened Miss Beale’s
-declining years grew out of the seed sown so long before.
-
-Miss Beale herself held that the influence of the Principal on the school
-should be through the teachers. ‘She can do more with five hundred if she
-has a staff thoroughly in sympathy with her than if she brought direct
-personal influence to bear upon a school of a hundred. “If you want a
-thing done, do not do it yourself,” should be the motto of a ruler for
-everyday use. Act through others, educate them thereby to independence,
-and reserve your strength for things that none but a Head can do.’
-
-In teaching, Miss Beale’s definite aim was to inspire. She sought but
-little to inform, but much to kindle a thirst for knowledge, a love
-of good and beautiful things, and to awaken thinking power. This she
-undoubtedly did, though the process was slow; working itself out quietly
-in the mind and character of those she taught, in nobler views of life,
-more refined appreciations, improved sense of proportion. When there was
-a question of preparation for examination, or of the definite knowledge
-such as was required in mathematical subjects, it was necessary to
-supplement the lessons of the Principal. Yet her teaching of the exact
-sciences was hardly less illuminative than of those which make a more
-direct appeal to the imagination. She would interest the class in a
-mathematical problem, induce the mind to work, leave it at the end of a
-lesson impressed and roused, but at the same time not clear about the
-subject she had been putting before it. Then afterwards the explanation
-up to which she had been leading would often come like a flash to the
-puzzling brain.
-
-Naturally the teaching of history was a great opportunity to one who
-could so clothe her subject with life. In this she was more than merely
-picturesque and vivid, she would allow her own delighted interest to show
-itself. Who that heard them could forget her lectures on the reign of
-George the Third, in which she and her whole class were transported to
-the old Parliament House, listening, it might be, to the younger Pitt’s
-maiden speech, or to some stirring debate between him and his rival,
-hearing the applause, the dissentient murmurs, even a joke under the
-breath of some listener? She would lead up to a climax with dramatic
-force. With what astonishment did her audience hear, as if it were a
-startling piece of political news of their own day, of the Coalition
-Ministry![69]
-
-The study of history has now become organised and scientific. Miss
-Beale’s own methods were out of date long before her death; she ceased
-indeed to teach the subject herself about 1874, but she never lost the
-enthusiasm with which she first entered upon it. As an example she was
-always anxious that those who were lecturing on history should adopt the
-views she considered just about certain personages. Once, when the Tudor
-period was being studied in the College, she summoned the teachers, as
-the school hours ended at one o’clock, into a classroom to hear what she
-believed to be the truth about Cranmer—with a few words making a terrible
-picture of time-serving and cowardice. On the other hand, she was always
-anxious that what was great in Elizabeth should be recognised; that every
-possible excuse should be made for her faults.
-
-But if Miss Beale’s methods of teaching history have been to some extent
-superseded, it should be remembered that she was among the first to
-insist on the importance of general history. Though assured of the value
-of detailed and special knowledge, she was not content to let one period
-stand alone unlinked with its context. She would not cut off the history
-of England as a thing by itself, but showed its place in the stream of
-time, in the lives of the nations. So almost every class was obliged to
-learn something of outline and general history, and here it was that the
-_Chart_ and _Textbook_ played so important a part.
-
-Miss Beale’s English literature lessons may, more than any others she
-gave, be described as _sui generis_. ‘Miss Beale gives literature lessons
-of a peculiar kind,’ was the appreciation of a new pupil who had studied
-the subject before coming to Cheltenham. Her literature lesson, indeed,
-had many functions. The subject became the vehicle of much teaching
-that it was not convenient to give in a Bible lesson. She sought to
-interest her class in books, in reading, in noble thoughts, in fine
-prose and poetry. But this was by no means all. She sought primarily
-to give views of life, conduct, and character such as would enable her
-hearers to go from school into a larger world, already prepared to know
-what to find. Under the names of friend and friendship much was said
-which might apply equally to the choice of a husband and to marriage.
-Knowledge of character, she would often say, is so important for women.
-Hence she liked, if possible, once a year to read and lecture upon one
-of Shakspere’s great plays to the first class. Though ever fresh and
-interesting, and herself as interested as ever in these readings, though
-the lectures were constantly brightened and enriched by new books and
-thoughts brought to bear upon them, there was very little variation
-in the treatment of the main theme. At certain crises in the story,
-over certain characters, hearers of long standing knew what to expect.
-Ophelia, to take an instance, was for all the generations of girls who
-read _Hamlet_ at Cheltenham the woman who failed a man because she
-could not dare to be true. A matter like this was vital to Miss Beale.
-Could any class-teacher in the College have represented Ophelia in any
-other light, the Lady Principal would have spared no pains to point out
-the error of the treatment, both to her and to those she had misled.
-Desdemona, again, was always marked as the wife who not unnaturally
-roused the suspicions of a jealous-minded husband, because he knew that
-in marrying him she had deceived her father. The misery that may follow a
-secret wilful marriage was always hinted at when this story was told.
-
-But there were other and less weighty considerations than influence and
-marriage in these lectures. They supplied opportunity for suggestions on
-simple affairs such as the choice of books, ways of spending time and
-money, manners, conversation, and the like. Often questions of the day,
-politics in a very general sense, and social problems were led up to.
-
-Miss Beale might be unacademic to a fault in these lectures, but she
-had that power of inspiration which made every poem she prized, every
-character she admired, live immortally for those who heard her speak
-of them. The actual reading—specially of poetry—was a delight to both
-reader and hearers. Miss Beale had a strong dramatic instinct, a keen
-enjoyment of poetry and the right use of words. She had also a wonderful
-voice, which she managed well, and though always quiet and restrained in
-manner carried her audience with her unweariedly. The literature lesson
-was long, specially in the early days when, owing to short distances
-and small numbers, no time was occupied by arrangements for prayers. For
-thirty or forty minutes corrected notes were returned and criticised,
-then the lecture proper would begin and go on for a full hour. Sometimes
-the whole time, an hour and a half, was taken up by the lecture. It was
-certainly very unusual for any one to find it too long.
-
-A further interest in these lectures lay in an effort to make them
-language lessons. As a matter of fact, though much interested in language
-herself, Miss Beale did little more than inspire a wish to study it
-further. Perhaps this was her aim in touching upon it at all. She would
-often bring to her lesson a table of Grimm’s Law, explain it very
-rapidly, and appear to expect that it should be as rapidly remembered.
-
-Miss Beale’s literature was by no means confined to Shakspere’s plays.
-All the greatest and many lesser works in the English tongue were taken
-in their turn. But she would seldom take the works of any whose thought
-seemed to her inferior; would have little, for instance, to do with
-Dryden and Pope. Style in itself had no attraction, and the growth of
-literary form, unless accompanied by the development of noble thought,
-was of little interest. No subject, perhaps, was more after her own
-choice than the poems of Spenser. She would dwell with unfailing delight
-on the complicated allegories of the _Faëry Queene_, or on the Hymns to
-‘Heavenly Love’ and ‘Heavenly Beauty.’ Nor was a school year ever allowed
-to pass without her introducing the higher classes in the College to some
-of Browning’s works. How many must have learned to know his greater short
-poems by hearing her read them.[70]
-
-But the subject with which the name of Dorothea Beale as a teacher will
-ever be associated is that of Holy Scripture. For this her greatest force
-was reserved. This was the soul of her work, as any who listened to her
-lessons with a hearing ear, or who marked the deep reverence prevailing
-in her class, could not fail to observe. Trammelled she was in many ways,
-at first by the narrowness which had almost prevented her coming to
-Cheltenham; increasingly, as time went on, by the numbers of her hearers
-who held opposing views on religion or who had no views at all; much
-always by her own dread of ‘offending’ or of hindering an earnest seeker
-for truth by a positive assertion. These causes made it inevitable that
-her teaching should seem to many vague or insufficient, since she could
-not bear to miss putting herself beside those who were as babes, unable
-to venture a step into the untried. An old pupil has well described this
-attitude:—
-
- ‘She did not go very much into every sort of detail, but I
- wonder what use can be made of doctrinal details by people
- whose general scheme of things is one into which they don’t
- fit? and that, I suppose, is the trouble of most people who
- are puzzled by such things at all. Whereas Miss Beale, in
- anticipation of this difficulty, always seemed to me to set
- forth a spiritual construction of the universe, into which no
- spiritual truth learned afterwards could possibly fail to fit,
- supposing it to be a truth in very deed. I do not see how any
- teacher can possibly do a greater work; though I do not say for
- a moment that she did no more.’
-
-Certainly in the weekly lesson to the whole First Division of the school
-she did a great deal more. Another old pupil may be quoted here:—
-
- ‘Speaking for myself, I can say without hesitation that it was
- from her that I learned the truth of the sacramental life.
- One thing she said to me, and she repeated it with emphasis
- at the time of my Confirmation, is as fresh in my mind to-day
- as the day she said it. Again, I can say for myself, and my
- reading has been fairly wide, that her influence has been
- entirely against any weakening of faith. Knowing something at
- least of her character and intellectual power, it was natural
- to feel that where she was steadfast one need not be afraid.
- More than that, her direct teaching by its sympathetic insight
- into the deepest aspects of life was always, and always will be
- inspiring. If it is true that there was something vague in her
- utterances, I believe it was because she had reached a plane of
- thought where the words which have become the current thought
- of everyday life are inadequate forms of expression.’
-
-If, in order to seek some erring spirit, Miss Beale did at times seem
-to neglect others, it must be remembered that in teaching the Bible,
-more than at any other time, she really took up the humble position of
-simply bringing her hearers to think and listen for themselves. This
-was the intention which lay below the reverent behaviour exacted from a
-Scripture class. By means of this she strove to impress the importance to
-the hearer of being still, ready, attentive, free from selfish or idle
-thought. She prepared not only the lesson, but also herself to give it,
-with a devotion and self-denial which she never allowed to become relaxed
-by pressing business, age, or infirmity.
-
-Not only was Friday evening strictly kept for the final preparation
-of the lesson, but the ordinary details of school business attended
-to before prayers were put aside on the day it was given. No one in
-the College would have thought on those days of speaking to Miss Beale
-beforehand except on some urgent matter. Writing to a young teacher in
-1880, she said: ‘I used to prepare my lessons on my knees, (don’t say
-this to others). You would find it a help, I think, to do this sometimes.’
-
-This earnestness and diligence were shared by many of the class-teachers.
-In a short account of Miss Belcher, which appeared in the College
-Magazine of 1898, Miss Beale said: ‘Only those who knew her intimately
-were aware of the long study and extreme pains she took with her
-Scripture lessons. Every Friday at Cheltenham we used to meet and go over
-the Saturday lesson together.’
-
-The annual midsummer examination was no mere test of knowledge gained,
-but, like the weekly notes, a real exercise of thought. In this matter
-Miss Beale received the full sympathy and co-operation of the Rev. E.
-Worsley, who for many years examined the upper classes of the College in
-Scripture.[71]
-
-The subject of Miss Beale’s Scripture lessons was generally a Gospel
-or an Epistle. Occasionally she would take the book of Genesis, from
-which she would draw much instruction on Sin, Freewill, Faith. Perhaps
-her favourite subject was the Gospel of St. John. Remembering the
-Saturday class, the awe with which she would speak of the Logos, or with
-passionate devotion follow the sublime teaching of the later chapters of
-that book, the glowing ardour with which she would heap up fact and proof
-concerning the Resurrection, occur at once to the memory.
-
-Letters to old pupils who had become teachers in other schools show Miss
-Beale’s reasons for dwelling on certain points. To Miss Wolseley Lewis,
-head-mistress of the Graham Street Church High School, she wrote in 1897
-concerning 1 Cor. vii.:—
-
- ‘Yes—I have taken it. There is no need to insist on every
- word. In reading one’s Bible some things are not suitable for
- children, but the teaching of those chapters regarding the
- sacredness of the body is extremely valuable. Robertson on
- Corinthians is very helpful.
-
- ‘I will see if I can find my notes, they would be useful to
- you; but you need not be afraid to take it, you will like it.’
-
-And again in January 1898 on the same subject:—
-
- ‘I have looked in vain for my notes on Corinthians. I think
- Robertson will give you much useful help in working out the
- more difficult chapters. It is very important with elder girls
- not to leave out the teaching which comes naturally out of the
- Epistle, on the sacredness of marriage, and the responsibility
- of choice,—on the certain promises that if we ask guidance
- it will be given. The example of Abraham in choosing a wife
- for his son may be cited,—the necessity of waiting for
- guidance,—praying for light until it comes, when we are called
- on to decide the most important question of our whole lives.
- One may insist on the duty of being so equipped that we can
- earn our own living, and not be tempted into the disgrace of
- a mercenary marriage. One may just touch upon the detestable
- teaching of some modern works, that our affections and acts are
- beyond our control. I feel sure you will find you can do much
- to help girls thus.’
-
-To Miss Arnold at Truro she wrote:—
-
- ‘As regards Acts: I should say not; because one is so much
- drawn aside to history and geography; but one may work in
- Epistles, etc., if there is an examination required. I made up
- my mind I would not take it again.’
-
-And again, in 1891, on the use of Scripture teaching:—
-
- ‘I think what we should do is to make it come home to the
- children in their daily life as a clergyman hardly can. We know
- their faults and temptations. I often take the baptismal vow. I
- really can’t find time to write much, and it is so impossible
- to suggest much. I am sure you will find things easier when you
- begin.’
-
-The immense detail of the teaching, following as it did the innumerable
-suggestions that one text might give, was sometimes confusing to a
-new class. A term’s lessons might be occupied with a few verses only.
-Then there is no doubt that Miss Beale’s large way of thinking and
-comprehensive form of expression was difficult to follow. This did not
-lessen with age. New pupils, particularly of late years, were often
-filled with despair at the prospect of having to write out the lessons.
-Many felt the Sunday work it involved to be a strain. This was less the
-case at first, when perhaps intellectual interests had more undisputed
-sway. The life in College, as in other spheres, has become more full and
-offers fewer spaces for uninterrupted thought. Sometimes a whisper that
-her Scripture lessons were too difficult reached the Lady Principal. It
-grieved her, but she never quite believed it. She wrote of it to Miss
-Arnold:—
-
- ‘I like you to tell me what is said, but then I do not like to
- know more.... There are others much older to whom I address
- myself, and I see they do enter more and more as the year goes
- on, and I am teaching more now for the future. I do think I
- fortify some more for the trials of their future life than I
- did when you were here. Those who cannot follow, ought to be
- put into a class where the teaching is less difficult. They
- do not say this, I hope, about my Monday lessons, only the
- Saturday....’
-
-The patient correction and explanation of the pupils’ essays on the
-lessons was not the least part of the Scripture work. How full,
-elaborate, and diligent this correction was will not readily be
-understood by any who do not know the Cheltenham system. But though Miss
-Beale wrote a great deal in the girls’ books, her corrections were often
-framed on the Socratic method so much prized by her. To take an example.
-A vague use of the word _infinitely_ has written against it, ‘Do you
-mean from eternity?’ ‘The _universe_,’ writes one pupil lightly, to have
-the word underlined and with ‘_Meaning_’ written above it. And she had
-a wonderful eye for thought and effort. No writer, however poor, whose
-work showed signs of these was discouraged. One writes of this:—
-
- ‘I have one of my old Scripture books, and on looking it over,
- for the first time for many years, I am most struck by her
- power of seeing good in the very crude attempts of a girl of
- sixteen. It seems to me marvellous that she, with her great
- intellect, could have put herself on our level, so as to see
- when we had _thought_, and to encourage us with the “s” and “g”
- that we valued so highly. I am afraid I used to look out more
- for the “g’s” than for the comments and corrections that showed
- how much pains she took _herself_ with each attempt of ours.’
-
-A good deal of enthusiastic drudgery was needed for the corrector of
-twenty or thirty Scripture books every week. Even Miss Beale found it
-hard at times, and would write:—
-
- ‘Much idle time again. At 10 P.M. Thursday not touched a
- correction. Thus unfaithful while I am so much helped.’
-
-And:—
-
- ‘Tired, but terribly negligent. Put off books in a really
- unpardonable way, and felt irritable at work.’
-
-In dealing with individual character, faults, and weakness Miss Beale
-showed no common tact, and often surpassing astuteness. To begin with,
-she was herself so well disciplined, so well attuned to the highest
-thought of work for others, that probably she did not even feel irritated
-by the errors and mistakes of her children. Certainly she never showed
-annoyance. It is impossible even to think of her being satirical or
-sarcastic either in teaching or in dealing with faults of manner or
-character. She would have considered it unpardonable in an under-teacher
-to be so, almost as reprehensible as to treat or speak of a child as
-stupid. She had indeed a special love for ‘ugly ducklings,’ in whom she
-would frequently perceive and draw out a latent swanhood.
-
-Some things—such as what she termed the ‘petty larceny of her time’ by
-those who prolonged an interview by aimless small talk—did irritate her;
-but she would no more have been annoyed by the shortcomings of a child
-than a doctor would be at the illness of a patient. Though able to adapt
-herself spontaneously to individual characteristics, she had certain
-distinct lines along which she worked. Dealing with ordinary childish
-faults she would make no appeal on high religious grounds, used no set
-or stock phrases. Always, in big and little things, she would show the
-child some ground for expecting right action from her, pointing out
-something probably connected with her home which, a legitimate source
-of satisfaction, should be also a spur to do well. Or she would treat a
-rebellious act in such a way as to rob it of all its delight. An amusing
-instance of this was told by a writer in the _Guardian_ of November 21,
-1906: ‘On one occasion a very clever student, with an unruly temper,
-refused, because some one had annoyed her, to eat her breakfast on the
-day of an important examination. Her form mistress begged Miss Beale to
-persuade the girl to have at least some milk. She was sent to Miss Beale,
-and was greatly startled by—“I hear you are fasting to-day; for a temper
-like yours it is probably a wise discipline.” Nothing more was said, but
-the girl did not refuse her luncheon.’ Such homœopathic treatment was
-sometimes also applied to idleness, a rare fault in a schoolgirl. It was,
-in ancient days, occasionally known in the Third Division at Cheltenham.
-Quite rarely, in consequence, a little girl would be allowed to do
-nothing but sit still all the morning. No one had a chance of showing
-obstinacy. It was a relief to more than one young teacher to be told that
-‘You must never let a child have the satisfaction of holding out against
-you.’ If such a thing did occur, there was no contest, no opposition of
-superior power on the part of a teacher; a few, very few words from the
-Lady Principal would make the child see the futility and silliness of her
-attitude.
-
-A moral delinquency was, however, met with the very greatest seriousness.
-Parents were sometimes surprised at the extraordinary pains Miss Beale
-would take to obtain the confession of such a fault as copying a lesson.
-The slightest suspicion of dishonesty was always followed up at once, but
-the act was never brought home to the offender until there was positive
-proof. Then the way would be made easy for her, the lie prevented by
-something like this: ‘My child, I am sure you have too good a conscience
-to rest with such a thing as this upon it.’ Conviction and confession
-of a fault made it immediately possible to show how it came about,
-how it might be prevented in the future. Especially in the matter of
-untruthfulness Miss Beale would trace the outside fault to its source,
-showing it to be a symptom of some corrupting force within, cowardice,
-vanity, or idleness. In this connection it is well worth while to read
-her remarkable little paper on Truth.[72]
-
-One tale of her discrimination may well be told. A class-teacher received
-some anonymous letters which she took to Miss Beale, naming the girl she
-took to be the writer. Some days passed. The teacher thought the matter
-forgotten, when one morning Miss Beale said to her, ‘Send —— to me. I can
-see by her face this morning that she will tell me all.’ Miss Beale was
-not disappointed either in the confession or its effects.
-
-No one could reprove like Miss Beale. Her grief, her admonition were
-expressed not only with so much sympathy, but with such an absolute
-impersonal sense of rightness and justice, that it was impossible to
-resent them. ‘Nothing is more touching,’ she wrote in 1898, ‘than the
-penitence of children, when they find that we have seen the good which is
-hidden, and not only the evil that comes forth; that we know, not only
-what is done, but what is resisted.’[73] Any who had so failed became a
-special care. ‘We try,’ she wrote once, ‘to make her feel there is no
-anger at all, but sympathy and an anxious watchfulness which will, we
-hope, make her more watchful over herself.’
-
-To break the rule of silence was always regarded as a great fault. A
-careless pupil, conscious of breaking it only once or twice, would be
-surprised to find in her term’s report, ‘Disobedient to rule.’
-
-A girl whose influence was seen to be a source of evil—a single act or
-conversation might be enough to prove it—was instantly removed. Careful
-as Miss Beale was to let no pupil go who might by any possibility be
-induced to stay, she never hesitated a moment in a case of this kind. The
-extreme seriousness with which she regarded this may be gathered from the
-following letter to a head-mistress:—
-
- ‘This is grievous. How is it that girls were allowed to go
- out by themselves? I wonder, too, that Miss —— did not _see_
- there was something wrong. No girls can act thus without some
- unnatural excitement. Then are there no prefects in the house?
- no elder girls to be relied on?—no confidential servant? I
- don’t see how you can keep _any_ one of the three, but perhaps
- there are degrees of guilt. It was so different at ——. A girl
- began to _talk_ as she ought not—the younger girls told the
- seniors, the seniors came to ——; she told me, and within two
- hours the girl had left the house. There ought to be such
- confidence between the seniors and the head of the house, and
- constant vigilance over the girls’ characters and _insight_. I
- always feel that a school is at the mercy of one naughty girl,
- and we must never relax our vigilance. It is sad to think that
- they have degraded women in the eyes of all that know it.’
-
-Such instances are stated, not because it was continually the part of
-the Principal and her staff to deal with iniquity. On the contrary,
-the order and conduct of the school were singularly good,—the sense of
-duty, fostered by a call to exercise it rather than by precept, was
-unusually high. One means by which this was maintained was the constant
-collaboration of the parents. In all matters Miss Beale tried to take
-them with her, encouraged them to come to her, to talk over the children,
-spoke to the children about them, wrote to them on special matters, tried
-to get them to understand her aims. Her letters, too, show what pains she
-took to bring about a real co-operation. On one occasion no less than ten
-letters passed between Principal, parent, and class-teacher on so simple
-a matter as a child returning in the afternoon, according to a school
-rule, to do a lesson over again. Miss Beale won the child to see and do
-what was right, but she also wrote to the mother:—
-
- ‘I fear you have led your child to think there is a question to
- be settled now as to which is the supreme authority. Of course,
- if this is so, it is much to be deplored; it is something like
- a conflict between father and mother before their child. We
- so earnestly wish that the home and school should be one in
- spirit. If this cannot be, it is best, as I have already said,
- that the child should be placed in another school.’
-
-One letter to a parent on a matter of the same kind ended with this
-postscript: ‘Sometimes we cannot, and sometimes we ought not, to keep a
-promise made under a wrong impression. Consider Herod’s case.’
-
-Parents who did not send their children back on the right day, or who
-kept them at home for insufficient reason, always heard from her. She
-would write thus:
-
-‘Had I known how difficult it would be for —— to return, I should have
-advised her remaining here for her holiday’; or, ‘I know things are not
-considered so serious at a girls’ school as at a boys’ school, but no boy
-would be received back, I am sure, at one of our great public schools who
-had been absent without the leave of the Head-master.’
-
-On the other hand, Miss Beale was always most anxious to support the
-authority and dignity of the parent. Once, when this seemed not to have
-been done by a teacher, she wrote: ‘She saw when I pointed it out how
-very wrong it was even to hint to a child that I thought her mother in
-the wrong.’ ‘She was never tired,’ ran a notice by an old pupil after her
-death, ‘of impressing upon the girls that home must come first in their
-affections. It was indeed pathetic to hear her speak, as she did almost
-weekly in her addresses to the assembled divisions, of the beauty of the
-relation of a child to its parents.’
-
-It is impossible to do more than refer to the many letters which show the
-confidence and gratitude of the College parents, but, as an example, one
-from a father who held high official rank, on his daughter’s passing an
-examination in 1877, may be quoted, with its good wishes which were so
-entirely realised:—
-
- ‘Excuse my sending you one line of sincere thanks for your
- valuable (and inestimable, I may call it) friendship towards my
- dear daughter.
-
- ‘We were immensely pleased at her success, which we attribute
- entirely to the love of work instilled into her by your system
- at College generally, as well as by your personal influence.
- You not only obtain the respect and the devoted love and
- loyalty of your girls, but through them the admiration of their
- parents and all those who take an interest in their careers. I
- am sure few persons in the army of teachers are more highly
- esteemed than yourself, few for whom more hearty prayers are
- offered for a long, long life of usefulness.
-
- ‘We feel so proud of our [girl’s] success. With every good
- wish for the health and prosperity both of yourself and your
- glorious College,’ etc.
-
-Lastly and supremely, it was through Miss Beale’s own personal influence
-upon her teachers, her clearly defined example always before them, that
-the spirit of the College came to be what it was. She had the gift of
-inspiration in that rare degree which makes actual direction of less
-value. She did not neglect details; she would indicate minor matters
-deserving of attention which others would overlook; she often quoted
-at a teachers’ meeting the example of the great general who, on taking
-over a command, first paid attention to the boots of his men. But it was
-never necessary for her to harp upon little things, or to go personally
-to see if her wishes had been carried out. One, who had had some years’
-experience in teaching before she arrived at Cheltenham as a student,
-spoke with something like rapture of the College organisation as it
-appeared to her coming fresh from other places of education.
-
- ‘If I had a spare hour in the morning, it was useless to
- try and concentrate my thoughts on any study, I was simply
- fascinated by the superior attraction of watching Miss Beale’s
- government of her little kingdom. No monarch ever had more
- absolute sway over his subjects; all the threads responded to
- her lightest touch....
-
- ‘The College, as Miss Beale made it, was an organism, the
- product of inner forces needing constant renewal of vitality,
- not a vast machine, working without friction for the production
- of clever women.
-
- ‘Then, for the first time, my soul conceived the possibility
- of a beneficent Spirit watching over the general good, and yet
- caring for the needs of the humblest individual. Thus she,
- who so loved to point out that outward things are sacramental
- exponents of the invisible, became herself a channel through
- which I realised things unseen.’
-
-This influence was not gained through the more ordinary ways of intimacy.
-In one sense Miss Beale saw very little of her teachers, some, as the
-staff became very large, she hardly knew at all, though naturally with a
-few of the older ones she became more really intimate. There were also
-a few special instances of close friendship. Notably may be mentioned
-that of Miss Martha Brown, who came to Cheltenham about 1873, no longer
-young or strong. Her actual work in the College lasted but a short time,
-for her health soon failed altogether, though a keen mind, occupied and
-interested by a true love of knowledge and desire to impart it, kept her
-up for a year or so, until she was forced to resign herself to her last
-illness. For more than a year she remained in Miss Beale’s house, Miss
-Beale herself sometimes sharing with Miss Gore the task of nursing and
-caring for her in every way, holding it, indeed, a privilege to wait
-upon one whose spirit so soared above her circumstances,—she was poor as
-well as hopelessly ill,—one who, regarding the mysteries of science as
-a lesson-book given to man by God, did not weary in her study of them
-even when near the gates of death. Miss Brown is often mentioned in Miss
-Beale’s diary, and later her name occurs frequently among those who had
-passed beyond the veil, and whom Miss Beale specially loved to honour at
-a Guild meeting.
-
-With regard to the greater number of the staff, though it is to be feared
-that her dislike of spending trifling sums of money stood in the way
-of even small hospitalities, this can have been but a secondary reason
-why she did not see more of them. It was a principle with her to spend
-time on recreation only so far as would help work; it was a principle to
-use the short interviews which alone were possible among large numbers
-in the most economical way; finally, it was a principle that influence
-may be stronger and better for detachment from everyday occasions. To
-spend time on small talk would only fritter away good influence. Yet,
-in thinking of this, there must occur to the memory of some, at least,
-that she had a kind of dread of the word influence, as implying something
-personal, that she thought it dangerous to try to establish a sphere of
-influence, that she never consciously tried to acquire it. Once when a
-petition was put forward against the suffrage for women, Miss Beale, who
-declined to sign it, said that one reason urged upon her for doing so
-seemed so poor, namely, that the vote would impair the influence of women
-with men.
-
-One aim, a common self-devotion in all was what she desired. To further
-it meetings of the staff were constantly held, when she would speak
-serious words which would burn themselves into the soul of many a
-young teacher. Her intense earnestness impressed, her tremendous claim
-was irresistible. Nothing for self! all for those committed to your
-care,—your whole life arranged so as best to further your work! This
-was the claim she made, and to this she found response. Individually
-she helped much by a quiet word now and then, by a little unexpected
-note, sometimes by a long letter. One young teacher, who was apt to
-become excited in the enjoyment of her work, was surprised one morning
-to receive in the midst of it a little note, which, when deciphered,
-ran, ‘My dear child, try to work quietly. We must not let good feeling
-go off in steam.’ Those who were long at Cheltenham could tell of many
-such instances of watchful kindness; letters to those who left to work
-elsewhere are full of it. She had a wonderfully keen perception for
-reality of intention and earnestness in work, and was quick to encourage
-any who showed these qualities. One who was long on the staff at
-Cheltenham has written thus of the help she received from the Principal
-when she first went:—
-
- ‘I often think of the days when I first began to teach, just
- a beginner. How Miss Beale encouraged and inspired one.
- I remember when she came in to one of my early geography
- lessons, an atrociously bad one, she spoke so kindly to me
- afterwards about it, and suggested that I should give up the
- subject for a time and study it before I taught it again.
- Later, she showed me a book with new ideas on the teaching of
- geography, and asked if I would try again. I did, and it became
- my special subject whilst I was at College, all through her
- kindly encouragement and help. She was always so delightfully
- sympathetic about one’s family and friends too, and she never
- forgot one’s home circumstances.’
-
-When it was necessary to find fault or alter an arrangement Miss Beale
-never shrank from doing what she believed to be for the good of the
-whole, even at the cost of personal convenience. But she was always
-careful not to reprove except in such a way as to leave an absolute
-sense of justice. There was no sting in her rebuke. And she could own
-herself wrong. She had no foolish fear about giving herself away. One
-member of the staff could tell of long and repeated application for an
-arrangement which she knew to be right, but which Miss Beale absolutely
-and bluntly refused. At last it was granted. Miss Beale herself came and
-stood patiently watching the removal of desks, etc., involved. It took at
-least an hour. When she had seen it finished, she said: ‘I see you were
-right in insisting on this.’ ‘She has given in, and I could die for her!’
-exclaimed the teacher, as she reported the incident to another concerned
-in it.
-
-It has often been said that the College teachers were overworked. It
-would be truer, perhaps, to state that too many chose to overwork, and
-that it was easy to do so. Miss Beale, who taught, read, wrote so much,
-interviewed people, conducted any amount of College business, and yet
-found time to write upon Browning or the Fourth Dimension, was unable
-rightly to estimate how little a young woman of average intelligence can
-do. She had to learn it by actual experience of cases, and she tried to
-learn it. She was always anxious to readjust a burden, took infinite
-trouble to do so, but did not always realise the weakness of many a
-willing horse, or the want of common-sense, which will make people
-heap up tasks or work without plan. She never wanted to play herself,
-could not understand that any one should seriously wish to do so; she
-therefore regarded such a thing as the teachers’ tennis-ground as quite
-superfluous.[74] Nor could she understand why any should wish to live
-out of sight of the place of their work. Even in the summer holidays
-she frequently chose the Sanatorium for a residence. Her own house was
-gradually absorbed by the College buildings, until it became almost
-as shut from the outer world as the women’s apartments in an oriental
-establishment, with no proper air and light of its own, only such as
-was derived from the surrounding corridors of the beloved College. Miss
-Beale preferred it should be so. Yet this attitude was but the defect
-of the great qualities by which she was enabled to make a complete
-self-surrender, and to call upon others to do the same ‘for the work’s
-sake.’ The only teachers who really felt ill-used or misunderstood, and
-who perhaps had some genuine ground for their complaint, were those
-who were unwilling to take trouble over fresh methods and subjects,
-or who were unable to rise to the high standard put before them,
-innocently thinking that the profession of a school-mistress was just
-an interesting occupation, or a means of earning a livelihood. Yet the
-practical side had its place. It was to Miss Beale’s foresight and
-initiative that the Pension Fund was in the first instance due.
-
-Miss Beale’s letters to Miss Clara Arnold, with whom she had a close
-correspondence from the time Miss Arnold left the College to become a
-teacher until her death in March 1906, show at once her ideal, and her
-close individual care for her own child. Some of the most interesting are
-quoted here:—
-
- ‘May God bless you and prosper your work. You look to me too
- eager,—will you understand my word? Try to feel more what I was
- saying to-day, that work is not ours but God’s, and so we may
- look up peacefully, trustingly, committing our work to Him. If
- we try to serve Him in sincerity, He will perfect that which
- is lacking. Are not those chapters in Ezekiel comforting, when
- we feel our shortcomings, and that we sometimes lead children
- wrongly? Because the shepherds made them to err—“I myself will
- be their shepherd.”’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘_June 1881._
-
- ‘I wish I could help you, my dear child. I have copied out for
- you parts of an address given to teachers some years ago by Mr.
- Body.[75] I took notes of it and send some to you. You must not
- let your spiritual life die down, you must get oil to burn in
- the lamp of your being: that spirit of grace and life and light
- of the soul. Such times of dryness do seem to be sent at times
- to try our faith; whether we serve God for His gifts and the
- joys of religion, but often they are the result of disobedience
- to the Voice of the Spirit. “Because I called and ye refused,”
- etc. Some unfaithfulness to what we knew to be right, some
- self-indulgent ways, some sloth. Sometimes there is a sin
- unknown, and God would make us search it out; sometimes hidden
- like Achan’s piece of gold, it causes us to turn our backs on
- our enemies. We have to find out and acknowledge the sin.
-
- ‘I don’t understand about your Sundays. I find I need so
- much that quiet day. I think you should _resist_ making it a
- _social_ day, as friends expect,—have a good portion alone for
- prayer and study—for the study of rather deep books. “Build
- yourselves up, beloved, in your most holy faith.” Take portions
- of the Bible and work them out with good commentaries, above
- all with prayerful study.
-
- ‘Do you intercede enough? If our prayers become selfish they
- lose life. Remember the cruse of oil.
-
- ‘I wonder if you could sometimes go to St. Peter’s, Eaton
- Square, to a Bible class, which Mr. Wilkinson holds generally
- once a fortnight on Fridays after afternoon service. I should
- like you to see him; but I care for his teaching on Sundays
- less than on week-days. It is a fashionable congregation and
- the church crowded, still I wish you would go, because he seems
- to feel the presence of a living God more than almost any one I
- have heard.
-
- ‘Do you go to Church now or to the Brethren’s services? To me
- the Church services and seasons, and especially the silent
- half-hour while others are communicating, is full of teaching.
- “I will come to them and make them to sit down to meat and will
- serve them.” Do you know the “Imitation”? If not, let me send
- you a copy. Perhaps God speaks to _you_ better in other ways.
-
- ‘Have you let opportunities slip of helping others? Now see if
- there is some one to whom you might give a cup of cold water.
- Thank God for such an opportunity, and ask Him to refresh your
- own soul and He will, but you must be patient. Not at first
- does He answer. Partly this dryness is to teach you humility
- and sympathy.
-
- ‘I would recommend you to be sympathetic in spite of it. Make
- some definite rule for devotion and _keep_ to it.
-
- ‘Be particular about _time_, one may waste so much in mere
- talk; have some rule and respect it.
-
- ‘Take a little time at mid-day for prayer. Then if you don’t
- feel right, just go on quietly and untroubled, trying to _do_
- as well as you can.
-
- ‘Read some daily portion on your knees and look up in faith. He
- “feedeth the young ravens that call upon Him.”
-
-To one who wrote that she found the character of the county in which her
-school was placed ‘detestable.’
-
- ‘I am most sorry about your finding the —— character
- “detestable.” If you have seemed called to work there, you must
- be intended to love them, to see what is good in them first,
- then what needs correction. I dare say their good qualities are
- just complementary to yours, just what you want.
-
- ‘How does your Bishop feel about the flock over which the Great
- Shepherd has made him overseer? and how does the Great Shepherd
- Himself feel towards our detestable characters?
-
-Many letters to young teachers dealt with the care of health, which was
-always impressed as a sacred duty upon girls and teachers alike. Body and
-mind should be kept fit for duty. Hence social engagements which would
-make it imperative to sit up late at night should be cut off as far as
-possible. Holidays should be spent in such a way as to gain complete
-freshness and rest and where there was no risk of infection, not even of
-taking cold.
-
-Here is one to Miss Arnold:—
-
- ‘I am so vexed to hear about this chronic headache. Remember it
- is one of your duties to God, Who has given you work, to keep
- yourself fit, so you must use every means. I dare say a tonic
- _would_ do you good.
-
- ‘Take warning too by —— and do not put too great a spiritual
- strain upon your soul; the body is to have rest and not too
- great excitement. There have been times of weakness when I have
- not dared to let myself feel,—not at church or I should have
- broken down. You are not as weak as that, I hope. I believe you
- ought to do less in the holidays.’
-
-Again, a month later she wrote:—
-
- ‘But I often think that you drive your _poor_ body too hard;
- if we do that, we have to carry “the ass” instead of the ass
- carrying us, and then we break down under the burden.’
-
-Here is a letter to another head-mistress:—
-
- ‘I do wish you would take a real rest and holiday. I feel sure
- it would be more economical in the end. You have led two lives,
- and for awhile I want you to lead none, go to sleep.... Those
- whom you have inspired will carry on your work, and then I hope
- you will come back with fresh energy to take up not all, but a
- part of the work you have done.’
-
-Miss Beale could also enter into the feelings of exhaustion and
-depression which follow some special trial connected with work. But the
-sympathy she showed was ever bracing, as may be seen in the following
-extracts from letters:—
-
- ‘I feel anxious about you, but don’t know what can be done,
- and think that the school must suffer if you let these private
- troubles occupy your field of vision.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘I am grieved that you are feeling so exhausted. If your post
- is clearly at Truro, if you have no call to leave it, then you
- must brace yourself again, and the work _will_ be done all
- right, whether in joy or sorrow. If God has given it you, He
- will give the strength to do it. We are inclined to lie like
- the impotent man thinking “I can’t.” Directly we hear Christ’s
- voice—we can! but it may be this body which you starved and
- ill-treated and worked so hard—“the ass,” as St. Francis, I
- think, called it, has been overdriven.’
-
-There were many teachers who heard from Miss Beale just at the moment
-when they seemed to need help. A few words of encouragement would come at
-such times as the beginning of new work. To one she wrote always for the
-opening day of the term. Two such letters follow:—
-
- ‘_January 18, 1897._
-
- ‘I am thinking of you on this your opening day, and this text
- seemed given me for you. “Be strong, and He shall comfort
- (strengthen, _i.e._) thine heart, and put thou thy trust in the
- Lord.”
-
- ‘Try, my child, to live more this year for your children, and
- to enter, as you are doing, more into the thought that to save
- our lives we must lose them.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘_September 18, 1899._
-
- ‘I have been thinking about you, and supposed you would begin
- to-morrow.
-
- ‘What a glorious Epistle for this week. May you be strengthened
- with might by the Spirit, and be filled with all the fulness of
- God. His power does work in it, above all that we ask or think.
-
- ‘The prayer in “Great Souls” speaks specially of those worn
- down by sickness. I am sorry you feel weak, but the heat has
- tried every one, and I think you will revive when your children
- gather round you.
-
- ‘Perhaps this sort of class will be better for you, and I think
- you are suited for it, because you are sympathetic, and will
- encourage those who feel themselves backward or not clever, to
- use the powers they have, to do what they can. May our Lord
- bless and comfort and guide you, my dear child.’
-
-The College was not an easy place to leave. Miss Beale was proud of the
-number of head-mistresses she sent out, but she grudged parting with her
-best teachers. And there were many who, like Miss Belcher,[76] sacrificed
-their own interests to that of the College.
-
-The following is a characteristic letter on the subject:—
-
- ‘_February 1894._
-
- ‘Miss Wolseley Lewis, who has been here nineteen years as pupil
- and teacher, who is B.A., gold medallist, all round, a charming
- character, good churchwoman, excellent influence, has come to
- ask me for a testimonial! I wish I could write she is horrid!
-
- ‘I am losing Miss Edmonds, another gold medallist, and so good
- all round, because she wants to be M.D. and missionary. I think
- it is cruel to take people at this time of year. Is there any
- chance of Canon Holland waiting?’
-
-But when Miss Wolseley Lewis went to Graham Street, she wrote to her:—
-
- ‘You have been much in my thoughts this last Sunday. The sorrow
- of this year[77] seems to have drawn us nearer, and it is hard
- to part with you; but I feel you have been called to this work,
- and I am in the depths of my heart glad. May you in some degree
- realise the life of the ideal woman, through the indwelling of
- the Holy Ghost.’
-
-‘I have known her,’ wrote a head-mistress after the death of Miss Beale,
-‘for thirty-six years now, and she has been the truest and most valued
-of friends to me. How we who are head-mistresses of smaller schools will
-miss her advice and help it is difficult to express.’
-
-And Miss Beale could be most generous in parting with her best even in
-obedience to the claims of ordinary life, claims which she did not find
-it easy always to recognise. The following letter gives an example of
-this:—
-
- ‘There can be only one answer under the circumstances,—you
- feel you could not return, and I should feel as you do in your
- place. It is a great blow to me, for we have learned to feel
- such trust in one another, and one cannot trust these young
- teachers to every one.... I shall miss from my staff one whom
- I had learned to regard as a dear and faithful friend and
- fellow-worker.’
-
-Many more extracts might be made from Miss Beale’s letters to show her
-care for teachers and her supreme interest in all that concerned their
-welfare, but in many cases they suffer by separation from their context.
-Therefore, from the large mass of correspondence left, a certain number
-of letters dealing with various subjects have been selected to form a
-chapter by themselves.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-PARERGA
-
- ‘All the great mystics have been energetic and influential, and
- their business capacity is specially noted in a curiously large
- number of cases.’
-
- INGE, _Bampton Lectures_, Preface vii.
-
-
-One outcome of Miss Beale’s time of personal spiritual distress, one
-which bore directly on what she considered as St. Hilda’s work, was an
-arrangement made for the first time in 1884 for devotional meetings
-for teachers at the end of the summer term. After 1885, when a second
-gathering took place, they were held alternately with the biennial Guild
-meetings. Like much of Miss Beale’s work, these Quiet Days, as they were
-called, resulted rather from a definite idea than from a formal plan.
-Their arrangement and character appear to have been due to the occurrence
-of certain conditions and circumstances while Miss Beale was forming a
-decision to help others who might be suffering as she herself had done.
-Plans for this help began to pass through her mind as early as the summer
-of 1882, while she was herself, as she would have expressed it, ‘in the
-fire.’ In July 1882 she wrote to a friend:—
-
- ‘_July 25, 1882._
-
- ‘What occurred to me was this—that something of a more definite
- Retreat might be held for teachers during the vacation. Mr.
- Wilkinson had at Christmas some Quiet Days which were very
- valuable and helpful. Still these were not quite like a regular
- Retreat:—because very few who went were able to be really quiet
- in London lodgings, and so could not get the absolute silence
- and repose which make a Retreat valuable.... Most of the
- regular Retreats are too general to give teachers the _special_
- help, and many are so distinctly High Church, that one could
- not venture to recommend young teachers to go.... I _can’t_
- accept the decision “nothing can be done”; theories of distress
- which reach me as the old light seems to go out, and the dark
- waves close in, are too distressing. We cannot administer “a
- universal pill”; but we can to some extent support and comfort
- those who are passing through the darkness; one can out of
- one’s own experience tell them that the stars will shine out
- once more; one can teach some few simple lessons of faith and
- patience and hope; one can show that there are _a priori_ and
- _a posteriori_ grounds for the faith we hold,—though mysteries
- unfathomable remain in every department of thought; and in such
- a meeting, personal help and advice might be given to meet
- special individual difficulties. It is here that the Christian
- Evidence Society fails. Teachers have not time for _much_
- reading and there are masses of books, many of them containing
- very little matter and plenty of words and arguments, which are
- useless for our special difficulties. Of course Retreats are
- not simply for such intellectual treatment of doubts, and one
- would look for a quickening of faith by the special services
- and united prayers. So I thought it might seem good to hold
- some sort of Retreat in Oxford next year.’
-
-It was not till the beginning of 1883 while attending a Retreat in
-Warrington Crescent—a time to which she often recurred as of much help
-and strengthening—that Miss Beale was able definitely to consider what
-might be done. There were friends to whom she could turn, who took
-trouble to help her by thinking over the matter from her point of view.
-Among these may specially be mentioned the late Archbishop of Canterbury
-and Mrs. Benson, the late Bishop of St. Andrews, and Canon Body. To Mrs.
-Benson she wrote:—
-
- ‘_Epiphany, 1883._
-
- ‘Whilst others were rejoicing at the recent appointment I
- have been conscious of a mixed feeling, for the Archbishop of
- Canterbury will not be able to do what the Bishop of Truro had
- half promised, in the way of helping by some kind of Retreat,
- teachers who have difficulties of belief. Mr. Wilkinson has
- also been unable to give us the Quiet Days for which we had
- hoped. So some Head Mistresses, who were in Retreat, and felt
- the great need, asked for special prayers for teachers in
- Colleges and High Schools, and that some way might be found to
- help them. Mr. Body responded very heartily to our request, and
- desired us to make it the subject of our special petition each
- week during the year. Afterwards in conversation, he spoke of
- the valuable help you had been able to give, and this has set
- me thinking whether we could not ask you to make your knowledge
- and experience more widely useful.
-
- ‘Our main difficulty would be to meet the doubts of those who
- have them, without suggesting doubts to those who have not been
- called to encounter this trial.
-
- ‘It has occurred to me, that perhaps there might be something
- on the model of the Guild for the Sick, combining the principle
- of the “Instruction by Correspondence” classes.
-
- ‘ ... Perhaps you may think me intruding—my acquaintance with
- you is so slight—and unpractical, but the need is great and
- immediate, and I think you will feel this too. I have gained
- such painful experience, both from within and without, of the
- misery of those who have once seen and then lost the sight
- of the invisible; those who have left, especially those who
- become teachers, often turn to me for help, which I feel so
- incompetent to give, and which I have not time to do properly.
- One is writing to me now, who is in a school in which there are
- sixteen teachers, ten of whom have given up all outward sign of
- the religious life. I long to be able to refer those who need
- guidance to some who are able to help them. Every other trial
- can be borne, but this is utter misery.
-
- ‘ ... It is not enough to preach sermons, and print books, as
- well might we furnish a treatise on Arithmetic to a child whose
- sum is wrong; we must find out and show why it is wrong. The
- Church did not make its way by such means at first, at least
- not without daily discussions “in the school of one Tyrannus.”
- Of course I do not overlook that some of the difficulties of
- belief are moral, but these could be met by the means I suggest.
-
- ‘I think it is _very_ important that members should be able to
- enquire anonymously; come “by night” as it were, and should be
- assured that no one would try to find out the name.’
-
-To Canon Body, who had sent her a letter full of sympathy and interest,
-she wrote:—
-
- ‘I am so glad you wrote thus freely, for it has made me
- understand better how much you can feel for those in this
- deepest sorrow, and yet have a sure and certain hope that they
- will rise out of that Hades. It is, as you say, most cheering
- to find movements of the same kind in different places. If
- there is a spiritual tide, the waters can only be lifted by
- extra mundane force.’
-
-Gradually the plan shaped itself. For a time Miss Beale hoped to be able
-to arrange at Oxford a Retreat followed by a conference, with lectures
-and discussions on theological subjects. This proved to be impracticable.
-Then she sought to carry out the plan at Cheltenham. She was advised
-to limit herself to two or three days of quiet study and devotion with
-addresses. She would not, however, relinquish the idea of some kind of
-conference. The scheme stated in the following extract from a letter was
-very much what was actually carried out:—
-
- ‘I hope the archbishop will be so good as to ask some one to
- give the addresses in the Quiet Days.... I should be there and
- a few of my friends, head mistresses, and we should make our
- subsequent lessons harmonise with the previous instruction,
- so that there should be unity. I do not mean to give lessons
- on _methods_ of teaching in the ordinary mechanical sense;
- but on our vocation and the moral aspects of our work, and
- then I thought we could get some one to give Bible lessons
- on the books set by Oxford and Cambridge, some one who knows
- the difference between dead and living teaching. We must have
- enough to occupy those who come for the whole month, though I
- expect only a few of those who come will remain so long. There
- will, I find, be a large proportion of earnest teachers who
- will be able to help and strengthen the weak.’
-
-The Rev. V. H. Stanton[78] kindly acceded to Miss Beale’s request to give
-the addresses at the three Quiet Days which opened the conference in
-1884. In the following year Canon Mason did this. It is noticeable that
-on almost every occasion the conductor of this Retreat for teachers was
-drawn from the ranks of Cambridge. The reason for this Miss Beale often
-explained, as in the following letter written as late as April 1904:—
-
- ‘I have had nearly all the book you sent read to me; there
- are some beautiful thoughts, but I don’t feel quite at home
- in the general atmosphere. It is difficult to describe, but
- I remember when Archbishop Benson was choosing a Conductor
- for our Retreat, he said one day, he would rather choose from
- the Cambridge school of thought. I asked him what was the
- difference between Cambridge and Oxford, and he said, “The
- latter began with the thought of sin, the former with the
- thought of the Divine Life in man.”
-
- ‘Some day when we meet I may be able to make clearer what I
- mean.’
-
-Mr. Stanton’s earnest sympathetic addresses were greatly valued by those
-who were present in 1884. Not less prized was the generous kindness of
-the Lady Principal in the weeks which followed the Retreat. Miss Beale
-not only gave frequent addresses on various subjects, continuing in some
-the line of thought begun on the Quiet Days, she was also constantly at
-the service of any member of the party for discussion or counsel.
-
-‘I expected certainly to see something of you,’ one who had been present
-wrote afterwards to her, ‘but that you would constitute yourself the
-mother of the party, be with us at meals, and do so very much for our
-improvement and entertainment was quite undreamt of. Indeed, we were all
-touched by it. I think those quiet days at the beginning gave a special
-tone of earnestness to the gathering.’
-
-Mrs. Soulsby wrote of the ‘help and comfort you gave to me and so many
-others by arranging that Retreat. I have never been present at anything
-so calculated to do steady and lasting good.’
-
-And many spoke of the ‘sense of fellowship’ which had been gained by
-meeting so many with like aims and interests; they told how they were
-going back to work with ‘new hope for the future,’ or with ‘many new
-lights and helpful suggestions to aid’ them. Some said the work of
-teaching had been represented to them in a new light, some that the
-conference helped them to a new start. One told how she was ‘in danger
-of making shipwreck when your wise counsel saved me.’ Another said: ‘One
-thing struck me very much, the fellow-feeling and anxiety to help that
-teachers who have been at Cheltenham have for each other.’
-
-More than a hundred teachers, many of them belonging to Cheltenham, were
-present for the first days of the conference in 1884. Some twenty outside
-teachers remained for the whole month. The time was long enough to foster
-real intimacy. A great deal of time and thought had been devoted to
-arrangements beforehand, in order that all might get the utmost benefit
-from the time. In this Miss Beale received much willing co-operation from
-her own staff, and Miss Caines lent Fauconberg House and her servants.
-Miss Beale was specially anxious that during the Quiet Days all should
-have the opportunity of keeping well the silence which was observed.
-Those who had no rooms of their own had little sitting-rooms assigned
-them in the College, the music-rooms being available for this purpose.
-That part of the Cheltenham world which still regarded Miss Beale with
-suspicion and to whom a Retreat appeared, even as late as 1884, to be a
-dangerous High Church innovation, raised a cry of alarm. The music-rooms
-had been turned into cells! It is not known what the word implied to
-those who made the outcry, and it was soon silenced, but it caused a
-little annoyance at the time.
-
-The month passed in teaching and helping, though gladly given out of her
-own holidays, was an undoubted physical strain to Miss Beale. She wrote
-to Mrs. Benson:—
-
- ‘I wish I had never said I would try to write a paper for
- Thursday at the Health Exhibition. I do not like to leave even
- for a day, as one ought to go on trying to help those who
- remain. We do feel so grateful for all the time and thought you
- and the Archbishop have been good enough to give us, especially
- in the selection of Mr. Stanton. For myself, I should never
- have had the courage to go on; (one gets nervous)....’
-
-And she was tired. The last entry in her diary for that month is this:—
-
- ‘_August 27._—End of month at Fauconberg. Last address not
- good, and result of neglect.’
-
-Yet Miss Beale probably felt such a strain far less than any other
-head-mistress would have done, so absorbingly interesting to her was this
-kind of work. She always looked back with great pleasure on that time.
-She treasured the letters she received afterwards from those who had been
-present, dated from it lasting friendships made with some who had come
-from other schools, and felt it had drawn her nearer to some of her own
-teachers.
-
-Miss Beale’s outside interests were concerned, as was natural, chiefly
-with education. With every educational movement made during the last
-fifty years in the direction of progress she became to some extent
-associated. She presided at the first meeting of head-mistresses held
-in 1874 at Myra Lodge, when the Association for Head-mistresses was
-founded with Miss Buss as president. ‘I see,’ said Miss Beale of this
-meeting in 1906, ‘it is recorded that I presided. My recollections
-are only of lying in great pain on the sofa and taking only a feeble
-part in the discussion. I little thought that I should be allowed to
-address a conference which more than thirty years after numbers over two
-hundred and thirty members.... At our first meeting certain principles
-were asserted which tended to settle some difficult questions.’ Miss
-Beale here doubtless refers to the very first resolution passed by this
-aristocratic body, which was to the effect that no school can work
-satisfactorily unless the head-mistress be entirely responsible for its
-internal management. Miss Ridley, in writing of Miss Buss,[79] (to ‘whose
-insight and foresight,’ said Miss Beale, ‘the founding of the Association
-was entirely due,’) has shown that the passing of this resolution was in
-itself almost a _raison d’être_ for the Association. For the rightful
-position of a head-mistress was not recognised without some difficulty
-and controversy. The governing bodies of girls’ schools could not at
-first be selected on the ground of interest and experience in educational
-matters. Another resolution passed on that occasion was to the effect
-that an examination to test the power of teachers is desirable.
-
-On the death of Miss Buss, in 1895, Miss Beale became president until
-1897, when her term of office expired. She never sought re-election, her
-increasing deafness making it difficult for her to conduct meetings. She
-thought a great deal of the importance of the Association and of the
-discussions which took place at its meetings, and strove in every way to
-render them not only earnest but fair-minded. ‘I hope,’ she said on one
-occasion, ‘that our assemblies will not become such as the discussions
-in Parliament, merely formal, every one having taken a side before and
-being unmoved by anything said.’ Miss Beale several times read papers to
-the Association, and in later years the deferential welcome she received
-from its members was very noticeable. Her last address, given on the
-request of the Association in June 1906, only a few months before her
-death, may be regarded as her farewell to the educational world.
-
-When the Association for Assistant Mistresses was formed, Miss Beale
-regarded it at first with some anxiety. She feared the clash of interests
-and promotion of suspicion between a head and her staff. Later, when she
-understood the work of the Association, she received it into favour, and
-on one occasion addressed a meeting of the western branch at St. Hilda’s.
-Members of the Association were welcomed, and sometimes spent the morning
-at College when they came over for branch meetings. Miss Beale, too,
-was always willing to let those of her staff who belonged to the A.A.M.
-Committee go up to London to attend meetings in term time, and was
-pleased when it fell to Miss Lumby, as President of the Association, to
-give evidence together with Mrs. Withiel, before the Bryce Commission in
-1895.
-
-The Teachers’ Guild, founded by Miss Buss in 1883, met with warm support
-from the head-mistresses of the Association. A branch was started at
-Cheltenham in the following year, and a paper by Miss Beale read, she
-herself being indisposed at the time. She used her influence with her own
-teachers to join the Guild, and frequently addressed the branch meetings
-on such subjects as the Value of Examinations. In the Froebel Society she
-was also much interested and subscribed to it regularly. When the Church
-Schools’ Company was founded in 1883, Miss Beale became at once a member
-of the Council. She was proud that the College supplied head-mistresses
-to both the Graham Street and Baker Street Schools.
-
-The hopefulness no increase of years or disappointment could abate, the
-open mind ever quick to receive what was good and original from those
-younger and less experienced than herself, were seen in the way Miss
-Beale greeted the work of the Child-Study Association.
-
-With her consent Miss Louch, then a member of the College staff,
-proceeded to America in 1894 to attend a course of lectures by Dr.
-Stanley Hall on child-study. On her return the Association was formed in
-Edinburgh, and in the same year a branch was started in Cheltenham, with
-Miss Beale as local president. Before her death she was president of the
-whole Association, and presided over the conference held in Cheltenham
-in 1906, the year of her death. When the _Paidologist_, the organ of the
-Child-Study Association, was started, Miss Beale contributed largely
-to the guarantee fund, and for five years was a member of the Magazine
-Committee. She promoted the work of the Association by trying to get the
-College staff, boarding-house mistresses, and parents of pupils to join
-and assist in it.
-
-Miss Beale was among those consulted by Miss Mason when, in 1888, she
-definitely sought to give the Parents’ Educational Union, which had had
-a successful year’s work in Bradford, a national name and character. The
-work of the society appealed greatly to Miss Beale, and the Cheltenham
-branch was one of the earliest founded. Her name appears among those of
-the vice-presidents in 1892.
-
-To pass beyond the limits of the work in which, from the fact of her
-position, the Lady Principal of Cheltenham was called upon to take
-a part, it may be noticed that she was always much interested in
-Sunday-school teaching, and wrote many articles upon it. Several of these
-have been printed. Her interest was caused largely by the numbers of old
-pupils who took up this work, and who came to her for advice about it,
-as well as to the congenial nature of religious instruction. Dissatisfied
-with the methods or want of method prevailing in many Sunday-schools,
-she had a high ideal of the work for the sake both of teacher and
-children, and was always ready with sympathy and suggestion. To an old
-pupil engaged on a paper intended to point out some existing ills in
-Sunday-schools she wrote in 1880:—
-
- ‘I should say begin with all the good done—the necessity for
- them at the time, etc. Then speak of the evils, and with
- each sort suggest a remedy, and admit that the evils are not
- universal. Try to put it in rather a different shape, and I
- think it would do good in overthrowing some self-complacency.
- Especially is it an evil when quite raw girls—some ignorant
- girls such as we have at College—pretend to teach. Children
- accustomed to proper teaching of course fidget. I should have
- been a little rebel myself, if I had had to hear the wretched
- stuff that some children do at Sunday School. But it does, when
- done properly, draw classes together.’
-
-Institutions and societies designed to help the poor of Cheltenham
-came of course before Miss Beale’s notice. She never, however, allowed
-herself to be drawn from the pressing requirements of her own work, so
-as to become acquainted with the details of that which, to some extent,
-grows up round every church. She was, indeed, on principle, chary in her
-support of this, maintaining that in a town there was generally great
-waste of funds and labours, owing to the lack of combination. She wrote
-as early as 1881 in reference to Cheltenham:—
-
- ‘I am so anxious that we should all work in the direction
- pointed out by our Rural Dean, get all Church people to work
- together as one, for works which cannot or ought not to be
- merely parochial, and in all charitable work, wherever it
- is possible, to get all, whether Church or not, to join in
- opposing all forms of evil.... I think we should take works
- in order of importance. I may be wrong, but I have regretted
- the erection of Church steeples when there was other work that
- seemed to me of more importance [left unsupported]. I think
- the increase of offertories in churches, good as it is in many
- ways, has tended to hinder united work in the town. I do not
- know whether there ever could be a sort of Council for the
- administration of at least part of the funds so collected;
- but it does seem as if the present plan gave too much to some
- districts and too little to others, and left some institutions
- which have a claim upon all, with scarcely any support, because
- what is everybody’s business is nobody’s.... The laity have
- very little influence in the distribution of money collected
- in churches, which tends always to become a larger proportion
- of what is given away, so that much of the power to organise
- united work must rest with the clergy. And _living_ forces,
- which are enormously more important than money, are wasted by
- “congregationalism.” Could there not be some larger association
- of Church workers from which some sort of administrative
- council might select persons suitable for any special work?
- Could not work sometimes be done collectively, instead of each
- clergyman doing it separately for his own congregation? I do
- hope that more and more, in one work after another, we may
- unite our forces, and if once people can be induced to look
- into the evils which exist at their very doors, they will be
- moved to work with one heart and mind to remove what is a
- disgrace to our town.’
-
-Among the institutions of Cheltenham, for which Miss Beale specially
-claimed the need of united action, was the Working Men’s College.
-She herself on one occasion read a paper there, her subject being
-‘Self-support and Self-government from the point of view, not of the
-individual, but of the College.’ The paper, simple and direct, shows how
-Miss Beale could throw herself into the minds of those she addressed,
-appealing to all that was best in them, while at the same time putting
-her own thoughts into them. It embodies her favourite theories of the
-danger of helping people through gifts:—
-
- ‘I do not think there are many belonging to this College
- who could not pay a few shillings annually. Self-denial adds
- value to energy.... Everybody does not agree with me. Some
- think you will misunderstand,—think we do not want help. I do
- not think you will, to judge by my own feelings. I like to be
- independent. You look at the Ladies’ College and say, “You have
- got all you want.” But time was when we were very poor, so poor
- that our Council said, ... we will have but another year’s
- trial and then shut up. We never said we would beg people to
- help us: we would make it self-supporting, or it should die....
- I feel certain if you working-men were to say, We will take
- the management ourselves, and it shall be a success, that it
- would be, and I think that if other people manage and pay for
- it, that some of the strongest and most independent would stand
- aloof.... I am quite sure that our College would not have been
- what it is if we had had money to fall back upon. I might
- myself have left the helm and gone to sit quietly in the cabin
- while the vessel drifted on to the rocks.’
-
-Among Miss Beale’s papers there exists a very simple address entitled,
-‘Is Death the End?’ She intended to read it at a little mission-room,
-maintained in a very poor street by her friends, Mr. and Mrs. James Owen.
-The subject was one which had taken strong hold of her fancy at the time.
-Some one had discovered a dragon-fly emerging from its chrysalis on a
-water-lily in the little pond which then existed in the Fauconberg House
-garden adjoining the College grounds. It was taken to Miss Beale, who
-saw enacted before her own eyes a living parable of resurrection-life.
-Her childlike delight in this came out in almost every Scripture lesson
-she gave that summer. The pond was watched for chrysalids; they were
-taken into the classrooms for the children to see the creatures creep
-out of their tombs, lie soft and sleepy for a little, then sail away
-on new-found wings. This true story of the dragon-fly and all it could
-teach of life, through death, Miss Beale longed to tell to Mrs. Owen’s
-poor friends. She wrote it carefully, and had little illustrations made;
-but the lecture was never given. ‘Mrs. Owen would not let me,’ she said
-sadly, ‘but I think I could have interested them in the dragon-fly.’ But
-Mrs. Owen was probably right, since the audience for whom the paper was
-intended was such as Miss Beale knew only in the pages of Browning’s
-_Christmas Eve_.
-
-In the work of the Church abroad, in the needs and claims of heathen
-peoples governed by England, in the various problems which arise out of
-these vast considerations, Miss Beale was interested only in a secondary
-way. That is to say, when they came before her in the work of her own
-pupils, when her girls turned to her for sympathy and help, then she
-would consider them enough to be able to form some definite opinion, and
-to give sound advice. The teachings of Hindoo religions and philosophy,
-and the progress of Christianity in India, came before her as matters
-of real interest in 1883, when Pundita Ramabai was sent by the Wantage
-Sisters to study at the College. Miss Beale received her with the utmost
-warmth and friendship. She made every possible arrangement for her health
-and protection: she not only put at her disposal every advantage the
-College could offer, but gave up a large portion of her own valuable time
-in order to help her personally. She welcomed Ramabai’s long letters on
-religious questions and difficulties, answering them at equal length.
-She obtained introductions and arranged interviews for her with many
-whom she thought could help her. Ramabai’s ‘appetite for philosophy’
-(to quote Miss Beale), her enthusiasm and unsparing devotion to the
-cause of her unhappy sisters in India, touched her deeply, and when
-the Home for Widows was established at Poona,[80] Miss Beale became a
-large and regular subscriber to it. Among her papers there is one which
-was perhaps sent to India, or was perhaps just one of those written
-expressions of some thought which had seized and filled her mind. It was
-evidently intended to be an appeal against the cruelty which made such
-homes for widows necessary:—
-
- ‘My heart,’ it runs, ‘is stirred by sorrow and pity for those
- suffering widows of India; but there are some whom I pity
- more,—those who inflict the sorrows on them, since it is far
- better to suffer than to do wrong.... But what grieves me,
- too, is the thought of the waste of all that wonderful amount
- of energy and life which God has given your country-women in
- order to bless others. If the men of India believe in God’s
- goodness and wisdom, as I think they must, even though they
- may not trust Him, they must think He has not made all those
- widows to be a burden and misery to themselves and others, but
- to do good work. What mistakes people make when they think that
- they are wiser than God.... I look forward to the future and
- rejoice and think that as India grows wiser with that wisdom
- which trusts the infinitely wise and good God, Whom we worship,
- she will send out her clever and good women, who are now
- crushed by sorrow and unkindness, into the rich harvest-fields
- of the world, will cheer them on in their work for others,
- and they will become a blessing; surely that is the only joy
- of a woman’s heart.... Not this only, there will be many who
- will gladly give up all thought of the happiness of wife or
- of mother, in its limited sense, and go forth to live for
- others.... I can remember when Old Maid was a term of contempt
- in England, but it is not so now; you have seen me and sixty
- old maids working together happy and content, and if I could
- send out a hundred women where I can now send one, I should not
- have too many, so constant are the demands for “old maids,”
- as you would call them,—for teachers, nurses, missionaries,
- and all sorts of good work.... India will some time feel all
- that her wasted women’s life can do. God will put it into the
- hearts of men and of the happy women, who are sometimes hard
- on the unhappy, to set these women free to do all that is in
- their heart, and other good women will teach them to use their
- precious gift of liberty as in God’s sight.’
-
-Ramabai undoubtedly made Miss Beale realise the need for definite
-Christian teaching in India. Here is an interesting extract from a letter
-on this subject:—
-
- ‘_1884._
-
- ‘Rama Bai is very learned and thoughtful, and says how
- powerless most missionaries are, for want of the knowledge of
- native philosophy and religion.... I thought that the native
- religions were feeding the higher life, but it seems not so
- now; but the state is much the same as in Greece and Rome just
- before the Christian era. She spoke much as Plato does in
- the _Republic_ about the character of the gods in the Indian
- poetry, and felt the wonderful power of the perfect Example,
- and the inward Grace to follow it.’
-
-On hearing of Miss Beale’s death Ramabai wrote: ‘It is over twenty-one
-years since I saw Miss Beale for the last time. But her sacred memory
-is quite fresh, and I seem to hear her pray and give Bible instruction.
-Her love and influence, her words of encouragement and her prayers on my
-behalf, have helped me much in my life and work.’
-
-In South Africa, a school at Bloemfontein, still more one at Grahamstown,
-became of interest at Cheltenham through the influence of Miss Strong,
-who prepared herself to work in them by some periods of time at the
-College. Many teachers at the Diocesan School, Grahamstown, were drawn
-from Cheltenham, and its association of old pupils was for a time
-affiliated with the Guild. Other old pupils went to India, China, Japan.
-As the number of Cheltenham missionaries increased, the importance and
-needs of their work became impressed more and more on some members of
-the Guild. In 1878 Miss Beale, whose own interest in foreign missions
-grew steadily in later years, allowed the formation of a Missionary Study
-Circle within the Guild.[81] This is the only special work other than
-that of the London Settlement she ever sanctioned, and this one was much
-safeguarded. When the _Occasional Leaflet_, the organ of this circle, was
-first published, she made it a condition that there should be no begging
-for money, nor even a definite urging of the claims of foreign mission
-work. She feared girls might be drawn by the attraction of distant and
-more heroic-seeming activities to neglect duty at home. And, as the
-present editor of the _Leaflet_ has remarked, ‘She hardly realised how
-careful societies are in selecting and training would-be missionaries.’
-
-On one occasion Miss Beale, by the request of the late Bishop of
-Grahamstown,[82] actually addressed a small missionary meeting. She began
-by saying:—
-
- ‘I have been asked to speak to you a few words to-day, and
- I have consented on condition that I should not advocate a
- cause. It is sometimes said, “Will you not collect money or
- bring forward such an institution?” and I say “No! my duty is
- to give principles, and to leave the definite application.”
- And if the carrying out of the principles deprives of helpers
- myself and the work that is nearest to my heart I am content,
- and so I am sure the Bishop is.’ She continued, ‘I admit there
- is sometimes a call to go abroad for those who want to serve
- Christ, and lack resolution to be cut off from home ties. We
- cannot so easily forget we are soldiers if we go out to an
- enemy’s country. We read in history of brave people who failed
- in war because when they had won a battle they could not be
- kept together; but disappeared into their own homes, and had to
- be got together again on the next emergency. So, I think some
- who feel themselves weak do well to join some army bound for
- foreign parts. They can’t run away on the first repulse, or
- give up when tired;—and the raw recruit comes back a veteran
- from his foreign campaign, able to lead the volunteers who
- have to be trained at home. Not only does a foreign campaign
- help us to break the bondage of self-indulgent habits, but
- it unites us too. There is nothing like going away from home
- and facing a common foe to unite us to those from whom we
- were severed. A neighbour whom we scarcely knew in Cheltenham
- is a friend at once in China or Africa. In the presence of
- unbelief Christians who are separated feel their differences
- in minor matters, matters of taste and feelings rather than
- of principle, to be insignificant;—and unite in the great
- battle against sin. Whilst, on the other hand, they feel the
- immense power, the great need of faith, living and real, to
- sustain them when the props of Society, of Church Services,
- of sympathetic friends are taken away;—they have to dig down
- to the rock.... In any case the battle must not begin without
- training and discipline. Useless women, because undisciplined
- in thought, in will, in action, what havoc they make! Having
- a name to live, yet dead;—these bring in confusion. Those
- who have not learned obedience, those who want credit for
- themselves, or excitement, never help to win victory.’
-
-There was one matter outside her own proper sphere of activity in which
-Miss Beale was never sparing of money or personal trouble. This was
-the work to which Mrs. Lancaster had first drawn her in her youth, the
-rescue and protection of women. It became, as life went on, specially
-linked with the memory of that other friend, of whom she loved to think
-as Britomart, rescuing her sister from the fire. When Mrs. Owen died, it
-was felt instinctively that her work for others must and should continue.
-There seemed no memorial so fit as a Home for Friendless Girls for one
-whose chosen task it had been to seek the lost piece of silver. Miss
-Beale translated, as it were, all her poetical thoughts, all her most
-tender memories into active co-operation, taking the chair at committees,
-addressing meetings, making known the needs of the Home, finding workers
-for it.
-
-Miss Beale herself had learned much since 1856. As time went on she felt
-less inclined to seek remedies for evil than to prevent its beginning;
-she looked more to causes than to resulting facts. When in 1885 Mrs.
-William Grey made an appeal for help in organising some definite movement
-among the mothers of England against the sins which create the necessity
-for rescue, Miss Beale responded warmly, urging her to come forward
-herself to lead it.
-
- ‘LADIES’ COLLEGE, CHELTENHAM, _August 5, 1885_.
-
- ‘DEAR MRS. GREY,—Your beautiful letter was sent me by an old
- pupil, who with her husband, Mr. Mitchell, is one of the most
- earnest workers in the cause. The labours they have gone
- through patiently and quietly for years are immense.
-
- ‘Well: it seems to me that we ought to have a Union, as large
- as the one you established, and which did such wonderful work
- before; but this time for—shall I say shepherding those who
- have no proper protectors, and my thoughts turn to you to
- lead in this also. (1) Because I am sure that the work you
- have done has alone made it possible to hope that we may roll
- back this flood of corruption instead of being submerged by
- it; the improvement in education has shown what women can do,
- and won for the time a respect from men, which they had not
- before. These large schools have taught them to work together
- organically, and the solid studies have strengthened them in
- every way. (2) Because you have such faith—I remember how
- strong it was when mine failed. (3) Because you would be able
- to unite people of various creeds and classes and ranks in this
- great national work—people would trust your delicacy and your
- judgment, and you would emphasise the patriotic grounds. I
- never forget your speech at Bristol, and your words about our
- “dear, dear country.” You can _both_ stir the heart, and guide
- the judgment. I think that perhaps God has restored your health
- that you may lead once more.
-
- ‘Dim visions float before my mind of an Union of Women which
- should embrace and work with the existing organisations, such
- as the Girls’ Friendly, the Metropolitan Association, and the
- Christian Young Women,—which should welcome help from all; for
- what are sectarian distinctions in the presence of such evils?
- “Let every one that nameth the name of Christ” join—and those
- too who, not naming His name, live according to His life....
-
- ‘Women band themselves together to go out to nurse in the
- armies—once that was thought impossible.... _Perhaps_ I am
- talking of what is impracticable. It is hard to keep calm
- enough to see clearly, when such visions hover before one.
- It is so important to keep calm, that one may neither be
- paralysed, nor make fantastic strokes instead of striking
- truly; and therefore I want you to think and guide.
-
- ‘I am sure we teachers must not let ourselves be diverted
- from _our_ proper work, of inspiring and setting others to
- work—indirectly, not directly, can we act. I often have to stop
- earnest teachers, who would break themselves down, and say—“If
- you want a thing done, don’t do it yourself.” But we do need
- more and more not to think of the mere giving of knowledge, but
- of lifting through education the girls’ characters; giving them
- proper ideas of marriage and what it ought to be: we should
- abolish all the frivolities of the marriage ceremonial. Would
- we had more weddings like that I attended yesterday of one of
- our teachers. I had never before been present at one which
- had really satisfied me, and there were crowds of poor people
- belonging to the “unwashed” amongst whom she had laboured,
- who behaved as fashionable congregations do not, and who must
- have gone away with a deeper sense of the meaning of a true
- marriage. We need, I think, a marriage reform association as
- much as a funeral reform. I am afraid my letter is a little
- incoherent. I am in bed with headache, after a somewhat
- exhausting week. We have had a teachers’ meeting again this
- year, beginning with some Quiet Days, and addresses to teachers
- by Canon Mason, whom the Archbishop of Canterbury kindly asked.
- I think we all thoroughly enjoyed these and our after meetings,
- and our country excursions and social gatherings.
-
- ‘Miss Helen Gladstone was with us, and Ramabai, with teachers
- from all parts.
-
- ‘Give my love to dear Miss Shireff. I don’t know what she will
- say to my urging work on you.’
-
-Mrs. Grey did not decline the task thus sent back to her, so far as she
-was able to do it by writing. She was then living abroad in enfeebled
-health, but her passionate words touched many in England, and a movement
-which received the name of the Women’s League was set on foot in the
-usual routine way with committees and meetings. Miss Beale attended one
-or two of these, but does not appear to have been quite happy at them.
-She was necessarily hampered by the fact that the name of the College
-ought not to be associated with this special work. She felt also that
-she had not sufficiently studied the subject, nor knew enough about the
-organisation of societies other than educational, to be able to make
-suggestions before others of wide experience. On one occasion, when a
-difference of opinion arose about admission to the League, she felt she
-had not spoken as decisively as she should, and she wrote afterwards to
-Mrs. Grey: ‘I enclose the two circulars; but please do not question me.
-It seemed impertinent to speak when there were four or five Bishops’
-wives present, and I doubt my judgment. I have given all my thought to
-other forms of organisation, and I live so much out of the world.’ And to
-the lady with whom she had specially differed she wrote thus:—
-
- ‘I have been trying to think how it was possible for you to
- misunderstand me, as I saw you did on Saturday. I thought you
- knew me too well to think I _could_ wish any one to conceal
- their colours. I was _very_ tired, and I see I did not make
- myself clear. May I try now?
-
- ‘There are two parties who call themselves Agnostics: there
- are those who reject the Christian moral law, and teach a
- truly abominable doctrine; with such one could have absolutely
- _nothing_ to do; no league _we_ could ever join could include
- these, for they are our enemies.
-
- ‘There are others, who hold _all_ that Christ has taught us,
- who would fully accept the Christian moral law, as the one and
- only rule. I know some of these; their whole heart is with us;
- they do the work of Christ, for they go into the wilderness and
- find those wounded and stripped by thieves, and bring them to
- our inn, and bid us take care of them.
-
- ‘I am sure our Lord will one day place such on His right hand,
- though they may question, “Lord, when saw we Thee?” I would not
- separate from them, lest I should be parted from Him Whose love
- is certainly working in them, tho’ their “eyes are holden” that
- they know Him not.
-
- ‘I know still that we cannot join them, _so_ as to do the
- _same_ work, and they know it too. They gather in, they go into
- the highways and hedges; they leave the inner work to those who
- are actually disciples. One I know has just now got the care of
- two neglected portionless girls, and sent them to good Church
- schools....
-
- ‘I shall be deeply grieved, if in a crisis of such danger, we
- show the enemy that we are so divided that we cannot welcome as
- allies those who are doing Christ’s work, and acknowledging the
- perfection of His teaching, because we cannot understand their
- difficulties in accepting the doctrines _we_ hold sacred. We
- shall not “water down” our teaching, nor would they wish us to
- do so. We shall not give up prayer, because we do not impose
- special rules.’
-
-Another letter of this period (March 1886) to Mrs. Grey shows Miss
-Beale’s calm judgment as well as her sympathy in the difficult work of
-the League:—
-
- ‘ ... I am disappointed to find that some, even of mature age,
- seem to think it right to shut their eyes.... Of course one
- would be glad that such subjects as this should not be brought
- up without necessity, and I suppose that many of us have grown
- up without a notion that some of the crimes alluded to in
- your paper were possible. It does darken the whole world and
- sadden the lives of the young to know that such wickedness is
- possible; it may destroy their faith in God, to know it before
- their moral constitution has attained its full vigour, and
- plunge them into pessimism: one cannot help wishing to conceal
- these loathsome visions from those we love. I do not go with
- Miss Ellice Hopkins in her wish that the young should be very
- early warned. It seems to me that there is a parallel between
- that and our action in cases of bodily disease: one who looked
- on passively is sickened and made ill;—the nurse or surgeon
- bent on healing does not suffer.
-
- ‘And I do feel that there is a great danger in bringing before
- the mind temptations which are connected with the bodily
- organisation. A nervous excitement seems to be produced,
- something of the nature of hysteria, and there is a sort of
- criminal fascination such as those feel who throw themselves
- from heights: the judgment seems utterly in abeyance. The same
- thought seems expressed in the story of Medusa.
-
- ‘For this reason I do feel a little hesitation in giving
- countenance to the indefinite extension of Blue-ribbon armies,
- necessary and beneficent as they are in cases where there
- is strong temptation, or persons are moved to work actively
- against intemperance; and I would rather that the campaign
- should be one of missionaries, so to speak, of those who have
- bound themselves to some active work in the cause. I think
- that such great evils might arise from the terrible mistakes
- which might be committed by those who undertook the ostracism
- without having a fair chance of arriving at a correct judgment.
- It is so easy to stab to death the character of an innocent
- man; the devil may steal as well as buy a man’s shadow; he may
- sell as well as buy....
-
- ‘So what seems to me best would be to have a small band of wise
- and calm leaders; and not to invite a general public to give
- any pledge, only trust to the working of such leaven as these
- would form.
-
- ‘Some of the points to which they direct attention should be
- the abolition of the frivolities of the marriage ceremony....
-
- ‘As regards material measures, I would still urge the formation
- of a body of women-policemen, who could safely do work which
- could not be done by men-policemen or clergymen. These should
- undertake to watch over registries for women, shops where women
- work, to establish labour registers themselves, and take care
- that women were not paid starvation wages; to enter (under
- protection) suspected houses; to watch railway stations and
- ships, etc. etc.
-
- ‘So you see, dear Mrs. Grey, tho’ my heart is altogether with
- you, my judgment does not quite go with the recommendations. I
- do not fear your misunderstanding me, because we are so truly
- one, and can only differ about the best modes of work....’
-
-As time went on Miss Beale’s continued sympathy with this particular
-work was evidenced in larger subscriptions to the National Vigilance
-Association, to which she also left a legacy. The letters of the last
-years show her interest in it, and that her horror of a worldly marriage
-was as great as ever. She wrote to Miss Ellice Hopkins in 1903:—
-
- ‘I meant that marriage without the spiritual ideal was
- intolerable, but the body is transfigured; there is a
- “metamorphosis,” as the New Testament insists so often; but the
- Scripture teaching is so different from the mere sentimental. I
- don’t like the tendency of _Lady Rose’s Daughter_. I dislike,
- of course, much of Sarah Grand, but the end of the _Heavenly
- Twins_ does bring before people the horrors of such a marriage
- as the Bishop’s wife promotes. It is a long and ever-renewed
- struggle with these wicked laws.... It is sad to see that this
- new Education Act is shutting out women, and making the hope
- of the suffrage less. Here the Town Council and the County
- Council both asked me to nominate a woman—and four of our staff
- here have been asked to be managers of schools—but of course
- two or three women will be able to do very little.’
-
-Cheltenham pupils who in course of time took up the cause of the poor
-and degraded, found the greatest sympathy and help from Miss Beale. She
-was always specially ready with sympathy for those who were engaged in
-an unpopular struggle for good. Among them may be specially mentioned
-Miss Annette Bear, whose labours in 1894 were instrumental in getting
-a clause dealing with children employed on the stage added to the Act,
-afterwards known as the Children’s Charter, and who after her marriage
-worked successfully for the women’s vote in Australia. A short account of
-Annette Bear Crawford appeared in the College Magazines for 1899 and 1900.
-
-To an old pupil trying to help her unhappy sisters in Africa she wrote:
-‘I must tell you how glad I was to see your name on the Ladies’ National
-List, and to hear from yourself on the subject. I am so rejoiced when my
-old girls take up this trying question. Only refined and educated women
-can handle it successfully.’ She also begged her not to be discouraged
-by failure, ‘but remember the real thing to aim at is the Suffrage.
-Without the vote you may cut off one evil to find it coming up again in a
-worse form, and often, but for the personal discipline, might as well be
-knocking your head against a stone wall.’
-
-As time went on this question of the vote for women seemed more and more
-important to Miss Beale. She became a Vice-President of the Central
-Society for Women’s Suffrage, besides being a regular subscriber.
-
-Naturally, Miss Beale hoped for reform by means of the cultivation of
-the mind. Much evil she considered came from want of proper interests and
-from deficient knowledge of life, such as even good reading could to some
-extent supply. ‘Give them literature lessons,’ she said to an old pupil
-who had a large class of intelligent Yorkshire factory girls. A letter to
-another worker shows in what way she hoped women school managers might
-help to hinder the spread of corruption. It has the additional interest
-of suggesting a measure akin to one lately adopted by the educational
-authorities in some counties:—
-
- ‘_(circa) 1889._
-
- ‘Perhaps I ought not to say much; my own vineyard I must keep.
- It does seem to me that both men and women who are wanting to
- mend things ought to take municipal offices and all sorts of
- legal and government work.
-
- ‘Schools ought to be able to keep children longer and gradually
- reduce school time, and could not one get a law that children
- without employment should be at school? They must have in
- clerical language a “title” to leave school control by showing
- their parents are able to look after them or that they have an
- employer. This wholesale feeding does seem a serious matter, as
- weakening the sense of parental responsibility. I do hope we
- shall not go in for pauperising in Bethnal Green. I feel sure
- we shall not under Miss Newman....
-
- ‘The monstrous evil is, however, hydra-headed, and one’s
- courage sometimes sinks; but there is, no doubt, a much higher
- public opinion than there was.’
-
-Miss Beale’s pity for the helpless was not confined to women. She felt
-deeply the needs of discharged prisoners, and more than once sent
-donations of money to one of her old girls who was in a position to help
-them. She also supported Miss Agnes Weston’s work for sailors.
-
-Another class whose needs she fully recognised was that of poor gentle
-people. Impoverished Irish ladies, governesses, and others, she was
-always anxious to help, and frequently maintained the duty which richer
-members of their own class owed to them. Those who asked her aid for
-these often found her unexpectedly generous. It has been shown how much
-she undertook, both in money payment and trouble, for girls who could not
-afford an education befitting their position. Outside this, indeed, her
-interests may have been held to have been comparatively few; but when she
-did permit herself to study the problems of her day, she made it evident
-that the force of mind and will which she concentrated on her own work
-could also have effected great results in other fields of labour.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-HONOURS
-
- ‘He deserved well of his country.’
-
-
-‘Shall we try to deserve more rather than to win more?’ said Miss Beale
-when she quoted the phrase of the Roman senate, which heads this chapter,
-to some children—not of Cheltenham—who were to receive prizes. It well
-expresses her feeling about rewards. They should grow out of the work;
-should be some fresh privilege of service. Hence her indifference to
-prizes in the College. They were given on a percentage of marks obtained
-in the midsummer examinations. They were announced when the marks of the
-classes were read to them on the first morning of the next term, but
-they were never presented: they had to be fetched by the individuals who
-earned them from the secretary’s room.
-
- ‘I was opposed,’ she wrote on one occasion, ‘to this custom. I
- did not think it necessary to make pupils work, they seemed as
- earnest and painstaking before prizes were given as since. I
- felt it was better they should work from a love of knowledge or
- a simple sense of duty, but the Council took another view, and
- as there is much to be said on their side of the question, I
- yielded.
-
- ‘In life, prizes must be to a great extent the reward of
- thoughtful industry, and it seems to me that on the one hand
- we may thereby teach the children to put success at its true
- value, and point out to them that it is at the bar of our own
- conscience alone that we must stand approved or condemned;
- that on the other hand they may learn to bear disappointment
- patiently. I do not find that prizes create any feelings of
- jealousy or ill-will, nor can I blame a child who looks forward
- with pleasure to carrying home to her parents this proof that
- she has tried to do as they would have her. It appears to me
- a matter of less importance than is usually supposed, and in
- any case can affect only a few pupils at the head of a class.
- Stimulants to exertion, however, are rarely needed. There are
- very few who are not interested and earnest in their work, and
- our difficulty is more frequently to check too great zeal, and
- to insist on the observation of those limits we place to the
- time devoted to study than to demand more.’
-
-The high ideal of _deserving_ rather than _gaining_ was what Miss Beale
-set before herself as true wealth to be desired. So she was careful, when
-the management of large public funds and a much increased personal income
-came to her, to remain as frugal, as poor as ever. It was not merely that
-she liked simplicity. Her simplicity of life was a deliberate intention.
-There was a personal note in the fervour with which she would read the
-words of Abraham to the king of Sodom: ‘I will not take from a thread
-even to a shoe-latchet, ... lest thou shouldest say, I have made Abram
-rich.’ No monk was ever more faithful to his chosen bride of Poverty than
-Miss Beale remained with her large income and successful investments. She
-was consistent also in preferring for those she loved a simple personal
-life, which would leave mind and time free for thought and the needs of
-others.
-
-When first Miss Beale went to Cheltenham she adopted a very simple mode
-of living, such as she thought would sufficiently meet her needs, and
-she never changed it. At the age of seventy she would even help to lay
-her own table for the frugal midday meal, if the general servant had
-been delayed by household work in the morning. She would walk to the
-station to save a cab fare, and invariably chose the simplest means of
-conveyance unless on a matter of urgency. It is true she became rather
-grander in dress as years went on. ‘What did I wear,’ she wrote to Miss
-Brown about 1876, after some function she had attended, ‘“velvet and
-ostrich feathers?” Well, what could I wear but my felt bonnet and old
-velvet cloak and old black serge? I looked quite smart enough.’ Kind
-friends there were who liked to see the Lady Principal beautifully
-dressed, and who were allowed in later life to guide her into velvet and
-ostrich feathers. She submitted for the sake of the College, for whose
-good she would cheerfully have worn either sackcloth or cloth of gold!
-
-For the sake of the College, still more for the sake of that work for
-women and the race which the College represented, Miss Beale gladly
-greeted honours. That they had anything to do with herself personally,
-she was not even aware. Her work did indeed receive recognition far and
-wide from those who prized education, and who regarded it from various
-points of view.
-
-Among the first to honour it with special notice and a substantial, even
-magnificent gift, was John Ruskin, when in 1885 he presented to the
-College two beautiful and valuable manuscripts—one, of the four Gospels,
-in Greek, written in the eleventh century; another (_Antiphonarium
-Romanum_) of the thirteenth century. He gave also a collection of printed
-books. These were the occasion of an interesting series of letters from
-Mr. Ruskin to Miss Beale. Some of them are printed here.
-
- ‘BRANTWOOD, CONISTON, LANCASHIRE, _February 10, 1882_.
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—I have to ask your pardon for never having
- replied to your former letter; but it came when I was already
- over-wrought and threatened with illness, and it gave me more
- to think of than it was possible then to review.
-
- ‘I am now, however, most seriously bent on understanding the
- principles and knowing some of the results of modern girl
- education....
-
- ‘A very few lines would enable me to become of some use to
- you—in my own fields of work—and without moving from my fields
- of rest.
-
- ‘I have the deepest respect for Mr. Shields’ work, nevertheless
- it is out of my _way_; and such drawing models as I may send
- you would be altogether different in feeling.
-
- ‘But the first thing I want to know is what kind of library
- or schoolroom you have, for quiet separate reading, and what
- standard books the College possesses in Lexicons, works on
- natural history, and classic literature, and what place Latin
- and Italian have in your code of studies.—Ever faithfully yours,
-
- J. RUSKIN.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘BRANTWOOD, CONISTON, LANCASHIRE, _February 18, 1887_.
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—I can only thank you to-day for the most
- interesting parcel, which gives me an idea of the College and
- its branches, admitting every degree of enthusiasm in its
- Principal.
-
- ‘ ... but for the moment, entirely puzzling to me, as I neither
- want to confuse the strict College work with that of Ruskin
- societies, nor the elementary and general teaching with that of
- artists’ studios, or of general papers in your Magazine.
-
- ‘And when I give you books I should like them to be accessible
- to the classes in general. I can’t scatter them among the
- boarding-houses or give them only to the senior students at St.
- Hilda’s. You can surely put up some shelves for me in a corner
- of some generally inhabited room, and put them under the care
- of an official librarian. It seems to me the office might be
- given for a term at a time to any girl who cared to take it,
- involving also the curatorship of any drawings, casts of coins,
- or the like, which I could at times lend or present to you.
-
- ‘In the meantime, will you let me have a list of the classes,
- with the books used in them, and times of required attendance.
-
- ‘Dr. Watson has trusted me for the present to arrange the work
- for his daughter, without reference to any competitive honours
- or testing examinations. I wish to keep her well at her music,
- French, and if she cares for it, elementary drawing, with
- beginning of Latin and the first making out of classic history.
- What I chiefly need to know is the method of instruction in
- the music and drawing classes. (Do your seniors touch Greek at
- all?)
-
- ‘I have just been reading an excellent paper by Miss _Sophia_
- Beale on Art instruction, in which, however, the general sense
- and truth of the author’s views are prevented from taking a
- practical form by her falling into the scarcely in our time
- avoidable error of supposing that accuracy of drawing can only
- be taught by the figure.
-
- ‘The figure can never be drawn accurately unless life is given
- to the task. But a triangle, an arch, a cinquefoil, and a wild
- rose are within the reach of ordinary girlhood’s observation
- and delineation, to ordinary girlhood’s extreme profit.—Believe
- me, dear Madam, your faithful servant,
-
- JOHN RUSKIN.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘BRANTWOOD, CONISTON, LANCASHIRE, _March 3, 1887_.
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—I shall be most thankful if you can find
- anything in my books that the girls will like to have in the
- Magazine: the ivied trunks were sent in no high spiritual but
- lowly practical intent, simply as the sort of models which you
- can’t cut and bring in for yourselves, and which, once drawn
- real size, will teach more than all my talking.
-
- ‘I think her librarian cares will be ever so good for my wild
- flower, and am looking out more fine books for her to-day,
- chiefly a perfect edit, of Scott’s poetry and Heyne’s beautiful
- _Virgil_.
-
- ‘I am wholly with you in liking Greek better than Latin, but
- only as added to Latin by clever girls. The entire history of
- the Catholic Church being in Latin, and half the language of
- Europe derived from it, I would make every girl who passed
- through any course of literature begin with understanding her
- Pater Noster and Te Deum.
-
- ‘But I have put a lovely edition of _Hesiod_ aside for next
- dispatch to the wild librarian.
-
- ‘I don’t quite know what the “Kyrle” Society means, but imagine
- I have stores of things they could put to use.—Ever faithfully
- yours,
-
- J. RUSKIN.
-
- ‘Enclosed may be a pretty little gift to any of your good
- girls.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘BRANTWOOD, CONISTON, LANCASHIRE, _March 7, 1887_.
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—I have put the little volume of poems into my
- near bookcase at the back of my arm-chair. They look really
- very nice, and show an extremely high tone in the school.
-
- ‘I am going to send you with the Pindar, a beautiful 13th
- cent. MS., with the Gregorian notes all written to the old
- Latin songs. I think the College will be proud of it, and your
- organist interested by it.
-
- ‘I shall be delighted to see whatever the teachers care to send
- me. I have been languid and stupid this spring, or should have
- written something for the drawing classes before now.—Ever
- faithfully and respectfully yours,
-
- J. RUSKIN.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘BRANTWOOD, CONISTON, LANCASHIRE, _March 11, 1887_.
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—There is no way of enlarging those Kate
- sketches: they were calculated for the little confusion
- caused by their smallness, and are not well drawn enough for
- magnifying.
-
- ‘I will send you some prettier ones for framing. I am very
- glad the books have come safe. The grace and dignity of the
- engravings in Heyne are of great educational value, and the two
- MSS. are extremely good of the kind. They cost, curiously, the
- same price each, £100 or £105,—I forget which.
-
- ‘The wild librarian sends me an extremely bad account of
- herself to-day. I have sent her a beautifully impressive and
- didactic answer, which she ought to show you.—Ever faithfully
- yours,
-
- J. RUSKIN.
-
- ‘I have sent your organist a Magister for himself. I am so glad
- he likes it. I couldn’t make out his initials, or would have
- put his name in it; people ought always to sign in print.
-
- A.B.C. So and So.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘BRANTWOOD, CONISTON, LANCASHIRE, _March 12, 1887_.
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—I send you two books to-day with real
- pleasure. The old book of towns containing images of the
- things that once were, in spite of their stiffness, liker the
- realities now lost than any wooden efforts at restoration,
- while the Arabian book is a type of all the subtle and faithful
- skill of France can do at its present best.
-
- ‘I call it the _faithful_ skill of France. There is no nation
- has ever produced such honest work in love of its subjects,
- not in vanity, as the _Desc. de l’Egypte_ and the illustrated
- beautiful books of modern times. The great Cuvier series is
- degraded by its filthy anatomies, but in mere engraving and
- colours stands alone. But I am going to send you some birds,
- also matchless, as I can’t send you the Cuvier for its horror.
-
- ‘The English book on the Dee, with its rotten paper and vulgar
- woodcuts, illustrates our English meanness in comparison, but
- has its poor use too....’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘BRANTWOOD, CONISTON, LANCASHIRE, _March 14, 1887_.
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—There is not the least need of this flame
- of gratitude. I am only too glad to find a place where I can
- send books likely to be permanently useful to English girls. I
- am sending three more to-day, which I think likely to be far
- more serviceable than those finer ones, containing as they do,
- quantities of sound historical information given in a simple
- and graceful way on subjects which every Christian girl should
- have knowledge of, while I suppose not one in fifty ever hears
- any truth about them. They are nice collegiate books too, to
- look at.
-
- ‘I am mightily pleased too at your having a girl-organist, and
- hope to work out some old plans with her.—Ever most truly yours,
-
- J. RUSKIN.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘BRANTWOOD, CONISTON, LANCASHIRE, _March 24_.
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—These candlesticks are lovely, but a little
- too loose and catchy to be quite good design. The fillets of
- the bases should be bars, and branch into the foliage, not be
- entangled in it. But I am heartily glad to see such work.
-
- ‘The glass for the MSS. will be excellent,—but only the lazuli
- and gold will stand sunlight—all colours of time fade in full
- light. But there’s no harm in a little fading of the Greek
- Evangelists, or the musical notes on a single page.
-
- ‘That Norway Bishops’ book will be a lovely companion to the
- Old Geography.
-
- ‘You needn’t mind who is or isn’t in association with you.
-
- ‘You have plenty of power alone—and inventiveness enough to
- boot.—Ever affectly. yrs.,
-
- J. R.’
-
-Mr. Ruskin’s munificent gifts did not stand alone. Almost every number
-of the Magazine chronicled some present to the College, some book or
-picture, scientific apparatus or specimen. Special mention should be
-made of Dr. Wright’s collection of fossils which formed the foundation
-for a museum, and of the grant of flint instruments and many animals
-obtained through Sir William Flower from the British Museum.
-
-The distinctions which came to both Principal and College in the later
-years of Miss Beale’s headship were very numerous and came from widely
-differing sources. The College gained gold medals for educational
-exhibits at the Paris Exhibitions of 1889 and 1900.
-
-The name of Dorothea Beale became known abroad as that of one who had
-a real interest in education for its own sake and who had no exclusive
-or insular views. The warm welcome she would extend to educationists of
-every kind and tongue, the care with which she would personally answer
-letters of inquiry, the high tone of her addresses at public gatherings,
-her pamphlets and articles made the name of Cheltenham respected afar.
-To this may be added the freshness and openness of mind with which she
-would lend attention to new methods. She always took them seriously,
-however empirical they might appear,—considered them, tried them if they
-seemed hopeful, persevered in them if they were proved to be effective,
-abandoned them if they were inferior to methods already in use. There
-were many examples of this. Once, for instance, in the eighties, she
-heard of a method of teaching reading and of preserving discipline which
-had been evolved by Mrs. Fielden, a clever lady who had established a
-good elementary school in a Yorkshire manufacturing village. Miss Beale
-sent an old pupil who lived in the neighbourhood to visit the school,
-watch its working, and send her full details of the management. After
-receiving her report, she obtained the loan of one of Mrs. Fielden’s
-teachers for a week, and had the system introduced by her into the
-schoolroom of the Third (Junior) Division. It lived but a short time.
-Miss Nixon, head-mistress of the division, found it mechanical, and it
-was abandoned.
-
-In Miss Beale’s last term, in September 1906, Mrs. Arthur Somervell’s
-_Rhythmical Mathematics_ came to her notice. She not only wrote to the
-author ‘The book is beautiful and the method very suggestive,’ but within
-a few days introduced it to the teachers whom it concerned and had its
-principles explained to a class of little children.
-
-Foreign pupils were always welcomed at the College, and made to feel
-at home. When first it was suggested that some Siamese girls should be
-received there, Miss Beale wrote eagerly to secure them, and always
-took the greatest interest in their work. The foreign teachers found
-her sympathetic and interested, able to understand and allow for their
-different training and points of view. With some it was not merely a
-case of mutual esteem. There were those who found she welcomed their
-friendship and returned it with kindred affection and confidence.
-
-In the summer term of 1889 several foreign educationists came to
-Cheltenham. Mrs. E. H. Monroe was sent by the Government of the United
-States, and Signora Zampini Salazaro by the Italian Government, to study
-English schools and methods. Madame Garnier-Gentilhomme, Officier de
-l’Instruction Publique, spent a week with Miss Beale. These visits were
-perhaps not unconnected with the International Congresses of Education
-which met in Paris in August. These Miss Beale attended, and herself
-wrote an account of them in the Magazine of autumn 1889, from which some
-brief extracts are made.
-
- ‘I cannot sufficiently regret that so few English took part
- in the most interesting International Congress of Secondary
- and Superior Instruction which has just concluded in Paris.
- It was an assembly such as one can scarcely hope to see in
- a life-time. One had an opportunity of hearing not only the
- leading educational authorities of France, who are doing a
- great work for their country, but distinguished men from all
- parts of the world.’
-
-After enumerating the representatives present from different countries,
-she continues:—
-
- ‘From England, the near neighbour of France, came the
- Honourable Lyulph Stanley, member of the School Board, but not
- one person having official rank as a member of the Education
- Department, not one representative of a university. There was
- one Professor from Edinburgh, the Secretary of the College of
- Science from Dublin, Mr. Widgery, of University College School,
- the Editor of the _Schoolmaster_, Miss Buss with one of her
- staff, Miss Beale of Cheltenham with four, and two private
- governesses.
-
- ‘ ... The first step was to add to the Committee a number of
- foreign members; eighteen were chosen, amongst whom were Mr.
- Stanley and myself. Then, after arranging the order of the day,
- we separated and formed ourselves into sections, each person
- selecting the question which interested him most. In each
- section a President and Vice-Presidents and a reporter were
- elected. I was chosen a Vice-President of Section IV.[83] ...
-
- ‘I was told that we were to speak our own language, as was the
- case at the Congress held at the Health Exhibition in London.
- However, the general wish was at last complied with, that we
- should all produce our thoughts in more or less foreign French,
- and it was nearly always intelligible.
-
- ‘ ... One question (“The methods best adapted for the Secondary
- Instruction of girls, specially as regards Modern Languages
- and Science”) gave rise to a good deal of warm discussion.
- We were surprised to find that less than two hours in a week
- were given to a modern language in French schools for girls.
- The importance of beginning very early was not generally
- recognised. The English, specially Mr. Widgery and Miss Beale,
- contributed a great deal to this part of the discussion,
- insisting much on a truly scientific gymnastic of sound as
- opposed to the haphazard mode of teaching pronunciation.’
-
-The Misses Andrews who accompanied Miss Beale on this occasion were
-impressed by the way she was received and heard. Her deafness did not
-prevent her taking a part in the discussion, and speaking as she did in
-a foreign tongue, she yet dominated her large international audience.
-She showed extraordinary indifference to her own comfort. Miss Alice
-Andrews remembers, for instance, a luncheon in the neighbourhood of the
-Sorbonne, at a little restaurant to which they had been guided by some
-acquaintance. Miss Beale and Miss Buss found themselves in the midst of
-artists and students, some of whom carried on pronounced flirtations with
-the waitress girls. Miss Beale sat calmly writing her speech for the next
-meeting, indifferent to her déjeûner and unconscious of her surroundings.
-
-The Congress of Secondary and Superior Instruction was followed by a
-Congress of Primary Teachers, for which Miss Beale was induced to stay.
-One day she addressed it:—
-
- ‘I said a few words on the work of teachers in enlarging the
- sympathies and diminishing prejudice and enabling us therefore
- to understand one another better.
-
- ‘It is the seen, the material, about which nations quarrel; it
- is the unseen, that which belongs to the intellect, the spirit,
- which unites us in a generous emulation, in which all are
- gainers, for in such contests all may obtain the prize.’
-
-Greatly pleased as Miss Beale was with much she saw, she quickly
-perceived that she could not work herself with such a system as prevailed
-in France. ‘I do not wish to see secondary education in England subject
-in any way to a Government department, or secondary schools in England
-assimilated to primary.’
-
-All the intervals of the Congress were filled with visits to various
-educational institutions and interviews with leading educationists. There
-was a visit to Fontenay-aux-Roses, to a deaf school, to a primary school
-and kindergarten, to the Musée Pédagogique. There were also some visits
-less of the nature of business. Once, at least, they went by invitation
-to the Théâtre Français, where they witnessed a representation of the
-_Femmes Savantes_. There were also many receptions. Miss Alice Andrews
-wrote:—
-
- ‘We had two evenings at the Ministère de l’Instruction
- Publique, just for the members of the Congresses. These were
- more like our Guild meetings; no amusement was provided, but
- the members found it for themselves in walking about and
- conversing; and so did we, for by the end we had made many
- acquaintances and a few friends, and there we met some of
- those who, in the day, had been seated on platforms and had
- interested us by their eloquence. On the last evening there was
- a dinner-party of about fifty persons, at which the principal
- foreign members of the Congress were entertained. To this Miss
- Beale was invited, and placed at table on the right hand of the
- minister.’[84]
-
-It was a great happiness to Miss Beale to see so much good work going on,
-and to meet so many who really cared for the cause for which she lived.
-
- ‘Many were the promises of visits; we left Paris with a
- higher idea of the great work that France is accomplishing,
- and grateful for the generous hospitality with which we were
- welcomed, and allowed to see all that is being done by those
- who are directing education in France.’
-
-The immediate result to the College of this Congress of 1889 was an
-honour for its Principal when Miss Beale was made Officier d’Académie.
-In the following year a meeting of the ‘Société des Professeurs de
-Langues Vivantes’ met at Cheltenham. Miss Beale was elected a member of
-this Society, by means of which many French students came to Cheltenham.
-After her death a little article upon Miss Beale appeared in _Les Langues
-Modernes_, the monthly organ of this Society. It rightly acknowledged
-the welcome and the constant kindness that foreign students always
-received from her.
-
- ‘Il faudrait un volume pour analyser sa vie et son œuvre.
- Les Anglais l’avaient bien comprise, parce qu’elle résumait
- au plus haut point les qualités de leur race. Les étrangères
- ont pu admirer son esprit d’initiative, son énergie et son
- enthousiasme communicatif. Les jeunes filles françaises qui
- ont eu la bonne fortune d’étudier à Cheltenham, lui étaient
- particulièrement reconnaissantes de la sympathie large qu’elle
- leur témoignait. La vivacité et la spontanéité françaises,
- que les Anglais confondent volontiers avec la légèreté et
- l’insouciance, étaient des qualités qu’elle prisait beaucoup.
- La bienveillance pour nous se traduisait en actes. Dans ce
- collège aristocratique où les frais d’études étaient assez
- considérables, où l’on n’admettait que les jeunes filles
- appartenant à un milieu social élevé, Miss Beale réduisait
- volontiers les frais d’études des Françaises, et facilitait
- leurs relations avec des familles anglaises distinguées.
-
- ‘Elle eut pour plusieurs de mes compatriotes et moi des
- attentions qui nous allèrent au cœur. Quand nous la
- rencontrions dans les couloirs avec son petit bonnet blanc
- de douairière, ou quand elle nous invitait au thé dans son
- home, elles s’informait de nos études, corrigeant elle-même
- dans la conversation nos phrases défectueuses, nous parlant
- avec sympathie de notre pays, et nous rappelant le souvenir
- agréable qu’elle avait gardé de Paris, où elle était venue
- passer quelques mois dans sa jeunesse, en vue de compléter son
- instruction.’
-
-A further result was the permission granted by the French Government for
-the admission of students from the College to Fontenay-aux-Roses. This
-permission was much prized by Miss Beale, who was comforted by it for
-delays which had occurred in the opening of St. Hilda’s, Oxford.
-
-Another recognition of her work for education came to Miss Beale in 1896,
-when Durham University conferred upon her the distinction of Tutor in
-Letters. The widespread influence of that work was emphasised by her
-election in 1898 as a Corresponding Member of the National Education
-Association, U.S.A. In her letter acknowledging this honour Miss Beale
-said: ‘We receive much inspiration from the States, and possess in our
-Library a large number of valuable works from Americans on Philosophy and
-Education.’ She was specially attached to the writings of Dr. Harris.
-
-The contrasts existing between girls’ education as it was in 1865 and
-thirty years later must have been brought very forcibly before Miss
-Beale when, in 1894, she was again asked to give evidence before a Royal
-Commission. The chairman of this was Mr. Bryce, who had himself inspected
-and reported for the Taunton Commission of 1864-7. The composition of
-this later body marked the advance that had been made. Of its seventeen
-members three were women. Well might Miss Beale say that the changes she
-had witnessed were ‘inconceivably great.’ Her own position was changed.
-On the first occasion she had merely been the able representative of a
-little known and rather despised class of workers. On the second she came
-as one of the recognised leaders of a band whose work was becoming yearly
-more valuable and more important.
-
-Miss Beale was first questioned on the co-operation and co-relation of
-different schools in one neighbourhood. She expressed herself in favour
-of the co-operation of teachers, not of unity in governing bodies,
-‘because one governing body is rather apt to generalise and say that
-everything that is suitable for boys should be done for girls.’ She
-was also careful to say that there must be a supreme authority in each
-school. One point of special interest to-day is the discussion which took
-place on the teaching of the classics to girls. Miss Beale, as has been
-shown, was never in favour of teaching either Latin or Greek to young
-girls, and she maintained her objections on this occasion. She thought
-it a mistake to begin Greek at the age of eleven or twelve, though she
-admitted that it was easier to learn than Latin. ‘But children,’ she
-said, ‘do not enter into the delicacies and refinements of the Greek
-language, ... and they get tired of it.... I do not think the most
-intelligent teacher could make a child like the intricacies of grammar
-early.’[85]
-
-Miss Beale does not seem to have mentioned one reason why she would
-not teach Latin early until, in 1898, she wrote in _Work and Play_: ‘I
-feel strongly that Latin should, however, properly come after German,
-specially for girls. There is a pestilential atmosphere in the Campania,
-and one needs to have one’s moral fibre braced by the poetry of the
-Hebrews and of England and Germany, if one would remain unaffected by
-writings saturated with heathen thought.’
-
-Other points discussed were the training of teachers, a subject on
-which Miss Beale had much to say. She insisted on the advantages of
-associating training colleges with large schools: ‘If students get simply
-lectures, and ideas which they have not an opportunity of carrying into
-practice, they become unpractical, and they have to learn the practical
-parts of their profession when they become teachers.’ The question of
-scholarships was introduced; Miss Beale enunciated her theory that they
-should be given irrespective of place. It ought not to be possible for
-one institution to buy up scholars from another. She admitted that she
-would like to make necessity a condition of holding a scholarship. ‘Would
-not that,’ asked Dr. Fairbairn, I carry with it to a large extent what
-one may term a social distinction,—even a stigma in certain cases?’ ‘I
-think,’ was the reply, ‘if people are ashamed of being poor, they ought
-to be ashamed of being ashamed of it.’
-
-Some points there were on which the Commissioners desired enlightenment
-from Miss Beale’s experience, but got little help. One of these was by
-what means a passage might be effected from primary to secondary schools
-and the universities. Miss Beale, who disliked free education, had in
-1895 even less sympathy with elementary teaching than she had a few
-years later, when she undertook to train students for it. The indication
-she gave the Commission was a suggestion that to meet the needs of the
-prize pupils of the elementary schools, it would be best to found higher
-schools of the same class, as she maintained that, owing largely to the
-influences of their homes, children coming from primary schools could not
-profit by the kind of education existing in secondary schools as they are.
-
-Three or four times the chairman also sought to obtain an opinion from
-her on the difference between boys and girls, but was always met by some
-such answer as, ‘I do not profess to say much about boys.’
-
-It was an excellent thing that Miss Beale was asked by Messrs. Longmans,
-Green and Co. to put forth her own original ideas, and state something of
-her long experience concerning education, in the volume which appeared
-in 1898 under the title _Work and Play in Girls’ Schools_. Designed
-primarily for the enlightenment of the generation which first received
-it, the book will remain as an historical record of methods actually in
-use at the Ladies’ College.
-
-With the two last sections of this work Miss Beale had nothing to do:
-that on the ‘Moral Side of Education’ was written by Miss Soulsby,
-the concluding chapter on the ‘Cultivation of the Body’ was from the
-pen of Miss Dove. Yet it is worthy of notice that both these able and
-original-minded head-mistresses were for a time teachers at Cheltenham.
-Miss Beale felt that Miss Soulsby’s chapter should have been first in the
-book; but as her own section is so very much the longest, and as it would
-have been impossible to her to treat of education from the intellectual
-side only and apart from its bearing on character, there is nothing to be
-regretted in the arrangement. One of Miss Beale’s chapters is, moreover,
-devoted to the question of Philosophy and Religion.
-
-A letter she wrote to Miss Strong on this subject is interesting:—
-
- ‘_January 1897._
-
- ‘I have ventured to accept Mr. Longmans’ proposal. I am afraid
- it is rather rash, and I hope I shall find that he gives me
- the Midsummer holidays. This is what he puts in his programme.
- “Order of importance. Cultivation of the body, cultivation
- of the moral character, cultivation of the mind,” and so he
- arranges the subjects in that order. You see what I have said,
- it makes me so vexed to hear people say, “Of course health is
- the first thing,” when I know they mean to put pleasure before
- duty. In order of _importance_, of course, Miss Soulsby is
- first.’
-
-This book, the most important of Miss Beale’s mature age—she was verging
-on sixty when it was published—was written with all the enthusiasm of
-youth. The hopefulness and freshness of a young teacher, heightened
-rather than restrained by the experience of years, glow on every page.
-Nor is the idealism of the student missing. Notice specially for this
-the passage on astronomy on page 254:[86] ‘Thus [is] the mathematical
-passion awakened; surely most of us can remember the first time that our
-soul really ascended into the seventh heaven.’ The chapter entitled
-Psychological Order of Study,’ in which this passage occurs, is perhaps
-the most suggestive in the book, which abounds in the results of ripened
-thought and knowledge. But that on the ‘Relation of School to Home’ was
-most impressive to those who did not already know the writer’s views on
-the subject. In ‘A Few Practical Precepts’ occur one or two phrases which
-might well pass into scholastic proverbs, as for instance this: ‘It is a
-worse fault to teach below than above the powers of a child.’
-
-Miss Beale did not write the whole of that part of the book for which
-she made herself responsible. Some parts were given to specialists upon
-the College staff, in order that all the subjects might be treated with
-expert knowledge.
-
-Miss Beale’s own life during this later period naturally became more
-social than ever before. She attended many public functions, and was
-brought constantly into touch with those who shared her high intellectual
-aims or literary work. Among these was Dr. Jowett, to whom she felt she
-owed a special debt for his translation of the _Republic_. A day came at
-last, in 1893, when, as a witty friend said, she and the Master lunched
-together, ‘with Plato as an unobtrusive third.’
-
-In 1894, accompanied by Miss Draper, she made another visit to Paris,
-to be present at the wedding of Lady Victoria Blackwood and Mr. W. L.
-Plunket. She greatly enjoyed the experience, especially Lord Dufferin’s
-friendliness.
-
- ‘Lord Dufferin proposed to send a young man to take us out
- in the morning, and show us something of Paris. I rather
- wondered that we grey-haired ladies should require an escort,
- but of course accepted, and we were awaiting our young man in
- the salon of the Hôtel Normandie when, to our surprise and
- pleasure, we heard Lord Dufferin’s own voice in the hall.
- Though he had to be present at the civil wedding at twelve
- o’clock, he most kindly found time to take us up the Heights of
- Montmartre. We had much interesting conversation on the way.’
-
-The diary which Miss Beale still kept carefully, though briefly, gives a
-glimpse of this fuller outside life, but remains faithful to its early
-character as a record of thought and aspiration. A few extracts from the
-last years are given.
-
- 1893.
-
- ‘_Jan._ 15. Retreat at Brondesbury. Canon Body 9th to 13th.
-
- ” 22. Last Sunday of Epiphany.... Perfect revelation of
- God’s character only possible to man in Christ.
- Arise, shine! Magi faithful to what was given....
-
- ” 24. More earnestness in work needed. Unnecessary
- speaking of others’ faults.
-
- ” 31. Again a quarter of an hour wasted....
-
- _Feb._ 2. Edward died.[87] Presentation in the Temple.
-
- ” 14. Friendless Girls’ meeting.
-
- _Mar._ 31. All Saints. Mr. Illingworth.
-
- _May_ 10. In London. Degree Day. Radley.
-
- ” 11. Ascension Day. H. C. Radley. At Cowley
- House. Froude’s Lecture. Lunch at Balliol.
-
- ” 12. Text. “In Him was Life and the Life was the
- Light.”
-
- ” 14. Mrs. Russell Gurney lunched.
-
- _June_ 7-10. Royal Society. Staying with the Samuelsons.
-
- ” 19. Grandchildren’s party. Twenty-three present.
- Five absent.
-
- ” 24. Council. Baker Street. Queen’s College. Greek
- Play.
-
- ” 25. At Miss Clarke’s.
-
- ” 26. Oxford. Home.
-
- _Dec._ (31?). Was at Sudeley for Christmas.
-
- 1896.
-
- _April_ 21. Cambridge Conference.[88] Stayed at the [Vice-]
- Chancellor’s.[89]
-
- _May_ 3. Pressed in spirit. “I stand at the door and knock.”
- Read Bishop French’s Life.
-
- ” 6. Girls came back.
-
- ” 7. First day. Full of self.
-
- ” 13. Slept at Bethnal Green.
-
- 1897.
-
- _Feb_. 9. Bishop came.
-
- ” 10. Miss Clarke died.
-
- ” 15. Went to funeral. “He giveth grace for grace.” As we
- spend, more pours in, the water level is kept up.
- “He that watereth shall be watered also himself.”
-
- ” 25. Telegram to say £3000 subscribed by the Guild
- [for St. Hilda’s East].
-
- 1898.
-
- _Jan._ 8. Council.
-
- ” 14. After reading to-day [I thought] ... the smallest
- living thing can stir tides of the boundless ocean,
- the atom move the infinite.
-
- ” 23. H. C., St. Philip’s. Woman touched garment.
- Sermon and lesson, to be healed of that weakness
- which is undermining spiritual strength, not by
- thinking, but by touching Jesus Christ.
-
- _Sept._ 13. Had a very refreshing holiday. (1) Lord Farrer’s;
- (2) Lodgings; (3) Miss Bidder’s; (4) Bonchurch;
- (5) Forest; (6) Woodchester.
-
- ” 9. Studio looks well and all rooms.
-
- ” 23. Opened.
-
- ” 25. H. C. Fresh resolutions against spirit of indolence.’
-
-The year 1895, which opened sadly with the death of Miss Buss, was marked
-by wide extensions of the Cheltenham College work. The playground was now
-in daily use. A triumph of the athletic tendency of the age, it was also
-an emphatic mark of Miss Beale’s acceptance of new ideas. To the end she
-could not quite understand why it was wanted, but she saw it had to be,
-and even grew proud of it in its way.
-
-In 1895 the old Cheltenham theatre, which the College had purchased a
-few years before, was razed to the ground, and the erection of a new,
-fine building in its place, as an integral part of the College buildings,
-was begun. This was an immense hall,[90] capable of holding nearly two
-thousand people, and possessed of remarkable acoustic qualities. It was
-fitted up with a large stage and everything necessary for the acting
-which had already become a feature of the Guild meetings. The Guild plays
-grew to be Miss Beale’s recreation in her old age. It was an immense
-pleasure to see the stories and poems she had prized all her life made
-living on the stage. She had a keen dramatic sense, and delighted in
-watching rehearsals and personally coaching some of the individual
-actors. She was interested even in getting details of dress as correct as
-possible, and in the schemes of colour, objecting to a predominance of
-red, a colour she always disliked. The Guild plays were of course chosen,
-like the subjects of her literature lessons, with a view to elevate
-rather than to entertain. Three performances specially stand out in the
-memory: _Comus_, in 1896, with its exquisite dancing and dressing; that
-of _Griselda_, in 1904; and the last of all, with its prophetic note of
-farewell, _Hatshepset_, in 1906. Probably _Griselda_ most of all appealed
-to Miss Beale, who gave an interpretation all her own to Chaucer’s tale.
-She saw in it a spiritual allegory of God’s dealings with the soul, and
-she set it forth in a beautiful little introduction to the story. Years
-before it had been proposed that Sir Edwin Arnold’s _Griselda_ should be
-taken for the College play. She wrote very strongly against it to Miss
-Wolseley Lewis:—
-
- ‘I am sure none of you would be able to bear the modernised
- dramatised Griselda if you learned it. It is like painting
- the face of an unearthly mediæval saint and clothing her with
- garments which show the human form. In the Griselda of Chaucer
- there is nothing of the vulgar love-making of the “merchant.”
- The love of the “markis” comes as a gift from heaven.
-
- ‘Then that scene in which she ministers to his pleasure
- by music; it is all such a low kind of ministry. Whereas
- in the original, hers is just the worship of perfect
- _faith_,—obedience to his _will_, because she will not question
- it.... The whole thing jars on me.... The quiet, grave “markis”
- (of Chaucer) may be a type of Him who tries us to confirm our
- faith, but this human “marquis” is of the earth earthy, and
- cannot stand for a spiritual type. It reminds me of the passage
- in which Ruskin comments on the attitude of the Prophets in
- “The Transfiguration.”[91] Do you remember it in _Modern
- Painters_?
-
- ‘There! enough! I wish it might be _Comus_, or _The Princess_
- or _Alcestis_ would not cost so much trouble as something
- new,—but better nothing than something not really high.
-
- ‘There, I don’t want to dictate or to say you shall not do
- what you wish, but I hope you won’t wish this _Griselda_.... I
- do think we should like _Comus_, and we might have such good
- music.’
-
-In the early part of 1895 Miss Beale was more than usually active and
-well. In the Easter holidays she paid a long-promised visit to Miss
-Mason’s House of Education at Ambleside. Here she gave a lecture to the
-students on Geometry. The visit was a great pleasure, she was in full
-sympathy with Miss Mason’s work, and she enjoyed meeting Miss Arnold
-at Fox Howe, and many friends and pupils. In June she was present at a
-performance of the _Alcestis_ at Bradfield College; she also went again
-to the Royal Society conversazione.
-
-The active enjoyment of this summer received a check at the term-holiday,
-when, while walking on Leckhampton Hill, Miss Beale slipped and broke her
-leg. The period of forced inaction which followed was generally held to
-be good for her, and she was well enough to be carried into the College
-for the addresses of the Quiet Days at the end of the term. She was
-unable, however, to be present at the Oxford summer meeting in August.
-The paper she had written for this on the Professional Education of
-Teachers was read by Mr. Worsley.
-
-A school which has neither prize-giving nor speech-day does not easily
-obtain very highly distinguished visitors. It was not till 1897 that the
-College was honoured by the presence of Royalty. In that year the Empress
-Frederick of Germany proposed a visit. Her interest in education led
-her to wish to see the classes at work in their usual conditions. She
-therefore went with Miss Beale from one room to another while the actual
-teaching was going on. A few days after her visit Miss Beale received the
-following letter from Major-General Russell, who was at that time member
-for Cheltenham:—
-
- FRANKFORT, GERMANY, _August 13, 1897_.
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—Yesterday I had the honour of lunching with
- the Empress Frederick at Cronberg. As soon as I arrived there
- she called me on one side, and begged that I would convey to
- you the pleasure and satisfaction that she had derived from
- her visit to the Ladies’ College at Cheltenham. She begged me
- to tell you that she was much gratified by what she saw of the
- arrangements, and what she learned of the system of education
- pursued there. She was much impressed by the happiness and
- contentment which appeared to be universal among the pupils,
- and also with the strict and excellent discipline which she
- hears and remarked you maintain both among the instructors and
- the students themselves.
-
- ‘She added that she fully appreciates the great work that you
- have accomplished in the interest of education, as well as the
- personal sacrifice and self-devotion which you have consecrated
- to the task.
-
- ‘I need not say how much pleasure it has afforded me to be the
- medium of conveying to you Her Imperial Majesty’s gracious
- message, and, I remain, yours sincerely,
-
- FRANK S. RUSSELL.’
-
-Two years later the Princess Henry of Battenberg came to unveil a marble
-bust of Queen Victoria, the work of Countess Feodora Gleichen, which had
-been presented to the College.
-
-[Illustration: _The Empress Frederick at Cheltenham_
-
-_from a photograph by Mr. Domenico Barnett_]
-
-Among Miss Beale’s triumphs of this period should surely be mentioned
-her mastery of the tricycle at the age of sixty-seven. It became a great
-delight to her. She used it chiefly in the early morning—often very
-early—when the streets were empty. ‘The men in the milk-carts know me
-and keep out of my way,’ she would say. She greatly enjoyed the fresh air
-and complete solitude gained with so little effort.
-
-In 1898 England received a severe visitation of small-pox. No town in
-the country suffered more than Gloucester, where for long it raged among
-the unvaccinated, and even devoted nurses and doctors fell victims. It
-was five times introduced into Cheltenham, but owing, Miss Beale was
-pleased to hint in the Magazine, to the healthiness of the climate and
-the good sanitation of the town, it never got a hold there. Cheltenham
-largely owed its immunity to the exertions of the Lady Principal, who
-insisted on revaccination where it was necessary for every one connected
-with the College. This meant not only teachers, pupils, servants, but
-all who had to do with any College girl in any capacity—all in the homes
-of the day-pupils—all in the shops which served the boarding-houses—the
-whole railway staff at the different stations. The College custom was too
-good to lose, and she carried her point. Such a drastic measure had its
-comic side, as was perceived by the saucy butcher-boy who shouted to a
-boarding-house cook, ‘I must know if you are vaccinated before I deliver
-this meat.’
-
-Among the College victims was a girl within a few weeks of an important
-examination. The daughter of an anti-vaccinator, she had of course never
-been ‘done,’ and the father telegraphed that he would not permit it.
-A married sister staying in the town urged the College authorities to
-act on their own responsibility; but that Miss Beale would not do. The
-girl made another appeal to her father; but a cab was actually at the
-door to take her to the station, when his answer arrived in the second
-telegram—‘May do as she pleases.’ This modified permission saved the
-situation.
-
-Miss Beale’s determined and successful action in this matter was
-doubtless remembered when, in 1901, the Mayor and Corporation resolved to
-bestow upon her the freedom of the borough. This was ceremonially done on
-October 28, the Town Council, Governing Body of the College, and a large
-number of Miss Beale’s friends being present.
-
-‘The honour,’ said the Mayor (Mr. Norman) in his preliminary address to
-the Council, ‘is given with discrimination, and somewhat rarely. We in
-Cheltenham, during the thirty years of our corporate life, have only
-conferred it in two instances.... I am charged to-day with the proposing
-of a resolution which will add a third to that number. The resolution is
-in these terms:—
-
- “That, in recognition of the great work she has done for the
- education of women in England, and especially of the unique
- position to which under her direction the Cheltenham Ladies’
- College has attained among the educational institutions of the
- country, Miss Dorothea Beale be, in pursuance and exercise of
- the provisions of the Honorary Freedom of Boroughs’ Act, 1885,
- admitted to the honorary freedom of this borough.”
-
-‘When I first approached Miss Beale on this subject, I did not know
-whether any lady had before been admitted a freeman of the borough. But
-from the wording of the Act of Parliament I was quite sure that the term
-“freeman” in the section quoted was used in a generic sense, and that
-ladies were as eligible as men to the honour which we propose to confer
-upon Miss Beale. I was therefore prepared to create a precedent, if
-necessary. But since then I have learned that at least in one case, that
-of Baroness Burdett Coutts, this honour has been conferred upon a lady.’
-
-In her reply Miss Beale said:—
-
- ‘ ... In some places those who should work together stand
- opposed; elsewhere we have heard of fights between town
- and gown; at some seats of learning women have been denied
- titles that they have earned. In Cheltenham we have a happy
- conciliation of opposites.... You Municipal authorities
- recognise that; you care not only for pure water and open
- spaces and cleanliness, but for the Free Library and Science
- Schools and Art Galleries and healthy recreations; and we
- school authorities cannot but make the body healthier by mental
- discipline, by the sunshine of truth, by inspiring the young
- with high aspirations, and so lifting them out of the rudeness
- which is the outward sign of selfishness. I look upon to-day’s
- ceremony as a sign of our faith for the individual and for the
- community, health in its largest sense, _mens sana in corpore
- sano_, is to be realised only by the harmonious working of the
- inward and outward law. To invite a woman to be a Freeman of
- a Town is, I venture to believe, an expression of the thought
- that not the individual but the family, with its twofold life,
- is the true unit and type of the state, that social and civil
- and national prosperity depend on the communion of labour, and
- that the ideal commonwealth is realised only in proportion as
- the dream of one of our poets is fulfilled, and men and women
-
- “Walk this world
- Yoked in all exercise of noble ends.”
-
- ‘ ... Formerly we had no women Guardians, but one who is called
- in her own town “the Guardian Angel”[92] visited us and won all
- hearts, and then there were elected two ladies, who have been
- re-elected ever since, who by their insight and gentleness and
- wisdom have destroyed the last vestige of prejudice.
-
- ‘ ... Mrs. Owen was also a link between the Ladies’ College
- and the Cheltenham College, that elder brother, under whose
- protection alone our College could have grown up. It is a
- strange thing that women are threatened with exclusion from the
- projected Educational Authority; women, who are born to the
- care of children, who are so much needed to hold the outposts
- in our educational army, which are being deserted by men.
- Visions I have of a closer union between all the schools of our
- town.... Cheltenham, too, has made progress intellectually. A
- Literary Institution died a natural death shortly after I came;
- it was, I hope, only a case of _post hoc_. In my early days the
- provision of books was scanty indeed. I tried to get Tennyson’s
- last poem in one of the principal shops of the Promenade. I was
- told, “We never have had any poetic effusions in our library,
- and I do not think we shall begin now.” There was no Permanent
- Library, and a Free Library was impossible and unthought of,
- and in our own College I was fain to be content with a grant of
- £5 for books. But more than all the material and intellectual
- progress has been the raising of public opinion regarding the
- moral law. Much there is still to deplore, much to amend, and
- we long to see more efforts made to promote temperance, but I
- am sure that the higher education of women, the opening to them
- of larger opportunities of usefulness, has helped to lift many
- above the unsatisfying pleasures of a frivolous life, and won
- for them the respect which is always a blessing both to “him
- that gives and him that takes.” We have, indeed, reason to
- thank God and take courage.’
-
-In the same year Miss Beale was co-opted a member of the Advisory Board
-of the University of London.
-
-The recognition by the town was from every point of view a triumph and
-an honour. The year in which it took place and the preceding one were
-marked by large extension of boarding-house property and many other
-signs of wealth. But for Miss Beale herself it can have been no time of
-great gladness. Though her vitality was as great as ever, her health was
-less good, her deafness much increasing, her sight impaired. Constantly
-she was called upon to part by death from some old and valued friend
-or fellow-worker. In January she shared the general mourning for Queen
-Victoria. In March 1901 Miss Caines died; a month later the beloved
-sister Eliza and Canon Hutchinson, of whom Miss Beale spoke as a friend
-and pastor of many years, were buried on the same day. Miss Beale turned
-from her sister’s grave to write last words to be read after her own
-death should she be called away while still head of the College. She also
-revised her will and wrote directions concerning her personal belongings
-and her funeral.
-
-But if the road to the Dark Tower grew lonely,[93] it was greatly
-brightened by the love of those she had taught, inspired, and helped. No
-parent was ever more closely encompassed by the love of children. There
-were those at Cheltenham who thought for her, waited on her, read to
-her—no light task—those who, should she desire it, were ever at her beck
-and call. Some of these were on the College Council. One, in particular,
-Miss Flora Ker, who lived at Cheltenham, was always at hand, making the
-interests of the College and little attentions to Miss Beale the first
-duty of her day. Another, who had become head of a boarding-house,
-thought of her daily needs to the smallest details. A third habitually
-accompanied her on the visits which became so great an enjoyment in these
-later years, and on the frequent business journeys to London, making
-them easy by many little thoughtful arrangements. Miss Beale would seem
-unconscious of these at the moment, but she deeply valued the thought
-and the loving service of which she availed herself to the full. The
-Chairman and different members of the Council showed also much personal
-consideration for the Principal. Nor could she travel anywhere without
-finding ‘old girls’ ready to welcome and make much of her in every way.
-In these things she had indeed ‘all that should accompany old age.’
-
-In 1902 came a crowning honour for the Ladies’ College when its Principal
-was offered the LL.D. by the Edinburgh University, in recognition of her
-services to education. Miss Beale was simply and unfeignedly delighted
-with this acknowledgment of the worth of women’s work. Her loyal staff
-seized the occasion to give her a personal sense of satisfaction also.
-They presented her with her robes, which were made as costly and
-beautiful as possible. A journey to Scotland was a great adventure to
-Miss Beale, but the occasion warranted the effort. As usual, all the
-arrangements were left in the hands of Miss Alice Andrews, who with
-others of the College staff accompanied the Principal. It was examination
-week at Cheltenham, or such a flight of teachers would not have been
-possible. The degree was conferred on April 11 in the M’Ewan Hall of
-Edinburgh University. Others who received it on the same occasion were
-Lord Alverstone, Mr. Asquith, Mr. Austin Dobson, Sir John Batty Tuke, and
-Dr. Rücker.[94] Only once before had the University conferred this degree
-on a woman, viz. on Miss Ormerod, in recognition of her great services to
-agriculture.
-
-[Illustration: _Photo. G. H. Martyn & Sons_
-
-_Dorothea Beale, LL.D._]
-
-Sir Ludovic Grant, Dean of the Faculty of Law, thus summed up Miss
-Beale’s claim to a national recognition:—
-
- ‘No feature of the national progress during the last fifty
- years is more remarkable than the revolution which has
- transformed our girls’ schools from occidental zenanas into
- centres of healthy activity. In the great crusade which has
- been crowned with this most desirable consummation, the
- foremost champion was the cultured and intrepid lady who
- guides the destinies of the Ladies’ College, Cheltenham. It
- was largely due to Miss Beale’s indomitable advocacy, on
- platform and on paper, that the barriers of parental prejudice
- were broken down, that the ancient idols venerated by a
- former generation—Mangnall, Pinnock, and Lindley Murray—were
- shattered, and that barren catechism and lifeless epitome
- were compelled to give place to fructifying studies, and the
- futile promenade to invigorating recreations. I need not
- remind you that Miss Beale’s apostolic ardour is equalled by
- her administrative abilities. When she went to Cheltenham her
- pupils were counted by tens; to-day they are to be counted by
- hundreds, and the institution in respect of organisation and
- educational efficiency will bear comparison with the best of
- the great English public schools. Among the collateral benefits
- resulting from the great movement for the higher education
- of women, in which Miss Beale has played so conspicuous a
- part, not the least important is the power which the Scotch
- Universities have obtained of conferring their honorary degrees
- upon women, and therefore it is with no ordinary satisfaction
- that the University of Edinburgh now exercises this power by
- begging Miss Beale’s acceptance of an honour which has been
- brought within the reach of her sex largely through her own
- endeavours.’
-
-Her account of the ceremony is best read in her own letter to the
-Vice-Principal:—
-
- ‘_April 12, 1902._
-
- ‘Just a few lines while waiting for breakfast. We start at
- eleven for Glasgow, and I am in the midst of the agonies of
- packing.
-
- ‘Yesterday was a long day. We started at 9.20, as it is a
- long drive to the M’Ewan Hall. In the voting-room we met
- our Chairman and various distinguished professors—Laurie,
- Saintsbury, Professor Rücker—of the people I knew; but the
- most important of all was the beadle. In a little while our
- names were called, and one had to step into place. First came
- the Doctors of Divinity. There were six LL.D.’s, headed by
- the Lord Chief-Justice, who was followed by Mr. Asquith, whom
- I followed in every subsequent procession.... Arrived at the
- hall, we sat as it were in the front row below the stage in
- our hall. There were central steps, opposite which sat the
- Vice-Chancellor or Vice-Principal. Each went up and stood with
- his back to the audience whilst the leader of his faculty
- expatiated on his claims to the honours; he looked like a
- person being reprimanded. Then the beadle invested him with the
- hood, the V.-P. put the cap over his head, he wrote his name
- in a book, and then seated himself with other exalted persons
- on the platform. Various speeches followed, but none were made
- to ordinary graduates. Music played, no sticks or umbrellas
- were allowed, and no cries such as the savages utter at English
- Universities; the only amusement was to fly paper from the
- galleries; some seems to have been made into windmills, they
- flew rather well. Then procession again to the voting-room,
- where I was first to claim my box; there was nothing to
- compare with my shabby things—cardboard most of them, but I am
- persuaded that my robes were far superior to any other. Ask
- those who saw them from a distance.
-
- ‘Well, we next proceeded to church, and St. Giles’ looked most
- beautiful. The sermon I did not hear, but am assured that
- was because the preacher had an Aberdeen accent. One thing I
- omitted. Just after I had taken the degree, as I was seated on
- the platform, came a porter with a telegram for me. I opened
- it and found congratulations from the Kindergarten. Please
- tell them how smartly it arrived at the right moment. The
- others kindly sent arrived at the hotel, and I found them on my
- return; please thank the senders.
-
- ‘After church some nice Miss Stevensons carried us off. They
- have a beautiful house and a splendid view of the heights,—one
- is Chairman of the School Board. They are always at work. Then
- we came back and were visited by various old girls.’
-
-At Glasgow Miss Beale stayed with a married pupil, and found herself in
-the midst of ‘old girls,’ who made much of her. From Glasgow she wrote a
-second letter, to be read to the assembled College before the dispersion
-for the holidays:—
-
- ‘_April 16, 1902._
-
- ‘We are often in spirit in Cheltenham, and I must send a few
- last words, to wish you all very happy holidays.
-
- ‘We are very busy. The first thing we visited was the Queen
- Margaret Settlement, which is something like our St. Hilda’s.
- It is a very large place, and a school for invalid children
- was being held. Miss Bruce came down to the opening. On Monday
- a large number of distinguished people were invited to meet
- us, and yesterday afternoon we had a party of about thirty
- Cheltonians. In the evening we dined with Professor and Mrs.
- George Adam Smith. I sat next to Professor Henry Jones, who
- has written a book on Browning, and on the other side was the
- Rector, Dr. Story. He has kindly promised to take us over the
- University this morning. There are about three hundred girls
- studying here,[95] and they have a charming Miss Galloway;
- she is as fond of Glasgow University as I am of our College.
- To-morrow we are to go over the Cathedral.
-
- ‘I think we shall come back refreshed and with some new ideas.
-
- ‘I am glad to hear all is going on well.’
-
-From Mrs. Osborne in Glasgow Miss Beale went on to stay with other old
-pupils in Scotland, coming afterwards to Newcastle, where she was asked
-to launch a ship. Her ignorance of use and wont under conditions fairly
-well known to most people came out when she attired herself for this
-event in well-looped-up dress and indiarubber shoes. Much as she disliked
-adventure, she was prepared to march into the Tyne if the glory of the
-Ladies’ College demanded it. However, she much enjoyed the ceremony
-that actually took place,—the drive to the docks, the description she
-received of the vessel, the bouquet of roses presented to her in honour
-of St. George’s Day. Her diary at this point becomes crowded with facts
-concerning steamers and dock labourers. From Newcastle Miss Beale went to
-Durham, where she stayed with the Dean; then to York. Wherever she went
-there were schools to visit, and perhaps address, ‘old girls’ to see. A
-night in London ended the wanderings, and she came home well and happy
-to enter in her diary: ‘Arrived to the hour, exactly three weeks after
-starting, having spent the night in nine different places, and feeling
-quite refreshed by meeting with so much kindness, and so many charming
-old girls.’
-
-The year which had so bright a spring brought but a sorry autumn for
-Miss Beale. In October 1902 she was—an unheard-of thing—obliged to
-leave Cheltenham for her health, and went to Bath, accompanied by Miss
-Berridge, for several weeks. Her sight was a special anxiety, and during
-this time she was not allowed to write or read. A letter from Miss
-Berridge to Miss Sturge gives a glimpse of the life at Bath:—
-
- ‘_October 1902._
-
- ‘We brought with us Adam Smith’s work on the _Minor Prophets_,
- and also Jane Austen’s _Persuasion_. At first we stuck to the
- _Prophets_, but at last Jane got a hearing, and since then
- she has utterly ousted the _Prophets_. It has been rather
- amusing to note how many excellent reasons there were for
- giving Jane the preference. Miss Beale was—tired—or sleepy—or
- not very well, and could not attend to anything that required
- thought—or it was near lunch—or tea—or supper-time, and
- therefore it was not worth while, etc. etc., and I think she
- has really liked the story very much. Please tell Miss Alice
- Andrews,—it is her book, and Miss Beale at first refused to
- bring it, but thought _I_ might do so, as it might amuse me.
- The result of the experiment is that we are now going to read
- some of Scott’s, beginning with _The Antiquary_. Miss Beale is
- very much better, though of course far from being her former
- energetic self. But we have still more than a fortnight before
- us, and if she makes as much progress in that time as she has
- done in the fortnight just gone, we may be very well satisfied.
-
- ‘Bath is a very pretty place, but, of course, I have not seen
- much of it. Miss Beale is now able to take short walks; to-day
- she went to Milsom Street.
-
- ‘I have written such multitudes of letters that I really do not
- know to whom they have all been.’
-
-Miss Beale was able to return to work before the end of the term. She
-seemed in most ways as vigorous as ever. A doctor, whom she consulted
-about her deafness in 1903, told her she had the pulse of a woman of
-forty. But she became more and more careful about her health. Her summer
-holidays were spent at Oeynhausen, where she followed a ‘Kur.’ There she
-took with her always some friend who devoted herself to the care of Miss
-Beale, and at the same time was a congenial companion, reading aloud to
-her, or listening while Miss Beale read. On one occasion Miss Amy Giles
-went, on another Fräulein Grzywacz. The life at the baths was carefully
-planned even to minutes. Miss Beale liked to have her morning letters
-before the early walk, which the daily régime demanded. While waiting for
-the postman, even watching his appearance along the street, she would
-have some deep book read aloud to her, able to give her whole attention.
-‘The postman is just here, Miss Beale,’ Fräulein Grzywacz would say, as
-she finished a chapter. ‘He is still ten doors off, you can read another
-paragraph,’ would be the reply.
-
-In 1902 a determined and successful effort was made to get a worthy
-portrait of Miss Beale. Early in the College history a picture, which
-bore but a faint resemblance to the original and was wholly unworthy of
-her, had been painted, and at a Council meeting in 1873 it was ‘resolved
-that it be placed (veiled) over the door of the Council room, as most in
-accordance with the wishes of the donors.’ In 1889 the Council itself
-approached Miss Beale on the subject of a portrait, Sir Samuel Johnson,
-then chairman, writing to her:—
-
- ‘_February 25, 1889._
-
- ‘You cannot, you must not leave the College without something
- that will identify it with the Founder. Fancy what unavailing
- attempts will be made some day to supply the want! and the
- blame which will attach to us for not having left something
- behind worthy of such a woman! Think again, and do not let your
- feelings stand in the way of a plain duty.’
-
-On the envelope containing this letter Miss Beale wrote in pencil the
-characteristic note: ‘Miss Stirling might make a clay or terra-cotta.’
-A modelling class had recently been opened in the College under Miss
-Stirling; Miss Beale was much interested in it and anxious to encourage
-it.
-
-The wish of the Council took the form of a resolution to which Miss Beale
-replied:—
-
- ‘_June 1889._
-
- ‘I certainly have a very great objection to the thought of my
- portrait being placed in the Ladies’ College during my life.
- When our Guild asked me to allow this last year I refused.
-
- ‘Secondly, I should _much_ regret the diversion of funds which
- are so much needed for improvements in the College, and for the
- extension of work in many directions; whether that money is
- contributed from public or private sources.
-
- ‘Lastly, I believe that putting myself forward in this way
- would be a real hindrance to my work, as it would give a false
- impression regarding the share I have been allowed to take in
- helping on the growth of this College.
-
- ‘I thought of getting Miss Stirling, who models portraits, to
- take one in clay, this would be executed in stone by Mr. Martyn
- at small cost, and would answer all historical purposes. I have
- a variety of photos, too.’
-
-Later, she consented to give a few sittings to Mrs. Lea Merritt, for
-whose work she had a great admiration. The approach of the College
-Jubilee made a new moment for appealing to her again on this subject,
-and at the Guild meeting of 1902 she was presented with the following
-address, composed by Miss Amy Lumby and signed by a large number of old
-pupils:—
-
- ‘DEAR MISS BEALE,—We, the undersigned, your “children,” once
- in learning and always in affection, approach you with a very
- earnest wish. There is not one amongst us who does not look
- back with loving delight to the time when she saw your face
- daily, and learnt from your lips what things were best worth
- learning.
-
- ‘The face we can never forget, but we should like to be able
- to have it constantly before us in such a form as shall call
- up again the spirit of those happy bygone days. There exists
- as yet no counterfeit presentment of our “School-mother”
- which does this; only a great artist can accomplish the task
- worthily; and so we beg, and beg most earnestly that, for our
- sake and for the sake of those who come after us, you will
- consent to let a portrait of yourself be painted by such an
- one, and will accept it for the College in commemoration of the
- Jubilee.’
-
-Miss Beale was much touched by this appeal. She received it in eloquent
-silence, but at the last gathering before the Guild members separated her
-reply was read aloud by Miss Ker:—
-
- ‘I am touched by the kind wish of the Guild conveyed to me in
- the resolution of yesterday. I am afraid a third attempt would
- be no more successful than the preceding. The unbiassed artist
- represents his subject as she is, not as she seems to be to
- those who are good enough to overlook her defects, and love her
- in spite of them. Still, if it is really wished that another
- attempt should be made, I will willingly sit once more.’
-
-The work was entrusted to Mr. J. J. Shannon, R.A., who had proved
-his ability for the task by the portraits of Miss Clough and Miss
-Wordsworth. No effort was spared by the painter to realise Miss Beale
-at her best,[96] and she gave a good deal of time to sittings, which
-were employed also in listening to reading aloud. Dr. Illingworth’s
-_Personality Human and Divine_, a very favourite work of hers, was often
-chosen. Sometimes this work was displaced by _Lorna Doone_, which Miss
-Beale said ‘amused the painter.’ The Lady Principal was painted in her
-LL.D. robes, but also in her familiar head-dress, _son petit bonnet de
-douairière_. She is represented as looking up with the glance well known
-to those who had watched her when she lectured. The attitude, which is as
-much that of disciple as teacher, was fitly chosen.
-
-The portrait was formally presented by the Duchess of Bedford on November
-8, 1904, and with it an illuminated book containing the names of the
-donors. Miss Beale in her reply said:—
-
- ‘You have all come here moved by loyalty to your College.
- Loyalty is not a personal matter.... Tribute was due not to
- Tiberius but to Caesar; so you wanted a portrait of a Lady
- Principal—not of the person but of the representative,—and the
- Principal has a great advantage over the person in that the
- former lasts on when the latter passes away; loyalty outlasts
- life:—so I look on your gift as a page of College history. But
- not only have you brought a present for the College. I find
- also a beautiful book for my own personal self, not my official
- self, a record of affection from my children, which warms my
- heart, and makes me long to be more worthy of it.
-
- ‘But if the affection of those we love is an energising power,
- it produces a moral tension, not unmingled with fear.... He who
- recorded the names in the ancient church wrote: “Let us fear
- lest we also come short.” But as I have said, the Principal
- does not die. Like the Lama she is re-incarnated. In her, if
- the body dies, the _esprit de corps_ survives, and I look
- forward to the time when another shall reign in my stead, ...
- and a procession of rulers greater than their ancestors ...
- shall see developments which we cannot foresee.’
-
-For various reasons it was necessary to postpone the College Jubilee
-celebrations until May 1905. On this occasion a bust of Miss Beale was
-presented to the College by some admirers of her work who were not
-connected with it. A large new wing built for science teaching was opened
-by Lord Londonderry, then President of the Board of Education; and there
-were many distinguished guests. Two memorable speeches were made on
-this great occasion. One by the Chairman of the Council, Dr. Magrath,
-Provost of Queen’s College, Oxford, who made a brief but very sympathetic
-retrospect of the past history of the Ladies’ College. The other was from
-Mrs. Bryant, Head-mistress of the North London Collegiate School. She,
-as was fitting, looked forward to the future, and foreshadowed a large
-development of the work so well begun and established at Cheltenham. This
-Jubilee Day was the only public commemoration the Ladies’ College ever
-had. It was fitting that there should be one great public acknowledgment
-of Miss Beale’s work before the day came when she must leave it to the
-guidance of another.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-THE LAST TERM
-
- ‘And, when the day was done, relieved at once.’
-
- BROWNING, _How it strikes a Contemporary_.
-
-
-At the beginning of the year 1905 Miss Beale sought to induce Bishop
-Ellicott, who had then resigned his see of Gloucester, to continue to
-visit the Ladies’ College, Cheltenham, as he had done for upwards of
-thirty years. He declined on the ground of ill-health, saying, ‘Among the
-many things that I regret being unable to attend to, I regret none more
-than the addresses to the bright-eyed attentive hearers I always secured
-at the College. But all things must have an end.’ This was written but a
-few months before the Bishop’s death.
-
-Miss Beale, happily for her active spirit, was not thus summoned to
-retire from work owing to age or feeble health. She had expressed more
-than once the wish that she might die in harness, and her letters since
-1900 had frequently breathed the wonder that she should still last on,
-and up to the summer of 1906 there was nothing to suggest that the end
-was really drawing near.
-
-The last Christmas holidays were happy. Miss Beale made a round of
-visits. At Lindfield she stayed with Miss Keyl, an old Gloucestershire
-friend, in London with Mrs. Tallents, an old pupil. Lastly, having been
-joined by Miss Alice Andrews, she went for a few days to Miss Wedgwood,
-whose sister, Lady Farrer, was also staying with her. Miss Beale greatly
-enjoyed her time with these old friends whom she had first known as
-pupils at Queen’s College. She was singularly active. ‘I dare say you
-would like to do just one thing each day,’ said one hostess to her,
-little realising the vitality which would carry her on through a long
-series of events such as would tire out most younger people.
-
-The spring passed with little special incident, but for Miss Beale it was
-saddened by the death of Mrs. Charles Robinson in March.
-
-In the Easter holidays Miss Beale much enjoyed a visit to Miss Mellish,
-Head-mistress of the Ladies’ College, Guernsey. Here she made many new
-acquaintances, took drives, saw places of interest, and kept an account
-of all in her diary. But the draft of a letter to some friend during this
-visit shows, that in spite of her courageous spirit, she felt her own
-term of work in this world to be practically over.
-
- ‘GUERNSEY, _April 1906_.
-
- ‘I arrived here yesterday. I am staying with a very nice old
- girl who is Head-mistress of the College here. I have long
- wished to see this beautiful island where I have many friends.
- I have one of our staff with me who is a geologist, and is
- enjoying rambles. I don’t go about now without some one, a
- “lady-in-waiting,” to take care of me.
-
- ‘The revolutionary changes make one anxious, the Bill to
- legalise “peaceful persuasion” especially. Perhaps the German
- conquest may change all. That a contest must come there seems
- no doubt, but it is better not to prophesy till after the
- event....
-
- ‘There are problems enough for our successors on this planet. I
- wonder what we shall find to do,—what battles to fight when we
- pass out of sight.... I don’t think we shall want only _rest_.’
-
-In the summer, having at first declined the invitation, Miss Beale
-was persuaded to address the Head-mistresses’ Conference, which met
-on June 8 and 9 at the Clapham High School. In spite of the deafness,
-which made her dread committee meetings, she took her share in the
-discussions. Speaking on a resolution concerning the suffrage she said:
-‘The underpayment of women went to the heart of all as a crying evil, and
-made every one earnest about the extension of the suffrage.’ She also
-in a later discussion expressed her emphatic disapproval of afternoon
-compulsory school, and related the history of the change made at
-Cheltenham in 1864.
-
-The address to the assembled head-mistresses on the following morning,
-Miss Beale’s last public utterance, may well find a place here. Full of
-the tenderest regard for the past, appreciating as no younger worker
-could the ideals and conflicts of her own generation, that utterance
-showed a front of marvellous courage and hope to the anxieties of the
-present and future.
-
- ‘I feel a sorrowful pride as I remember some of the Heads of
- the great Schools, who have passed out of sight, but whose
- works follow them. We were happy in our founder:[97] with such
- a leader one felt ashamed of any evil spirit of competition:
- she always wanted to impart any good gift and introduce
- improved methods of teaching: to recommend new books, and to
- propose arrangements for the better organisation of schools,
- for the training of teachers, for extending the sphere of
- women’s work, for relieving them of the pressure of anxiety
- about old age: these things occupied her thoughts while she was
- still herself bearing the burden of financial responsibility,
- and generously caring for those bound to her by strong ties of
- family affection.... It was the celestial light which shone
- inwardly that irradiated her outward life. Of external work
- she undertook perhaps more than she ought to have done. She
- was on the Governing Body of the Church Schools Company, a
- member of our Governing Body, and of that of several other
- schools. She spared no pains in labouring for others, always
- sympathising and sustaining, fighting for the best good. Above
- all, actuating her, and enabling her to go on bravely, was that
- optimism which came from the belief that God had given her
- this work to do, and that His Spirit would sustain her. Most
- gracefully did she descend from her throne when the end came. I
- shall not forget our last interview, when she playfully alluded
- to the fact that she had now to become again as a little child,
- to obey where she had ruled, and she was content to pass on the
- work into the hands of one so able, so beloved, so trusted as
- Mrs. Bryant.
-
- ‘Another early member was Miss Benson, the first Head-mistress
- of the Girls’ Public Day Schools Company’s School at Oxford,
- and afterwards, for a few months, at Bedford; she was a burning
- and a shining light, unsparing in her demands upon herself and
- others;—she might have been called Zelotes.
-
- ‘Of her successor, our own beloved Miss Belcher, it is hard
- for me to speak. She was the soul of honour. I remember
- one day she and her friend[98] came to me and said one of
- them would like to apply for a good post, at a time when
- head-mistress-ships did not abound. I said, “I think I ought
- to tell you that events are impending which may shake our
- College to its foundations.” Some would have said, “Let us
- seek another shelter.” Their answer was, “We shall not apply.”
- Sometimes one thinks that if she could have had a less onerous
- work than the rule over the great school at Bedford, which
- left but little leisure for exercise, she might be at work
- now. But we will put aside “Might-have-beens,” as we see how
- her spirit lives in her school. One of the Bedford Council
- thought when a salary of over £1000 was offered, there would
- be many applications—thought we might send a second Head as
- her successor, but not one of our staff would apply, for Miss
- Belcher had chosen.
-
- ‘This year has taken from us one of my best-beloved pupils, the
- late Head-mistress of Truro High School, afterwards the wife of
- Canon Charles Robinson; all who knew her regarded her as indeed
- a saint.
-
- ‘I may not speak of the living—none are happy till their
- death—but it is a joy to me (now the most ancient grandmother
- of all) to see with intimate knowledge the good work being
- done by those whom I have learned to know as friends and
- fellow-workers. Specially close ties bind me to those
- Head-mistresses whom we ourselves have sent forth. Of these in
- the Association there are now twenty presiding over important
- schools, and ten who are no longer Heads, not to name many who
- for various reasons do not belong to our Association.
-
- ‘To turn to less personal matters, we who belong to Secondary
- Schools have been happy in escaping the troubles which beset
- those schools which receive Government grants. So far,
- Secondary Schools have been allowed some individuality. I
- think we may give thanks for the liberty of “prophesying,”
- that we have hitherto enjoyed. I rather dread the result of
- the absorption into Trusts of the great School Companies. “Wha
- dare meddle wi’ me?” has been the cry of some of us, and the
- prickles have protected the flower.
-
- ‘Then we have escaped payment by results, and interference from
- inspectors, some of whom are able to see the body but not the
- soul which moves it.
-
- ‘The present troubles bring us into closer sympathy with those
- who have been enduring what seemed to us an Egyptian bondage,
- but who were doing grand work in disciplining and drilling the
- masses. Many of those who are now to take up the management of
- Council schools are now brought into closer relation with ours.
-
- ‘ ... And now what is the main issue before us? When the
- Secondary Schools are absorbed into the national system, and
- orders are issued to us from the Education Department, shall
- we be told that we also are to give only secular instruction,
- and forbidden to give definite teaching regarding the creeds
- and ritual which express the truths by which we live;—shall
- we be forbidden to ask any questions about the fitness of the
- teachers whom we wish to appoint? These are matters which seem
- to press for answers.
-
- ‘Only a few thoughts can I throw out to-day on this subject.
- First, it seems inconceivable that there should be any such
- limitations of the realms of knowledge as is implied in the
- word “secular.” Man’s thoughts cannot be shut in by space or
- time, he must seek the real beneath the phenomenal, he must
- search for the ultimate; more than any earthly or secular
- good he desires to know and live for the things which belong
- to an eternal world,—the true, the beautiful, the good.
- All literature, all history, attests this. Whence then the
- discordant cries, some demanding secular teaching only, others
- fearing it?
-
- ‘I think we are confused sometimes, because we do not
- remember or recognise sufficiently that there are two ways
- of approaching the subject of religious teaching and of all
- subjects of thought. Take for an illustration the subject now
- occupying the scientific world. Can we retain the conception
- of the atom as formulated in the last century? Is matter an
- aggregate of impenetrable, indivisible nodules, or is an atom
- merely a centre of force? Have we nothing that we should call
- solid, only vortices? Is solidity a flux of ions? These are
- all matters on which the wisest may differ, but there are
- certain fundamental facts on which all are agreed—the fact
- that there must be one all-embracing medium through which
- relations are realised. So in the world of spirit, the fact
- is indisputable that we are conscious of forces affecting us
- and on which we individually react, indisputable that we can
- interpret facts of sensation, and this necessitates a belief
- in the correspondence of our mind with one all-embracing
- spirit; it seems impossible to doubt that in interpreting
- the universe we are corresponding with and holding communion
- with an infinite mind revealed in Nature, and we repeat
- with inner conviction the first article of our Creed—“God
- created,”—we pass on to the second half—“God created man in
- His own image,” and so we go on to speak of other articles of
- faith. Philosophy, which has so large a place in the Bible
- teaching and which is always based on the facts of our inner
- consciousness and our moral sense, ought, I believe, to have
- a larger space in our teaching, but we should endeavour more
- to build on foundations which cannot be shaken. The mystery of
- our own being, the distinction of the “I” and the “Me,” the
- facts of conscience, the συνείδησις which lifts us out of the
- mere individual or animal, and speaks of the relation of the
- true self to the eternal, the kingdom of righteousness,—the
- evolution of human thought through the ages,—leads on to the
- faith that man is indeed the child of God, that His Spirit is
- inspiring us.
-
- ‘What seem to us present troubles are perhaps intended to
- make us dig deeper in the field wherein the great treasure
- of spiritual truth is hidden, so that we may say with fuller
- conscious conviction, “The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand”—“is
- within you.”’
-
-On her way to Paddington after the Head-mistresses’ Conference, the cab
-which contained Miss Beale and Miss Andrews was run into by another, a
-shaft shattering the window beside Miss Beale.
-
-She did not realise her danger or that her shawl was full of bits of
-broken glass. The accident is alluded to in the letter she afterwards
-wrote to Mrs. Woodhouse, whose guest she had been at Clapham.
-
- ‘I am so glad I was able to be present. It was a most
- interesting meeting; and very glad to see your beautiful
- school....
-
- ‘Lord Aberdeen [once] complimented me on not suffering from
- “train fever”; I am afraid I seemed to do so at lunch. It was
- well that we allowed a little spare time to be run into. One
- needs to allow for motors!’
-
-It was the year of the Guild meetings. A very large number of old
-pupils, larger than ever before, came to Cheltenham in June, for every
-year saw additions to the roll of members and no falling off among the
-elder ones, who felt each time might be the last occasion on which the
-beloved Principal would preside. The subject chosen for the play was the
-very unusual one of a story from Egyptian history. No pains were spared
-to render it truthfully; Dr. Budge was consulted, the Book of the Dead
-studied; Miss Beale herself gave a lecture on the history of Egypt, a
-subject she had never worked up before. The story of the great queen
-whose life was given up to her country, ordered wholly for their good,
-with no private interests; whose marriage was an act of sacrifice; who
-ruled her people with large-minded beneficence, and under whom they
-prospered; who finally, as age came upon her, resigned for their sake,
-seemed strangely appropriate for the close of Miss Beale’s long work for
-Cheltenham. The very remoteness of the story, its gravity, the absence
-from it of such didacticism as abounded in Miss Beale’s interpretation
-of Britomart and Griselda, made it all the more forcible. It was in no
-way premeditated. Miss Beale herself said she did not much care for it,
-as it contained so little spiritual teaching. But as the curtain fell
-upon Hatshepset’s resignation and death, the crowded audiences of past
-and present pupils palpably realised that for them the inevitable change
-awaiting the College had been, if unconsciously, foreshadowed.
-
-The Guild arrangements, which generally included an address from Miss
-Beale on Saturday morning and a closing one on Monday from some speaker
-invited for the purpose, were altered in 1906 to suit the convenience
-of the Bishop of Stepney. The earlier address was given by the Bishop
-after the College prayers, which Miss Beale herself read as usual. His
-subject was the work of St. Hilda’s East and the needs of East London.
-He held his hearers enthralled as he spoke to them of those other girls
-and women whom they were meant to help. But even more striking than the
-strong words of the young Bishop was the sight of the frail and aged form
-of her, so long their teacher and inspirer, to whom most of those present
-were consciously and deeply indebted for much that was best in their
-lives. Miss Beale, with the familiar smile which marked her enthusiastic
-approval, stood the whole time close to the Bishop, straining to hear
-every word, her eye alert to trace the effect of what he was saying
-on his audience. Many who saw her thus saw her for the last time, as
-they had to leave Cheltenham when the morning Guild meetings were over.
-Miss Beale herself left before the end, unequal to the long strain they
-involved.
-
-On Sunday the usual admission of new members took place. On Monday Miss
-Beale addressed the Guild for the last time. It was not unnatural that
-she should speak on this occasion as one who looked back on the changes
-and progress of fifty years. Miss Beale conveyed to her hearers the
-suggestion that it was not with unmixed satisfaction that she surveyed
-matters from this standpoint. In the midst of advantages, such as the
-last generation could not know, their eyes opened to the needs of others,
-needs they could supply, many women remained not serious, not devoted.
-She appealed for more earnestness in all, that there might be none
-wearing the Guild badge who should not be able to use the motto of St.
-Hilda’s, Oxford: _Non frustra vixi_.
-
-So passed this great gathering of friends. It was only afterwards that it
-came to be known that below her joyous affectionate welcome, her ready
-sympathy and quick memory for her children and their concerns, lay a deep
-reason for personal anxiety, that she was beginning to suspect herself
-to be the victim of a serious malady. Only once was there a sign of
-uneasiness, when she seemed much distressed not to have seen again an old
-pupil and Guild member, Dr. Aldrich-Blake, who had been obliged to leave
-Cheltenham without saying good-bye to her.
-
-The summer holidays were again spent at Oeynhausen. She wrote in the
-course of them that she was deriving benefit from the treatment, but
-certainly it was far less effective than before. Nor did she give herself
-a chance of throwing off the cares of work. In the ordinary sense of the
-word, indeed, Miss Beale could never rest, and though physically less
-strong her brain seemed inexhaustibly active. She corrected the Magazine
-proofs, engaged new teachers, and wrote many letters to the College
-secretary, going as usual into all kinds of details about arrangements
-for new pupils. Nor did she even rest from study. She wrote to Cheltenham
-for a table of German genders; while from Mr. Worsley she asked the
-Scripture examination papers, which he had as usual undertaken. Her
-letter shows this continued activity of mind:—
-
- ‘_September 12, 1906._
-
- ‘Thanks for your note. I think I should like to have all the
- papers; we can better show the girls where they have failed to
- enter into the full meaning. I looked at mine, and thought they
- had kept to very outside things.
-
- ‘Have you seen Montague Owen’s record of the Sewell family?
- It is privately printed, but I can lend you my copy. They
- certainly were a wonderful and original people. Now Elizabeth
- is gone at the age of ninety-one. You were, I think, at Radley.
-
- ‘We re-open next week with one hundred and fifty new pupils to
- fill our vacancies.’
-
-She was glad to get back to Cheltenham, but those who knew her best saw
-that it was only by a stern effort of will that she nerved herself to
-begin her work in the ordinary way. They began to hope that she might not
-much longer be called upon to make what was visibly a tremendous effort.
-Nothing was left undone.
-
-School began on September 22. Miss Beale, as usual on the first day of
-term, gave a short address after prayers to the assembled teachers and
-children. She spoke, as often before, of the parable of the Talents, but
-mainly of the joy of the Lord—the joy and reward of being fellow-workers
-with God. Strangely fitting did her words afterwards seem for the last
-time she addressed the College as a body.
-
-In the month which followed only a few saw signs of the weakness and
-illness which had really begun. She had undertaken the usual courses of
-lectures, and missed none. The College numbers were very large, the life
-as full and vigorous as ever. There was even a new department started for
-the first time that term, in the arrangement—the revolution of Time’s
-wheel having been made—of courses of lessons in cookery.
-
-On October 16 the annual Council meeting was held in London. In order
-to spare herself fatigue, Miss Beale did not as usual accompany Miss
-Alice Andrews to the Oxford meeting on the previous evening, but went
-up alone from Cheltenham the next morning. It meant a long day and an
-early start, earlier than ever before, as the time of departure had been
-altered. This Miss Beale only learned the same morning, but with her
-habit of being ready long beforehand she was able to catch the train.
-This, by the new arrangement, did not wait for the Oxford train by which
-Miss Andrews went up. Consequently, when Miss Andrews arrived at the
-Paddington Hotel, Miss Beale had already gone to see her doctor, Miss
-Aldrich-Blake. Probably she preferred to make this visit alone.
-
-To Miss Aldrich-Blake she owned that she was tired, that she felt her
-much impaired hearing and sight to be a hindrance to work; but she
-made light of the malady which was her real and undefined dread. Miss
-Aldrich-Blake, however, advised an immediate operation, in spite of the
-annual general meeting fixed for November 16,[99] on account of which
-Miss Beale wished to put it off for the present. On leaving the doctor’s
-house Miss Beale went on alone to keep one or two appointments. At the
-Council meeting in the afternoon she showed no fatigue, but read her
-report with animation. Miss Andrews then joined her for St. Hilda’s
-committee meeting. They left this meeting in time to catch the afternoon
-train back to Cheltenham. Miss Beale generally slept for part of this
-journey; that day she was wakeful and tired, but she said nothing then to
-Miss Andrews of what the doctor had told her. She did, however, shortly
-tell Miss Rowand, who persuaded her to see Dr. Cardew. He confirmed Dr.
-Aldrich-Blake’s opinion, and Miss Beale then made up her mind to enter a
-nursing home, hard by the College, on Monday, October 22. During these
-intervening days she went on with her usual work, and silently made
-preparation for what might be a final parting from it. On Sunday, which
-she spent alone but for a visit from Fräulein Grzywacz, she wrote a large
-number of letters. One was to the Vice-Principal, Miss Sturge:—
-
- ‘I have been feeling very unwell since my return from Germany,
- and two doctors whom I have consulted say I must have a few
- weeks away. I am sorry to throw any of my work on others, but
- I thought the week in which our half-term holiday comes my
- absence would be less felt. Also, as the Bishop gives five
- lectures, these would take the place of mine on Saturdays.... I
- thought some one who has taught the Fairy Queen could take [my
- literature lesson]. The doctor who knows me best fixed three
- weeks as the date of my return.’
-
-One to Miss Gore:—
-
- ‘I have not told any one but Miss Rowand the reason why I
- shall have to be absent, perhaps for a few weeks—perhaps for
- ever—from my beloved College. I want you to come and stay in
- the house till we see which way things will go. I hope you will
- manage to come, and that you will put on a cheerful countenance
- and not let any one suspect that there is so serious a cause
- for my absence. I am very grateful for having been allowed
- to do so many years of work, very grateful for the loyal
- and affectionate support of my colleagues and our Council,
- specially the Chairman. I think I feel content whichever way
- things may be ordered for me by Him who doth not willingly
- afflict, but chastens for our profit.—Yours affectionately,
-
- D. BEALE.’
-
-On Monday, October 22, Miss Beale read prayers as usual, choosing a hymn
-by Miss Fermi from the collection of school hymns she herself had made:—
-
- ‘All the way our Father leadeth,
- Whether dark or bright.’
-
-After prayers she gave her last Scripture lesson—the usual Monday lesson
-to the assembled First Division. The subject was the Healing of the Body,
-in connection with thoughts suggested by St. Luke’s Day, and the Gospel
-for the Nineteenth Sunday after Trinity. It was a remarkable lesson. One
-who had not been present said that, when she entered the Hall after it
-was over, people were talking of Miss Beale’s wonderful Scripture lesson.
-In it she dwelt, as often before, on the duty of the care of health; and
-yet it was not to be the first consideration. She showed why sickness of
-the body is often for our profit. Then, having touched on wrong teachings
-about the body, as, for instance, those of Buddhism, she showed that the
-Incarnation brought unity of the whole being, at-one-ment of body, soul,
-and spirit. She concluded with the words: ‘The Body of our Lord Jesus
-Christ preserve thy body and soul unto everlasting life.’
-
-After the lesson Miss Beale read the weekly class marks, as usual on
-Mondays. In the course of the morning she discussed a paper she had
-written, for the American National Educational Association, with Miss
-Alice Andrews. Miss Andrews told her that a member of the staff had lost
-her mother, and during the day Miss Beale wrote a note of sympathy. In
-a second interview that morning Miss Beale told Miss Andrews that the
-doctor had told her she must lie up for some weeks. ‘But I am not going
-away, I shall be amongst you all.’
-
-Miss Sturge noticed that Miss Beale lingered in the Hall when school was
-over, as if unwilling to leave. She seemed pathetically anxious to leave
-nothing undone. Finally, after discussing several small matters, she
-said, ‘Good-bye; I hope to come back in three weeks, and you can just
-say I am resting. I will not tell you where, and then if you are asked
-you will not know.’ Then she added wistfully, ‘Perhaps I may never come
-back.’ On that afternoon, accompanied by Miss Rowand, she went to the
-nursing home.
-
-The operation took place next day. Miss Beale found it hard just at
-first to reconcile herself to the position of patient, and the absolute
-obedience and dependence it involved. But in the charge of Miss Lane and
-her staff she was surrounded with loving care, to which she was most
-responsive, once pointing out to a friend the nurse who was standing by
-as ‘the one who spoils me so.’ Miss Gore and Miss Rowand saw her from
-time to time. The mid-term holiday was approaching, and she spoke of
-arrangements for it, and begged Miss Rowand to send her party for their
-usual expedition in charge of the house-governesses, and to remain at
-home herself.
-
-Up to the morning of Sunday the 28th all seemed to go well. Very early
-that day she seemed ill, and wandering in mind, getting up and saying she
-must go to early service. In the afternoon she was quiet and calm, and
-saw one or two friends. To Miss Gore she spoke of the coming All Saints’
-Day, saying how much the Communion of Saints meant to her.
-
-On this day also, by the hand of Miss Lane—but she signed it herself—she
-wrote a last letter to Miss Amy Giles[100]:—
-
- ‘I went up to a Council Meeting, and afterwards consulted Dr.
- Aldrich-Blake. I had had my suspicions for some time, and she
- at once confirmed them. I went on to Paddington, as we had a
- meeting of our Council, and returned at three o’clock. Then
- after a few days we decided to enter a Home, and here I am....
- They say I am going on very well, but I had to leave my work.
- My doctor says I can come back probably at the end of three
- weeks, which I am anxious to do, as I have a General Meeting
- (annual) on the 16th November. I am very contented, and the
- Head of the Home takes great care of me. The only people I
- allow to know are Miss Rowand and Miss Gore, who are coming
- to see me to-day. I have had a not very cheerful Sunday, and
- I wonder whether I shall get right, sometimes I hope not. I
- wonder if we shall meet again. I hope some day. I need not say
- how dear you are to me. We have lost many friends this last
- year. At least, I ought not to say that, they have passed out
- of sight. I think you have not heard that both Mr. and Mrs.
- Rix, who came to our first Retreat, have passed away within the
- month, so those three friends have met once more.[101] ... I
- have been talking to the Head of this Home, who is very anxious
- to have a Home for six ladies, I have promised her £100. What
- do you think of a site? I know your father built one in the
- Isle of Wight, but it is an expensive place. There, I don’t
- think I have any more to say.—Yours very affectionately,
-
- DOROTHEA BEALE.’
-
-On Monday came the change for the worse; nervous prostration, from which
-she never rallied, although one day there seemed a gleam of hope, and
-during the brief improvement she dictated to Miss Lane, at the doctor’s
-request, some details of the days before the operation:—
-
- ‘On Tuesday (the 16th October) I went up to London hurriedly
- at 6.37, full of the thought of what was before me. I went
- straight to Dr. Aldrich-Blake, an old pupil. She condemned me.
- Then I saw, as I had arranged, a new attendant. I looked into
- shops and felt giddy, and went on to the place of meeting,
- where I saw two others, and lastly several friends, and those
- who were to dine together to attend the meeting of our Council,
- and next a meeting of our St. Hilda’s Council, and then came
- down to Cheltenham, thinking of course of what I should do. The
- following Tuesday you know I decided and you arranged for the
- operator to come from Birmingham, and you can report further.
- I gave all my lessons as usual, and corrected all my exercises
- until the evening of Monday. Whatever my work was I did it.
- My last lesson was on Monday morning. I had planned to give a
- Confirmation lesson on Tuesday, but this the doctor forbade.’
-
-Once after this she recognised the doctor. Once she asked for her
-Prayer-book and spectacles, but before they could be brought she had
-lapsed again into unconsciousness. When her sister addressed her by
-name, she turned her head, but did not open her eyes. Then on November
-8 appeared more alarming bulletins, and on the 9th the fatal notice,
-‘Miss Beale is sinking.’ ‘We went through the morning,’ says Miss Sturge,
-‘feeling like Elisha. “Knowest thou that the Lord will take away thy
-master from thy head to-day? Yea, I know it, hold ye your peace.”’
-
-Not in Cheltenham only, but far and wide her children were praying for
-her; watching for news, remembering and repeating to each other things
-she had said. It was stormy weather, and more than one thought of
-Wordsworth’s lines—lines which she had often read to her class—written
-when he was expecting to hear of the death of Charles James Fox:—
-
- ‘A power is passing from the earth
- To breathless Nature’s dark abyss.’
-
-Miss Beale died on Friday, November 9, at 12.15, during College hours. It
-was thought best that the girls should hear of her death before leaving.
-When all were assembled in the Princess Hall the Vice-Principal said:
-
-‘It has pleased God to take from us our beloved Principal.’ In a few
-words she told the history of the last few days, and then said: ‘We feel
-that it is what she would have desired,—no long waiting in suffering or
-helplessness, but to go home straight from her work with her splendid
-powers scarcely impaired.
-
- “Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail
- Or knock the breast; no weakness, no contempt,
- Dispraise, or blame; nothing but well and fair,
- And what may quiet us in a death so noble.”
-
-‘“The readiness is all.” Let us bear our grief with calmness and dignity.
-We know that it would be her wish that work should go on as usual.... We
-believe that love lasts on, and that the noble work she did for fifty
-years has done much for England and for womanhood, and that not only we
-who have been blessed by her gracious presence, but generations also to
-come shall reap the fruit of her toil, and rise up and call her blessed.
-Let us pray.’ Then followed a thanksgiving, adapted from the form of
-memorial service issued by authority in January 1901 after the death of
-Queen Victoria.
-
-Of the days immediately following Miss Beale’s death, Miss Sturge wrote:
-‘Many of the staff and elder pupils were privileged to see the beloved
-form as it lay in the peace and majesty of death. Though not one of the
-thousand workers at College can have been unconscious of the mighty
-change that had come for all, the work went on as usual, and the College
-was closed only on November 16, the day of the funeral.’
-
-The paper which Miss Beale intended should be read at College prayers on
-her death was not found at the time. This was well. She certainly had not
-weighed what the effect of her words, written with calm deliberate detail
-years before, would be if read to assembled numbers at the very moment of
-shock and loss.
-
-In this paper she first explained the directions she had left in her will
-about the funeral:—
-
- ‘First let me say I have put in my will two things, which have
- to do with the disposal of this perishable body.
-
- ‘(1) I desire that it should be cremated. It seems so wrong to
- place in the ground the disease germs which may injure others,
- when they could be destroyed. No feeling of sentiment should
- hinder our doing what is reasonable or right.
-
- ‘(2) I have asked, and I hope my wish may be respected by all,
- that no flowers should be bought for my funeral. They are
- beautiful emblems, and if any could gather a few wild flowers
- or bring a few from their own gardens, it would be good, but
- I should not like any wholesale destruction, any waste of
- life, even with wild flowers, and it seems to me quite wrong
- to spend large sums in decking a grave, when there is so much
- to be done for the living. If the present pupils and teachers
- were to give only sixpence each it would come to about £30, and
- if we take in old pupils and friends, and those who give much
- more, I fear a large sum would be wasted, which, wisely spent,
- would not perish like cut flowers, but bear real fruit. Still,
- flowers are all beautiful things, and gifts of our Father to
- teach and cheer us: they are patterns of things in the heavens,
- and flowers speak to us of ἀνάστασις, rising. I often said to
- you I do not like the word resurrection because it means rising
- again, and gives the impression that the body that rises is the
- same that was buried; whereas St. Paul has taught that we sow
- not that body that shall be.’
-
-But this was only a preface. She spoke chiefly of rising through death to
-fuller and higher life,—of the purification which all who would see God
-must desire. Finally she asked:—
-
- ‘Shall I pray for my children who are now on earth, for this
- College which I have loved, and which has, I dare hope, been a
- means of blessing to some? Has it through my fault hidden the
- spiritual instead of revealing it, like the trees of Paradise?
- Will you see that the sunshine of Heaven, the love and holiness
- which can dwell only in souls, may light up the school-rooms
- and boarding-houses, and kindle hearts and send forth many
- light-bearers? And will you ask sometimes for me that I may be
- purified of the evil that obscured the heavenly light that yet
- burned feebly within the earthly pitcher? May He send you a
- worthier teacher! May you, above all things, hear the Voice of
- Him who stands at the door and knocks, may you open your eyes
- to the Blessed Spirit, the Paraclete!’
-
-On Monday, November 12, the body was cremated at Perry Barr, the Reverend
-Dr. Magrath reading the committal service. Next day came the offer
-from the Dean and Chapter of Gloucester of ‘a tomb in the Cathedral to
-Dorothea Beale,’ and on the 16th the funeral took place. Everything
-that could lend dignity and honour to the occasion was done. Those who
-were present can never forget the impression of that day. The sombre
-beauty of the Cathedral in the November rain, the music, the well-ordered
-procession, the crowds, produced a sense of fitness for an occasion which
-was not merely one of grief. Rather was it an act of solemn thanksgiving
-for the long, faithful labours ended, an act of resignation through the
-heart and will of thousands of the life which had blessed them, to the
-continuous love of a merciful Creator. Many were there who held high
-position, in educational or municipal life, many friends and parents of
-pupils, many former teachers, and of course the whole staff. But the
-crowd which filled the great nave from end to end was made up for the
-most part of pupils past and present. Eight hundred girls still at the
-College came voluntarily, walking in grave silence in pairs from the
-station to the Cathedral. Only a small proportion of this crowd could
-be present in the Lady Chapel for the latter part of the service, but
-all when it was over filed quietly past the open grave surrounded by its
-home-made wreaths of flowers and laurel.
-
-Meanwhile, in Cheltenham, those who were unable to come to Gloucester
-filled St. Matthew’s Church, where a service was held simultaneously with
-that in the Cathedral. At St. Paul’s Cathedral at the same time the dome
-was filled for a memorial service, which included a short address from
-the Bishop of Stepney. An old pupil present wrote of this:—
-
- ‘A memorial service in St. Paul’s Cathedral is an honour
- accorded to very few women, and befitting but very few. But to
- the great throng assembled in the wide spaces of the dome on
- November 16, there was a profound sense of congruity in this
- mourning for a woman whose real distinction was described on
- that occasion by the Bishop of Stepney when he called Miss
- Beale “great.”
-
- ‘Miss Beale’s greatness—that indefinable, unmistakable,
- inestimable quality so rare in her sex—gave her a right to be
- commemorated there, at the very heart of the world of the
- living, in presence of the memorials of the nation’s mighty
- dead. Listening to the mysterious, hope-inspiring sentences,
- and to the lesson from 1 Corinthians xv., so often chosen
- by her at College prayers, it seemed that but a very slight
- veil divided us from that eager, unquenchable, quickening
- spirit, then exploring the “vasty halls of Death.” And the
- reverberating thunders of the “Dead March in Saul” have an
- appropriateness for every strenuous life. Effort in growth and
- development, conflict with difficulties, the surmounting of
- obstacles, were certainly of the very essence of Miss Beale’s
- nature.’
-
-Services were also held at Bowdon Parish Church and at Sunderland. At
-Bakewell, on the Sunday after she died, thanks were offered for the life
-and work of Dorothea Beale.
-
-There was widespread appreciation both spoken and written of Miss Beale’s
-life and work, with barely a discordant note. Many of the notices[102]
-gave a really striking impression both of herself and of what she had
-done for the cause of education. Apart from that work she did not care to
-be known; it is but an obvious truth that its greatness was dependent on
-the greatness of her character.
-
-A number of old Cheltenham pupils were once asked what they considered
-the special result of the teaching they had received at the College.
-Their replies were to the most part to the effect that they had learned
-the worth of the strenuous life. They would perhaps have been nearer
-a complete statement of the truth had they said ‘an idea of Duty.’
-For it was surely this—a consciousness of responsibility, a sense of
-stewardship, some perception of the ‘thanks and use’[103] owing for
-each excellence that had been lent out to them—which was brought home
-by the teaching, both of word and life, of Dorothea Beale to all,
-even the youngest and least clever, who came within the circle of her
-influence. Through such knowledge of duty Miss Beale’s own idea of the
-‘strenuous life’ might be perceived. Among the words most often on her
-lips, especially when speaking to teachers, were such as vivifying,
-energising, quickening, inspiration. She did not hesitate to say that to
-her all forms of life were a manifestation of God. Work was to her mind
-a privilege,—the active will, a Divine gift,—slothfulness was death. It
-was the defect of a great quality that she sometimes hasted overmuch,
-that she found it hard to wait in trifling matters, that she seemed even
-to exaggerate the importance of the College. She was not spared—she
-would not have asked to be spared—the inevitable sacrifice demanded of
-all genius, of all lives devoted to a cause. It was the sign of her
-self-consecration that in any great emergency, before any important
-decision, she was calm and full of patience. It should be remembered
-also that each generation has its own mission. To that of Dorothea Beale
-belonged especially the duty of crying to the careless daughters of
-England, ‘Rise up ye women that are at ease.’ To another it may be given
-to serve by waiting.
-
-What, it is often asked, was the secret of her really marvellous
-influence? Personal magnetism she undoubtedly possessed, and that of a
-rare and abiding quality, a quick eye to perceive, and a touch which
-could evoke the best even in the most unlikely. But her influence and
-power for good came surely as much from what she would not do as from
-what she actually did for her children. Her strength lay in what she
-would herself call ‘passive activity.’ It was her claim not to teach
-them so much as to lead them to the One Teacher, to bring them into
-such relationship with Him that they could hear His Voice. For that
-inner Voice which must at all costs be obeyed she bade them listen, with
-pure and undefiled conscience,—the ear of the soul. Thus each who tried
-to follow her teaching left the College not merely as a devoted pupil
-of Miss Beale, possibly even indifferent to her, but with a clearer
-consciousness of the ‘Light that lighteth every man,’ and the paramount
-necessity of walking in it.
-
-Was the strenuous life all they learned at Cheltenham? It was doubtless
-not easy to tell the whole. The strength and greatness of their Head lay
-not alone in devising and carrying out important and detailed work. It
-lay also—though this was less readily seen—in an unwearied watchfulness
-of affection, in a sympathy never estranged, in active thoughtfulness, in
-a memory for all that was hopeful and fair in the lives and characters
-which came under her care. Remembering these, there comes ultimately to
-the mind the thought of how little she really cared for human judgment,
-just or unjust; how she would say that there was but one Voice to listen
-for, one word of approval worth earning, since the Lord Himself had said
-about a woman’s work, ‘She hath done what she could.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-LETTERS
-
- ‘The living record of your memory.’
-
- SHAKSPERE, _Sonnet_ lv.
-
-
-Miss Beale enjoyed both receiving and writing letters. She kept a very
-large number, especially of those from old pupils. A letter which told of
-help or inspiration gained through the life at College would be put away,
-labelled in her own peculiar and favourite abbreviated way: ‘Sent 2 chēr
-me.’ She was a very ready and at times a very voluminous correspondent.
-She attended to all her letters herself, and answered all to which she
-intended to reply, not merely by return of post, but often the moment she
-received them. If her answer was of some importance she would keep it
-by her for a time, and often rewrite it before finally sending it. Her
-papers include a very large number of drafts and copies of letters which
-she sent. The chief part of her correspondence was done before the school
-hours began each morning, and she generally came to her place at 9 A.M.
-with her morning letters already answered. Where she found she could help
-by means of letters she would spare no pains nor time over them.
-
-Perhaps Mrs. Charles Robinson received more than any one else. In 1878
-Mrs. Robinson, then Miss Arnold, left Cheltenham to become a teacher
-at the Dulwich High School. She was at that time in a state of great
-religious perplexity; dissatisfied with the teaching of the Plymouth
-Brethren, among whom she had been brought up, unable to accept that of
-the Church, she would not attend the services of either. During this
-time of gloom Miss Beale wrote every week to Miss Arnold a letter she
-might receive on Sunday morning, and all her life remained a constant
-correspondent. It is fitting that this chapter of letters should begin
-with some of those written to the ‘best-beloved child.’[104]
-
-To Miss Arnold:—
-
- ‘_July 1880._
-
- ‘It seems to me you have failed in trying to keep the first
- commandment, and so of course in the others. “Thou shalt
- worship the Lord Thy God and Him _only_ shalt Thou serve.” You
- see it is not _when_ we feel inclined; _when_ we can realise
- His presence, _when_ we have plenty of spare time.
-
- ‘Then in your life and work has it not been that you have
- thought more of pleasing others, of doing work, of being so
- laborious, so useful, etc. etc., instead of serving Him, too
- much of being well thought of yourself. This often leads to
- greed of work: we do not say: “Lord, what wouldst Thou have me
- to do?” but, “I want to do this or that.”
-
- ‘Then as regards your public worship. Do not you think, if you
- told your father that you felt Church services more helpful, he
- would be less grieved that you should go to Church than go in
- deadness. He chose the Brethren because he felt his religious
- life quickened with them; would he not wish you to act in the
- same spirit? Could you not frankly talk it over with him?’
-
-In 1881 Miss Beale wrote to urge Miss Arnold to attend some addresses Mr.
-Wilkinson was about to give:—
-
- ‘You will make some effort and some sacrifices, if necessary,
- to come, will you not, my dear child? Even the love of Miss ——
- for which you should give thanks, is a danger too, lest you
- should learn to look at yourself with the indulgence that we
- give to those we love, and do not see clearly the faults and
- failings. Mr. Wilkinson does help to show how much ground there
- is for humility.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_1882._
-
- ‘Your letter grieves me very much, just as the painful illness
- of one I love would; because you have to go through it; but it
- is right, if you go through it rightly, seeking the truth. Only
- one cannot in a letter, nor in a little while, nor off-hand
- deal with these difficulties. As in every science, thought, and
- earnest labour, and aspiration, and desire are necessary if we
- would find truth; so in religion, the knowledge of absolute
- wisdom and goodness, which transcends all we can know, there
- must be a deep devotion to truth, which spares no pains in the
- search.
-
- ‘Will you begin with a simple and clear book first,—I noticed
- it in the last Magazine,—by Godet. It is translated by Canon
- Lyttelton. I think it shows conclusively the fact of our Lord’s
- resurrection, and with that goes the testimony of miracles,
- not as wonders but as signs. When you have got thus far, you
- will find, I trust, the repulsion to the supernatural element
- diminished, if it exists in you. Don’t _ever_ let yourself
- say, “We can’t know.” We can know enough to believe and trust
- in God’s goodness, and one must go on seeking by _prayer_,
- _thought_, _obedience_, very, very patiently, and then through
- eternity one will draw nearer and nearer.
-
- ‘As regards your conception of inspiration, I think it requires
- correction; claims have been made for the Bible which it never
- made for itself. Holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy
- Spirit; but the _literal dictation_ of every word we are not
- taught.
-
- ‘But I cannot attempt to answer piecemeal. I have gone through
- all these questionings, but I think my faith strengthens
- from year to year,—if I dare say so. So that it seems to
- me marvellous that any one can fail to _feel_ the divine,
- underlying all the superficial, the phenomenal which men verily
- call realities. Do you remember how Browning makes Lazarus
- feel “marvel that they too see not with his opened eyes!” That
- objection to the Israelites destroying the Canaanites seems to
- me so frightfully superficial. Are there not evils far worse
- than death? Would it not be enormously preferable to die than
- to live as many do? What should we say if we could see beyond
- the grave? We judge knowing only one side of the grave. And
- if God saw well that these people should die at once, would
- it not be part perhaps of the education of a nation chosen
- to do a particular work, that God should make them burn with
- indignation against the detestable, unspeakable, moral evils,
- and make them the executioners of His justice? It would not
- degrade them to do this, if they did it as a judge condemns
- the guilty, with no personal hatred. We cannot sit in judgment
- thus. In the world’s history we see God ever employing men to
- do the work He has to do. There may be necessities for this,
- of which we know nothing; I mean in the nature of things:
- certainly there is good as regards the moral training of men.
-
- ‘Go on wishing and praying and seeking all your life, never
- saying anything which you do not believe, and then the God of
- truth will hear you as you say, “Open Thou mine eyes, that I
- may see the wondrous things of Thy law.” “Lighten our darkness,
- we beseech Thee!” _Feeling_ must come in, as the Brethren
- rightly say. We must love, and desire, and know Him to be our
- Father; we must trust Him. We can’t understand even an earthly
- friend without trust, but we must use the powers He has given
- us, we dare not bury them. We shall have to wait for the
- solution of much hereafter; but we shall grow in grace and in
- the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour.
-
- ‘My poor child, would I could help you more, but God will
- help you. “Though He tarry, wait.” Use the means natural and
- supernatural. Tell me from time to time how you are getting on,
- and I will try to put you on a _course_ of reading.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_1882._
-
- ‘My poor child, I do indeed feel for you in your loneliness,
- but remember him whose eyes were opened spiritually and he was
- _therefore_ cast out of the synagogue,—but Jesus found him. Do
- not fear that because the disciples call down fire that the
- Lord will [send it]. “Come unto Me all that are heavy-laden,”
- He says to us now as then. To those who are “without guile,”
- _i.e._ sincerely seeking truth, He still promises that they
- shall see greater things than they have ever done.... No; we
- cannot and we would not believe that He who is infinitely
- wiser than man can be less good. He is not a Pharaoh to bid us
- make bricks without straw. He does not tell us to do what we
- cannot and then punish us for not doing it. “She hath done
- what she could” was the sentence of the Lord when others found
- fault. God is love, and if _we_ pity and long to draw to our
- hands any suffering child of earth, must not He? If we pity
- those who suffer in a _less_ degree, must not He those who are
- suffering the sorrow greatest of all, the loss in any degree of
- His presence, of that faith which makes all things possible?
- Go on, my poor child, looking up to Him, and trusting in His
- utter love who will not leave us, not when we cry, “Depart from
- me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord.” It is hard sometimes to
- believe we are not wrong, when we see the disciples, those who
- really want to do right, acting so differently from the way in
- which He acted. But we know that in all ages some of the most
- unchristian things have been done by those who thought they
- were doing God’s will.
-
- ‘I do not think from what you tell me that you can go on at
- the Meeting. If your father wishes it you might for a while
- abstain from going to church; but if so, let the time you would
- have spent in public worship be passed in private prayer and
- studying; just looking up with childlike spirit to the Father,
- feeling His presence, His love.
-
- ‘I do not think you should, however, absent yourself long from
- communion with some body of believers. All Scripture and our
- spiritual experience is against this. If you decide for St.
- Peter’s, I think I can tell you of a friend’s house where you
- would be welcome most Sundays; and we must have you among us
- for the Quiet Days at Christmas.
-
- ‘You know I do not want to proselytise; if with the Brethren
- you had found spiritual nourishment, I would have had you rest
- there; but now you are starving it is different, like that poor
- dove who found no rest for the sole of her feet, you need to be
- taken into an ark.
-
- ‘I do not want you to be dependent on man, but it is the order
- of God’s providence that He sends disciples to lead others to
- Him, and so we are to help one another. And you have a period
- of trouble before you, outward and inward, until you are able
- to stand upon the rock once more. Trust God if you should have
- to walk through that dark valley where you cannot see Him. Each
- trial will one day result in joy,—the joy of being able to help
- other troubled souls especially. He descended into Hades, He
- rose again! I shall remember you in prayer, and I shall ask
- prayers for you at St. Peter’s, of course without their knowing
- the least who you are, but that you are suffering and in
- darkness. Be patient and I think your father’s heart will come
- back.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_1882._
-
- ‘Now, my dear child, do not fret about this trial. Just try to
- look up and wait. I believe your father’s heart will come back.
- You see he has obeyed his opinions before, and truth is like
- the sun which ever rises higher upon our earthly day, and does
- not sink as the natural sun. We need sometimes to remember the
- words, “Call no man your father upon earth.” I mean that there
- is the all-embracing Fatherhood, in which we see all earthly
- relations: we do not, must not, cast those off, but they must
- be swallowed up in the greater. Write to me whenever you feel
- it would comfort you, I will try to help you, until you feel
- again that you need not outward help.... One feels more and
- more how slowly one learns and how infinite is God’s truth; how
- one need’s patience and deep humility, and utter faith in Him
- who is the Light.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_January 1883._
-
- ‘My poor child, you must not grieve thus. Since God loves your
- father, He is giving to him only that discipline, whatever
- it be that is necessary. Yes, believe this, even though
- the suffering has come through you, for we must believe it
- _universally_. I do not say you will not suffer for it, or that
- there may not have been some wrong in it on your part. But
- if, as you know, he does wish you to know and serve God more
- perfectly, then through this God is leading him on to know and
- serve Him better, and you must trust God to know _what_ He is
- about. You _must_ go on for your own sake (and for the sake of
- the children God has given you), seeking for light.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_January 1883._
-
- ‘I always feel as if I must write by return. Your letters draw
- out my heart to you so. I am glad you went and felt the love
- shining in on you.
-
- ‘Now, as regards the _a priori_ argument; it is just the
- fundamental thing. Did you read my Browning paper? See, it is
- just _the_ thought that comes out in “Saul.” We, if we love
- ourselves, we _must_ believe in God’s love. He must be better
- if He is greater in every other way; it cannot be that we excel
- Him in the power of love, which is the highest gift of all. We
- can’t think that He does not care for His children, that He has
- left them orphans.
-
- ‘I think one can see too that He in whom dwelt the Divine
- Spirit without measure, yet who was truly man, and who
- therefore grew as man in insight as we do, felt that utter
- faith grow, tower up, as that intense love, that utter
- self-devotion which He felt within, _told_ Him of His oneness
- with God; as He prayed that we might be one, even as He was one
- with the Father.
-
- ‘And He, trusting the Father, knew He could _not_ be deceived
- by that Father; and we knowing Him, know He could not deceive
- us.... So I come _a priori_ to belief in the story of that
- Life, and when I get to it by inward reasons, I am able first
- to look at the outward [reasons], which to many are enough
- without the inward, but are not to me. It was in this way too
- Kant got back to belief in Christianity. I read it was the
- moral law within which taught him, and all St. John’s teaching
- seems to me to be that we must feel the Spirit within ere we
- can recognise the Christ without. But then He does give freely
- of His Spirit,—if we seek, we shall find. He knocks at the door
- of man’s heart, “If _any one_ will hear He will come in.”
-
- ‘My child, do remember those comforting words, “If ye were
- blind ye should have _no sin_, but now ye say, we see;
- therefore your sin remaineth.” So blindness is no sin in
- itself, if is lazy, conceited ignorance that is sin.
-
- ‘I wish you could be in the House of Rest from Friday to
- Monday, and have all Saturday of the Quiet Days. I wish you
- could have one talk with Mr. Wilkinson before he leaves.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_January 1883._
-
- ‘It does seem to me such a strange idea that our service should
- be acceptable to God in proportion to its difficulty. It is
- really at bottom the same thing that makes people torture
- themselves. It lies at the root of that idea regarding the
- Sabbath, which our Lord condemned so strongly. He came to make
- us know better the Father’s heart. Surely He loves to make it
- easy to His children to draw near. “I will allure her into the
- wilderness and will speak comfortably unto her.” Under the old
- dispensation He appointed a solemn ritual, and why did St. Paul
- exhort us to use psalms and hymns but that by the joy of music
- our hearts may be loosened from their deadness, and then we can
- trust them whither we will. It seems to me of course that our
- service is much more in conformity with the apostolic model
- handed down, and with allusions in the Bible. But I do not want
- to dispute about that. God has left us free. If your father
- says, “I wish you to go to the meeting,” you should, supposing
- you think it not wrong, obey. But I don’t believe he would, if
- you told him you went merely in obedience to his wishes; that
- you felt it did not help your spiritual life.
-
- ‘If it is finally decided that you go to St. Peter’s, I should
- like to ask Mr. Wilkinson to see you, and I would tell him some
- of your difficulties; he is so wise.
-
- ‘I have been thinking much these holidays about the many who
- like yourself are full of difficulties and questions. One thing
- some of us are going to do, and I want you to join: make each
- week special prayers for the teachers in Colleges and High
- Schools,—(you will specially remember me), and ask that some
- means may be found of helping them....
-
- ‘Need you dwell upon that question of eternal death? Could you
- not say, “Father, I see not yet what Thou doest, but I trust
- Thee?” If the death of any of His creatures whom He loves is
- _inevitable_, then it does not make us believe Him unloving, we
- know how He yearns to serve us.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_March 1883._
-
- ‘I do not mean either to say that the carelessness of a time in
- which you did see and were able to realise divine things was
- _nothing_ to do with the present trial. Who can judge another?
- I begged him not to be unhappy if your religious life took
- another form....
-
- ‘Yes, I was so glad to see your father. I feel I know him much
- better, and perhaps he knows me better.
-
- ‘I quite understand his strong language about the Church, only
- those evils are not inherent in it, but in our sinful nature,
- and similar ones appear even among the Brethren. The unreality
- does not depend upon the amount of ritual....’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_April 1883._
-
- ‘I have very much enjoyed Professor Edward Caird’s _Hegel_.
- It is 3s. 6d., published by Blackwood. I am not quite sure it
- would help you, but think it would. I want you to get deeper,
- and to be very patient until God shows you more light. He
- is showing it to you, only until you and I are able to see
- more clearly He must wait. You have not suffered so much for
- nothing, but I trust you may one day help others. If you get
- Westcott on the Resurrection, read the end first on Positivism,
- there is much in it that is so Christian, and much in what is
- called Christianity which St. Paul would have called carnal.
- All that about the Lord’s glorified Body in St. John and St.
- Paul speak to us of a spirit glorified and no longer bound in
- any space, but a life-giving power, real, substantial....
-
- ‘Poor George Eliot. She had a passionate nature, and she came
- into circumstances so sad. Her life is a great sorrow to those
- who feel that her teaching was in some way noble, though in
- others it was really weakening. He who knows all will judge
- her: “Whose mercy endureth for ever.” She was a long way above
- Lewes. If you come across Hutton’s Essays you ought to read
- them. I always get a good bit of reading in the holidays that
- demands thought....’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_May 1883._
-
- ‘I am glad you find the work comforting again, and that God
- has sent you help through some one else. Don’t fret and look
- forward to next holidays, you don’t know yet how full of
- blessing they may be. Just remember it is a command, “Be not
- anxious for to-morrow,” and so we can obey. I remember once
- that thought that I must stay seemed the only thing to save me
- from breaking down, and so failing to do as I ought the work
- God had given me. See that it is a sin to fret and be anxious
- about your father’s health, or your future relations to home,
- or anything. We have to do our best, and then trust to Him “who
- ordereth all things according to the counsel of His Will.”
-
- ‘Then as regards past sins. It seems to me that it enervates
- you to dwell upon them as you are doing. I may be wrong, but it
- seems to me that the sense of guiltiness in the past makes you
- afraid of God, as you ought not to be. If a child were ever so
- naughty to you, did ever so many wrong things to you, would it
- shut her out from your love? You know it would not; you would
- sorrow over her, and seek to do her good. Only her continuing
- naughty, continuing to hate and distrust you, could _prevent_
- your doing her good. “Ye are not straitened in God, but in your
- own heart.” “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to
- forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us.” We can’t think of Him
- not forgiving us, without thinking of Him as less good than
- He is, and He is infinitely good. Of course this does not mean
- that He will not give us due discipline for our past failures,
- in order that we may be healed of the sins which caused them;
- but then we are glad of this, it is only a sign of His love for
- us.
-
- ‘We should confess to Him because He is judge, _i.e._ He
- separates and enables us to discern, distinguish the good from
- the evil in us, and separate. One whom I have often quoted to
- you said, “I forbid you to look at your sins except at the foot
- of the Cross.” Do you do this sometimes? The consciousness
- of guilt would be hardening without the consciousness of the
- abounding love. This purifies. I wonder if I have met your
- thought....’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_May 1883._
-
- ‘You say you don’t know what to pray for. I think, perhaps,
- you are praying too exclusively for yourself. Ask for God’s
- grace, and power to respond. Intercede much for your children,
- your relations, your father, teachers and friends, and any one
- whom God gives you the means of helping. Especially at Holy
- Communion pray for the Church and all who are separated by
- darkness from one another, and put yourself quietly in God’s
- Hands. Some of our collects help me; one Mr. Wilkinson was so
- fond of: “Who knowest our necessities before we ask,” etc.
- etc.: do you know it? I think of Him then as coming to us all
- in Holy Communion, and from His own Hands giving us the pledges
- of His love, to make us know He is giving us His own glorified
- Life; the Life of God in such a way that we can receive
- it,—emptying Himself in Christ of that glory which we can’t
- know: the Absolute Being, the Infinite we cannot conceive. We
- must trust His word ... and this faith makes us strong, saves
- us from sickness, delivers us from the power of sin; yes,
- though we fall again and again, enables us to arise.
-
- ‘I so want you not to have that crushing fear, which, I may be
- wrong, but I think, you sometimes feel of God. He must be so
- sorry, if we don’t understand Him and feel like that.... “I
- fell at His feet as dead, and He laid His hand on me, saying,
- _Fear_ not.” Think of this and of the parting words, “Peace be
- unto you.”’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_July 1883._
-
- ‘ ... You will have heard of our great loss, and yet I ought
- not to call it so,—in dear Mrs. Owen. It is good to have known
- her, and one feels what it is to live and work in the hearts of
- others, seeing such a life and death. I will tell you more of
- what she has taught [me] when you come.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_July 1883._
-
- ‘My dear child, I will certainly ask for both of you to come.
- Yes, it is a naughty letter. You must love not only with pity,
- but with a stretching forth to sympathise. What if we feel
- ourselves better than another, because the Spirit has stirred
- the once cold depths of our soul, and so there is some light.
- Is it not because there has been so little that souls near us
- have remained cold? Can we ever glance at their faults without
- shame in thinking we are responsible for so much? How we shall
- long to make them some amends, how gladly we shall bear any
- punishment, or even harshness, if we can through this show our
- yearning love, alleviate our self-reproval! We cannot feel
- we are better. Our Church service does at least try to keep
- us humble by our repeated confessions, especially at Holy
- Communion.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘So very glad you have had a happy time. God is good in giving
- us playgrounds as well as workrooms; we want both, and in
- both He shines on us, and is glad in our gladness as well as
- afflicted in our afflictions....’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_October 1885._
-
- ‘I object to your sentence, that you would rather your father
- thought what was not true, than that he should think what is
- certainly the truth, viz. that he has been in some way to
- blame. Also to that “I cannot bear this sorrow to fall on
- him.” We have simply to do the right, and believe that God
- knows what He is about, when He lets pain come upon us for our
- mistakes; pains us, yes, “shatters us,” that we may know the
- truth better. How many a parent or teacher tries to spare a
- child _pain_, and wrongly. You will not, of course, _willingly_
- pain any, much less the father whom you love so much, but
- you have both of you simply to speak the truth and do what
- conscience bids you.... Say frankly and firmly what you _feel_
- you _must_ do, and then drop the subject.... You remind me of
- those good Christians who beg us not to hang a man, “_lest_
- he should fall into the hands of God.” God can care for people
- whether alive or dead, but I believe your father would really
- suffer less, and be worried less, by a simple straightforward
- course of conduct. You are thinking of self too much, thinking
- _yourself_ of _too_ much importance when you say, “I am only
- thinking of the sorrow that threatens him and how I can bear
- it.” Perhaps God is leading him to truer views of the Father.’
-
-The following letter, written in August 1888, refers to Miss Arnold’s
-appointment as Head-mistress of the Truro High School:—
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_August 1888._
-
- ‘Do not trouble yourself about whatever you _ought_ to have
- done _now_. It is done, and you thought it right, so it was
- right. I think of your Bishop saying in his quiet way, “I do
- the best I can, and then I just leave it.” I dare say the Lakes
- will refresh you. It is “heart-rending,” I doubt not. I wept
- all the day that I left Queen’s, but it was well. We are having
- a delightful time....
-
- ‘Now I must stop my 15th letter. I had to get up at 5 A.M., the
- days are so full.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_September 1888._
-
- ‘I think you are beginning to-day, at least you are a good
- deal in my thoughts, and you will want a lot of wisdom. It is
- a comfort to remember, “If any man lack wisdom let him ask of
- God, who giveth to all men liberally.” I am so glad you have
- Miss ——. It is a great thing to have a few who work for love
- only....
-
- ‘Don’t be hasty in making changes, and don’t take to caps!’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘Be sure the rooms will brighten when you have prayed some
- sunshine into them. It is terrible to have such a lot of
- servants!
-
- ‘Miss Buss gets her girls to help adorn.
-
- ‘I am glad we open on St. Matthew’s Day.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_August 1888._
-
- ‘Miss H. and Miss E. wanted me to advise your going out
- socially a little. I said I thought there were as yet
- difficulties, as a Head-mistress cannot choose; that I thought
- for the first term it might be best to abstain; then you can
- look round you and judge better. They did not think there were
- many who would ask you, that those who would were nice, and it
- would be better for you not to be quite shut up. What do you
- think of saying you will go out not more than once a week? You
- have had so active a life; and intercourse with other people,
- and varied interests are good for school teachers. Also they
- think for the school it is good. I merely tell you this, I said
- I could not judge for you.
-
- ‘I hope you will not be led by anything I said to speak, if
- you do not think it is quite best, or indeed to do anything. I
- cannot judge, and if I could, the responsibility is yours, and
- I should grieve if I misled you.
-
- ‘I am so glad you feel refreshed. It is our general meeting; I
- shall be glad when it is over.
-
- ‘All best wishes, dear child, for you and yours, the children
- whom God has given you.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_October 1888._
-
- ‘“Be wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.” I should not
- answer people who lay snares, we have a good example of this to
- guide us.
-
- ‘It is so absurd of people to expect one to make up one’s mind
- on all subjects. We can no more judge of many questions of
- foreign or domestic policy than we can about the steering of a
- ship. But we can of questions of morality and cruelty.
-
- ‘Mrs. Grey’s new book, _Last Words to Girls_, is so grand. I
- hope it will be useful.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_October 1888._
-
- ‘We must put things in the ideal way. Religiosity is the death
- of religion, the grave-clothes which keep the living soul bound
- in the sepulchre; which you have to help to loosen that it may
- come forth at Christ’s word.
-
- ‘No, I don’t know the Bishop at all personally. I think if he
- will let you consult him, you will find his judgment a great
- help, but after all the responsibility rests on you, you can’t
- put it on any one.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_July 1889._
-
- ‘We have, I should think, quite full numbers now. I have not
- got the lists, but we have at least seventy new pupils; it is
- strange.
-
- ‘I am better, have managed to be in College every day, by means
- of spending the end in bed. I hope I shall pick up, for work is
- a tonic.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_February 1889._
-
- ‘I am so thankful God gives me any words to help you, my dear
- child. I think, however, it was that passage I sent you from
- Canon Body’s notes, was it not, that really helped you, not
- what I said myself?’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_January 1890._
-
- ‘It was nice to see you. Be sure that nothing would be worse
- for you than to have no worries, to have all speak well of you.
- Besides the more you need wisdom the more you will ask and seek
- it, and the more it will come for your needs.
-
- ‘And it is only by patience under our trials that you can bear
- witness to her and others of the spirit that is in you.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_August 1890._
-
- ‘I shall not, I expect, see you. I do not go to Oxford till
- Saturday, and leave on Monday. I hope you will not be made
- ill at Ammergau; I mean to keep as quiet as I can. I have
- already begun a good read; all Lotze’s book on Religion, _The
- Children of Gibeon_, part of Stanley, a good deal of Green’s
- philosophical works, and _Lux Mundi_, and endless magazines.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_August 1890._
-
- ‘Thanks for your very interesting letter. I think I should
- have felt as you did. I once went to something of the kind in
- Switzerland, and liked some of the early scenes, but after the
- Agony in the Garden I felt I could see no more, and came out....
-
- ‘I have had such cheering letters lately. One from a girl whom
- I thought the most tiresome I ever knew, about thirty-four
- years ago. She has been writing and saying how sorry she is,
- and wants to send her niece to be under me: “after many days
- thou shalt find it.”’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_November 1890._
-
- ‘All good wishes for “more life and fuller.” Don’t trouble
- about not _feeling_. Remember the Lord’s words to those
- unfeeling disciples who went to sleep during His agony: “The
- spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” There is winter as
- well as spring or summer in our spiritual life. “Die Blume
- verblüht, die Frucht muss treiben.” You complain of the outward
- excitement of others, yet you want inward excitement. See how
- in the _Imitatio_ one finds the same sort of feeling. I foresaw
- some reaction; there have been times during the last few years,
- during which you have been overstrained, and now you want a
- period of hybernation, I believe. You will, of course, go on
- doing just the same, as if you felt and saw, and you will
- believe in the Presence, and do your best.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_June 1891._
-
- ‘Don’t fret about what “they say,” not even listen, except to
- learn. I dare say they are right, and have sides of truth that
- we have not. In Tara there are beggars who go about saying:
- “What God gives, I will take”; each of us can only do that.
-
- ‘I am glad you have got advice; you have been too careless
- with this marvellous body, so complicated and needing to be
- well-treated. You have driven it on, like some poor ass, with
- sticks! Now you must be a little kind to it or it will stand
- still and kick.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_February 1892._
-
- ‘Your Bishop came last Wednesday, and I spoke to him for the
- first time in my life, after having known him for so many
- years. He seemed so bright, and I hope the removal of the load
- of responsibility will restore him, and he will be able to take
- up some less heavy work. He cannot but do good where-ever he
- is: it is wonderful what a spiritual power he is felt to be.
- He did just manage to see us before we broke up, but only in a
- hurried way; then he lunched with me, and when all were gone he
- gave me his blessing, which made me feel worse and better. Do
- you understand?
-
- ‘I am so glad you are feeling cheered about the school. Don’t
- you think it is right to be content with prosperity as well as
- with adversity?...
-
- ‘Yes, I read _The Wages of Sin_ when it was coming out, a thing
- I seldom do, but I was much struck with its power. The author
- is a daughter of Kingsley. I don’t feel inclined to read Mrs.
- Ward’s new book.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_June 1892._
-
- ‘ ... I am enjoying my work. I was on the top of Battledown
- before 7 A.M. to-day. It is the best time for a walk....’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_July 1892._
-
- ‘Our new building is to begin, and I am miserable at having to
- turn out of my house, which is to be pulled down.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_August 1892._
-
- ‘I think this state is partly reaction; do not bustle about
- it, but take rest. The excitement of last year is, I fancy,
- likely to lead to this; our spiritual faculties need rest after
- overfatigue, so seek repose, “O rest in the Lord.” Read, too,
- some lighter literature. Farrer’s story of Nero’s time I should
- like you to read. It shows what Christianity has done. I had
- a restful time at our Sanatorium after I had got out of my
- house, and now I have had a very pleasant week with my sisters
- at Woodchester. I really think it would be good for you one
- day to make your headquarters at Leckhampton. The country is
- so lovely, the air bracing, and there are all sorts of nice
- excursions by train and omnibus, to most lovely places, and
- there is such variety....
-
- ‘Be not anxious. Let me recommend you, as a diversion, to learn
- shorthand. I find it very good. Script phonography, it is an
- easy system, you could teach yourself. I am taking lessons; it
- is much liked.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_January 1893._
-
- ‘ ... We began to-day. I dare say I shall feel better when
- we are once more immersed. We are about the same in numbers,
- but there is a great deal of illness about, and we are half
- thinking of having a whooping-cough class, under a separate
- teacher, for Division III.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_June 1893._
-
- ‘I have had a great pleasure lately. Mrs. Russell Gurney
- has been spending six weeks here. You must get her _Dante’s
- Pilgrim’s Progress_, just brought out, you will enjoy it; I
- have given a copy to Mrs. Rix. Mr. Alfred Gurney came to stay
- with her, and he has sent me his _Parsifal_, a little book of
- about eighty pages; it is beautiful too.
-
- ‘I should like you to read (in part) Mrs. Booth’s _Life_. It is
- very interesting, and I am quite surprised at the clearness and
- truth of her teaching. She seems never to have joined a party,
- but always looked for truth, and hates the God of Calvin and
- the doctrine “of assurance,” and the idea that Christ could be
- good _for us_ and we need not be good. Her utter devotion is
- beautiful. I have not finished it, and I can’t see how the work
- was carried on after the person “was saved.”’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_August 1894._
-
- ‘I am so glad you are feeling somewhat refreshed. You really
- _must_ forget “the things that are behind”—the bad things as
- well as the good, or the heart “would fail in looking back.”
- And if no other way opens, and you are both called to go back
- to Truro, you will be able. “I can do all things,” and the
- sorrows for both of you will be like the mist which, though it
- came up from the face of the ground, yet watered Paradise and
- made it fruitful. Does not all consciousness of sin and failure
- bring us nearer not only to Him in Whom alone is strength, but
- to our brothers and sisters in sympathy and compassion. We are
- touched with the feeling of their infirmities.
-
- ‘So, my dear child (I feel inclined to say children, for this
- has made me feel nearer to your friend), “lift up the hands
- that hang down and the feeble knees, lest that which is weak
- be turned out of the way, but let it rather be healed” by your
- sorrows—your wounds too.
-
- ‘I have had a very pleasant but exhausting time since we met.
- I spent a fortnight at Oxford, attending both Oxford Extension
- and British Association. We heard a good deal about social and
- economic problems. Mr. Sydney Webb and Dr. Rein of Jena, who
- trains men as teachers, gave some nice lectures. Miss Louch
- is come back, having had a delightful time at the Educational
- Congress at the Clarke University, under the Presidency of
- Dr. Stanley Hall. She says she has learned a great deal....
- I think our Training Department has as many if not more than
- any College there is, in spite of not having received any of
- the thousands that have been given to them—or, shall I say,
- because of it? I am sure it is good to have to pay one’s way.
- I believe our Universities would do better work if they had
- nothing. “Then welcome each rebuff.”
-
- ‘We had many parties at St. Hilda’s, and everybody admired the
- house. The girls enjoy the boat very much; I hope there will be
- no accidents. It is a very safe one, but one is always nervous
- about the water....
-
- ‘I am pleased with the Higher Cambridge List ... and I am glad
- that we manage to keep up our lists, _because_ we do not buy
- up our neighbours’ girls, and try not to make examinations the
- end. Glad your girl has done so well.
-
- ‘I am working hard at the Magazine and my Reports to the
- Council, and trying to rest a little after my Oxford labours.
- On Tuesday I hope to go to the hills near Stroud.
-
- ‘I must lend you some day _Streets and Lanes_, by the late Miss
- Benson. The Archbishop has sent me a copy.
-
- ‘May God bless and comfort your hearts, my dear children, and
- make this light affliction, which is but for a moment, work out
- an eternal good.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘AMBLESIDE, _May 1895_.
-
- ‘ ... The lakes are more beautiful and lovable than I had
- imagined. There is a singular charm in the hills round
- Ambleside, they ripple like the sea.
-
- ‘You must not “feel” while you are so weak, just lie, as
- it were, in the sepulchre, and then come out as Browning’s
- Lazarus.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_July 1897._
-
- ‘I got home from London late last night, and it troubled me,
- and you were much in my mind when I went to church; and in the
- service it seemed to me that it must be your energies were
- to be used to the full, and yet your married life, to which
- you have now been called, does in some degree restrain you.
- Hitherto I have thought you wanted, like an electric eel, to
- recuperate; you have gone through too much lately. To-day, it
- seemed to me as if you should still speak, but in writing; you
- have the power of writing well. I think I speak better than I
- write; I don’t know how you speak, but you can write. Now see
- if speaking is not to be your work whether writing is. How I
- feel I need solitude, and can’t write for want of it; but you
- have solitude enough to enable you to write. A little later,
- as I waited for a message, which sometimes comes at the quiet
- times, the words came: “I became dumb, and opened not my mouth,
- for it was Thy doing.” I thought it was to be sent on to you,
- so there it is; not with your mouth, but with your hand, and
- perhaps to a larger audience. I think the solitude of the cycle
- will help you too....’
-
-There was one friend and old pupil, a writer for whose philosophical
-and poetical work in particular Miss Beale had a great admiration, who
-received many letters from her. A few extracts from these are given. To
-Miss ——:—
-
- ‘_December 1886._
-
- ‘I don’t think you will get any food in Spinoza. You say, may
- we not adopt Agnosticism and say of these problems honestly, “I
- will give it up”? But you _cannot_. We may try to, but it is
- not _human_ to be content to be caged in by this little world
- of time and space. That restless discontent reaching out to
- wider knowledge, to the infinite, is surely its own witness.
- If not, Man, the crown of all things on earth, is the only
- irrational creature upon it. You will not be able to give up
- philosophy.
-
- ‘I quite agree that we are not to be allowed here so to “make
- up our minds.” That spirit ever open to receive more light, is
- what our Master spoke of as the childlike spirit.
-
- ‘Have you seen a little sixpenny book by Armstrong of Leeds?
- He is a Unitarian, so I do not agree with the end; but all
- the early chapters on the Belief in God are very good, and I
- think you would like it. There are also some very satisfactory
- sermons by Professor Momerie on the existence of the soul.
- I read a great deal of philosophy when I get time. Have you
- read Martineau’s _Types of Ethical History_? If not, do. Also
- Green’s _Prolegomena to Ethics_. Last summer I read Lotze’s
- _Microcosmus_, but I should recommend the two others rather.
-
- ‘I wish you entered more than I think you do into Browning’s
- thoughts. He has, it seems to me, so clearly set forth the main
- basis of Faith, not systematically, but recurrently.
-
- ‘We must work out these matters for ourselves; but rest
- we cannot. You cannot in the presence of your brother’s
- suffering—you cannot in the presence of death say: “I care not
- to lift the veil, or ever to know whether there is a curtain
- behind which we pass or a dark abyss.”
-
- ‘Indeed, dear child, I do feel for you. When you are freer, you
- must come and see me, and we will talk over things. I shall
- not think you wicked, but believe that you do want to know
- God, and that He is sorry for you, because you do care, but
- cannot see.... It is only the contemptuous, what I may call the
- omniscient Agnostic, that I do not want to have anything to do
- with; those who _sneer_ at the most pathetic aspirations and
- hopes. The reverent and yet sorrowful doubt which yet longs for
- dawn, shall one day be blest by the sunrise, here or hereafter.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_January 5, 1887._
-
- ‘MY DEAR CHILD,—No; I don’t mind your saying anything that is
- in your heart.
-
- ‘As regards knowledge. We use this word, it seems, in different
- senses. It is not at all identical with “to form a conception
- of”: _e.g._ I cannot form a conception of what gravitation or
- electricity is, but I _know_ each in a sense. These are names
- for something without which the kosmos as it is could not be.
- Or I might perhaps illustrate better by saying I can form no
- _conception_ of the Universe, no _complete_ conception, and
- yet from my isolated spot I look up and say, _it is_. Of what
- _can_ we form a complete conception? Not of the “flower in the
- crannied wall.”
-
- ‘Any other explanation of the facts of the Universe seems to
- me incredible, except one, viz., that it is the utterance
- of supreme Wisdom and Love, and that it is adapted to the
- intelligence of finite beings. The Unity of law tells us there
- is _one_ God, the Creator and Ruler. As regards the hypothesis
- of order coming out of chance atoms—the myth of a primæval
- chaos—can any one entertain it? _Ex nihil nihil_; the order we
- see in evolution must have existed with the original atoms, if
- such were the basis of created life.
-
- ‘No, I do not think it your _fault_, but the fault of Spinoza’s
- system that it cannot give you satisfaction. It is a revival,
- only in another form, too, of the old Greek thought of Zeus,
- over whom there was another God, Fate. So Spinoza’s and the
- Greek Supreme were not Supreme.
-
- ‘Of course I can do nothing in a letter but suggest lines of
- thought and lines of reading. After Armstrong, I should most
- like you to take either Green’s _Prolegomena_ or Martineau’s
- _Types_, and read both several times. Green will help you to
- see the unity underlying all possibility of knowledge.
-
- ‘It is perhaps more than anything the harmony of the Threefold
- Unity which helps me to realise the conception of the divine
- which Jesus uttered most clearly.
-
- ‘One sees the absolute physical unity, each atom forming part
- of the complete whole, and standing in vital relation to the
- whole.
-
- ‘One sees all knowledge as real, only when it takes its place
- as in (can I say part of?) the Universal thought. One can see
- things only when one sees all in God. But one sees that this
- which we have separated off as physical nature, is yet the
- means and the condition of the intellectual too; for Light,
- which is necessary to vital processes, is the means by which
- the Universal thought is revealed to our intelligence, by which
- God touches, as it were, from without and awakens, and causes
- truly to live, our intellectual being.
-
- ‘Thirdly, each—the physical, the intellectual—are felt by us
- to be the means to the highest of all, the perfection of the
- moral nature. Without this, goodness, power, and intellect
- would be worthless or horrible; and as the material can only be
- translated into the conception by the intellectual, so we feel
- that the moral alone can interpret the intellectual.
-
- ‘That the full solution is not ours must seem natural to us,
- who know ourselves to be shut in by space and time. But I am
- sure that men will not long remain blind to other facts, as
- they have been to some extent in this generation, owing to the
- scientific sudden growth of our day.
-
- ‘The facts of conscience are to me quite inexplicable on
- any other hypothesis than that of One who is supremely good
- speaking to His children, not through “eye or ear,” but
- directly. There is the unity of consciousness which makes
- memory possible, and moral judgment possible; and yet there
- is a secondary consciousness, the “categorical imperative,”
- the ideal goodness, ever revealing to man a higher and
- better. What if the conscience has never—I should say Except
- in One—received the perfect vision of goodness? This is only
- to say that the receiver is limited and imperfect, not that
- the perfect spiritual sun is not, or rather I should say the
- universal light, for the sun is a localisation of that which
- is invisible; is saturating through infinite space. Words ever
- fail.
-
- ‘I know that endless questions are still unanswered, but this
- seems to me to be a real knowledge, which is consistent and
- which gives peace, that all other theories are inconsistent,
- and that the highest, the moral being is starved upon them.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_January 27, 1892._
-
- ‘ ... The Bishop of Gloucester was here to-day, and began
- talking about your Goethe, which he praised; he is a good
- judge. I thought you would like to know. Would you send him the
- book, and say I have asked you; he will tell people about it.
- He reads philosophy too, and specially advises _Lotze_.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘Written from SUDELEY CASTLE, (probably) _December 1893_.
-
- ‘I fetched your Magazine from the Post Office about five
- o’clock, and I have just read it through. I must express to you
- how delighted I am with it. It is so clear, so well written, it
- gets to the centre of things. I have seen nothing you have done
- at all to compare with it. I must get the number. I think I
- shall take in the Magazine, it looks good throughout. A friend
- takes the philosophical review and lends it to me. I might
- take this and lend it to her. I have a paper in hand against
- an article in that, but I fear I shall not be able to polish
- it off. You must have had days, _weeks_, of quiet thought to
- write this. This makes me want you still more to go to Oxford,
- and get to know Caird. Did I tell you I lunched with Jowett
- _tête-à-tête_ not long before his death?
-
- ‘You must come and see me if I can’t come to you....’
-
- ‘PS.—If you lend it to other friends, ascertain about the
- postage.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_November 1895._
-
- ‘ ... I am sending you a little book on _Psychology_ by a young
- teacher and writer. I wish she had shown me the MS. or the
- proof. If you feel inclined to look at it, and give her a few
- written criticisms I should be glad. We want so much common
- language in all these subjects, words are used so differently;
- _e.g._ “conception” is not generally used as she does.
- Intuition is another which we must fix the meaning of, for
- each book one reads. _Real_, _reason_, etc., want defining. A
- dictionary of philosophical terms should be made by some people
- authorised to establish an Eirenicon.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_? 1896._
-
- ‘No; I am sure you _ought not_ to give anything. I am sorry
- even that the notice was sent you. Perhaps, however, you may
- know some one or ones who may have money that they want to put
- out in some way for the Master’s service, and might think this
- a right way. We shall not get on if the Guild has to produce
- funds unasked. I don’t want _any one_ to be asked, but they
- might be shown a paper.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_January 1897._
-
- ‘ ... I find I read _Not made in Germany_ without knowing it
- was yours. It is prettily written, but I don’t consider such
- things worthy of you, and the variations on that _one_ tune
- are so very numerous. I wish we, like the Greeks, had things
- written which turned on other problems. These things are very
- well as a diversion. I wonder what is the subject of the novel.
-
- ‘One of our teachers has been translating a book of Herbart’s.
- I have sent for his introduction to philosophy. I will tell you
- if I think it would do for what I want; something giving the
- fundamental questions which come before beginners. Herbart is
- much read now, but he is difficult to translate, and the people
- who have tried have not been very successful; I wonder if you
- have read any of him.
-
- ‘I send a letter of introduction to Miss Swanwick, I suppose
- you know her translations and writings. I think she is only
- second to Mrs. Browning, and she is charming, and young still.
- When I last saw her, the friend of so many distinguished
- people, her memory was wonderful. Tennyson had one of her books
- open upon his table during the last days.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘(Date uncertain.)
-
- ‘ ... Herbart is a power. I have not got the book yet. You
- really must not let yourself be diverted altogether from
- philosophy. You have not thought and suffered so much for
- nothing, and though your philosophy will come out in most
- things, even in stories, you _must_ give it us sometimes
- “neat.” You remind me of Darwin’s earth-worms; you have
- had to burrow and work underground, and you have turned up
- some fruitful soil. Well, the Spirit which led you into the
- wilderness will bring you out of it, and anoint you to tell
- some good tidings.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_July 4, 1898._
-
- ‘ ... I am glad to hear you have come to a satisfactory
- agreement with Blackwood. It is an advantage to have a leading
- publisher. Now as regards the sonnet. I don’t feel as if
- anything could make the Eros of later Greek religion pure. He
- and Aphrodite have fallen from heaven, and I cannot think of
- them at the same time with the Sufferer on Calvary—so it rather
- jars on my feelings.
-
- ‘I know there is behind the myth the thought of love, of one
- who is the offspring of truth and purity, of perfect beauty.
- But love, associated with Eros as we know him, is not love....
-
- ‘I am feeling wonderfully well; the body responds to the
- spirit, and is refreshed too by the sympathy of my dear
- children.’
-
-Miss Beale’s correspondence with her ‘children’ frequently concerned
-spiritual and mental difficulties of various kinds. One or two of the
-letters she wrote on such questions follow.
-
-To one in religious doubt:—
-
- ‘(Undated.)
-
- ‘ ... How I wish some one abler and better than I could help
- you now, but as God has given you to me, and something of a
- mother’s heart with my children, I must try.
-
- ‘First: I would resolve to take some fixed time each day, say
- ten minutes on first rising, just to plume one’s feathers for
- some short flights above the earth.
-
- ‘Secondly: I would think of some of the blessings and thank God
- for them.
-
- ‘Thirdly: Then I would plead for light; “Show me Thy glory;
- but I would ask in humility, being content to wait till the
- third or even the fourth watch.” I would ask, “Show me the
- Father and it sufficeth; let me know Thy love, if I cannot
- bear Thy glory.” And I would utter _the prayer_ not only in
- aspiration in spoken words, or only in feeling (which is the
- music of prayer), but I would utter it in act, by reading in
- a childlike spirit some Scripture—climbing as it were the
- Delectable Mountains with the shepherds, and trying to make out
- something through their glasses. Ask that same Spirit, which
- has taught the spirit of man, and which I believe taught you
- specially,—not for your own, but for the Church’s sake, to show
- to you spiritual truths.
-
- ‘Fourthly: Then I would see if there was some selfishness, some
- “Evil Eye” preventing my seeing, and ask deliverance from any
- besetting sin.
-
- ‘Fifthly: I would ask God to let me offer some sacrifice,
- permit me to join with Him, to hold communion with Him in
- blessing another, and try to look for some to whom I might give
- some cup of refreshment, some way of entering into His joy, and
- of crucifying self.
-
- ‘Sixthly: I would place myself under such influences as have
- lifted the souls of others. I would join in common worship as
- much as possible in our prayers here and at Church.
-
- ‘Seventhly: I would receive the teaching of Jesus, and through
- the bread and wine of earth ask God to feed me with the
- Heavenly Manna.
-
- ‘Will you, my child, try some of these ways, and not be soon
- weary? In _due_ season you will reap, if you faint not.
-
- ‘Perhaps you will soon find some ways more suited to yourself
- than some of those I have suggested; but you asked me. I
- will try to get a beautiful prayer I have heard asking for
- light. It may be that the answer will be a baptism of fire;—a
- heaping coals of fire on our heads, and thus purifying us from
- evil. I would say earnestly, compel yourself (though often
- unwillingly), to look up to the Father, as the noblest souls
- have done in all ages, whether Christian or not. You must catch
- some beams of heavenly light, and see, as St. Stephen did, that
- man may be glorified to stand at the Right Hand of God, and to
- share with Him in carrying out His purposes of love. I think
- you will be led on to see the Father revealed in the Son; to me
- He is the Way, and it seems His words are true for us now: “No
- man cometh _unto_ the Father (cometh near so as to see and know
- Him) but by Me.”
-
- ‘May the Good Shepherd lead you to green pastures and the still
- waters of comfort.’
-
-To one who found danger and unreality in forms and ceremonies, and who
-wrote: ‘I feel I am cutting myself off from you in writing like this.’
-She replied:—
-
- ‘_PS._—Nothing will cut you off from me. I thought I had given
- no rules, only such suggestions as a heathen philosopher might
- have followed. I wrote my letter hastily; I should like to see
- what I said.
-
- ‘Your letter gave me pain, which was partly selfish, to find I
- was too ignorant to help you. We must have a little talk some
- day.’
-
-To one who had written that she had to fight hard against pessimism
-caused by much unaccountable and apparently needless suffering. She
-answered:—
-
- ‘_November 10, 1895._
-
- ‘I think our faith in God, as in any person, rests more on what
- He is than what He does....
-
- ‘Now I come to the conclusion:—
-
- ‘(1) That in Nature is revealed an intelligence whose limits
- we cannot see; One, _i.e._ infinitely wise and mighty. (2) In
- good men we see benevolence, the earnest desire to bless up to
- the limits of their power. In the Christ we see this without
- any limit of selfishness, and we say, If Man, the Son, is thus
- loving, then the Father is love. “No man knoweth the Father,
- but the Son.” We can approach God, so as to know the character
- of God, only thus, it seems to me. You have here the argument
- of Saul (Browning). Then when you allege against the witness
- of the heart, the facts of Nature, I answer that however
- inexplicable by us these facts are, this witness for God, which
- comes from within, cannot be overthrown.
-
- ‘Nor, indeed, does that fact of animals preying on one another
- trouble me much. Death to them, _i.e._ the stopping of the
- activities of life suddenly, whilst they are in full vigour,
- seems better than the gradual decay of sickness. There is with
- them no anticipation and no joy in cruelty.
-
- ‘The facts of moral evil, those are what seem to overwhelm
- one at times. There are children born into such terrible
- surroundings, we say. There again we can see a little way up
- into the darkness, and trust. We do see that the redemption of
- the lost is often effected by the knowledge that others suffer
- through their sin....
-
- ‘Do we not know enough of our interests and God’s infinite
- wisdom to make us trust God for the universal good? Men must be
- left to work out the consequences of evil, to bear them, and
- learn it is God’s purpose for them to rise out of the darkness
- into increasing love of His holy will. At length regenerated
- humanity will so enter into sympathy with the Spirit of God
- mediated through the indwelling Christ, that things in Heaven
- and earth will be recapitulated in Him the Head, and will
- become intelligently and lovingly obedient to that will. The
- cost of suffering is as nothing compared with the infinite
- good. I can only sketch the outline of my faith.’
-
-The letter which follows was written to a pupil who, while she was at
-school, did not personally know Miss Beale very well. A talk at a Guild
-meeting eleven years after she left revealed to Miss Beale’s penetrating
-eye some distress caused by disillusionment and disappointment. A
-fortnight afterwards she wrote:—
-
- ‘_July 1898._
-
- ‘I have so often thought of our interrupted conversation, and
- must take a bit of my first Saturday evening to write a line.
-
- ‘You were feeling, I judge, somewhat as Wordsworth did when
- he wrote the _Ode on Immortality._ This is, I think, how the
- matter stands. When we are young, we think that perfection,
- _i.e._ the ideal, can be found on earth—we set up, perhaps,
- some earthly idol, and endow it with every excellence. Then
- we find that we have been in a measure mistaken. What shall
- we do? Doubtless there does then come upon us the shadow of
- a great darkness, as we find how much evil there is, and
- we are tempted to believe the lying word of Satan, that
- the kingdoms of the world are his. Shall we then lower our
- ideal, say we will conform to that which is, or believe the
- heavenly proclamation—“the kingdoms of this world are become
- the kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ”—and work on to
- make this as true as we can for our own souls, and for those
- near us? We see that the ideals cannot be realised on earth,
- because this is a place of discipline. Many make a worldly
- marriage because they give up their ideal, and conform to what
- is, instead of ever striving to bring about what ought to
- be—nothing can make that right. But on the other hand we must
- be content to be the companions of those who, like ourselves,
- are “compassed about with infirmities,” to arm them for the
- fight with evil, and to love those who are not perfect, as
- Britomart did the Red Cross Knight. What I want you all to
- keep before you is that one day the ideal will be realised, as
- the Bible and our own hearts assure us, and to join the army
- of light and go right on, confident of eventual victory. You
- have, my dear child, a somewhat heavy burden of responsibility
- for your age, and you miss the sustaining hand, but you must
- not look down, but up! Take our first Cambridge Room motto:
-
- “As the soar falcon, so I strive to fly,
- In contemplation of the immortal sky.”
-
- There we may look for the realisation of our earthly
- endeavours, as Abt Vogler teaches. I wonder if you read
- Browning. I wish you had a Browning Society.—With much
- sympathy, ...’
-
-To one who had written of the ‘Intolerance of Church people’:—
-
- ‘_July 1884._
-
- ‘ ... But it does seem to me quite impossible in education
- to leave religion an open question, _i.e._, to teach without
- hypothesis. How could we unite into one coherent whole the
- teaching of optics, unless we presuppose the undulatory theory?
- Or the facts of astronomy without the theory of gravitation?
- Yet both may be, and are questioned. For some philosophical
- theory must underlie all things, and no one can, it seems to
- me, teach history, or geography, or science without it. We who
- believe in Christian philosophy, and feel that it alone makes
- the universe intelligible, and life worth living for ourselves
- or others; who think that it is the power needed to give life
- to the world, and to deliver us from evil and all the misery
- which oppresses us, naturally desire with all the energy of
- our being to teach it, and we most of us would not let little
- differences hinder our working with those who acknowledge the
- immeasurable blessings of Christ’s teaching. Here I found
- dissenters wishing that the teaching of our College should
- be Church; because they said there must be some basis; that
- they would rather let their children hear sometimes what they
- disagreed with, and judge for themselves, than that there
- should be no definite teaching. They thought our Church was on
- the whole the most liberal.
-
- ‘I am so grieved, dear friend, that any of us should bring
- disgrace on our Teacher by our faults, but when we do what our
- Master, the Truth, disapproved, the blame should not rest on
- Him. It would not be just to you if we called a child who was
- in your class and loved you, by your name when she told a lie.
- Nor should you say, “See what Christians do,” when they sin
- against Christ. _In so far_ as they are untruthful they are
- un-Christian.
-
- ‘Then, had you not, even as you admit, condemned utterly those
- whose conduct admitted of a more favourable interpretation?
- We are not utterly truthful, unless we do more than act up
- to our convictions, unless we do our utmost to make those
- convictions as near the truth as we are able. And do you know
- I felt so disappointed after talking to you the other day,
- because it seemed to me as if you had not cared to search
- into the depths of things, as if you were content to float
- about instead of searching for the rock beneath the flood.
- Our apprehension of the truth regarding the goodness of God,
- and His purpose for us, and our duty to our Father and to one
- another, seems to me the priceless pearl. I found you had not
- read what I thought you would have read, the works in which the
- ages have indeed drawn for us pictures of those who wrestled
- with God in the darkness and cried—“Tell me Thy Name.” And now
- you disappoint me again, as some other of my dear Agnostic
- friends. They seem wanting in the tenderness of those who ever
- look up to Jesus Christ, and therefore learn to feel in the
- light of His example. This our miserable failure, the habitual
- self-examination and definite confession of sin, helps us to.
- There, I have told you what is in my heart. The former on
- thinking over our conversation I meant to say, because I love
- you. The latter, (the want of sympathy,) I did not know of. I
- wonder if you will misunderstand me now,—perhaps,—but I have
- felt you did not before.’
-
-The following was written to a former student, who after a time of great
-religious privilege had been assailed by special temptation:—
-
- ‘_August 1888._
-
- ‘MY DEAR FRIEND,—I am grieved that you have suffered so much,
- and yet it was not sent you in vain. It was to correct faults
- in yourself, and to help you in your vocation to correct those
- in others. You did not, I feel sure, yield to the wrong, but
- fought against it, and temptation is not sin.
-
- ‘I have been thinking what you could read. Do you know
- Froebel’s own works? I think some of these (which are not light
- reading) would be nice for you on your travels. I like always a
- book that is suitable for a little reading and much thinking.
- He is so bathed in the spirit of love, so deeply Christian and
- so full of the spirit of liberty. When you come home you must
- come and pay us a visit,—that and Rosmini I should like you to
- read. I have asked Miss Gore to send you one of my photos, in
- case you care to have it, when we go home.—With deep sympathy,
- yours most sincerely,
-
- D. BEALE.’
-
-Among the letters are many to old pupils on the deaths of relations or
-friends. The next was written to Miss Alice Owen, now Mrs. Mark Collet,
-on the anniversary of her mother’s death:—
-
- ‘_June 1891._
-
- ‘This was a birthday eight years ago into a world of larger
- scope than this, and I feel as if her spirit were still
- watching over those she loved on earth....
-
- ‘Surely the tides of eternal love, flowing in upon our narrow
- lives, will make us all of one spirit, sorrowing and rejoicing
- with one another, instead of judging, because we feel, as she
- taught in that beautiful parable, that we are one.
-
- ‘May our Lord give you an ever larger measure of His own love.’
-
-The next letter refers to the death of Mrs. Russell Gurney:—
-
- ‘_October 1896._
-
- ‘I got a letter from Orme Square this morning. Our beloved
- friend entered into rest yesterday. I think of the glad meeting
- of those who were kindred souls on earth. I had also a note
- from Addington saying how thankful Mrs. Benson is, and happy in
- spite of her loss.’
-
-Several other letters of a kindred nature follow.
-
-To Miss Giles, on the death of her father:—
-
- ‘_April 1871._
-
- ‘Still in one way we who are old suffer less from parting. To
- us the time seems so short, ere we may hope to meet once more
- where are no more partings or tears.’
-
-To Miss Susan Wood, on the death of her mother:—
-
- ‘_May 1880._
-
- ‘I need not tell you I have felt much for you. One could not
- have wished the suffering prolonged, and yet one does not feel
- the loss less. Happily, one seems generally to forget, when all
- is over, the last painful incidents of the sickness, and to
- remember the past years. Few have had a more devoted mother.
- How proud she was of your successes! How old it makes us feel
- when we take our place in the front rank of the army of life;
- may we be able to say, when we too are struck down, “I have
- fought a good fight.” May God bless your work, my dear child,
- to the everlasting weal of those whom He has given you.’
-
-To Miss Frances Crawley, afterwards Mrs. Wells:—
-
- ‘_July 1881._
-
- ‘I must write you one line of sympathy in this great sorrow. I
- know how much you loved your dear father, and had longed for
- this visit, and now there will be a great blank. You will not
- think now “How glad he will be if I do well.” But on the other
- hand, my dear child, you will feel you must be more than ever
- to your mother. You children will be all to her now. Besides,
- God never takes but He also gives—only we often miss the gift
- because we don’t look for it. He will help you to know Him
- better as your Father, partly because you will think of your
- own father as near Him, for where our treasure is, there our
- hearts are also. You will think more of pleasing Him, and so
- preparing to meet those who have loved you and loved God, where
- there will be no more death for ever.’
-
-To an old pupil, on the death of her father:—
-
- ‘_November 9, 1896._
-
- ‘MY DEAR CHILD,—This is indeed a blessed death for one so good
- as your father; you must give thanks for him.
-
- ‘There is no service I think so strengthening as the burial;
- may you be comforted and strengthened for the battle of life
- by a clearer vision of that unseen host which is ever near,
- though “our eyes are holden that we see them not” through want
- of faith. Soon must we join their ranks. Shall we join in their
- psalms of thanksgiving?’
-
-To Miss Strong, on the death of Miss Margaret Clarke:—
-
- ‘_February 3, 1897._
-
- ‘Indeed I am grieved; she has been a power for good, and has
- sent out some grand workers, and I shall miss her greatly. I am
- thankful I was with her at Christmas.
-
- ‘One feels sure “her works will follow her,” and He who gave
- her power will raise up others. It is, so far as one can see,
- too heavy a burden for Kate alone. Her memory will be a power,
- her life was so wonderfully guided, and one feels sure she has
- work to do beyond, for which the training of earth will have
- prepared her.’
-
-To Miss Rowand, on the death of her mother:—
-
- ‘_June 1901._
-
- ‘It is grievous for you and those who loved that dear and
- noble, simple-minded woman, for her goodness gave unity to her
- life. Now the alabaster box is broken, only the fragrance of
- the life remains. She has been spared the living death such as
- I have seen, when the soul finds in the body a tomb. She is
- released and doubtless carries on ministries of love with your
- noble father and beloved brother.
-
- ‘I have just seen Fräulein, whose only sister has just passed
- away.
-
- ‘How little the sorrows of earth will seem to us as we look
- back, I think; even as many which even here issue in blessing.
- We realise that all things do indeed “work together for good to
- them that love God,” and I know that through this fresh sorrow
- the fire will burn up more and more of the earthly, so that the
- spirit may shine forth more brightly “to give light to all that
- are in the house.”—Yours with deep sympathy and affection.’
-
-To Miss Caines, just before her death:—
-
- ‘_March 1901._
-
- ‘MY VERY DEAR FRIEND,—We can only pray now that if it be God’s
- will you may be spared to the many who love you, and to whom
- you have been a blessing during these many years of faithful
- service. But if the Master should come and call for you, then
- He will go with you through the Valley of the Shadow of Death.
- His Rod and Staff which stay your tottering steps will comfort
- you, and He will bring you forth to the light.
-
- ‘We must say for you and for ourselves;—“Jesus, I trust Thee.”
- We do believe that what the world calls Death is birth into a
- brighter world.
-
- ‘May we all meet again where sorrow and sighing are no
- more.—With much love, your very affectionate.’
-
-To a friend, on the death of Miss Caines:—
-
- ‘This morning my dear friend passed away, full of peace and
- content to go. The children have been all that we could wish,
- full of sympathy, but quietly impressed and very sorrowful.
- We do not wish them to leave, but to learn to look calmly on
- death, and hopefully up to Him Who has taught His servants to
- triumph over death....
-
- ‘The loss to me is more than I can say. God’s will be done.’
-
-The next letter is to Mrs. Cooper,[105] a much-loved old pupil, who in
-1902 lost a son, a promising young artist, and seven months later her
-husband through death:—
-
- ‘_June 1903._
-
- ‘I am sending you such a nice sermon by our good bishop, which
- I think you will like. I quite agree with you that one ought
- not to seek intercourse through mediums. I would never join
- the Psychical Society. It was _right_ to enquire as these
- scientific men have done, but the inexperienced are almost sure
- to be taken in by such, and it seems to me that we ought not to
- try to draw aside the veil but wait until God’s herald bids us
- enter.
-
- ‘I think you must expect to feel the sense of loss becoming
- greater, but then you will get to feel how short is the time of
- mourning on earth, and to ascend in heart and mind—and so to
- be above the storms and clouds of earth—even as the lark—and
- yet with him to hover over the earthly home, “that nest which
- you can drop into at will,—Those quivering limbs comprest.”
- You will want to speak to and help others with the comfort
- wherewith you are comforted of God....
-
- ‘It is nice to look back on that time forty years ago. I
- remember your confessions to me then. Well, you have not been
- forsaken, nor left to beg your bread.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_October 1903._
-
- ‘I have just heard of this fresh trouble. Surely you must be
- intended to do some work for others specially needing heart’s
- blood.—This paper was put into my hands just as I heard of your
- fresh disappointment and anxiety.’
-
-To the Misses Hibbert Ware, on the death of their sister:—
-
- ‘_March 1905._
-
- ‘Indeed one ought only to give thanks for her. I think of her
- looking down on us all at peace having escaped from the long
- enduring pain associated with this earthly body, and springing
- up like the lark into the larger heaven.
-
- ‘Well, we must wait to understand these things which it has
- not entered into the heart of man to conceive in all their
- joyful reality, though in some measure they are revealed here
- to saintly souls which have been made partakers of Christ’s
- sufferings.’
-
-To Mrs. Mace, on the death of her husband:—
-
- ‘_May 1906._
-
- ‘Only to-day did I hear of the death of Mr. Mace.... It did
- seem grievous after his suffering with so much courage and
- hope the operation. One can only give thanks now that the soul
- has escaped from “the body of humiliation,” through which
- it has risen to the spiritual life. I don’t like the word
- resurrection, ἀνάστασις does not suggest that the soul has put
- on its old clothing, after being delivered from the body of
- corruption. You must be glad that he is free.’
-
-Miss Beale wrote several letters, from which extracts are given, to Miss
-Belcher during her last illness.
-
-The following was written after the Head-mistresses’ Conference on
-October 8 and 9 at Oxford in 1898:—
-
- ‘_October 1898._
-
- ‘MY DEAR FRIEND,—I got home last night. Everybody was asking
- and thinking about you and missing you so much. I hoped for a
- line this morning; Susan will doubtless write to-day. I brought
- back Agnes Body for the Sunday here. The text in my birthday
- book for to-day is: “I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail
- not.” I know this prayer is fulfilled for you. How I long to
- have some real talk with you now; but I think even in the body
- there is communion, and still more out of the body. It seems
- to me as if Miss Carter must be with you. Your love and care
- for her was returned in blessings on your own life, and through
- you on others. Miss Strong looks ill. She has been staying with
- her Bishop; that will strengthen her. That good Miss Day of
- Westminster was there, and sweet Mrs. Woodhouse of Sheffield.
-
- ‘I feel sure the Conference will do good, there were so many
- good women there;—only we missed _one_.’
-
-A day or two later she wrote:—
-
- ‘MY VERY DEAR FRIEND,—I feel somewhat cheered by Susan’s letter
- to-night. Each morning I have so many enquiries, “Have you
- heard?” Susan is good in writing. Here are three letters from
- some staying at St. Hilda’s, where we were always thinking of
- you....
-
- ‘Just two years on the 11th, since the Archbishop fell asleep.
- I wonder if he looks down at the school, and its first
- Head-mistress too. Shall we see and be able in some measure to
- “succour” those on earth? May the peace of God which passeth
- all understanding be with you.’
-
-The next alludes to a proposed visit of Miss Beale to Miss Belcher:—
-
- ‘_St. Luke’s Day._
-
- ‘DEAR FRIEND,—I am so looking forward to Friday. I thought
- of you so much on this the Physician’s day, as we sang that
- beautiful hymn and Psalm xxx.; and our window told of the
- raising of the daughter by the Healer. My own life seems to me
- almost a resurrection, I must hope that you too may be raised
- up to do work on earth, ere you go to a higher sphere.’
-
-After this visit Miss Belcher wrote:—
-
- ‘MY DEAR FRIEND,—The strength and comfort of your visit has
- been with me ever since, and far from its doing me any harm it
- has done me untold good. May God bless you for having imparted
- to me so richly of the “comfort wherewith you yourself have
- been comforted of God.” I do so trust you were not over-tired;
- hope to hear from some one to-morrow.
-
- ‘Will you call me Marian in our private letters? I have never
- liked being only Miss Belcher, and since the close communion
- and rich gift of yesterday, I feel I should like it.’
-
-Miss Beale’s reply was:—
-
- ‘_October 23, 1898._
-
- ‘DEAREST MARIAN,—It is good to hear that you were none the
- worse for my visit, and that our Lord put into my mouth some
- words of comfort. I shall hope to hear about Dr. Broadbent. I
- had a nice note from Susan. All here were so glad to get news
- of you direct....
-
- ‘I wonder if you know Fechner’s little book; there is one
- chapter I like much, from which I am sending you some extracts.’
-
-The next letter was written after an operation Miss Belcher had
-undergone:—
-
- ‘ ... I lingered this morning, and the postman brought me
- Susan’s cheerful letter, just as I was starting, and I was able
- to make the service specially a Eucharist on your account.
- What a wonderful epistle; it is one to feed on. It tells
- how suffering strengthens the inner man, and enlarges one’s
- sympathies and makes us know the love of God. And the Gospel
- tells of renewed life after going down nearly to the grave.
- You and I can give thanks for both; may St. Paul’s wish be
- accomplished in us.’
-
-Miss Belcher replied:—
-
- ‘_Sunday Evening._
-
- ‘MY DEAR MISS BEALE,—My first few lines written by myself must
- be to you. All through last week the Epistle and your words
- about it have been such a help. It was just like one of your
- Scripture lessons every day all to myself. I am still going on
- so well, but of course it must take time, and I am not out of
- the wood. Still, as you said, all is well and will be well.
- Thank you so much for Lilla’s letter. I am so sorry she is not
- well, and Lucy Soulsby too. I am so rejoiced to hear you are
- so well and vigorous, and that College is overflowing. How
- wonderful it all is, and so inspiring.
-
- ‘I had begun Archbishop Benson’s _St. Cyprian_ and your book
- before the operation, but have been too weak to read since. I
- hope to begin to-morrow. If you have read anything lately you
- think I should like, will you tell me the names? It must not
- be philosophy. I hope to have the best papers of the Church
- Congress read to me....’
-
-Shortly after this Miss Belcher wrote herself on an anticipated visit
-from another physician:—
-
- ‘MY VERY DEAR FRIEND,— ... Dr. Robson of Leeds comes to-morrow.
- I know you will pray that the “right judgment” will be given.
- It is thought he will operate, but not certain. Please let
- Eliza and Susan Draper know. I cannot forget all I owe to
- you, my friend and guide, of so many years. We have a private
- celebration to-morrow at eight, but you will not get this in
- time to think of us.—Ever your loving and grateful friend,
-
- ‘M. BELCHER.
-
- ‘You shall hear as soon as possible.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘_Dearest Marian_,—I have heard from Susan.... Of course we
- can’t understand, and we only know that all is well. I thought
- of you so much at prayers this morning. I read the Lesson
- instead of the Epistle. “The souls of the righteous are in the
- hands of God, and there shall no torment touch them.” We missed
- your accustomed visit on the term holiday yesterday.’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘_First Sunday in Advent, 1898._
-
- ‘MY VERY DEAR MARIAN,—We were all so full of hope at first,
- and are much disappointed that relief has not come, but that
- you are still stretched upon the cross. “No chastening for the
- present seemeth to be joyous but grievous, yet at such times
- one can just _think_ of the ‘Mystery of Pain,’ and realise
- that each sufferer does in uniting his will with God’s in some
- measure, ‘fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of
- Christ ... for His body’s sake.’” I think perhaps you may be
- suffering specially for one, that her faith may be once more
- awakened. Every sufferer thus “lifted up” does in a measure
- draw the hearts of others to Him through whom we are able to
- reveal the power of faith.... I said to Miss Drummond, “I dare
- say you would not have been spared any of the suffering”; she
- answered so heartily, “not one half-hour.” We see now what a
- wonderful work she did among the College boys, and it must be
- that your suffering is a part of the work God has given you to
- do for the school, and that you, too, will be enabled to say
- “not one half-hour,” when the darkness passes away, and the
- true light shines into the things of earth, and we know as we
- are known. I know that suffering so _claims_ the attention, but
- one can only know and believe, not feel it; but it is much to
- live by faith. Faith is the illuminating power through which
- alone we truly know. Was not Miss Carter’s suffering felt by
- you to be mediatorial too, and you are her successor. I shall
- try to spend a few days with Miss Martin at Christmas.
-
- ‘To-day the Jairus window comes before me; the thought of the
- Lord sending away all those who pressed round the maiden, that
- she might know the advent of Him who is the Lord and Giver of
- life.’
-
-The following is the last letter Miss Beale wrote to Miss Belcher:—
-
- ‘_December 5, 1898._
-
- ‘MY VERY DEAR FRIEND,—I have tried to write several times,
- but tore up what I wrote. Susan is good in telling me about
- you, and at times my heart sinks, when I think of all you are
- suffering, though there do seem to me to be some hopeful
- signs.... Well, we ought not, I suppose, to wish, we are so
- sure that “in all our afflictions He is afflicted,” and “the
- angel of His presence saves us,” and makes our souls strong to
- bear and our “light affliction is but for a moment.”
-
- ‘I dare say this term has seemed to you unending. I think when
- the strain of thinking about school is taken off, you will feel
- stronger. I hope to go to Kilburn from January 5 to the 9th;
- there we shall think much about you. I am just writing about
- St. Hilda’s East.... Things seem going on well, I think I shall
- stay there after the Retreat, and try to get more into touch.’
-
-Enclosed in this letter were some verses from Ken’s ‘Midnight Hymn,’ with
-the words, ‘I thought you might like this if awake at night.’
-
-After Miss Belcher’s death on December 15, 1898, Miss Beale wrote to Miss
-Strong: ‘Three of my noble-hearted friends gone so lately—Miss Buss, Miss
-Clarke, and Marian Belcher. The road to the Dark Tower gets lonely, but
-we look beyond.’
-
-A few letters on general subjects are given. The first of these was
-written to Miss Susan Wood, in 1897, in reply to an inquiry about women
-teachers:—
-
- ‘I should not like to say I would have none but women teachers.
- I consider a combination good, better than either men or women
- only. Still, if a woman is equal in knowledge and ability, I
- consider she generally teaches better than a man. If all women
- are ultimately forced to go to the University, the higher
- teaching will be taken out of their hands, or else women will
- teach there.’
-
-The following extract, from a letter to Miss Sturge in October 1902,
-deals with the developments of the College:—
-
- ‘The numbers enable us to have an aggregate of schools and to
- have virtually about seven who might have and ought—Headships
- elsewhere, had they not an independent sphere of their own.
-
- ‘Lastly, are you right in saying that an inspiring personality
- can be taken away? The inspiration is not from any person
- who can pass away; we are but the earthen vessels; the light
- persists and is given just so long as it is needed, to any one
- who has to give light. The inspiration for the Headship will be
- given to my successor in turn....
-
- ‘I do hope God may allow me to go on longer, and it is a
- comfort to feel that you are glad I should.
-
- ‘As regards the growing size of the College. I may add in
- addition to what I have said, that I have never wished
- independently to add to the size merely, and that in each
- development I have felt I was obliged to go on, though often
- I dreaded it; _e.g._ the training of teachers could not be
- refused when Miss Newman offered. Then the Kindergarten grew
- up, and the elementary teachers was really forced on one. It
- is unprofitable in money (the Elementary School Department),
- and a great strain on me, but I feel we have to do this special
- work. In fact, it is not our work, but we are set here by the
- great Captain, and I trust we are taking our share in advancing
- somewhat the kingdom of truth and righteousness. I cannot see
- that in this erection of buildings, or in any other way, we are
- acting from self, but under direction. I have not yet read the
- comments on the buildings, but wanted to reply to the letter at
- once.’
-
-The following was written to Bishop Fraser of Manchester, who had
-publicly referred with approbation to the saying of Thucydides, that
-‘that woman was most to be admired who was least spoken of whether for
-good or evil’:—
-
- ‘_December 1878._
-
- ‘MY LORD,—We owe to you so much for education work that I
- cannot but feel sorry you should by your recent quotation
- from Thucydides place before women a standard lower than the
- highest. I felt bound to protest against it, when a few days
- later I read a paper before the Social Science Congress in my
- own schoolroom.
-
- ‘Will the excuse be received from us: “I was afraid of being
- spoken of for good, and so I hid my talent in a napkin?” Must
- we not expect that our work will be measured, as was that of
- another woman by the words, “She hath done what she could?” I
- venture to enclose a few lines from an article of mine, signed
- “A Utopian,” in a Fraser[106] of 1866. It was provoked by the
- same quotation from Thucydides in a _Quarterly_ of that year.—I
- am, my Lord, yours with sincere respect and esteem,
-
- D. BEALE.’
-
-To Mrs. Ashley Smith, at that date Miss Lucy Hall, a relation of Bishop
-Fraser’s, on the same subject:—
-
- ‘_December 12, 1878._
-
- ‘DEAR LUCY,—I was glad to hear you thought you could be of
- use in the Board School. Could you not teach the boys some
- mathematics? If you could, I will send you an amusing book
- about Euclid.
-
- ‘I have asked Miss Gore to send you a copy of what I wrote to
- the Bishop. I think he should have got his secretary just to
- send me a line. I did not do it in a perky spirit, but I felt
- bound to protest, and having protested, I thought I should
- rather say to him, why. Many women do leave undone the things
- they ought to do, because they shrink from coming forward. I
- have done so myself. If he would preach that we should do what
- we ought in God’s sight, and never trouble our heads about what
- people say, when our conscience speaks, it would be better.
- Perhaps he will think twice before he again quotes that, and if
- so, I shall be satisfied. I would not care, if he were not so
- good and clever that people listen to what he says. He is, too,
- not conventional, yet he says what may promote a wrong kind of
- conventionality. I have since seen such a nice bit of a sermon
- about the idle lives that women lead; so if you do see him, I
- should like you to ask him about this too.
-
- ‘You must let me know when you really get to work as manager.’
-
-To Miss Laurie, after reading _Pasteur’s Life_:—
-
- ‘_1902._
-
- ‘I want to have a general conference about organising our
- Science work better; we are using razors for stone-cutting.
- I should like a great deal of the correcting taken from the
- “Professoriate,” and young specialists entrusted with work
- under superintendence. Talk with M. Reid and A. Johnson. We
- ought to let our superior minds “expatiate,” and let me have a
- few notes, as I can’t talk much now. We might bring up a body
- of inspirers as well as workers. Pasteur’s life has specially
- excited me to ask what more we could do. The teachers ought to
- read more of the lives of discoverers, _e.g._ Lodge (though
- that is too slight, _History of Matter_, etc. etc.).
-
- ‘If there are disadvantages in the London changes, at least I
- hope we shall get more liberty; let us try to find “a soul of
- goodness in things evil.”
-
- ‘What a beautiful character is Pasteur’s. I find it quite a
- Sunday book.’
-
-To Miss Nixon, on Henry George’s _Progress and Poverty_:—
-
- ‘_April 1884._
-
- ‘I am sorry to have given you pain, but I do hope you will read
- the writings of those who understand political economy better
- than we do. I think if you had read about the evils which
- preceded the abolition of the old Poor Law, you would have seen
- why I cannot approve Mr. George’s plans, and not thought that
- I desire less than you do that these miseries of the people
- should be lessened. It is so important for us teachers to try
- to get right views about history; to pray by our acts that we
- may have “a right judgment in all things.”
-
- ‘It is more pathetic than anything to see people led by false
- hopes to follow wandering fires to their destruction; and
- such, I am sure, are some of the new lights. The history of
- the Crusades and the French Revolution ought not to have been
- written in vain for us. There are three articles that I think
- you ought to read,—the Duke of Argyle’s, Mr. Herbert Spencer’s,
- and Mr. Brodrick’s, in the last _Nineteenth Century_ and
- _Contemporary_.
-
- ‘Reforms I _earnestly_ desire on laws of succession, land
- transfer, etc. etc., but I am sure that no external bettering
- of conditions can do good without this is the outcome of right
- principles, and that people can be raised only by raising the
- moral standard of all. Perhaps we may have time to talk some
- day.
-
-To Mr. Coates after a lecture he had given at Cheltenham:—
-
- ‘_July 1888._
-
- ‘DEAR MR. COATES,— ... What I especially regretted was that the
- lecture raised a number of questions to which it furnished no
- answers, but seemed to me to suggest erroneous ones; words were
- used which were not defined.
-
- ‘(1) Persecution; (2) Official dignity; (3) Rights of the
- individual in relation to the community.
-
- ‘(1) Now as regards persecution, you said people could not, if
- they were in earnest, help persecuting. That was equivalent
- to the assertion that persecution was right; but you did not
- say what you understood by persecution. Everything depends on
- that to girls accustomed to associate persecution with bodily
- torture. I think what you said would suggest wrong ideas. I
- can’t agree with your general proposition, but of course I may
- be wrong.
-
- ‘(2) “A Dog in Office” is to me a different being from one who
- has not been appointed to the charge. He feels it, and I feel
- it. He respects himself more, and by his “investiture,” though
- it be only by a costermonger, he becomes capable of acts of
- which he would otherwise have been incapable, and his bearing,
- in combination with his legitimate title derived from the owner
- of the barrow, obtains recognition from all the street curs.
-
- ‘I may, of course, be superstitious, but I do regard a
- consecrated king, a President elected deliberately by a great
- nation, a man solemnly set apart to serve a church, as in some
- sense different from others. It seems to me that this is a
- matter of some importance in these days, when the sacredness of
- human relationships is called in question. I think we teachers
- cannot feel too strongly the duty of doing for thought what
- the feudal lords did for material forces in erecting bulwarks
- or breakwaters against the floods of undisciplined opinions in
- question, passion clothed in rags of thought. We want, like the
- old alchemists, to make the indeterminate clouds of smoke like
- actual forms.
-
- ‘I do not think you and I really differ, but I suppose the
- fact of my having a little kingdom has aggravated my sense of
- responsibility, and I can’t help always regarding teaching
- as purposeful. I hold in abhorrence the maxim “Art for Art’s
- sake.” I _always_ want it to have a purifying influence on the
- character. I believe you do the same, only you are afraid of
- “preaching.”
-
- ‘You will be saying, “I wish some one else shared my aversion,”
- so I will spare you No. 3. I hope you will not misunderstand
- me.’
-
-To Mrs. Rix:—
-
- ‘_January 1891._
-
- ‘It is always an anxious thing when people of different nations
- marry....
-
- ‘I hope your good husband will not desert his post. I feel
- sure these scientific things were given us to prevent our
- feeling crushed by the weight of the “unintelligible world”
- of philosophy, and the atonement of science and philosophy is
- the work of our age—through nature we have to go to find the
- spiritual Christ. Poor Mr. Lant Carpenter. I wonder if it was
- the Sphinx who killed him.’
-
-To Sir Joshua Fitch, after the death of Miss Buss:—
-
- ‘_July (?) 1897._
-
- ‘I have been thinking what I could write to you about Miss
- Buss. I don’t think I could send you anything that would help
- in an article, or say much more than I have in the Guardian. I
- am spoken of as her life-long friend, but I did not know her
- until long after I came to Cheltenham, a little before you
- joined our Council. It is said in many papers that I attended
- with her the evening classes at Queen’s College. I never did.
- She assisted at the evolution which transformed our governing
- body from a local Committee to what it is now, and by getting
- an enlarged Council we were saved from dying of atrophy....
-
- ‘From that time we were intimately associated in educational
- movements, and I ever felt that she was utterly to be trusted
- never to think,—much less to do anything but what was true,
- straightforward, unselfish. She was deeply, unostentatiously
- religious, lived in the spirit of prayer, and had the love of
- God in its twofold sense ever guiding her thought and actions.
- Often have we knelt together, at her request, the last thing at
- night and said together the Veni Creator.
-
- ‘If I spoke the other day of troubles with the governing
- bodies—it was not from anything definite that she said to me;
- but she has often, to allay my impatience, repeated what one of
- her Governors said: “Do you think we come here to register your
- decrees?” She received it as a deserved reproof, though, of
- course, she must have known what was best for the school, and
- never desired her selfish good,—only that of the School.
-
- ‘The large view she took of the general outlook for the growing
- up teachers struck me much. The provision for the future, the
- opening of new occupations, the health and bodily development.
- Her gymnasium, I think, she herself built and gave to the
- school.... She had a lady doctor to examine the girls, weigh
- them, etc., etc.
-
- ‘The formation of the Head-mistresses’ Association was entirely
- due to her. The first meeting, and, I think, the second was
- held at Myra Lodge. She was very anxious about the “Teachers’
- Guild.”
-
- ‘I sat with her on the Council of the Church Schools’ Company,
- and was surprised at the amount of time and thought she gave
- to it. With such solicitude she used to say, “My dear, we must
- help these young Head-mistresses.” Whenever any school-mistress
- got into difficulties she was of such sympathy and help.
-
- ‘Then she tried so much to help her old girls, to promote the
- love of reading in her staff, to call out their helpfulness in
- many ways. That exhibition of things made that cost nothing,
- was a very original idea, and taught economy by an object
- lesson....
-
- ‘The ways in which she used to help poor girls were hardly
- known to any one; clothes she used to get sent to them, and she
- had friends to whom she could mention cases where money help
- was needed and get it. Then she was not one to give up because
- she could not influence people by what were _for her_ the
- highest motives; but appealed to the best _in them_, would give
- ethics when she could not give religion, and when she spoke of
- wrong, it was with a sorrow which covered the indignation.
-
- ‘There was a real solicitude, in spite of her many occupations,
- to help all teachers. She would get books to send round to
- other schools to help them, and never seemed to think of any
- being rivals, but rather fellow-workers.
-
- ‘But you must know most of what I am saying, for you knew her
- well, and she specially loved your wife. I am only writing what
- comes to my mind to do what I can; but you see I have so few
- definite facts, and I knew her only when she was full-grown in
- character and her work established.
-
- ‘I think, having a Boarding House as well as a School was a
- mistake, and she felt it so at last. It was impossible for her
- to attend to it much herself; and I think she should not have
- rushed off on foreign tours at Christmas.
-
- ‘Finally, perhaps, I may say that she was, it seemed to me,
- always pained and surprised at wrong in others, and expectant
- of good, and able to see the latent good underlying the
- apparent evil. She had the charity that hopeth all things.
-
- ‘Her generosity in money matters was very great, especially
- to her family. She used to speak with such joy and pride of
- the battles her brother fought in Shoreditch, and her brave
- sister-in-law, and great was her affection for her nephew.
-
- ‘Forgive my incoherence please, and take the will for the deed.’
-
-Miss Beale wrote but little about herself, but in her correspondence with
-an intimate friend, she would give glimpses of her own personal life,
-even of her doings, as well as of her thought and reading. Her letters to
-Miss Amy Giles are the most interesting from this point of view, covering
-as they do the last period of her life. Some extracts from these are
-given:—
-
- ‘_July 6, 1897._
-
- ‘DEAR AMY,—I wonder what you will do now that you have quite
- lost your beloved mother. I was talking with Miss Sewell about
- you, and said I wished you could come and spend a week here....
- If you came the week after next, perhaps you would like to stay
- for our Quiet Days at the end.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_August 15, 1897._
-
- ‘I have kept your letter so long, hoping I might see my way
- to pay you a visit, which I should so very much like to do,
- but I am afraid the prospect is a diminishing one. It was a
- great pleasure to renew my acquaintance with one whom I had
- loved as a pupil, and to find we had grown even nearer during
- the intervening years. It would, too, be a pleasure to see
- Miss Sewell, for whom I have so great an admiration. I will
- not altogether give up hopes, but I am much afraid it will be
- impossible. The work for Longmans is to fill two hundred pages.
- I get ordinarily a hundred and fifty letters a week on College
- business, and now that we are beginning this Elementary work,
- there is a Head to be found, prospectuses to be drawn up, the
- Education Office to be consulted, etc., and also the Magazine
- to be edited, and some few people I must see....
-
- ‘There are many things one has to deny one’s self “for the
- work’s sake,” but it is worth while. I cannot be too thankful
- for being allowed to do it.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_August 25, 1898._
-
- ‘My sister has come home on purpose, and I am spending a week
- with her on the hills; my niece helping to copy the MS.’
-
-In the summer holidays of 1898 Miss Beale stayed with Miss Giles at
-Bonchurch. They afterwards visited Marlborough College and Savernake
-Forest together, parting at Marlborough station. Miss Beale wrote after
-this to Miss Giles:—
-
- ‘_August 28, 1898._
-
- ‘I will own that after you were gone all things seemed
- colder.... The doctor thought me wonderfully well, and my ears
- much better than usual after so long an absence. He says I can
- go to-morrow, and highly approves of cycling if I can do it....
- May the spiritual sun ever rise for you, my dear child, more
- and more until the perfect day.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_September 7, 1898._
-
- ‘I had some bicycle lessons at Woodchester, but all united in
- recommending tricycling instead for me.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_October 1898._
-
- ‘That cycling is wonderful, I am so much better.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_November 13, 1898._
-
- ‘Miss Belcher is still very ill, but yesterday brought me a
- gleam of hope. Thanks to you I am wonderfully well. I have
- cycled two mornings as far as our Sanatorium, and got back
- about 8 A.M. ... I think this renewed life must mean that there
- is some more work for me to do, or that I want strength to bear
- some coming trials....
-
- ‘We have been getting some lectures from Mr. de Sélincourt,
- also a son-in-law. We like him very much.... Next Saturday I
- have to attend six meetings. I had to go to London lately, and
- spent a night at St. Hilda’s East; it looks so nice, and seems
- going on so well.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_November 29, 1898._
-
- ‘I am glad you have seen the Chapel of the Ascension. Mr.
- Shields is far the best interpreter I have ever seen of Bible
- thoughts in pictures.... Thanks to you I am wonderfully strong
- this term.... I have joined the Aristotelian Society. I shall
- almost never, perhaps _never_ be able to attend the meetings,
- but I shall get papers.... Miss Belcher is still battling with
- the disease. Sometimes we hope, and then we fear we may lose
- her, but to gain time is much.’
-
-To the same. Written when there was some idea of Miss Giles living
-abroad:—
-
- ‘_May 14, 1899._
-
- ‘I don’t like the idea of your being uprooted from England....
- It is different to go for a time, but it seems to me that most
- English people who live abroad have their lives comparatively
- wasted.’
-
-To the same. After alluding to the death of Mrs. Moyle:—
-
- ‘_July 16, 1899._
-
- ‘It seems so wonderful that I should be alive, and see so many
- dear children pass away.’
-
-To the same. Speaking of the South African War:—
-
- ‘_December 26, 1899._
-
- ‘It is indeed a sad time, and I don’t see how it is to end;
- surely we as a nation have to pass through the fire.... I think
- all the advantages we women have had this last half century
- were to prepare us for some terrible trials. Shall we be able
- to look up and lift up our heads above this earth, and know
- that salvation draweth nigh? I think you will understand me.’
-
-To the same. Also about the South African War:—
-
- ‘_February 10, 1900._
-
- ‘It is difficult to keep up one’s active powers with this
- nightmare: one is so sure that all suffering is intended to be
- purifying, and so we must glorify God in the fires. War does
- seem to be waged in a more humane spirit than ever before, that
- is one comfort, and there are many others.’
-
-To the same. Miss Giles had sent a paper for the Magazine:—
-
- ‘_September 1900._
-
- ‘I feel sure I shall not accept Guinevere as a subject for our
- magazine. I am not fond of the Idylls.’
-
-To the same. On recovering from bronchitis:—
-
- ‘_1903._
-
- ‘Thanks for your kind offer, but I must not ask any one to stay
- this term; I must reserve every bit of strength for the work.’
-
-To the same. Towards the end of the Easter holidays, when she had been
-confined to her room with a bronchial attack:—
-
- ‘I have been reading a very pretty book, _The House of Quiet_.
- Now I have Herbert Spencer’s _Autobiography_, which I am not
- reading, but a friend picks out bits for me. I have been going
- over again some old friends, _Dr. Jekyl_, _Cecilia de Noel_,
- etc.’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_June 1905._
-
- ‘I had a very enjoyable visit to Winchester to the annual
- meeting of head-mistresses, and last week I dined at the
- Clothworkers’, my first experience of a City company’s dinner.
- There were many interesting people.’
-
-In the summer holidays of 1905 Miss Giles accompanied Miss Beale to
-Oeynhausen. The two following letters concern the preparation made for
-this visit to the German baths.
-
- ‘_July 1905._
-
- ‘Have you quite made up your mind not to come to the Quiet
- Days?... remember you will have a period of spiritual
- starvation as regards church-going....
-
- ‘I mean to take as little as possible ... we do no visiting ...
- a few books I must have. If you come, you could write out your
- notes of addresses and read them to me, as I am not likely to
- hear them.... We have had twelve concerts, and I was present at
- most of them. I have not yet signed a report, and have taken
- leave of only some of the _about_ one hundred and twenty who
- will leave.
-
- ‘I thought of taking Illingworth’s _Personality_,—and perhaps
- _Lux Mundi_, if you do not know it well; also some _Hamlet_
- books: but I shall take chiefly light books, in a material
- sense.’
-
-On returning from Germany Miss Beale went to Hyde Court for her niece’s
-wedding, and wrote on arrival to Miss Giles.
-
- ‘_September 1905._
-
- ‘Lena looks lovely!’
-
-A letter followed describing the wedding, and concluding thus:—
-
- ‘The country is looking lovely—even in the rain; but the
- swallows are flying about in great excitement. I think they
- must be departing at once. I wonder how long I shall be
- privileged to go on working before I too migrate. I do hope I
- may be able to work on to the end....’
-
-To the same:—
-
- ‘_September 1905._
-
- ‘I had nightmare last night about war in India. Russia is quite
- ready to turn her armies into Afghanistan, and she is allowed
- to keep all ready in Manchuria. Well, one can only hope that
- still out of the strife will come soul evolution.’
-
-In September 1905 Miss Beale’s letters speak of exhaustion, but others
-wrote of her that she was busy, full of energy, and ‘does not seem to
-tire.’
-
-To the same. Speaking of her visit to London in the Christmas holidays:—
-
- ‘_January 15, 1906._
-
- ‘One afternoon I spent with Mrs. Benson, and Miss Benson lent
- me the book recounting her digging up of the Temple of Mut.
- Arthur Benson too was there, and Miss Tait and Mrs. Henry
- Sidgwick.
-
- ‘What a revolution we have! If we had stood still things might
- have been as they are in Russia. One could not be satisfied
- with the late government, but one dreads violent changes; it is
- well there are a few strong men in the Ministry. Mr. Balfour
- deserves his fate for not bringing in a re-distribution Bill,
- and for tyrannising—but one feels sorry for him too.
-
- ‘_PS._—Think of us on Tuesday’ (the opening day of term), ‘I
- feel so weak.’
-
-The weakness to which Miss Beale alluded was destined to continue, but
-amid the decay of natural health long-rooted hopes grew strong and
-blossomed afresh. But a few weeks before her own death she wrote to a
-friend who had recently lost her mother:—
-
- ‘You will miss your beloved mother, but it is well. I suppose
- none of us desire to live after our faculties fail.... I am
- feeling old age is creeping on.... Well, we shall soon all
- meet—Behind the veil, behind the veil!’
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] MS. Autobiography.—D. Beale.
-
-[2] MS. autobiography.
-
-[3] ‘Have you seen Miss Cornwallis’ _Letters_? A very remarkable
-woman, though a little uncomfortable to herself and others, and a
-little too audacious now and then. She wrote these _Small Books on
-Great Subjects_ which were much thought of at the time, and always
-considered a man’s work.’—_Letters of Dr. John Brown_, CLXXXIV.,
-‘To Lady Airlie.’ (Adam Black, 1906.)
-
-[4] See chap. xv., Letter to the Bishop of Manchester.
-
-[5] William Cornwallis Harris, Major H.E.I.C., was also a cousin
-of Mr. Beale’s. Major Harris saw service in India, shot big game
-in the heart of Africa, was sent in charge of a mission to Shoa in
-Abyssinia, returning after arranging a commercial treaty. For this
-he was knighted. He died in India in 1848, aged 41.
-
-[6] MS. autobiography written about 1895.
-
-[7] Author of _Malvern Chase_ and other works.
-
-[8] MS. autobiography.
-
-[9] MS. autobiography.
-
-[10] _Ibid._
-
-[11] MS. autobiography.
-
-[12] On the Education of Girls.—_Fraser’s Magazine_, October 1866.
-
-[13] MS. autobiography.
-
-[14] MS. autobiography.
-
-[15] MS. autobiography.
-
-[16] _Ibid._
-
-[17] MS. autobiography.
-
-[18] _Ibid._
-
-[19] See Appendix A.
-
-[20] _Nineteenth Century_, April 1888.
-
-[21] Mr. Carus Wilson was ordained the following year by the
-Archbishop of Canterbury.
-
-[22] Bishop Jackson.
-
-[23] _Kaiserwerth Deaconesses._ By a Lady.
-
-[24] _Ibid._
-
-[25] _Ibid._
-
-[26] See Appendix B.
-
-[27] See Appendix C.
-
-[28] See chap. v.
-
-[29] _Nineteenth Century_, 1888.
-
-[30] Mr. Bellairs was subsequently Vicar of Nuneaton, and Hon.
-Canon of Worcester.
-
-[31] Afterwards first Bishop of Tasmania.
-
-[32] ‘Cheltenham is Attica in architecture and Bœotia in
-understanding.’—_Gentleman’s Magazine_, 1828.
-
-[33] ‘Cheltenham: a polka, parson-worshipping place of which
-Francis Close is Pope, besides pumps and pump-rooms, chalybeates,
-quadrilles, and one of the prettiest counties of Britain.’—A.
-TENNYSON, Letter, 1845.
-
-[34] These were among the first in the country.
-
-[35] See Appendix D.
-
-[36] _History of Ladies’ College_, p. 12.
-
-[37] These marks of omission occur in the copy of Miss Beale’s
-letter left among her papers.
-
-[38] _History of the Ladies’ College_, p. 22.
-
-[39] Afterwards Sir Thomas Barlow and Sir William Gull.
-
-[40] ‘Of Queens’ Gardens,’ _Sesame and Lilies_, J. Ruskin.
-
-[41] See p. 11.
-
-[42] On the Education of Women. A Paper read by Mr. William Grey at
-the meeting of the Society of Arts, May 31, 1871.
-
-[43] Mrs. Grey.
-
-[44] Heroic couplets.
-
-[45] Lincoln’s Inn.
-
-[46] _Francis Mary Buss and Her Work for Education_, A. E. Ridley,
-p. 242.
-
-[47] _History of the Ladies’ College._
-
-[48] The Rev. G. H. Wilkinson, D.D., then Vicar of St. Peter’s,
-Eaton Square. At his death, Bishop of St. Andrews and Primus of the
-Scottish Church.
-
-[49] _Poems_, F. W. Faber.
-
-[50] ‘In Retreat, 1883.’
-
-[51] ‘Building.’
-
-[52] ‘In Retreat, 1883.’
-
-[53] Letter to a friend.
-
-[54] _Ibid._
-
-[55] In every embassy in Europe, in many Government houses in our
-colonies, and in several courts of Asia, wives and mothers are
-living who have drawn their earliest principles from the ideal
-teachings of Dorothea Beale.—_Court Journal_, November 24, 1906.
-
-[56] First preface.
-
-[57] _Ibid._
-
-[58] Bacon’s _Advancement of Learning_.
-
-[59] Guild Address, 1888.
-
-[60] See Bishop Lightfoot’s ‘Sermon on St. Hilda,’ _C.L.C. Mag._,
-Spring 1886.
-
-[61] See Miss Beale’s paper, ‘St. Hilda’s,’ _C.L.C. Mag._, Autumn
-1886.
-
-[62] Chap. VIII.
-
-[63] Dr. Kitchin, now Dean of Durham.
-
-[64] Then Somerville Hall.
-
-[65] Mrs. C. T. Mitchell, who has from the first been connected
-with the Guild work.
-
-[66] Now Bishop of London.
-
-[67] Afterwards Mrs. Charles Robinson.
-
-[68] Even such an act as this had nothing personal in it. ‘Once,’
-writes an old girl, ‘I asked Miss Beale to sign a photograph on
-the last afternoon of the term. She said her hand was tired with
-shaking hands, and asked if next term would do. When I said it was
-a Christmas present for Mother, and I wanted to give it complete,
-she at once sat down and signed it.’
-
-[69] Compare with this Miss Beale’s remarks on history as an
-educational subject, _Work and Play_, p. 114.
-
-[70] Miss Beale published some of her lectures on literature in
-1902 in the volume entitled, _Literary Studies of Poems New and
-Old_: G. Bell and Sons.
-
-[71] So much did Miss Beale dislike a formal study of the Bible,
-that when first the Oxford Local Examinations were taken in the
-College, she induced the parents of pupils entering for them to
-sign a conscience clause to the effect that they did not wish their
-children to take a Scripture examination. The amount set for study
-was afterwards lessened, and could therefore be more thoroughly
-taught. Thus her objections were minimised.
-
-[72] _Relation of Home to School Life, No. II., Truth._
-
-[73] _Work and Play in Girls’ Schools._
-
-[74] She spoke of tennis as ‘playing archery.’
-
-[75] At Miss Clarke’s school in the Christmas holidays of 1877, the
-first Retreat Miss Beale attended.
-
-[76] See chap. xv.
-
-[77] Death of Miss Newman at Mayfield House.
-
-[78] Now Ely Professor of Divinity at Cambridge, and Canon of Ely.
-
-[79] _Frances Mary Buss and her Work for Education._
-
-[80] Now at Mukti, Poona District.
-
-[81] Its objects are: a systematic study of mission work in all
-lands; formation of closer links with those old College girls who
-are now missionaries.
-
-[82] Bishop Webb.
-
-[83] In this section the methods best adapted for the secondary
-instruction of girls, specially as regards Modern Languages and
-Science, were discussed.
-
-[84] M. Fallières, then Ministre de l’Instruction publique.
-
-[85] It is interesting to compare this opinion with those expressed
-in the last Head-masters’ Conference (December 1907) by the
-Head-masters of Eton and Winchester, who were in the minority which
-would have lessened the amount of scholarship Greek required from
-boys of thirteen and fourteen.
-
-[86] The marvels of astronomy had always a special fascination for
-Miss Beale. When the Leonid meteors were expected on one night in
-1898 the Chief Constable, Admiral Christian, by her wish instructed
-the police as soon as they appeared to ring up Miss Beale, and she
-was to pull the alarm-bell to rouse the girls.
-
-[87] The news reached Miss Beale two days later. See Appendix E.
-
-[88] On Secondary Education.
-
-[89] Charles Smith, M.A., Master of Sidney Sussex College.
-
-[90] Designed by Mr. E. R. Robson, F.S.A.
-
-[91] Raphael.
-
-[92] Mrs. James Owen.
-
-[93] Letter to Miss Strong.
-
-[94] Now Sir Arthur Rücker.
-
-[95] Queen Margaret’s College.
-
-[96] He was surreptitiously introduced into the gallery of the Hall
-while Miss Beale was giving a lesson.
-
-[97] Miss Buss.
-
-[98] Miss Gretton.
-
-[99] This proved to be the date of her funeral.
-
-[100] See Letters.
-
-[101] The allusion is to Mrs. Charles Robinson.
-
-[102] See Appendix F.
-
-[103]
-
- ‘Nature never lends
- The smallest scruple of her excellence,
- But, like a thrifty goddess, she determines
- Herself ...
- Both thanks and use.’—_Measure for Measure._
-
-A favourite quotation of Miss Beale’s.
-
-[104] After Mrs. Robinson’s death in 1906, Miss Beale wrote to
-Canon Robinson, ‘I think I may say that Clara was the best beloved
-of all my children.’
-
-[105] F. Du Pré.
-
-[106] _Fraser’s Magazine_, October 1866.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX A, Page 28.
-
-
-A lady who attended Dr. Bernays’ German classes with Miss Beale has
-interesting recollections of her. She remembers her as in appearance
-‘very fair and slight and interesting looking,’ with a quiet dignity and
-attraction about her which gave her an influence; one remarkable instance
-of this may be told.
-
-Dorothea and Anna Beale were once absent from the German class on its
-first meeting for a new term. Dr. Bernays said they should read _Faust_,
-and accordingly all the pupils brought copies of _Faust_ to the next
-class. When all were seated, Dorothea stood up and said quietly and
-respectfully that she thought _Faust_ objectionable reading for young
-girls, and suggested some other book. Dr. Bernays looked just a little
-annoyed, but listened quite kindly. He said it was a pity the books had
-been bought, but put it to the class what should be done. Such was Miss
-Beale’s influence that all decided to submit to her judgment.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX B, Page 74.
-
-TITLES OF CHAPTERS IN MISS BEALE’S _TEXTBOOK_ 1858.
-
-
- A.D. FIRST CENTURY.—Christianity.
- ” SECOND ” Good Emperors.
- ” THIRD ” Barbarian Invasions.
- ” FOURTH ” Establishment of Christianity in the
- Roman Empire.
- ” FIFTH ” Fall of the Roman Empire.
- ” SIXTH ” Struggles of the Eastern Emperors with
- the Barbarian Kings.
- ” SEVENTH ” Saracens.
- ” EIGHTH ” Charlemagne.
- ” NINTH ” Northmen.
- ” TENTH ” Cities increase in importance.
- ” ELEVENTH ” Hildebrand.
- ” TWELFTH ” Crusades.
- ” THIRTEENTH ” The Age of the Schoolmen.
- ” FOURTEENTH ” The Middle Classes increase in importance.
- ” FIFTEENTH ” Invention of Printing.
- ” SIXTEENTH ” Reformation.
- ” SEVENTEENTH ” Religious Wars.
- ” EIGHTEENTH ” Struggles for Political Liberty.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX C, Page 75.
-
-A PAGE OF MISS BEALE’S _SELF-EXAMINATION_ 1858.
-
-
- Have I been | The ungodly borroweth | Most of the forms of
- always careful to | and payeth not | injustice come under the
- return anything | again.—_Ps._ xxxvii. | head of sins of the tongue;
- borrowed? | 21. | _e.g._, ascribing false
- | | motives, evil-speaking,
- | The spoil of the | &c. Cheapening, making
- | poor is in your houses. | bargains, is generally
- | What mean ye that ye | injustice. Also, delaying
- | grind the faces of the | to pay what you owe—you
- | poor.—_Is._ iii. 15. | may deceive yourself,
- | | so far as to think
- | Woe unto him that | that you are only anxious
- | buildeth his house by | to be economical, that
- | unrighteousness, and | you may have more to give
- | his chambers by | away; but will it not be an
- | wrong; that useth his | insult to God to offer Him
- | neighbours’ service | part of your unjust gain?
- | without wages, and | It is much more charitable
- | giveth him not for his | to pay justly, than to
- | work.—_Is._ xvii. 13. | give; but there is not so
- | | much chance of praise.
- | I will be a swift |
- | witness against them |
- | that oppress the |
- | hireling in his |
- | wages.—_Mal._ iii. 5. |
- | |
- | Say not unto thy |
- | neighbour go, and |
- | come again, and |
- | to-morrow I will give, |
- | when thou hast it by |
- | thee.—_Prov._ iii. 28. |
- | |
- Have I indulged | Whatsoever thy | Do not leave yourself time
- my body | hand findeth to do, do | to think about anything it
- by idleness, not | it with all thy | is your duty to do.
- rising when I | might.—_Eph._ x. 9. |
- ought, taking | | Idleness, by delaying,
- unnecessary rest? | Be not slothful in | conquers; stop to parley
- | business.—_Rom._ | and you have lost the day.
- | xii. 11. | It is a great help in
- | | getting up, or beginning
- Wasting time | Early in the morning | any occupation, to have
- with unprofitable | will I direct my | some signal, and then never
- or idle talking, | prayer unto Thee, and | allow yourself one second
- or reading? | will look up.—_Ps._ | after. Be careful to make
- | | some fixed arrangement
- Allowing idle | Rising a great while | of your time, as far as
- thoughts to run | before day, He departed | possible; at any rate,
- on unchecked? | into a solitary | put in as many landmarks
- | place, and there | as you can in the day; but
- Refusing prompt | prayed.—_S. Matt._ | do not praise yourself
- and cheerful | i. 35. | for your conscientious
- obedience because | | arrangement of your time,
- unwilling to | | or you will find, in a few
- give up some | | days, that you have become
- interesting | | quite unpunctual.
- occupation? | |
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX D, p. 90
-
-PROSPECTUS OF THE CHELTENHAM COLLEGE FOR YOUNG LADIES
-
-NOVEMBER 1, 1853
-
-
- PROSPECTUS
-
- OF
-
- THE CHELTENHAM COLLEGE INSTITUTION
-
- FOR
-
- THE EDUCATION OF YOUNG LADIES
-
- AND OF
-
- CHILDREN UNDER EIGHT YEARS OF AGE;
-
- Cambray House.
-
-Committee:
-
- REV. H. W. BELLAIRS, M.A., one of H.M.’s Inspectors of Schools,
- _3, Priory Parade_.
-
- REV. W. DOBSON, M.A., Principal of the Cheltenham College, _2,
- Sandford Place_.
-
- REV. H. A. HOLDEN, M.A., Vice Principal of the Cheltenham
- College, Fellow and late Assistant Tutor of Trinity College,
- Cambridge, _The Queen’s Hotel_.
-
- LIEUT.-COL. FITZMAURICE, K.H., _14, Royal Crescent_.
-
- S. E. COMYN, ESQ., M.D., _4, Berkeley Place_.
-
- NATH. HARTLAND, ESQ., _The Oaklands, Charlton Kings_.
-
-Honorary Secretary:
-
- REV. HUBERT A. HOLDEN, M.A.
-
-Treasurer:
-
- NATHANIEL HARTLAND, ESQ.
-
-The COMMITTEE are now able to publish a detailed Prospectus of the Course
-and Arrangements of this Institution, with the Hours and Terms for the
-various Departments and Classes.
-
-The management of the educational Working of the College, which it is
-proposed to open after the ensuing Christmas Vacation, will be committed
-to a LADY PRINCIPAL to be assisted by Teachers and Professors, appointed
-by the Committee.
-
-FEES, PAYABLE HALF YEARLY IN ADVANCE.
-
-The Pupils of the Institution will be arranged in FOUR DIVISIONS,
-according to attainments; and the terms will be regulated according to
-the following scale:—
-
- FOR THE FIRST DIVISION 12 _Guineas for the Half Yearly Session_.
- FOR THE SECOND DIVISION 9 _Guineas_ ” ”
- FOR THE THIRD DIVISION 6 _Guineas_ ” ”
- FOR THE FOURTH DIVISION 4 _Guineas_ ” ”
-
-Children will be admitted after the completion of their Fourth year; but
-Boys must be withdrawn on the completion of their Seventh year.
-
-REGULAR COURSE OF STUDY:
-
- HOLY SCRIPTURE AND THE LITURGY OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND,
- The PRINCIPLES OF GRAMMAR and the Elements of LATIN,
- ARITHMETIC,
- CALISTHENIC EXERCISES,
- DRAWING,
- FRENCH,
- GEOGRAPHY,
- HISTORY,
- MUSIC,
- NEEDLEWORK.
-
-EXTRA AND BYE COURSE OF STUDY:
-
- GERMAN,
- ITALIAN,
- DANCING.
-
-For Pupils desirous of availing themselves of _extra_ Lessons in MUSIC
-and DRAWING from Professors attached to the College, extra Classes will
-be formed and extra charges made.
-
-EXTRA OR BYE STUDENTS.
-
-Students, not engaged in the Regular Routine of the College Course, will
-be at liberty to attend the Bye Course of Study and also the _extra_
-Classes in MUSIC and DRAWING. Such Students may be nominated upon either
-Ordinary or Bye Shares (issued at £10 each), and will be required to pay
-a Fee of _Two Guineas_ a year to the College, exclusive of the Fee to the
-Professor.
-
-HOURS OF ATTENDANCE.
-
-MORNING.—From a Quarter past Nine to a Quarter past Twelve.
-
-AFTERNOON.—From Half-past Two to Half-past Four.
-
-(_Wednesday and Saturday Half Holidays._)
-
-Children under Seven Years of Age will attend in the Mornings only.
-
-_Members of Classes for Religious Instruction under the Parochial Clergy,
-will be excused attendance at the College on Monday Afternoons._
-
-BOARDING HOUSES
-
-for the reception of Pupils will be opened, with the sanction of the
-Committee, in the immediate neighbourhood of CAMBRAY HOUSE, under the
-Superintendence of the following Ladies:—Mrs. MURGEAUD, _7, Oriel
-Terrace_; Miss ATKINSON, _of Kingsbridge, Devon._; Mrs. TREW, _of
-Stoneham House, Bath Road_.
-
-The Charge for Boarders is £35 per annum. Extras: Washing £4, 4s.; Seat
-in Church £1, 1s.
-
-A few of the Fifty £20 Shares remain to be disposed of; application for
-which should be made to the Hon. Secretary. The Proprietors of such
-Shares will have the option of nominating either one Regular or two Bye
-Students.
-
-Several Teachers and Professors have been appointed, the announcement of
-whose names is deferred for the present, till the list is complete.
-
-_November 1, 1853._
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX E, Page 332.
-
-EDWARD BEALE.
-
-
-The Reverend Edward Beale, a member of the Society of St. John the
-Evangelist, Cowley, died at Mazagon, Bombay Presidency, on February 3,
-1894. He was a younger brother to whom Miss Beale was much attached.
-His early promise of a brilliant career was cut short by severe illness
-while he was still an undergraduate at Oxford. For years he was wholly
-incapacitated, but on recovering partial health he received deacon’s
-orders, and before joining St. John’s Society, worked for a time at
-Warminster. Here he gave the addresses afterwards published under the
-title of _The Mind of Christ_.
-
-From Cowley Mr. Beale was sent to the Society’s Mission in Bombay. He was
-much beloved and looked up to by those among whom he worked. At the time
-of his death (which occurred after a very short illness) he was engaged
-to read a paper at the coming Diocesan Conference on ‘The Necessity of
-Faith in the Church as the Fullest Possible Manifestation of the Life of
-God in Creation.’ His funeral was attended by a crowd of the poorest poor.
-
-The following lines in her brother Edward’s handwriting, found among Miss
-Beale’s papers, seem to be undoubtedly original, and to tell the history
-of his consecrated life:—
-
-INDIA—WRITTEN IN ILLNESS, 1884.
-
- Once I was wont to prize
- Glance from approving eyes,
- And sun myself too fondly in their light.
- Too eager to entwine
- The flowers about Love’s shrine
- With pulses throbbing with a wild delight.
- And one who loved me said,
- With voice of boding dread,
- ‘Oh child, these hopes will fade, these flowers will die,
- And what will then remain
- To ease the long, slow pain,
- Unless your heart be lifted up on high?
- ...
- Once when I heard a name
- Of high heroic fame,
- Of lives of lasting influence for good,
- I felt my heart on fire
- With one long vague desire
- To join the ranks of those who have withstood.
- But now I do not ask
- For such heroic task,
- My heart is all too faint to stand the glare,
- My eyes too weak to see
- The path laid out for me,
- I only wait and feel that One is there.
- ...
- One, at whose blessed feet
- I lie in silence sweet
- Perhaps unheeded as the world goes by,
- There only lying still
- Waiting to know His Will,
- Till He shall bend on me His gracious eye.
- Then in that glorious gleam
- Shall every earthborn dream,
- Darkness, delusion, doubt all flee away:
- Truth shall be brought to light,
- Faith shall be lost in sight,
- In the clear shining of the perfect day!
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX F, Page 368.
-
-
-The following notice by an old pupil, now a head-mistress, appeared in
-the _Times_ of November 17:—
-
- ‘Miss Beale’s personality made itself everywhere strongly felt,
- but most of all in her own school. Even in later days, when
- she could come in contact with a very small minority of the
- 1000 under her care, her absence was felt by all as a loss of
- moral support, almost a lessening of tension. Strenuousness was
- a dominant note of the tone she inspired by the force of her
- own vitality, and, to use a favourite word of her own, she was
- always “energizing” the school. And it told. “I am sending my
- girl to Cheltenham,” said one, “because I find that those who
- have been there do their work—paid or unpaid—with thoroughness
- and attention to detail,” and others paid the same testimony to
- the training. This thoroughness was eminently characteristic of
- Miss Beale’s own work. To the end she prepared her lessons with
- the same care she would have asked from the merest beginner in
- teaching. Her correspondence was unlimited, and an astonishing
- amount of it was written in her own hand. She superintended
- every detail of the building which she loved—which was indeed
- her hobby. While allowing her subordinates much scope and
- encouraging suggestion, she kept the threads of the intricate
- organisation in her own hands. Her physical energy was
- only second to her force of will, though her “spirit” was
- pathetically shown in latter days by her refusal to accept the
- limitations set by failing health. “We have talked for three
- minutes about my health,” she said to one who saw her after a
- serious illness, “let us speak of something more interesting.”
- And, though she had lost the sight of one eye, and was so
- deaf that listening to others reading must have been a strain
- rather than a pleasure, she still continued to read every book
- of importance as it appeared. Her intellectual vigour was
- fresh to the end, and her keen interest in every new branch of
- learning unimpaired. She would plunge on a railway journey into
- a discussion of the last book on psychology, or demonstrate
- the latest method of teaching shorthand. She was astonishingly
- young in thought, always “up to date,” and often in advance of
- the general progress.
-
- ‘Her personal influence, though strong, and in some cases
- almost overpowering, was peculiarly free from any weakening
- element. She did not encourage demonstration, and, though
- in later years she allowed her tenderness more play, the
- atmosphere about her was always bracing. Perhaps she was
- more in touch with the strong than the weak. She had little
- understanding of, or sympathy with any form of frivolity, still
- less of flippancy. She made decisions herself on principles
- always, and she expected the same from others. Very often
- she induced it by her mere expectation, and so made the weak
- strong. It was this partly which made so many come to her for
- the advice which was given at the cost of any amount of time
- or trouble to any “old girl.” And, though she never sought,
- or perhaps enjoyed, popularity in the ordinary sense of the
- word, many who had feared her in their school-days, grew
- afterwards to love her as well as to admire her, and often to
- depend on her. She had a great reverence for the conscience
- of each with whom she dealt. She brought up her “children” to
- think for themselves, and, though naturally disappointed when
- they differed from her, she always acknowledged their right to
- hold their own opinions. She was incapable of pettiness, and
- nothing could exceed her generosity in owning herself mistaken.
- Indeed she loved a fair fight, and greatly appreciated an
- honourable opponent, and she welcomed as fellow-workers those
- of very different views from herself, and had, indeed, the most
- wonderful power of discovering worth in all.
-
- ‘Much of her outward success was due, no doubt, to her shrewd
- business capacity—her physique, her intellectual strength, her
- single-minded absorption in the cause of education, and its
- concrete embodiment in her own school. But the real success,
- her power of inspiring others, was due to her greatness of
- character. The Guild meetings, at which there was often an
- attendance of some hundreds of old girls, were the source of
- inspiration to many. “I come back feeling a poor thing, but
- knowing that great things are possible,” was the feeling of
- many, if not expressed in these words. And this was due, not to
- her organising power, nor even to her freshness of thought, but
- to her spiritual genius. She was a seer, perhaps, rather than
- a prophet, for, though of original mind, she found accurate
- expression of thought difficult. “I never understood Miss
- Beale’s Scripture lessons,” said an old pupil, “they were so
- vague; but I always felt a bigness of thought about them, and
- sometimes the meaning of things she said begins to dawn on me
- now.” Her religious life was not expressed formally; but it was
- beyond all doubt a real force and the source of her strength.
- The feeling was there and was intense. Years after she could
- not speak without tears of a time of doubt and uncertainty. She
- was rapt in prayer, and at times fervent to passion. It was
- with absolute reality that she taught that the important thing
- was to know and do the will of God, and it is this above all
- else which is causing thousands of her children to “rise up and
- call her blessed.”’
-
-The following extract is from a notice in the _Guardian_ of November 21,
-1906:—
-
- DOROTHEA BEALE. IN THANKFUL REMEMBRANCE.
-
- ‘Miss Beale is dead. To many of us who loved and reverenced
- her, death seems the wrong word to use, she looked forward with
- such loving hopefulness to the great time of direct revelation,
- that one would rather (following Dr. Pusey’s practice) call her
- deathday her last and greatest birthday. Much has been said and
- written of her work—comparatively little of her personality. As
- one who was honoured by her friendship for over thirty years, I
- would ask for a little space in which to describe her. Her most
- marked characteristic was her profound reverence for truth.
- If truth hurt her, none the less did she accept it loyally.
- This sanctified her scholarship. Her generous gratitude to all
- who in any way helped her evidenced her large-heartedness.
- Especially did she remember her father’s indirect, unconscious
- teaching....
-
- ‘Among the most treasured memories of the present writer are
- those of certain Sunday afternoons spent at Cheltenham with
- Miss Beale, her great friend, Miss Buss, and another friend
- who has also entered into rest. After saying the Veni Creator
- together we talked with perfect openness of those things we
- most loved and dreaded. This close personal communion with
- such personalities as those of our two great leaders was
- at once a privilege and a responsibility. Mention has been
- made elsewhere of Miss Beale’s reading at College prayers.
- Even more penetratingly beautiful was her reading on some of
- those afternoons. In a time of great trouble she read to us
- Kingsley’s _St. Maura_. And the pathos with which she lingered
- on the words, “Who ever found the Cross a pleasant bed?” made,
- at least on one of her hearers, an indelible impression.
-
- ‘Perhaps the words which most adequately describe her whole
- life are, “I have set God always before me.” She has been, and
- still is, to those who knew her, a true Dorothea—the gift of
- God.’
-
- E. T. DAY.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Address to Parents, 155.
-
- Aitken, Miss V., 258.
-
- Aldrich-Blake, Dr., 357, 362, 363.
-
- Alston, Miss, 30, 40, 62, 79, 97, 98.
-
- Alverstone, Lord, 340.
-
- Ambleside, 333, 388.
-
- Andrews, Miss A., 322, 323, 340, 344, 354, 358, 359, 361.
-
- Angélique, La Mère, 226.
-
- Arnold, Miss C., 161, 173, 246, 267, 268, 280, 282, 283, 372-389.
-
- Asquith, Mr., 340, 341.
-
- Assistant Mistresses’ Association, 294.
-
- Astell, Mrs., 252.
-
- Austin’s, St. (boarding-house), 247.
-
- Autobiography, Miss Beale’s, 3-13.
-
-
- Balliol College, 330.
-
- Barlow, Sir T., 123.
-
- Barnes, 66, 95, 96, 99.
-
- Barrett, Mrs., 79.
-
- —— Professor, 187, 198.
-
- Barry, Canon, 168.
-
- Bartholomew, Mrs., 7.
-
- Bath, 343.
-
- Batten, Mrs., 240.
-
- Battenberg, Princess Henry of, 334.
-
- Beale, Anna, 123.
-
- —— Dorothea, childhood, 1-9;
- schools, 9-14;
- home life, 15, 16, 60-66;
- Queen’s College, 20-35;
- Principal of Cheltenham Ladies’ College, 98, 115;
- as teacher, 43, 45, 127, 254-275;
- early difficulties, 128;
- Blue-book, 138;
- as principal, 276-285;
- religious faith, 73-89, 187-202, 264, 268;
- honours, 319, 323, 324, 336, 339;
- letters, 150, 161, 162, 164, 192, 196, 197, 221, 239, 246, 251,
- 255, 266, 267, 268, 272, 273, 280-285, 287-290, 292, 296, 304-310,
- 314, 328, 332, 341, 342, 350, 357, 371-419.
-
- Beale, Edward, 15, 130, Appendix E.
-
- —— Eliza, 8, 13, 66, 79, 338.
-
- —— Henry, 1.
-
- —— Miles, 1, 2, 6, 7, 20, 38, 39, 44, 45, 48, 49, 50, 53, 54, 56, 74,
- 76, 132.
-
- —— Mrs., 2, 95, 107, 130.
-
- Bedford College, 135.
-
- —— Duchess of, 347.
-
- —— High School, 352.
-
- Belcher, Miss, 152, 182, 265, 284, 352, 404-408, 416.
-
- Bell, Mr., J.P., 95, 100, 102, 107.
-
- Bellairs, Canon, 82, 86, 89, 97, 98, 102-107, 168, 238.
-
- Bennett, W. Sterndale, 23, 30.
-
- Benson, Archbishop, 287, 290, 388.
-
- —— Mrs., 287, 292, 400, 419.
-
- —— Miss, 352.
-
- Bernays, Professor, 23, Appendix A.
-
- Berridge, Miss, 343.
-
- Bidder, Miss, 343.
-
- Blackwell, Dr. Elizabeth, 135.
-
- Blackwood, Lady Victoria, 329.
-
- Blenkarne, Mrs., 30, 79.
-
- Bloemfontein, 301.
-
- Boarding-houses, 89, 170-175.
-
- Body, Canon, 182, 249, 289, 291, 330, 386.
-
- Bonchurch, 331, 415.
-
- Boyd, Dean, 85, 94, 131.
-
- Bradfield, 333.
-
- Brancker, Mr. J. H., 112, 120-124, 165, 227, 228.
-
- Brasseur, Professor, 23, 28.
-
- Bray, Mrs., 13.
-
- Brewer, Professor, 23, 24.
-
- —— Miss, 94, 107, 113, 123, 131.
-
- Bromby, Bishop, 82, 86, 94, 115, 119, 132.
-
- —— Rev. G., 222, 224.
-
- Brown, Miss M., 276, 314.
-
- —— Dr. Morton, 168.
-
- Bruce, Miss, 243, 342.
-
- Bryant, Mrs., 348.
-
- Bryce, Sir J., 141, 325.
-
- —— Commission, 294, 325.
-
- Buckoll, Miss, 68.
-
- Budge, Professor, 355.
-
- Burdett-Coutts, Baroness, 336.
-
- Burney, Fanny, 83.
-
- Burrows, Mrs., 237.
-
- Burton, Canon, 37.
-
- Buss, Miss, 23, 24, 25, 27, 61, 123, 133, 135, 143, 145, 168, 169,
- 172, 174, 292, 293, 321, 323, 331, 382, 408.
-
-
- Caines, Miss, 170, 291, 338, 402.
-
- Caird, Dr. Edward, 378, 392.
-
- Cambray House, 90, 92, 108, 126.
-
- —— —— School, 246, 247.
-
- Cambridge, 330.
-
- Cardew, Dr., 359.
-
- Carpenter, Dr., 135.
-
- —— Mr. Lant, 413.
-
- Carter, Miss, 404, 407.
-
- Casterton, 33, 35, 36-61, 63, 66, 100, 175.
-
- Catherine, St., of Siena, 226.
-
- Charles, Mr. Justice, 173.
-
- _Chart_, the, 126, 261.
-
- Cheltenham, 66, 81, 82, 291, 337.
-
- —— College, 86.
-
- Child-Study Association, 295.
-
- Child, Dr., 235.
-
- Church Schools’ Company, 294.
-
- Clark, Rev. S., 24.
-
- Clarke, Miss Margaret, 180, 183, 282, 330, 331, 401, 408.
-
- Clewer, 134, 251.
-
- Close, Dean, 84, 85, 89, 100, 103, 131.
-
- Clough, Miss, 347.
-
- Coates, Mr., 411, 412.
-
- Cock, Rev. T. A., 24, 26, 29.
-
- Collet, Mrs. Mark, 400.
-
- Colson, M. Théodore, 112.
-
- Complin, Dorothea M. See Mrs. Beale.
-
- —— Elizabeth, 2, 5.
-
- Compton, Bishop, Lord Alwyne, 234.
-
- Comyn, Dr. S. E., 87, 98, 105.
-
- Cooper, Mrs., 403.
-
- Corbet, Rev. R., 196, 197.
-
- Corbett, Miss, 241.
-
- Cornwallis, Archbishop, 3.
-
- Cornwallis, Caroline F., 2, 4, 5.
-
- —— Mrs., 2, 3.
-
- —— Rev., 2, 3.
-
- Coulson, Mrs., 113.
-
- Council, Ladies’ College, 163, 168.
-
- Cowan Bridge, 41.
-
- Cowley House, 330.
-
- Crawford, Annette Bear, 309.
-
- Creighton, Bishop, 242.
-
- Crosby Hall, 6, 11, 12.
-
- Curling, Dr. and Mrs., 96, 105.
-
-
- Daldy, Dr., 73.
-
- Davenport, Mrs., 23.
-
- Davies, Miss E., 137, 140, 143, 145.
-
- Davis, Rev. L., 17.
-
- Day, Miss E., 404, Appendix F.
-
- —— Mr. Philip, 242.
-
- Degree, Edinburgh University, 339.
-
- De Morgan, Mr., 135.
-
- Denton, Rev. W., 42, 73, 76.
-
- Diary, Miss Beale’s, 70, 79, 105, 107, 181, 185, 189, 191, 195, 233,
- 255, 292, 330.
-
- Dobson, Rev. W., 87.
-
- —— Mr. Austin, 340.
-
- Dove, Miss, 327.
-
- Draper, Miss, 329.
-
- Drummond, Miss, 407.
-
- Dufferin, Lord, 329.
-
- Dunn, Mr. W., 168.
-
- Durham, 343.
-
- —— University, 324.
-
-
- Eaton, Miss, 123.
-
- Edinburgh, 339, 341.
-
- Edmonds, Miss, 284.
-
- Eliot, George, 379.
-
- Ellicott, Bishop, 89, 169, 206, 234, 349, 392.
-
- Elwall, Miss, 66, 79, 96.
-
- Endowed Schools’ Commission, 133, 136-145.
-
- Evans, Archdeacon, 42, 50.
-
- Examinations, 114, 124, 146, 153, 231.
-
-
- Fairbairn, Dr., 326.
-
- Fallières, M., 323.
-
- Fauconberg House, 169, 170, 291.
-
- Fermi, Miss, 360.
-
- Fielden, Mrs., 319.
-
- Fitch, Sir Joshua, 137, 138, 167, 284, 413.
-
- Fitzmaurice, Colonel, 87.
-
- Fliedner, Pastor, 66.
-
- Flower, Sir William, 319.
-
- Fontenay-aux-Roses, 322, 324.
-
- Forster, Mr., 138.
-
- Frankfort, 334.
-
- Fraser, Bishop, 409.
-
- —— Mrs., 129, 160.
-
- Frederick, the Empress, 81, 333.
-
- Freedom of Cheltenham, 336.
-
- French, Bishop, 330.
-
- Froebel Society, 294.
-
-
- Galloway, Miss, 342.
-
- Garnier-Gentilhomme, Mme., 320.
-
- Garrett, Miss, 135.
-
- Gedge, Rev. W. W., 168.
-
- George III., 82.
-
- Gilbert, Miss E., 23.
-
- Giles, Miss A., 344, 415-419.
-
- Girls’ Public Day-School Company, 123, 145, 166.
-
- Girton, 146.
-
- Gladstone, Mr., 134.
-
- —— Miss H., 305.
-
- Gleichen, Countess F., 334.
-
- Gloucester, 335, 367.
-
- —— Dean of, 219, 366.
-
- Gore, Miss, 360, 362, 399, 410.
-
- Governesses’ Benevolent Institution, 18, 19.
-
- Grahamstown, 301.
-
- Grant, Sir Ludovic, 340.
-
- Granville, Lord, 168.
-
- Green, Mr. T. H., 138.
-
- Greene, Mrs., 58, 102.
-
- Gresham Lectures, 12.
-
- Gretton, Miss, 352.
-
- Grey, Mrs. William, 140, 141, 145, 166, 172, 241, 304, 308, 383.
-
- Griffith, Mrs., 218.
-
- Grzywacz, Fräulein, 344, 360.
-
- Guernsey, 350.
-
- Guild, the, 213-221.
-
- —— —— Plays, 332, 355.
-
- —— —— Settlement, 221-225.
-
- Gull, Sir William, 123.
-
- Gurney, Mrs. Russell, 197, 198, 330, 387, 400.
-
- —— Rev. Alfred, 387.
-
- —— Miss M., 168.
-
- Guyon, Mme., 226.
-
-
- Hackett, Miss Maria, 7, 146.
-
- Hall, Dr. Stanley, 295.
-
- Harraden, Miss B., 205.
-
- Harris, Dr., 325.
-
- —— Hon. and Rev. C., 95.
-
- Harrison, Miss J., 152, 205.
-
- Hartland, Mr. N., 87, 93-95, 105, 120, 122.
-
- Hay, Mrs., 239.
-
- Hayes, Mrs., 24.
-
- Head-mistresses’ Association, 292, 293.
-
- —— Conference, 351, 404, 418.
-
- Helen’s, St., Church, Bishopsgate, 2, 8.
-
- —— —— (boarding-house), 170, 247.
-
- Hibbert-Ware, the Misses, 403.
-
- Hilda, St., 226, 234.
-
- Hilda’s, St., Association, 243.
-
- —— —— College, Cheltenham, 177, 227, 231, 235.
-
- —— —— East, 242, 331, 342, 356.
-
- —— —— Hall, Oxford, 235-240, 324, 388.
-
- —— —— Work, 243, 250, 251, 252.
-
- Hinton, James, 182, 186.
-
- History of the Ladies’ College, 205.
-
- Hitchin, 146.
-
- Holden, Rev. H. A., 87.
-
- Holland, Canon Francis, 125, 284.
-
- Hopkins, Miss Ellice, 186, 307, 308.
-
- House of Education, 333.
-
- Hullah, Mr. John, 23.
-
- Hutchinson, Canon, 338.
-
- Hyde Court, 1, 130, 182, 183, 185, 418.
-
-
- Illingworth, Rev. Dr., 330, 347.
-
- Ince, H., _Outlines_, 71, 73, 104.
-
- International Congress of Education, 320.
-
-
- Jackson, Bishop, 67.
-
- —— Rev. T., 69.
-
- Jervis, Rev. C., 84.
-
- Jex-Blake, Dean, 161, 167.
-
- —— Miss, 23.
-
- Johnson, Miss A., 410.
-
- —— Sir S., 345.
-
- Jowett, Dr., 329, 392.
-
- Jubilee of Ladies’ College, 348.
-
-
- Kaiserwerth, 64, 66-69.
-
- Kensington Society, 156.
-
- Ker, Miss F., 215, 239, 346.
-
- Keyl, Miss, 349.
-
- Kindergarten, 91, 244-246, 248.
-
- King, Miss, 23.
-
- Kingsley, Rev. C., 23, 24.
-
- Kirby Lonsdale, 40.
-
- Kitchin, Dean, 234, 238.
-
- Knight, Professor, 187.
-
- Kynaston, Canon, 168.
-
-
- Ladies’ College, 81, 82, 86, 109-130, 135, 157;
- new buildings, 158-163;
- constitution, 167, 169;
- extensions, organ, etc., 211, 212;
- Princess Hall, 331;
- science wing, 348.
-
- Lady Margaret Hall, 235, 237.
-
- Laing, Rev. D., 17, 20, 23, 24, 25, 28, 135.
-
- Lancaster, Mrs., 62-65, 67, 95, 97, 102, 250, 303.
-
- Lane, Miss, 362.
-
- Laurie, Miss, 410.
-
- —— Professor, 341.
-
- Leckhampton, 169, 333, 386.
-
- Lewis, Miss Wolseley, 266, 284, 332.
-
- Lloyd, Mrs., 112.
-
- Loan Fund, 230, 231.
-
- London, Bishop of, 248.
-
- —— Institution, 11.
-
- —— University, 338.
-
- Londonderry, Lord, 348.
-
- Longe, Mr. F. D., 168.
-
- Louch, Miss, 295, 387.
-
- Lowe, Mr., 165.
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- Lumby, Miss A., 294, 346.
-
- Lyttelton, Lord, 168.
-
-
- M’Causland, General, 168.
-
- Mace, Mrs., 115, 404.
-
- Mackenzie, Prebendary, 6, 7, 42, 72, 76, 126, 146.
-
- Mackintosh, Sir J., 24.
-
- Magazine, Ladies’ College, 186, 203-210.
-
- Magrath, Rev. Dr., 348, 366.
-
- Manchester, 136.
-
- _Mangnall’s Questions_, 141, 340.
-
- Margaret’s, St., Bethnal Green, 241.
-
- Maria Grey Training College, 176.
-
- Marlborough, 416.
-
- Marriott, Mr. T., 168.
-
- Martin, Miss, 23, 407.
-
- Mason, Canon, 290, 305.
-
- Mason, Miss C., 295, 333.
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- Maurice, Professor F. D., 20-24, 27, 28.
-
- Mayfield House, 225, 240, 241.
-
- Medd, Canon, 233.
-
- Mellish, Miss, 350.
-
- Merchant Taylors’ School, 15.
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- Merritt, Mrs. Lea, 346.
-
- Michaelis, Mme., 245.
-
- Middleton, Mr. J., 162, 168.
-
- —— Mrs., 186.
-
- Milner, Miss E., 136.
-
- Missionary Study Circle, 301.
-
- Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell, 304.
-
- Monroe, Mrs. E. H., 320.
-
- Monteagle, Lady, 24.
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- Moyle, Mrs., 243, 419.
-
- Mugliston, Miss H., 219.
-
- Mulcaster, Miss, 94.
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- Murray, Miss, 18, 19.
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- Music-teaching, 110-112.
-
-
- National Education Association, U.S.A., 324.
-
- —— Vigilance Association, 308.
-
- Newcastle, 342.
-
- Newman, Miss C., 223, 224, 240, 310.
-
- —— Miss M., 176, 177, 227, 411.
-
- —— Francis, 195.
-
- —— J. H., 195.
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- Nicolay, Rev. C. F., 25, 28, 114.
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- Nightingale, Miss F., 67, 135.
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- Nixon, Miss, 320, 411.
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- Norman, Mr., 336.
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- Northcote, Sir S., 138.
-
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- Oakeley, Sir H. E., 248.
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- Oeynhausen, 69, 344, 357.
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- Officier d’Académie, 323.
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- Oliver, Rev. J., 64.
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- Ormerod, Miss, 340.
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- Osborne, Mrs., 342.
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- Overwork, 153, 278.
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- Owen, Mrs. J., 168, 174, 186, 206, 213, 298, 299, 303.
-
- —— Mr. S., 124, 125.
-
-
- _Paidologist, The_, 295.
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- Parents’ Educational Union, 295.
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- Paris, 320, 329.
-
- Parratt, Sir W., 211.
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- Parry, Miss, 26.
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- Pearce, Colonel, 175.
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- Phillipps, Miss L. March, 168.
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- Piper, Miss, 136.
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- Plumptre, Dean, 23, 26, 29, 33, 34, 35, 37, 39, 42, 56, 57, 72, 95.
-
- Plunket, Mr. W. L., 329.
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- Procter, Mrs., 90, 92.
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- —— Miss, 90, 92, 93, 94, 113, 115, 116, 164.
-
- —— Adelaide, 23.
-
- Pullen, Professor, 12.
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- Pusey, Dr., 134.
-
-
- Queen’s College, 19-35, 131, 135.
-
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- Radley, 330.
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- Ramabai, Pundita, 299, 300, 301, 305.
-
- Reid, Mr., 135.
-
- —— Miss M., 410.
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- Rein, Dr., 387.
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- Retreats, 286-291.
-
- Reynolds, Mrs., 243.
-
- —— Miss, 97.
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- Richardson, Miss M., 78.
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- Riddle, Rev. A. E., 132.
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- Ridley, Miss A., 169, 293.
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- Rix, Mr. and Mrs., 363.
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- Robertson, Rev. F., 86.
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- Robinson, Mrs. C., 221, 255, 352. See Miss C. Arnold.
-
- Rooke, Mr. T. M., 168.
-
- Rowand, Miss, 359, 361, 362, 402.
-
- Rowley, Miss, 33.
-
- Rücker, Sir A., 340, 341.
-
- Ruskin, Mr., 136, 137;
- letters, 207-212, 314-318.
-
- Russell, Major-General, 334.
-
- Ryan, Sir E., 168.
-
-
- Saintsbury, Professor, 341.
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- Salazaro, Signora Zampini, 320.
-
- Samuelson, Lady, 320.
-
- Saumerez, Lord de, 89.
-
- Scholarships, 175, 176, 230, 239.
-
- _Self-Examination Questions_, 73, Appendix C.
-
- Sélincourt, Mr. de, 416.
-
- Selwyn, Miss, 176.
-
- Sewell, Miss E., 135, 136, 358, 415.
-
- —— Mrs., 15.
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- Shannon, Mr. J. J., 347.
-
- Shepheard, Rev. H., 53, 57, 58, 96, 99, 103, 105.
-
- —— Mrs., 58.
-
- Shields, Mr. F., 315, 416.
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- Shireff, Miss, 145, 305.
-
- Shorthouse, Mr. S., 209.
-
- Simeon, Rev. C., 84.
-
- Sinclair, Miss M., 205.
-
- Smith, Mrs. Ashley, 215-218, 411.
-
- —— Rev. Charles, 330.
-
- —— Professor G. A., 342.
-
- Soames, Miss, 227.
-
- Social Science Congress, 138, 146, 147, 155, 156, 166, 409.
-
- Somervell, Mrs. A., 320.
-
- Somerville College, 235.
-
- Soulsby, Mrs., 290.
-
- —— Miss, 327, 328.
-
- Stanley, Lady, of Alderley, 24.
-
- —— Hon. Lyulph, 321.
-
- Stanton, Rev. V. H., 289, 290, 292.
-
- Stepney, Bishop of, 356, 367.
-
- Stevenson, the Misses, 342.
-
- Stirling, Miss, 345, 346.
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- Stoke, 190.
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- Storrar, Dr., 144, 168.
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- Storrs, Mr., 146.
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- Story, Dr., 342.
-
- Strettel, Rev. A. B., 25.
-
- Strong, Miss L., 301, 328, 338, 401, 404, 408.
-
- Stroud, 1, 388.
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- Stubbs, Bishop, 238.
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- Sturge, Miss, 360, 361, 365, 408.
-
- Sudeley Castle, 392.
-
- Swanwick, Miss A., 393.
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- Symonds. Rev. W., 6.
-
- Synge, Miss B., 205.
-
-
- Tait, Miss, 419.
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- Tallents, Mrs., 349.
-
- Teachers’ Guild, 294.
-
- Temple, Bishop, 138.
-
- Tennyson, Alfred, 19, 137.
-
- _Textbook of General History_, 66, 70, 73, 95, 99, 104, 261,
- Appendix B.
-
- Thompson, Miss, 212.
-
- Tiesset, M. and Mademoiselle, 113.
-
- Training of Teachers, 29, 86, 151, 176, 228, 229, 231, 246, 249, 277,
- 289, 409.
-
- Trench, Dean, 23, 24, 67, 95.
-
- Trimmer, James, 3.
-
- —— Sarah, 3.
-
- Tuke, Sir John Batty, 340.
-
- Twining, Miss, 24, 65.
-
-
- Vaccination, 335.
-
- Verrall, Mr. H., 165, 167, 168.
-
- —— Miss A., 241.
-
- Victoria, Queen, 334, 338, 367.
-
- Vincent, Miss, 58, 99.
-
-
- Wantage, 13, 299.
-
- Wardell, Miss, 23.
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- Webb, Bishop, 302.
-
- —— Mr. S., 387.
-
- Wedgwood, Mrs., 25, 43.
-
- —— Miss, 22, 350.
-
- Welldon, Miss, 245.
-
- Wellington, Duke of, 83, 108.
-
- Wells, Mrs., 239, 403.
-
- Westcott, Bishop, 206.
-
- Weston, Miss Agnes, 310.
-
- Widgery, Mr., 321.
-
- Wilderspin, Miss, 246.
-
- Wilkinson, Bishop, 186, 281, 286, 374, 377, 378, 380, 382, 383, 385.
-
- Wilson, Rev. C., 40, 41, 58, 102.
-
- —— Mr. E. T., 168.
-
- Winkworth, Miss C., 168.
-
- Withiel, Mrs., 294.
-
- Wood, Lady Page, 24.
-
- —— Miss S., 152, 400, 408.
-
- Woodchester, 331, 338.
-
- Woodhouse, Mrs., 354, 404.
-
- Wordsworth, Miss, 347.
-
- _Work and Play_, 326-329.
-
- Working Men’s College, Cheltenham, 297.
-
- Worsley, Rev. E., 335, 357.
-
- Wright, Dr., 319.
-
-
- York, 343.
-
-
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-<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Dorothea Beale of Cheltenham, by Elizabeth
-Raikes</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world 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 <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Dorothea Beale of Cheltenham</p>
-<p>Author: Elizabeth Raikes</p>
-<p>Release Date: August 6, 2019 [eBook #60064]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DOROTHEA BEALE OF CHELTENHAM***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by MWS<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table class="pg" border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/dorotheabealeofc00raikiala">
- https://archive.org/details/dorotheabealeofc00raikiala</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>DOROTHEA BEALE<br />
-OF CHELTENHAM</h1>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 460px;" id="illus1">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="460" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption-r"><i>Photo. J. C. Hughes</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Dorothea Beale</i><br />
-<i>from the portrait by J. J. Shannon.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">DOROTHEA BEALE<br />
-OF CHELTENHAM</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-ELIZABETH RAIKES</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><i>ILLUSTRATED</i></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">LONDON<br />
-ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE<br />
-AND COMPANY LTD.<br />
-1908</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">Edinburgh: T. and A. <span class="smcap">Constable</span>, Printers to His Majesty</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><span class="smaller">TO</span><br />
-‘HER CHILDREN’</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>PREFACE</h2>
-
-<p>Miss Beale left ample materials for the history of her
-work. Not only were all business documents, such as
-minutes of council meetings, nomination papers, examination
-questions carefully preserved, she kept also
-all letters which could be of any interest. She went
-further than merely arranging materials for a future
-book. In 1900 she compiled a very complete <cite>History
-of the Ladies’ College</cite>. Here she traced its origin,
-growth, and expansion; here, too, she named most
-carefully all who by earnest work and self-denial, by
-industry, talent, or generous gift, had in any way contributed
-to its wellbeing and influence. She was anxious
-that all faithful work should be known.</p>
-
-<p>But Miss Beale recognised that after her death there
-would be a demand for something more. She was
-earnestly desirous that in any account which might
-appear of herself, the work for which she lived should have
-the first place. With her innate sensitiveness, she shrank
-from the thought of a Life. It would not indeed be
-possible to write a life of Dorothea Beale which was not
-also, fully and intimately, a Life of the Ladies’ College,
-Cheltenham. Yet Miss Beale left some materials for the
-more personal side of the book—many letters, diaries,
-and autobiographical fragments. One paper opens thus:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘In these days we all live in glass houses, and it seems useless
-to say, Let nothing appear in print. The life of the College,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span>
-for which I have lived forty years, some reminiscences of the
-state of things as regards education, and some traces of the way
-in which the Potter has formed the vessel for the service of the
-household, may perhaps be allowed. It seems to me that the
-story of the inward life may be helpful. I should relate only
-those things which, on looking back over my long life, seem to
-have exercised a formative influence upon my own character,
-and tended under God’s Providence to fit me for the work
-which was given me to do. The circumstances and ideals
-of my childhood, the family influences, sometimes what seems
-a chance acquaintance, or even a passing remark; these viewed
-from within might have had an influence little dreamed of
-at the time.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I have endeavoured in this book to follow Miss
-Beale’s own suggestions, but also to give some faint
-idea of what she was to the many she inspired and taught.
-In her <cite>History of the Ladies’ College</cite> she left little
-historical fact unmentioned: it is possible for another to
-show that she was the real founder, the main builder.</p>
-
-<p>Many thanks are owing to those who kindly furnished
-me with letters from Miss Beale. It was difficult to
-select from the very large number received, and it was
-with much regret that many had to be excluded, lest the
-book should become unwieldy.</p>
-
-<p>It remains but to add one word on my gratitude for
-the unfailing kindness and generous help of those who
-have read this book in manuscript and proof; to
-Mrs. Reynolds and Miss Bertha Synge; to Miss Helen
-Cunliffe who undertook the somewhat wearisome task of
-deciphering the diaries, and, lastly, to Miss Alice
-Andrews, whose name Miss Beale associated with mine
-when she asked me to write a History of the College.</p>
-
-<p class="right">ELIZABETH RAIKES.</p>
-
-<p class="smaller"><i>June 2, 1908.</i></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr smaller">CHAP.</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">I.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Childhood</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">II.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Queen’s College</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">III.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Casterton</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">IV.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">An Interval</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">V.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Cheltenham</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">81</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">VI.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Early History of the Ladies’ College</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">108</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">VII.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">A Royal Commission</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">134</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">VIII.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Organisation</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">158</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">IX.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">De Profundis</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">179</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">X.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">The Guild</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">203</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">XI.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">St. Hilda’s Work</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">226</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">XII.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Teacher and Principal</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">254</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">XIII.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Parerga</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">286</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">XIV.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Honours</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">312</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">XV.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">The Last Term</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">349</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcapuc">XVI.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Letters</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">371</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Index</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#INDEX">427</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<table summary="List of illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Dorothea Beale.</span> From the Portrait by J. J. Shannon, A.R.A</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdpg"><a href="#illus1"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Caroline Frances Cornwallis.</span> From a Painting by Herself</td>
- <td class="nw"><i>to face page</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus2">4</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Cambray House.</span> From an Old Engraving</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus3">90</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Miss Dorothea Beale</span>, 1859</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus4">108</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Mr. T. Houghton Brancker</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus5">120</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">The Lower Hall, Ladies’ College, Cheltenham.</span> A Photograph by Miss Bertha Synge</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus6">216</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">S. Hilda’s Hall, Oxford</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus7">238</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Ladies’ College and Garden</span>, 1908</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus8">254</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">The Empress Frederick at Cheltenham.</span> From a Photograph by Mr. Domenico Barnett</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus9">334</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Dorothea Beale</span>, LL.D.</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus10">340</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-<span class="smaller">CHILDHOOD</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<p>‘Wisdom goeth about seeking them that are worthy of her, and
-in their paths she appeareth graciously, and in every purpose she
-meeteth them.</p>
-
-<p>‘For her true beginning is desire of discipline; and the care for
-discipline is love of her; and love of her is observance of laws.’</p>
-
-<p class="right"><cite>Wisdom of Solomon</cite>, vi. 16, 17, 18.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Dorothea Beale was born on March 21, 1831. The
-story of her childhood and youth forms a good illustration
-of the best education that girls of the early Victorian
-time could obtain. It gives also a glimpse of the fears
-and hopes, the silent struggles, the disappointments of
-many a girl who strove to wrest, as from a grudging
-Fate, the opportunity to inform and use her mind. As
-far as possible this story is told autobiographically.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale belonged to a Gloucestershire family. One
-ancestor, in the early days of the manufacturing settlement
-in the Stroud Valley, married a Miss Hyde, a
-relation of the Chancellor. She brought to her husband
-Hyde Court, Chalford, where Miss Beale’s brother, Mr.
-Henry Beale, now resides. Miss Beale’s own father, however,
-never lived there. His parents, who married young,
-settled at Brownshill in Gloucestershire, and here his
-father (Dorothea’s grandfather) died, leaving a widow
-aged only twenty-four with three children, John, Miles,
-and Mary, to be brought up on very slender means. Mrs.
-John Beale removed to Bath, where she remained till the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-boys left school for Guy’s Hospital. Then she came
-to live with them in Essex, where for a time they
-practised in partnership. In 1824 Miles married
-Dorothea Margaret Complin, a lady of Huguenot
-extraction; her grandfather had practised as a physician
-in Spital Square, one of the original settlements of the
-French immigrants.</p>
-
-<p>In 1830 the young couple with three children came
-to live in St. Helen’s parish, Bishopsgate, where a year
-later Dorothea, their fourth child and third daughter,
-was born. She was baptized in the ancient church of
-St. Helen’s on June 10, 1831. ‘Awoke early. Baptism
-Day. Read the service,’ she wrote in her diary in 1891.</p>
-
-<p>The Complins were a family of wide connections.
-Mrs. Beale’s aunt, Mrs. Cornwallis, wife of the Rev.
-William Cornwallis, rector of Wittersham, Kent, was
-an active, benevolent woman with literary tastes and
-occupations. She took a great interest in her two young
-nieces, Elizabeth and Dorothea Margaret Complin, who
-at an early age lost their own mother, her sister. The
-two little girls were sent to school at Ealing, where
-the elder, Elizabeth, gained many prizes or ‘Rewards
-of Merit,’ as school prizes were then called. After her
-sister’s marriage to Mr. Miles Beale, Elizabeth Complin
-lived for some time with her clever aunt and cousin,
-Mrs. Cornwallis and her daughter Caroline, sharing their
-interests and studies. On the death of her brother’s
-wife she came to live in London. There she was
-brought into immediate touch with her nieces, Dorothea
-Beale and her sisters, whom she delighted to help and
-advise in their reading, and who by her means became
-familiar with the aims and ideals of the Cornwallises.
-These more distant relations, whose intellectual aims and
-work Miss Beale always reckoned among the influences<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-of her early life, were themselves authors of no mean
-merit. ‘Mrs. Cornwallis wrote several devotional books,
-and is said to have learned Hebrew in the first instance
-to teach her grandson, James Trimmer. She wrote also
-for him a series of papers on the canonical Scriptures, in
-four volumes. This was published by subscription, as
-was the custom with expensive works in those days.
-The Queen and a number of great people entered their
-names, and with the profits Mrs. Cornwallis was able to
-build schools in her husband’s parish.’<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<p>James Trimmer died when only twelve. His other
-grandmother was also literary—Mrs. Sarah Trimmer,
-famous in her own day as the author of nearly thirty
-volumes for the young. Her <cite>Sacred History</cite> was the
-most important of these, but perhaps the best known
-now is <cite>The History of the Robins</cite>.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘One story of his childhood,’ runs the autobiography, ‘was
-a great favourite with us as children. His uncle had settled to
-sell a pony of which James was very fond, and many were the
-tears he shed. His grandmother (Mrs. Cornwallis) said, “I
-think, James, that this life is a journey upwards; each time we
-do right, or bear a sorrow patiently, we get up one step of the
-ladder to Heaven.” So he dried his eyes and was quite cheerful
-once more. Meanwhile, his uncle, seeing the boy’s sorrow,
-cancelled the sale, and brought news to James that the pony was
-his once more. Again to his surprise, James burst into tears,
-and at length it was drawn from him that he feared now he
-would have to come down from that step of the ladder. He
-was finally consoled by some such doctrine as Browning has
-commended in the words, “’Tis not what man does that exalts
-him, but what man <em>would</em> do.” All her pupils were not as responsive
-as James. Once, after expending her eloquence on a
-plough-boy whom she was preparing for confirmation, she said:
-“Now, are you not glad that you have a soul?” to which she
-could only get the reply, “I don’t care very little about it....”</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr. Cornwallis was a scholar; he was a descendant of Archbishop
-Cornwallis. I do not know any details of his College<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-career; but he taught his only unmarried daughter Latin and
-Greek classics, and she gained such a rare facility in understanding
-that he used to read the classics aloud to her, and
-expect her to follow. He was a friend of Sismondi, from whom
-Miss Cornwallis received an offer of marriage, which she declined
-on the ground of great disparity of age. Sismondi lent
-her afterwards his villa at Pisa, and my aunt, her great friend,
-accompanied her there. A journey to Italy for two ladies was
-a great undertaking, and many interesting reminiscences used
-we to hear from my aunt. She there acquired a good knowledge
-of Italian, by which we benefited later.’<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In after years Miss Caroline Cornwallis moved to
-Maidstone, where she exercised her many talents and
-versatile mind in varied occupations. Miss Cornwallis
-not only studied Greek, Latin, and Hebrew, but such
-questions of the day as criminal procedure; she also
-read philosophy. She wrote besides articles for the
-<cite>Westminster Review</cite> and <cite>Fraser’s Magazine</cite>, several books
-in a series entitled ‘<cite>Small Books on Great Subjects</cite>—edited
-by a few well-wishers to knowledge.’ The first was
-<cite>Philosophical Theories and Experience of a Pariah</cite>. She
-said women were regarded as pariahs, and were it known
-that the book was written by a woman it would not
-be read.<a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Others of the series which she wrote were
-some volumes entitled <cite>A Brief View of Greek Philosophy</cite>,
-and some historical works, <cite>The State of the World before the
-Introduction of Christianity</cite>. She also wrote a classical novel
-called <cite>Pericles and Aspasia</cite>. Miss Cornwallis rejoiced in
-the fact that as a woman, though unknown, she obtained
-for her writings the praise of ‘big-wigs.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘“I long,” she wrote to a friend after one of her works had
-received flattering notices in the <cite>British Medical Journal</cite>, “to
-knock all the big-wigs together and say it was a woman that
-did all this—a woman that laughed at you all and despised your
-praise. And if, like Caligula’s wish, I could put all mankind
-into one and leave you to say that in its ears when I am gone
-quietly to my grave, I think it would be glorious. It is as a
-woman, and not as the individual C.F.C., that I enjoy my
-triumph; for, as regards my own proper self, I like to creep in
-a corner and be quiet; but to raise my whole sex and with it
-the world is an object worth fagging for. Heart and hand to
-the work.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 420px;" id="illus2">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="420" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Caroline Frances Cornwallis</i><br />
-<i>From a painting by herself</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Cornwallis reflects the thought of her day with
-regard to women’s work. It was one of the tasks of
-her cousin, Dorothea Beale—whose ‘fagging’ in the
-next generation did so much for her own sex and the
-world—to show that the best work is done when the
-question of what will be said about it does not affect
-it one way or the other.<a name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<p>The authorship of the <cite>Small Books</cite> was a well-kept
-secret.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘We did not know who wrote the books till after her death,
-though my aunt, who gave them to us, often stayed with her
-as her amanuensis. Miss Cornwallis was a skilled handworker,
-too. Before the Society for Home Arts existed she learned to
-bind books for her library. She was no mean artist, and her
-portrait of herself in her library is considered very successful. I
-have heard how she fitted up a marionette theatre for the
-amusement of friends. I did not know her personally; she
-died when I was young; but the talk of her ability and knowledge,
-and the association with my aunt, Elizabeth Complin,
-who was her friend, had much to do with calling out my literary
-ambition.’<a name="FNanchor_5" id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Beales were a very large family, with more than
-twenty years between the eldest and youngest children;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-and all those things which make home life at once
-precious in itself and valuable as a training for the
-world’s work were theirs to a full extent: mutual love
-and toil and suffering, the elder serving the younger,
-the little ones looking up to the wise elder sisters, the
-constant practice of all those qualities which are the law
-of a well-ordered religious home. Both parents from
-the midst of their own absorbing personal occupations
-found time to lead out the mental abilities of their
-children, by reading aloud to them, giving verses of
-Scripture and poetry to be learned by heart, and finding
-time to hear them repeated. The home atmosphere was
-serious and intellectual. Dorothea said she owed much
-to the literary tastes of her parents. ‘I shall never
-forget,’ she said, ‘how we learned to love Shakspere,
-through my father’s reading to us, when we were quite
-young, selected portions. I still remember the terror
-which, as a very small child, I felt as I heard Portia
-pronounce the verdict. I thought Shylock had really
-gained the day.<a name="FNanchor_6" id="FNanchor_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
-
-<p>‘History and general literature we would read with our
-mother, and listen with delight to her stories of the
-eventful era she had lived through.’</p>
-
-<p>Miles Beale, like his wife, belonged to a family with
-cultivated tastes and interests. Among his relations he
-could reckon the eminent geologist and archæologist,
-William Symonds,<a name="FNanchor_7" id="FNanchor_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> rector of Pendock, Gloucestershire,
-whose daughter married Sir Joseph Hooker. In connection
-with his friend the Rev. Charles Mackenzie,
-vicar of St. Helen’s, and others, Mr. Beale joined a committee
-known as the Literary Society, of which he became
-honorary secretary, for the institution of lectures in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-Crosby Hall. A library and evening classes were also
-formed, and these became in time the basis of the present
-City of London College for young men. He was
-much helped by Miss Maria Hackett, well known for
-her diligent efforts to rescue old endowments which,
-granted for girls’ education, had been alienated to boys.
-Mr. Beale, who was fond of music, was also a prime
-mover in getting up concerts of sacred music. ‘This
-made us acquainted with some musicians, and amongst
-others with Mrs. Bartholomew and her husband, the
-friend of Mendelssohn, who translated many of the
-German songs. He was a most interesting and cultivated
-man, an artist and dramatist.’<a name="FNanchor_8" id="FNanchor_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-
-<p>The growing children were often allowed to be present
-when their father’s friends came, and thus silently
-heard much thoughtful and intellectual conversation.
-They looked up to him as to one who expected them to
-care for books and for matters of public moment, and he
-strove to interest them in his own pursuits and reading,
-and to give them a taste for what was really good.
-‘“Blessed are the pure in heart”—poor Swift,’ he said one
-day as he handled a volume of the great satirist. ‘That,’
-said Dorothea long after, ‘was the best literature lesson
-I ever received.’ The daughter must have resembled
-her father both in literary taste and zeal. This busy
-man, who found time to pursue so many interests, would
-accuse himself of being ‘naturally idle.’ It may come
-as a surprise to many who knew the strenuous life at
-Cheltenham to find this was a fault of which the Principal
-constantly accused herself.</p>
-
-<p>One friend who was much with the Beales, often
-dining with them on Sundays, was Charles Mackenzie,
-then headmaster of St. Olave’s Grammar School, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-successively vicar of St. Helen’s, Bishopsgate, and St.
-Benet’s, Gracechurch Street, and prebendary of St. Paul’s.
-Dorothea felt she owed much to his teaching; he prepared
-her for confirmation in 1847. As children she
-and her brothers and sisters attended St. Helen’s. Again
-to quote her autobiography:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘To come to the nearer influences of my childhood. There
-was the faith of my parents, the morning and evening prayer.
-There was the Bible picture-book and the Sunday lessons.
-The church we went to was an old one, St. Helen’s, and at the
-entrance were the words, “This is none other than the House
-of God, and this is the Gate of Heaven.” There were high
-pews, and the service was almost a duet between clergyman and
-clerk, yet I realised, even more than I ever have in the most
-beautiful cathedral and perfect services, that the Lord was in
-that place, even as Jacob realised in the desert what he had
-failed to find at home. There was over the East window an
-oval coat of arms with strange scrolls which seemed to have
-eyes, and reclining on each side two life-sized golden angels.
-This thing seemed to speak strangely to my spiritual consciousness.
-Our clergyman must have read well. I remember how,
-as the story of the Crucifixion was read, the church would grow
-dark, as it seemed. There were no hymn-books, only a few
-hymns pasted on a card, and generally we sang from Tate and
-Brady. I know nothing of the substance of the sermons now,
-but I remember the emotion they often called forth, and how I
-with difficulty restrained my tears. There was a Tuesday
-evening service, at which I suppose there were never a dozen
-present, but I found there great help, and to be obliged to go
-elsewhere on that night was a great privation. The hymns
-were a great power in my life. I remember the joy with which
-I would sing, in my own room, Ken’s Evening Hymn, and the
-awful joy of the Trinity hymn, “Holy, holy, holy.”</p>
-
-<p>‘The books that we read most on Sunday—for no secular
-book was allowed—were Mant’s Bible with pictures, which
-were explained by my mother, and a book of Martyrs with
-dreadful pictures; Bunyan’s <cite>Pilgrim’s Progress</cite>, with the outline
-drawings, and a number of tracts, such as Parley the Porter,
-and stories of good and bad children.</p>
-
-<p>‘An aunt, my godmother, lived with us, and was often my
-friend in my childish troubles. I shall not speak much of the
-governesses we had in succession, because they left but little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-impression on my inner life, nor need I speak of all my brothers
-and sisters, except so far as they come into my inner life. The
-strongest influence was that of my sister Eliza. We were constantly
-together. She had a very lively imagination, and on most
-nights would tell me stories that she had invented. Early in
-the mornings she would transform our bedroom into some wild
-magic scene, and we would play at Alexander the Great, and
-ride Pegasus on the foot of our four-post bedstead. I remember
-now how Mangnall furnished her with mental pictures of
-heathen gods, which were cut out in paper and painted.
-London children had no outdoor games.’<a name="FNanchor_9" id="FNanchor_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The elder daughters were at first educated by daily
-governesses. Dorothea said that among her earliest
-reminiscences about 1840 were those relating to the
-choice of a governess.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘My mother advertised and hundreds of answers were sent.
-She began by eliminating all those in which bad spelling
-occurred (a proceeding which as a spelling reformer I must now
-condemn), next the wording and composition were criticised,
-and lastly a few of the writers were interviewed and a selection
-was made. But alas! an inspection of our exercise-books
-revealed so many uncorrected faults, that a dismissal followed,
-and another search resulted in the same way. I can remember
-only one really clever and competent teacher; she had been
-educated in a good French school and grounded us well in the
-language.’<a name="FNanchor_10" id="FNanchor_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Memory preserves the name—Miss Wright—of the
-lady who earned this word of praise. When she left,
-the girls were sent to school.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘It was a school,’ again to quote Miss Beale’s own account
-of her education, ‘considered much above the average for sound
-instruction; our mistresses were women who had read and
-thought; they had taken pains to arrange various schemes of
-knowledge; yet what miserable teaching we had in many
-subjects; history was learned by committing to memory little
-manuals; rules of arithmetic were taught, but the principles
-were never explained. Instead of reading and learning the
-masterpieces of literature, we repeated week by week the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-Lamentations of King Hezekiah, the pretty but somewhat
-weak “Mother’s Picture” of Cowper, and worse doggrel verses
-on the solar system.’<a name="FNanchor_11" id="FNanchor_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The arrangements were doubtless similar to those of
-the period in all schools of the same kind, such as were
-described by Miss Beale in one of her early articles on
-the Education of Girls.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I know one school,’ she wrote, ‘existing to the end of the
-first half of the nineteenth century, in which the terms were
-not less than £100 a year. The following was the arrangement
-of hours: Rise at seven o’clock ... Lessons till eight; breakfast,
-consisting of bread and butter, with extremely weak coffee;
-lessons till twelve, luncheon, consisting of bread and butter, or
-bread and jam, and “turns” till one o’clock. These “turns”
-consisted in going thirty times post haste round and round the
-garden; they could scarcely be accomplished unless the luncheon
-were carried round in the hand and eaten <i lang="fr">en route</i>. Lessons
-from one o’clock until three forty-five. Dinner four o’clock,
-and “turns” in fine weather immediately following, as after
-luncheon. Lessons until eight, then tea, and bed at nine.’<a name="FNanchor_12" id="FNanchor_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The school was at Stratford, and it lent perhaps a
-personal reminiscence to a favourite line of Chaucer’s
-<cite>Prologue</cite>, on which, in the literature lessons at Cheltenham,
-Miss Beale never failed to dwell.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘After the scole of Stratford atte Bowe,</div>
-<div class="verse">For Frensch of Parys was to hire unknowe.’</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">She always had a horror of schoolgirl French, and the
-practice at one time so common of permitting no talk
-except in French.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Our thinking power was hindered from developing by
-intercourse with one another, because we were required to
-speak in a tongue in which we could indeed talk, but in which
-conversation was impossible; and the language we spoke was
-one peculiar to English boarding schools.’<a name="FNanchor_13" id="FNanchor_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Young as Dorothea was when she went to school, she
-was no doubt distinguished there for her industry and
-ability, and certainly for her conscientiousness. A little
-story of this remains. On one occasion she fainted in
-church, and when some kindly hand removed her bonnet,
-she revived, and clung to it desperately, because she
-would not have her head uncovered in church. The
-weary rounds in the garden lingered in the memory of
-those who performed them, and there were those who
-would tell in after years how faithfully the little Dorothea
-would perform her ‘turns,’ while some girls were not
-above cheating a little.</p>
-
-<p>The school-days were not prolonged, for ‘fortunately,’
-she says,—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Ill-health compelled me to leave at thirteen, and then began
-a valuable time of education under the direction of myself,
-during which I expended a great deal of energy in useless
-directions, but gained more than I should have probably done
-at any existing school; dreaming much, and seeking for a
-fuller realisation of the great spiritual realities, which make one
-feel that all knowledge is sacred. We had access to two large
-libraries; one that of the London Institution, the other that of
-Crosby Hall; besides which the Medical Book Club circulated
-many books of general interest, which were read by all and
-talked over at meal-times and in the evening, when my father
-used often to read aloud to us. Novels rarely came our way,
-but we found pasturage enough. We read a great deal of
-history: the works of Froissart, Thierry, Thiers, Alison,
-Miller’s <cite>Philosophy of History</cite>, Sir James Stephen’s books,
-Prescott’s, Creasy’s stand out very distinctly to memory.’<a name="FNanchor_14" id="FNanchor_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The reading of a book named <cite>Scientific Dialogues</cite> she
-counted also as an era in her mental history. All the
-good reviews of the time, the <cite>Edinburgh</cite>, <cite>Quarterly</cite>, and
-<cite>Blackwood’s Magazine</cite>, came in her way, with books
-of travel and biographies. She made elaborate tables on
-all sorts of subjects, some of which in neat handwriting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-may still be seen. She had access to all Whately’s
-works, and worked up alone his <cite>Logic and Rhetoric</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>This unwearied study was no accumulation of knowledge
-for its own sake, it was the outcome of a true
-if youthful admiration for what was noble and good.
-‘I worshipped for years Isabella of Castile. Sir James
-Stephen’s essay on George the Third filled my imagination
-with magnificent visions; his Port Royalists were
-my ideal characters; especially was Pascal a hero, I
-read and re-read his <cite>Life and Provincial Letters</cite>.’<a name="FNanchor_15" id="FNanchor_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
-
-<p>Pascal’s life perhaps breathed for her a spirit of
-emulation. ‘I borrowed a Euclid, and without any help
-read the first six books, carefully working through the
-whole of the fifth, as I did not know what was usually
-done. It did not occur to me to ask my father for
-lessons in such subjects.’<a name="FNanchor_16" id="FNanchor_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> She also made some way with
-algebra, and calculated for herself the distance to the
-moon. Much time, she owned, was wasted by working
-alone. But the very difficulties proved a source of help,
-showing her the value of knowledge acquired by effort
-and search, as opposed to mere information received
-from another. In all her reading she received both help
-and sympathy from her aunt, Elizabeth Complin, who
-herself understood Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, had considerable
-taste for mathematics, and was fond of philosophy.
-She was one of the first subscribers to Mudie’s.
-The London Library was also a mine of wealth to the
-young readers.</p>
-
-<p>Outside her home, the chief educational influence for
-Dorothea at this period must have been the lectures of
-the Literary Institution at Crosby Hall, and more
-especially the Gresham Lectures. She attended some of
-these in company with a younger sister, who often grew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-weary and hungry when Dorothea, after a long morning’s
-work, would stay to talk abstrusely with a professor, or
-linger over a bookstall on the way home to dinner. The
-professor was probably Mr. Pullen, of whose lectures on
-astronomy she wrote that they ‘inspired a passionate
-desire to know more of mathematics, and to understand
-all the processes described. I obtained books on
-mechanics and spelt them out as well as I was able, but
-was often baffled. The mysteries of the Calculus I
-pored over in vain ... not knowing that I lacked the
-knowledge which alone could make it intelligible.’<a name="FNanchor_17" id="FNanchor_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<p>Dorothea’s educational fortune proved itself to be
-better than that of the Prioress, for in 1847 she was sent
-with two elder sisters, their characters ‘ripe for observation,’
-to Mrs. Bray’s fashionable school for English girls
-in the Champs Elysées. This school, kept by English
-ladies, was supposed to offer a good English education,
-as well as French.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Imagine our disgust,’ writes Miss Beale, ‘at being required
-to read English history in Mrs. Trimmer, to learn by heart all
-Murray’s grammar, to learn even lists of prepositions by heart,
-in order that we might parse without the trouble of thinking.
-I learned them with such anger that the list was burnt into my
-brain, and I can say it now. The “Use of the Globes,” too,
-we were taught, and very impertinent was I thought for asking
-a reason for some of the tricks we were made to play with a
-globe under the direction of Keith. We used indeed to read
-collectively Robertson’s <cite>Charles the Fifth</cite>, i.e. it was read aloud
-on dancing evenings. Each class went out in succession for
-the dancing lesson; thus no one read the whole book, though the
-school in its corporate capacity did. I felt oppressed with the
-routine life; I, who had been able to moon, grub, alone for hours,
-to live in a world of dreams and thoughts of my own, was now
-put into a cage and had to walk round and round like a squirrel.
-I felt thought was killed. Still, I know now that the time was
-well spent. The mechanical order, the system of the French
-school was worth seeing, worth living in, only not for long.’<a name="FNanchor_18" id="FNanchor_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One personal glimpse we have of the sisters at school
-in a letter of Mr. Beale’s to Dorothea: ‘I thought your
-last letter very nicely written; tell Eliza so, though it
-did not apply to hers. She does not write much, though
-in the right spirit too: but a genteel hand is of great
-importance. I am aware it requires much practice.’</p>
-
-<p>The old-fashioned word exactly describes the neat,
-fine, pointed handwriting, which is preserved for us in
-two or three French exercise-books of the time. This
-writing soon after began to suffer from too much of the
-German character, and later still more from unduly
-ambitious haste. There is also in existence a thin book
-of <i lang="fr">dictées</i> signed <i lang="fr">Dorothée</i>, belonging to this period. The
-teacher has written at the foot of one or two of these, after
-the enumeration of a few omitted commas and accents,
-a word surely inapt as bestowed on this pupil, ‘<i lang="fr">Etourdie</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>The school was brought to an untimely end by the
-Revolution of 1848, when a mob surrounded the house
-demanding garden-tools as firearms. These were not
-available, but Miss Bray faced the men and persuaded
-them to leave quietly. Before this incident occurred
-Dorothea Beale and her sisters had been fetched home
-by a brother, who did not, however, leave Paris without
-taking them round the city to see as much as they could
-of the movements of the Revolution.</p>
-
-<p>This return from school may be considered the close
-of childhood; for Dorothea was now seventeen. A
-grave and quiet girl, so we learn from one or two friends
-of her youth, with a sweet, earnest expression, and
-deliberate speech; also with a sunshiny smile and a
-merry laugh on occasion. She was remarkable even in
-a studious, sedentary family for her love of reading and
-study. For her the fields of literature had taken the
-place of those other fields and gardens now held to be a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-necessity for the best development of children’s bodies
-and minds. But her life in the less favourable surroundings
-of a great city was made bright by ‘the light that
-never was on sea or land, the consecration and the poet’s
-dream.’ The joys of imagination and fancy, the delight
-of entering into the thoughts of the great, were hers, and
-lifted her above what was small and trivial. She knew
-also, and from babyhood seems to have known, a stern
-side of life. An innate sense of duty, that guide she
-never failed to observe, already hedged her steps,
-protecting her strong, eager spirit from flights of ‘unchartered
-freedom,’ leading it through restraint and
-self-denial towards a glorious liberty.</p>
-
-<p>There was plenty to do at home; younger sisters to
-be taught and schoolboys’ lessons to be superintended.
-The boys were at Merchant Taylors’ School, where the
-education was neither better nor worse than in other
-public schools of the day. Such as it was, it gave
-Dorothea a horror of the old-fashioned methods by
-which boys were taught Latin and Euclid, without
-intelligence and without sympathy. It was one of her
-tasks at this time to aid in the daily grind of this
-uninteresting work. Mrs. Frederick Sewell, an old
-friend of the family, remembers the boys going off to
-their lessons under the supervision of the clever elder
-sister. Uncongenial as must have been to her the work
-of directing boys already wearied with a long day at
-school, it was evidently done in a spirit of dutifulness
-and high endeavour. In 1876, a brother, the Reverend
-Edward Beale of the Society of St. John the Evangelist,
-Cowley, wrote to her after what proved to be a final
-parting: ‘Our lives seem wonderfully linked together,
-and I am more conscious every year how much my life
-has been influenced by your early teaching. If I had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-followed that way of <em>Duty</em> I should have found the
-entrance less rugged to the more excellent way.’ Nor
-was the task a wasted one for Dorothea herself. She
-determined, she tells us, to follow her brothers’ lessons
-on her own account as well as theirs, and thus was
-enabled to gain a thorough knowledge of Latin grammar.</p>
-
-<p>The younger sisters remember the careful and regular
-teaching given them by the elder ones, the quiet instructive
-games they were encouraged to play with little
-pictures from Greek mythology, and the rewards bestowed
-on industrious pupils. It is on record that
-Dorothea herself dressed a doll for a little sister’s
-birthday.</p>
-
-<p>For she was by no means unequal to feminine pursuits.
-She could be what is called <em>useful</em> at home; the inevitable
-sock-darning which falls to a girl’s portion in a
-family of many boys was not neglected; though carried
-on simultaneously with the mental exercise of learning
-German verbs. An exquisitely fine piece of tatting
-remains to testify to skilfulness of fingers, as well as to
-the perseverance she more gladly devoted to intellectual
-efforts. Such was the interleaved New Testament, a
-monument of patient toil, into which she copied in very
-small writing whole passages of comment from the
-Fathers and other writers. So full of work was the
-home life that there can have been scarcely any leisure;
-but a few so-called holidays were spent in rubbing
-brasses in the ancient city churches. There was full
-occupation even for the strenuous spirit of Dorothea
-Beale, in the interests and affairs of home, but a wider
-field for her energies was to open with the gates of
-Queen’s College in 1848.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-<span class="smaller">QUEEN’S COLLEGE</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Long shall the College live and grow,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">When we three sleep in peace,</div>
-<div class="verse">And scholars better far than we</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Its glory shall increase.’</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="attr"><cite>Eliza Beale on the Jubilee of Queen’s College.</cite></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Llewelyn Davis rightly said that the establishment
-of Queen’s College was an epoch in women’s
-education. Like that of all really great institutions, its
-development and growth were an outcome of the needs
-of the time. But the movement which led up to it was
-‘not from beneath but from above. It was compassion
-in the hearts of a few good men which moved them to
-help a forlorn class of solitary and ill-paid workers, that
-seemed the immediate cause. A little band of men full
-of faith and good works came to the help of a man
-whose influence was quiet but strong.’ The good man
-of whom Miss Beale thus spoke was David Laing, who
-was vicar of Holy Trinity Church, Kentish Town, from
-1847 to 1858. Good he was, in many senses of the
-word: a man of education, wide culture, and personal
-force. He showed both large-hearted charity and
-wisdom in dealing with the needs of those for whom it
-was his duty to care, and he was ready to make any
-self-sacrifice required in carrying out his schemes for
-them.</p>
-
-<p>In 1843 he became Honorary Secretary of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-Governesses’ Benevolent Institution, a position he occupied
-till his death in 1860, and the lamentable state
-of women’s education, particularly that of professing
-teachers, was brought forcibly before him. The society,
-which had had a kind of passive existence only for two
-or three years, began at once under Mr. Laing to
-develop manifold activities. Within a year the work of
-help for which it was primarily intended was in full
-swing, and its scope of usefulness was enlarged by the
-establishment of a registry and a scheme for granting
-diplomas to governesses.</p>
-
-<p>It was soon found to be a real difficulty to know the
-efficient teacher from the mere pretender. For the lack
-of education is frequently seen in an assumption of
-knowledge. In the days when women were required to
-teach everything, a confession of ignorance on almost
-any subject was regarded as a disgrace. The advance of
-true education is marked by the fact that it is no longer
-necessary for a governess to pretend to knowledge she
-does not possess.</p>
-
-<p>It was soon seen that if the registry for teachers was
-to be of any value, some test must be established for the
-women it undertook to recommend. The first efforts
-at examination revealed such depths of ignorance, that
-the further necessity of instructing those who wished to
-avail themselves of the society’s diplomas was perceived.
-This need happily coalesced with the generous plan of
-Miss Murray, Maid of Honour to the Queen. She
-seems first to have thought of a college for women, and
-had already received donations of money towards such
-an object. These she transferred to Mr. Laing, when in
-1844 he entered into communication with the Government
-respecting the establishment of a college. In
-1847 Queen Victoria graciously gave her permission for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-the adoption of the title ‘Queen’s College,’ and a house
-in Harley Street, adjacent to that occupied by the
-Governesses’ Benevolent Institution was taken. Mr.
-Laing then called upon some of the Professors of King’s
-College to help him in the work by giving lectures to
-governesses and others, and it was largely owing to their
-talent and unwearied kindness that the College became
-rapidly so successful.</p>
-
-<p>It should not, however, be thought that Queen’s
-College was destined by its founders solely to help
-governesses, though in this direction its usefulness was
-immediately seen. Miss Murray and Mr. Laing, like
-Alfred Tennyson and others less immediately interested
-in the scheme, looked beyond such direct results to the
-larger needs of women. The time had come when it
-was recognised that marriage could not be the lot of
-all,—that there might be purpose and interest in a
-woman’s life even when she could not be married, and
-that to use marriage merely as an escape from an empty
-impoverished existence was an act unworthy of a good
-woman. Women were now willing to fit themselves
-for life independently of marriage, and for this end
-were seeking intellectual development. Therefore the
-founders of Queen’s College planned that the education
-should be general, and not merely an initiation into a
-craft which a governess might learn as if she were a
-member of a certain guild. For the governess herself, it
-was surely best that she should be educated as if she had
-interests in common with the rest of her sex, and for all
-women it was needful that they should seek means to
-inform, occupy, and control their own active minds and
-‘wandering affections.’ Mr. Laing thought with compassionate
-horror of the wasted lives of many women, of
-their capabilities and sympathies which were meant to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-enrich the lives of others, degraded by misuse or disuse
-into positively harmful activities. After Queen’s College
-had been opened for some months he wrote, in words
-which some will recognise as a favourite quotation of
-Miss Beale’s, ‘the fate of some victim of a conventional
-marriage, or of a life of celibacy ending in deranged
-health, is particularly sad and pitiful. Like the daughters
-of Pandarus who, after being nurtured by the goddesses
-and fed on honey and incense by the Graces, are snatched
-away by the Harpies, “And doomed for all their loving
-eyes, To serve the Furies who hate constantly.”’</p>
-
-<p>Miles Beale was among those who shared such
-thoughts for women. It was his aim to give his
-daughters every opportunity to cultivate their minds
-and pursue any path of knowledge they should desire.
-Above all, he wished that they should not regard marriage
-as a necessity.</p>
-
-<p>The inaugural lecture on the opening of Queen’s
-College was delivered by the Rev. F. D. Maurice, the
-first Head of the College, on Wednesday, March 29,
-1848. As his inspiring but stern words fell upon the
-ears of Dorothea Beale, we may well believe that the
-sense of vocation which must early have grown for her
-out of her natural dutifulness, became to her more
-clearly shaped. Certainly, in reading them now, we feel
-we are tracing back to its source a stream of that thought
-with which she herself in due time awed and inspired
-many a young teacher. ‘The vocation of a teacher is
-an awful one; you cannot do her real good, she will do
-others unspeakable harm if she is not aware of its usefulness.
-Merely to supply her with necessaries, merely to
-assist her in procuring them for herself ... is not fitting
-her for her work. You may but confirm her in the
-notion that the training of an immortal spirit may be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-just as lawfully undertaken in a case of emergency as
-that of selling ribbands. How can you give a woman
-self-respect, how can you win for her the respect of
-others, in whom such a notion or any modification of it
-dwells? Your business is by all means to dispossess
-her of it; to make her feel the greatness of her work,
-and yet to show her that it can be honestly performed.’</p>
-
-<p>The speaker went on to deal with the word ‘Accomplishments,’
-a word which at that time was supposed to
-cover the whole of a woman’s education; and he pleaded
-that something more than finish, something substantial
-and elementary was needed for those whose duty was
-‘to watch closely the first utterances of infancy, the first
-dawnings of intelligence;—how thoughts spring into
-acts, how acts pass into habits. Surely they ought,
-above all others, to feel that the truths which lie nearest
-to us are the most wonderful ... that study is not
-worth much if it is not busy about the roots of things.’</p>
-
-<p>Again, with what responsive if silent joy must the
-girl who had toiled alone at Euclid and Algebra have
-heard his encouraging words on Mathematics, then held
-to be an unfeminine pursuit. ‘To regard numbers with
-the kind of wonder with which a child regards them, to
-feel that when we are learning the laws of number we
-are looking into the very laws of the universe,—this
-makes the study of exceeding worth to the mind and
-character; yet it does not create the least impatience of
-ordinary occupations; ... on the contrary ... it helps
-us to know that nothing is mean but what is false.’</p>
-
-<p>The concluding thoughts of Mr. Maurice’s address
-must be familiar to Cheltenham pupils: ‘The teacher
-in every department, if he does his duty, will admonish
-his pupils that they are not to make fashion, or public
-opinion, their rule ... that if these are their ends, they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-will not be sincere in their work or do it well....
-Colleges for men and women ... exist to testify that
-opinion is not the God they ought to worship.’ We can
-hardly realise, after nearly sixty years of the liberal
-education won for us largely through this first concerted
-effort of earnest men and women, the trembling joy and
-diffidence of those pupils,—some of them mere girls,
-some already themselves engaged in the work of teaching,—who
-formed the first classes in Harley Street. We have
-become so accustomed to the new order of things then
-inaugurated, that their allusions to Tennyson’s <cite>Princess</cite>,
-their fear of being regarded as <i lang="fr">outré</i> seem to us almost
-self-conscious and unnecessary. Professor Maurice
-opened his address with an apology for the word ‘College’;
-on another occasion he spoke of the project as ‘equally
-extravagant if not equally imaginative with that lately set
-forth by our great poet.’ Miss Wedgwood recalls dismay
-under the ‘witless laughter roused by the mention of the
-College after I had been its pupil for more than a year.’</p>
-
-<p>Nor was this all. A more annoying opposition took
-shape in articles in the <cite>Quarterly</cite> in which the theological
-opinions of the lecturers were attacked. The
-writer found fault in the first place on such points
-as these: the early age of admission was likely to
-lead to desultory education; the absence of proper
-framework and machinery, and the want of proper
-authority were to be deplored; the low rate of payment
-might lead governesses availing themselves of the
-classes to get by their means a smattering of knowledge.
-He then proceeded to attack the professors for a ‘sort
-of modified Pantheism and Latitudinarianism prevailing
-in their so-called theology,’ adding that the lecturer on
-English Composition distinguished himself above the
-rest of his company by the ‘Germanisms embroidered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-on his prose.’ Mr. Laing took up a vigorous pen to
-answer the <cite>Quarterly</cite>, and in defence of Maurice,
-Kingsley, and the rest, exclaimed: ‘These men are
-doing a righteous and godly work in the face of heaven
-and earth.’</p>
-
-<p>It is a wonderful history. Remarkable, too, were the
-women and girls who seized the advantages offered
-them, who were waiting almost literally for the College
-doors to be opened. Mrs. Davenport, then Miss Sarah
-Woodman, records with natural pride the fact that she
-was the first pupil. She was quickly followed by Miss
-King, and we may be sure that the three Miss Beales
-were not far behind them.</p>
-
-<p>Among the earliest pupils beside those already named,
-were Miss Buss, Miss Frances Martin, Miss Jex-Blake,
-Miss Elizabeth Gilbert, and Miss Adelaide Anne
-Procter, whose simple holland dress without ornament,
-bands of dark hair, pale complexion, and regular features
-are noted for us by a young fellow-student, Miss
-Wardell. And the teachers were worthy of the pupils.
-Among the lecturers and examiners were the Rev. F. D.
-Maurice, the Rev. E. H. Plumptre, afterwards Dean
-of Wells, the translator of Dante, the Rev. Charles
-Kingsley, the Rev. R. C. Trench, then Dean of Westminster,
-afterwards Archbishop of Dublin, John Hullah,
-W. Sterndale Bennett, Dr. Brewer the historian, Professors
-Bernays and Brasseur. These are well-known
-names, but there were many others almost forgotten
-to-day, who were interesting and inspiring teachers.
-There were no lady-teachers at first, but Miss Beale
-enumerates with grateful words a staff of lady-visitors,
-‘who undertook, of course gratuitously, the often burdensome
-duty of chaperoning. Lady Stanley of Alderley,
-stately and beautiful all her life, but especially then;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-Mrs. Wedgwood, the daughter of Sir James Mackintosh,
-so clever and kind, whom everybody liked; Miss
-Elizabeth Twining, Lady Monteagle, and Lady Page
-Wood were often present; and a Mrs. Hayes, of
-whom I have lost sight, was one of the most diligent. I
-never happened to meet Lady Canning, she went to
-India almost immediately.’</p>
-
-<p>Before tracing Miss Beale’s own connection with
-Queen’s, it is worth while to read the following letters
-written to her by Miss Buss in 1889, in which the
-working of the College, especially with regard to the
-evening classes, is shown in a detailed and personal way:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right"><i>January 13, 1889.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Queen’s College was distinctly an outcome of the Governesses’
-Benevolent Institution. It was found that governesses
-living in the Home in Harley Street were often very ignorant,
-and Mr. Laing, a University man himself, asked some of the
-King’s College professors to give some lectures to the ladies
-living in the Home, so that they might be better informed when
-leaving to take a situation. The professors responded, some
-lectures were given, but it soon became evident that outsiders
-must be admitted to help to pay expenses—so the College was
-opened in 1848....</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr. Laing kept his original idea before him, and soon induced
-some of the professors to give, free of charge, courses of evening
-lectures to women actually engaged in teaching. I was a
-member at the very outset, being the youngest woman then
-attending the evening lectures. A very able man, Mr. Clark,
-Principal of Battersea, gave a splendid course of Geography lectures
-(of England, I think), Mr. Cock took Arithmetic, Mr.
-Brewer, Latin translation—he was a first-rate teacher. Some
-one else took Latin Grammar, Mr. Laing gave Scripture. The
-first term I attended six nights a week, the second, four.
-F. D. Maurice took Elizabethan Literature somewhat later;
-Trench gave his lectures on English from his manuscript notes,
-and how delightful they were! English Past and Present, etc.
-I do not remember Kingsley, I was not introduced to him until
-many years after. Nicolay gave Ancient History, and was not
-popular....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Queen’s College began the Women’s Education Movement
-undoubtedly, but it became conservative, and did not grow....
-There was a Rev. A. B. Strettel, who taught grammar
-well, but only to the day-students, I think. Recalling the old
-days in this way takes one back to one’s youth. Queen’s
-College opened a new life to me, I mean intellectually. To
-come in contact with the minds of such men was indeed
-delightful, and it was a new experience to me and to most of
-the women who were fortunate enough to become students....
-Believe me, as always, yours affectionately and admiringly,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Frances M. Buss</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In reply to some questions from Miss Beale in answer
-to the above, Miss Buss wrote again on January 17,
-1889:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The day classes were of course attended by girls and women
-from outside. I attended the evening classes in 1849. Our
-school was opened in 1850, and then as we began with sixty
-girls, and ended the first quarter with eighty, I had not time to
-attend and work as I had done before. Mr. Laing always
-wanted to help women teachers, and he was strong enough to
-get the King’s College men to teach governesses gratuitously in
-the evening, each professor only attending one night in the
-week. The men had plenty of work and pay for their day
-lectures. The evening classes went on for some time, and
-were very well attended by women, all of whom were teaching.
-Some of these women (I among them) presented themselves for
-the irregularly conducted examinations, for which certificates
-were offered. Each professor did as he liked, he saw the
-candidate alone—at any rate in my case it was so—told her to
-write answers to questions set by him, asked a few <i lang="la">vivâ voce</i>
-questions, and then gave a certificate. No papers were printed,
-therefore no one could know what line the examiner would take.
-I have three of these certificates. Later, the examination became
-more formal and more valuable; a sort of standard was created.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Dorothea Beale was, as a matter of fact, strictly a
-pupil of Queen’s College for an even shorter time than
-her great contemporary. But there for the first time she
-obtained the object of her ambition—mathematical training,
-given by Mr. Astley Cock. Of this she characteristically
-remarked, ‘as the class was small I could go at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-my own pace. The work was however elementary, and
-as I had read a good deal alone, I found private lessons
-necessary.... I read with him privately Trigonometry,
-Conics, and the Differential Calculus.’ After a time
-Miss Beale was asked to help in teaching mathematics,
-and in 1849 was appointed the first lady mathematical
-tutor. ‘I had the <i lang="fr">entrée</i> of any class I liked, being
-tutor, and attended at various times—Latin, Greek,
-German, and Mental Science.’ She speaks also of the
-delight she had ‘at the opening of a Greek class by
-Professor Plumptre. The class, it is true, languished
-and died in less than two years. For nearly a year it
-consisted of myself and a friend, and most thoroughly
-did we enjoy reading Plato and Sophocles under such a
-teacher.’ Miss Beale also much enjoyed an interesting
-German literature class held by Dr. Bernays.<a name="FNanchor_19" id="FNanchor_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> The
-formal reports of progress made, of attendance, and
-even of good conduct at the classes may still be seen.
-The attendance, it goes without saying, was always
-regular, the conduct very good, and the progress most
-satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>In 1854 Mr. Plumptre required help with the Latin
-tuition, and asked Miss Beale to take a junior class. In
-the same year she was offered the post of head teacher in
-the school under Miss Parry, from whom she says she
-received ‘much kindness, and learned from her many
-valuable lessons; we travelled abroad together during
-one long vacation.’</p>
-
-<p>Queen’s College, both by the tuition it afforded, and
-the experience it gave in teaching and managing classes,
-was an important factor in Dorothea Beale’s training
-for her life’s work. There was a yet further advantage
-in its certificates. Miss Beale and her sisters, like Miss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-Buss and others engaged in the work of education, desired
-and obtained from the College diplomas certifying their
-ability to teach. These were obtained by examinations,
-which in the earliest days were conducted in the manner
-described in Miss Buss’s letter already quoted. Miss
-Dorothea Beale herself spoke with unmitigated pleasure
-of her first examination conducted by Professor Maurice.
-‘The <i lang="la">vivâ voce</i> was a delightful conversation; he led us
-on by his sympathetic manner and kindly appreciation,
-so that we hardly remembered he was an examiner’;
-and she says later, ‘I remember to this day what a
-pleasant hour we had of <i lang="la">vivâ voce</i>; his wonderful power
-of intellectual sympathy came out, and made us forget
-that we were being examined; he seemed to take pleasure
-in following up our thoughts on the bearings of the
-history we had read, so that it appeared we were holding
-a delightful conversation on the subject. Again, in
-speaking of language, he wanted not merely formal and
-conventional grammar, and showed such pleasure when a
-grammatical definition was enlarged beyond the scope of
-ordinary school-books.’</p>
-
-<p>It should be remembered that the examination which
-proved to be so ‘delightful’ was on the result of her own
-private reading encouraged by home sympathy, and a
-few public lectures. The questions asked were of wide
-scope; some were quite simple, almost superficial;
-others were framed so as to draw upon intelligence or a
-reserve of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>The educational certificates of sixty years ago, the
-first ever given, have a great and touching interest for
-those who love to follow the development of intellectual
-advance. The simple way in which the advantages
-offered by the examinations held by the Committee of
-Queen’s College are set forth speaks of effort and hope,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-unconnected with the school routine and studied preparation
-made necessary by the large and complicated
-system of the present day. Below the lists of Patrons,
-Committee, and Lady Visitors, it is stated that the
-Committee is prepared to give certificates in any of
-the following subjects: The knowledge of Scripture;
-English Grammar and Literature; History, Ancient or
-Modern; French, German, Italian, Latin, Greek,
-Hebrew, etc.; Music, Vocal or Instrumental; Arithmetic,
-Algebra, Geometry; Geography, Geology,
-Natural Philosophy, Botany, etc.; Drawing, Painting
-in any style; Principles and Methods of Teaching.
-To this truly magnificent offer,—infinite indeed if
-any value is to be attributed to ‘etc.’—is attached the
-note: ‘As it would be absurd to suppose that any
-governess could combine all these varied subjects, the
-List is offered, that Parents may select those to which
-they attach most importance; and may observe how the
-certificates meet their wishes.’</p>
-
-<p>Miss Dorothea Beale obtained six of these certificates,
-and four of the later ones, granted under slightly
-different conditions. The first, dated June 12, 1848,
-for English Literature and English Grammar, states
-that the examiner, Professor Maurice, is of opinion
-that Miss Dorothea Beale ‘has shown much intelligence,
-and a very satisfactory acquaintance with these
-subjects.’ The diploma bears also, as do the other
-certificates, the signature of Mr. Laing, the Honorary
-Secretary, and of the Rev. C. F. Nicolay, Deputy Chairman,
-and afterwards called Dean of Queen’s College.
-Mr. Nicolay was also Librarian of King’s College. The
-next certificate, for French, is only three days later
-in date, June 15, 1848. On this, Professor Isidore
-Brasseur states that he considers Miss Dorothea Beale<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-‘well qualified to teach that language (which she speaks
-fluently, having acquired it in France) theoretically and
-by practice.’ The two diplomas gained in December
-of the same year are of even greater interest for her
-pupils at Cheltenham. The first of these, dated December
-11, 1848, and signed by the Rev. Thomas Jackson,
-Principal of the Battersea Training College, who had
-examined her in the Principles and Method of Teaching,
-states that ‘she has paid praiseworthy attention to
-the subject, and is likely to become an accomplished
-teacher.’ We note the office of the examiner. Already
-then, in 1848, itself a mere infant, elementary education
-was giving the lead in this important subject; for when
-at last, after a long day of desultory and often unfruitful
-toil, those who were the professed teachers of the
-rich sought to learn the meaning and methods of their
-work, they found that they could only do so in England
-from the teachers of the poor.</p>
-
-<p>The date of the next certificate, December 26,
-shows how much these diplomas were dependent on
-voluntary and individual attention, and opportunity on
-the part of the examiners. This, signed by Professor
-Plumptre, states that in her knowledge of Holy Scripture,
-Miss Dorothea Beale exhibits ‘a very intimate
-knowledge of its history and Scripture.’ On January
-16, of the following year, a certificate for Geography
-was signed by Mr. Nicolay, who is of opinion that ‘she
-has studied the subject carefully in its details, and that
-her knowledge in its various branches is satisfactory.’</p>
-
-<p>In November 1850 Miss Beale received from her
-mathematical tutor, the Rev. T. Cock, a certificate of
-efficiency in Arithmetic, Geometry, Algebra, and Trigonometry.
-He is of opinion that ‘she has acquired a sound
-knowledge of the first principles of these four subjects,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-showing considerable ingenuity in the application of
-them to examples and problems; that she possesses the
-power of defining and distinguishing with clearness and
-brevity, and that appreciation of mathematical reasoning
-which, if further cultivated, will enable her to study
-with success those treatises on Natural Philosophy which
-require a knowledge of the exact sciences.’</p>
-
-<p>In 1855, after the certificates had become classified,
-this diploma was exchanged for a first-class certificate.
-And in the course of these later years she received two
-other first-class certificates, one for Latin, and one for
-German; and, for pianoforte playing, a second-class
-certificate, signed by W. Sterndale Bennett. For this
-was required the performance of the more important
-sonatas of Mozart (without accompaniments), the early
-sonatas of Beethoven, the ‘Lieder ohne Worte’ of
-Mendelssohn, and Cramer’s Studies. This must have
-been for Dorothea Beale a period of happy and fruitful
-life and work, during which her interests enlarged in
-many directions. The connection with Queen’s College
-brought much congenial acquaintance, while at home
-she was working vigorously at German and still following
-the classical work of her brothers.</p>
-
-<p>In 1851 Miss Beale’s family removed to 31 Finsbury
-Square, then a great medical centre; thirty-one houses
-were occupied by medical men. There were friends to
-share her aims and interests. Among these we specially
-note Mrs. Blenkarne and Miss Elizabeth Alston. To
-the first of these Dorothea confided her hopes and aims,
-and gained from her sympathy and help, a boon she
-never forgot. The links of the friendship so begun
-ran on throughout her life. Mrs. Blenkarne’s daughters
-and great nieces were educated at Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p>In Elizabeth Alston Dorothea had a friend of her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-own age—a friend who survives to tell of the many
-happy hours the young girls spent together, of the
-books they read and discussed, their philanthropic
-works, and dreams of good. Dorothea, always
-fond of teaching, gladly instructed her friends. Miss
-Alston learned from her to read St. Mark in Greek,
-and in return taught her to sing. ‘We would linger
-long at the piano, as I sought to make her convey by
-her singing the depth of meaning in the words, “But
-the Lord is mindful of his own.” She told me it was a
-revelation to her.’</p>
-
-<p>As late as 1902 Miss Beale wrote to that friend of
-her youth: ‘I think with gratitude of those lessons you
-gave me in singing; this, I believe, has helped much
-to make me able to teach without fatigue. “In questa
-tomba oscura” was fine for a chest voice. I suppose
-you are as much interested in music as ever.’ And in
-1903, with an allusion to those designs on all knowledge
-which the friends had shared, she wrote: ‘Sanscrit
-is very fascinating; my Sanscrit studies were cut
-short by my coming here.’</p>
-
-<p>The vacations of this period were spent sometimes
-at watering-places like Brighton, or Blackheath, where
-she would be in charge of the younger members of the
-family. To this day is remembered her conscientious
-way of taking them for a walk with her watch in her
-hand. Sometimes she went to Germany or Switzerland,
-where she took every opportunity of studying schools
-and methods of education. She was most happy in her
-work. The actual teaching, apart from the subject, was
-in itself a delight. That power of inspiration which she
-held should be one of the gifts a teacher should earnestly
-covet, was already hers. This was felt not only by the
-elder pupils, whose minds under her guidance opened to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-the interests of Latin and mathematics. The children
-in the school knew it also. An unexpected tribute from
-one of these once reached Miss Beale, when the parent
-of a pupil wrote: ‘I have just learned from my little
-girl that the Lady Principal of the Cheltenham Ladies’
-College was my dear and valued teacher of olden days,
-at Queen’s College.... I assure you I have never
-ceased to cherish a warm affection for you, and I have
-never forgotten your great kindness to me in Harley
-Street.’ In 1905, at the time of the College jubilee,
-one who had been a child pupil of Miss Beale’s wrote
-to her: ‘The few months during which I was under
-your tuition more than fifty years ago were an epoch
-to me. Young as I was, I ever afterwards judged
-teaching by the standard set by yours, and very seldom
-indeed, I may truly say, has it been subsequently
-reached. The fifty years that have since passed, full
-as they have been, have never effaced the impression
-then received, both of your teaching and of something
-more comprehensive than teaching, which contact with
-you engendered, and which impels me to take this
-opportunity—late in the day as it is—to express and
-to thank you for.... I had a most keen desire to
-visit Cheltenham and the buildings and institutions
-which embody in so grand a manner the impress which
-my childish mind received.’</p>
-
-<p>There is also ample evidence that the professors and
-lady-visitors of the College highly esteemed Miss Beale’s
-work there. ‘The flattering regard in which you are
-held at Queen’s,’ wrote her father to her just after she
-had left the College, are words fully justified by other
-letters which exist.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear that this spring of work was full of hope
-and delight, as well as of scrupulous effort. Dorothea<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-Beale possessed at this time a growing confidence in her
-own powers, educational ideals which were slowly shaping
-themselves, and a consciousness of her fitness for the
-work on which she was engaged.</p>
-
-<p>Then, at the end of 1856, the connection with Queen’s
-College came rather abruptly to an end by Miss Beale’s
-own wish. She appears to have been some time feeling
-that there was a tendency for the whole administration
-of the College to get too much into the hands of one
-person; and that there was consequently not enough
-scope for that womanly influence which she felt to be so
-important where the education of young girls is concerned.
-She returned to her work after the summer holiday of
-1856—a holiday spent in visiting Swiss and German
-schools—to find the power of the lady-visitors more
-restricted than ever. In fact, she said, ‘the time had
-come when it could be truly said, “the lady-visitors
-have no power.”’ As she was not in a position to
-effect the changes she desired, she sent in her resignation,
-and her friend and fellow-teacher, Miss Rowley,
-did the same. The actual moment for doing this in
-November seems to have been decided for Miss Beale
-by hearing she could obtain the post of head-teacher at
-Casterton.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s connection with Queen’s College had
-been long and close, and her gratitude to it was so great
-that she hoped to be allowed to resign without explanation.
-This was during the headship of Dr. Plumptre.
-When Miss Beale’s resignation reached him, he urged
-her to make the reasons for it known, and his letter on
-the subject shows something of the consideration in
-which she was held.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘If there is an evil which cannot be remedied, are you right
-in leaving those to whom the welfare of the College is very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-dear to all the discomfort of feeling or imagining that there is
-something amiss without giving them any clue to that which,
-whatever it be, has been at all important enough to lead you to
-resign? Are you right in exposing the College itself to the
-consequence of the construction which will inevitably be put
-upon your conduct—whether that construction be true or false?
-I may form three or four conjectures as to the motives that
-have led you to this decision—but it is all guess work—I think
-the decision itself to be deplored. We shall lose an able and
-earnest fellow-worker. You will lose a position of great usefulness—you
-give up a work to which you have been called and
-opportunities of doing good. I believe that these lamentable
-results might have been avoided, but it is too late for this; there
-is at any rate time for the openness which, I think, we have a
-right to look for.</p>
-
-<p>‘I will not end without thanking you for your consideration
-in calling to tell me what you had done, and for all the assistance
-you have given me in my College work.—I am, yours most
-sincerely,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">E. H. Plumptre</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale finally gave the desired explanation with
-full detail and this preface:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Before consenting to answer any questions, I think it right
-that we should state that when we sent in our resignation, we
-naturally supposed we should be allowed to do so without being
-required to give any reasons.</p>
-
-<p>‘It was only after several weeks of resistance that, at the
-earnest appeal of Mr. Plumptre, who placed it before us as a
-moral duty, that we at last reluctantly consented to speak to
-him and to the Lady Visitors. From the course we adopted, I
-think you will see we are prompted [solely] ... by a desire for
-the good of a College in which we feel the warmest interest.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The defects she deplored—pioneer mistakes she called
-them later—were then enumerated in detail, and she
-dwelt especially on the hindrance to education caused by
-so much authority being left to one individual, who
-could not possibly be in a position to know the abilities
-and standard of work of every pupil. Much harm, she
-pleaded, had been done</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">‘by withdrawing pupils from the school, compelling them without
-my consent and contrary to the wishes of their parents to
-attend College classes, although they are unable to spell correctly
-and are ignorant of the first principles of grammar; classes in
-which you know it is impossible to give that individual attention
-required by children of twelve, who, owing to the rank from
-which so many of our pupils are now derived, are singularly
-deficient in mental training, and require to be obliged in extra
-time to do work given them; to be trained, watched, educated
-by ladies (who alone can understand, and therefore truly educate)
-girls. My pupils in the school are not removed by competent
-professors who understand the subjects there taught. The
-instruction which is in itself good, and if given four or five
-years later would be beneficial, has been rendered useless.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On learning Miss Beale’s reasons for leaving, and that
-her decision was irrevocable, Mr. Plumptre wrote: ‘I
-wish to state at once that I believe most thoroughly that
-what you have done has been done conscientiously because
-it seemed to you—painful as it was—to be in the line of
-duty.’ But before this letter reached her, Dorothea had
-accepted another post, that of head-teacher in the Clergy
-Daughters’ School at Casterton.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-<span class="smaller">CASTERTON</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent4">‘O lift your natures up:</div>
-<div class="verse">Embrace our aims.’</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="attr"><span class="smcap">Tennyson</span>, <cite>The Princess</cite>, ii.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>‘It was a year full of great suffering mingled with a
-peace which the world cannot give.... I look on this
-as one of the most profitable years of my life, but I could
-not long have borne the strain of work and anxiety.’</p>
-
-<p>Thus, long after, when in the distance of years the
-events of earlier life could be seen in their relation to
-each other and to the future, Miss Beale wrote of the
-year at Casterton. But she did not often speak of it.
-To the end it gave her pain to go in thought over that
-time of loneliness and strain. Even late in life, if she
-entered into conversation about it, she would turn from
-the subject saying it distressed her too much; ‘some
-other time she would try’ to speak of it. But, none the
-less, she knew she had gained much at Casterton. She, who
-was ever ready to learn from mistakes, from pain, from
-adverse circumstances, gratefully acknowledged her debt
-to all that had shown her the real difficulties of her vocation,
-and her own weakness, and which had deepened her
-consciousness of the only source of strength. Some lives
-are led so much at haphazard, that it really hardly appears
-to matter whether at any given period they have taken
-one direction or another. In the lives of those who, like
-Dorothea Beale, are always conscious of an over-ruling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-and ordering Power, every year is not only known, but
-seen to have its place. The very errors, nay failures, are
-sunk deep into the foundations to become supports to
-the House of Life which, under the direction of the
-Master Builder, is rendered more stately with each added
-touch of Time. Hence, this year—not a successful one,
-as success is generally reckoned—has its special interest.</p>
-
-<p>It was a year in which she learned much, not only
-about herself individually, but of feminine human nature
-in general. Those matters which she longed—and
-longed ineffectually at the time—to re-arrange in the
-system and time-tables she found existing at Casterton,
-prepared her for the organisation of the great school
-to which she was shortly afterwards to be called.
-Daily contact with many, who were more or less out of
-sympathy with her, must have been useful for one whose
-work was largely to be in the direction of influence on
-women and girls of varying natures and opinions. Doubtless
-the very loneliness of the position was bracing to her
-sensitive nature. ‘Above all,’ she had written to Mr.
-Plumptre when she accepted it, ‘it involves leaving home.’
-She had seen from the first how hard a trial this would be
-to her, but strength and insight were won out of the
-suffering it cost.</p>
-
-<p>The manuscript account from which the opening words
-of this chapter are taken, and which has been quoted
-before, was written many years ago. As late as 1905
-Miss Beale wrote to Canon Burton, the present vicar of
-Casterton and chaplain to the school, that she felt she
-owed much to it, and ‘in grateful remembrance of her
-connection with it’ founded a scholarship from the school
-to Cheltenham. The first Casterton-Beale scholar is
-now at the Ladies’ College.</p>
-
-<p>There were many reasons why Dorothea Beale could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-neither be happy nor rightly appreciated at Casterton in
-1857. She went at a difficult moment when the school
-had not recovered from the relaxed discipline consequent
-on the troubles of the year before. There had been a
-serious outbreak of scarlet fever, the Lady Superintendent
-herself being one of the victims. The head-teacher had
-left in September, and it was not convenient to supply
-her place before the end of the half-year. The ‘School
-for Clergymen’s Daughters’ is one, like many others, of
-which it is the reverse of disparagement to say that its
-present is far above its past. And it is permissible to
-think that if Miss Beale had found herself in any other
-large boarding-school of the period, she would have
-encountered many of the same difficulties and disappointments
-as those which beset her life at Casterton. Of
-this school she wrote much later, describing it as she felt
-it to be when she was there, that it was ‘in an unhealthy
-state. There was a spirit of open irreligion and a spirit
-of defiance very sad to witness; but the constant restraints,
-the monotonous life, the want of healthy amusements
-were in a great measure answerable for this.’<a name="FNanchor_20" id="FNanchor_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> A strange
-tale this to us, who know of the walks and rambles, the
-games and matches enjoyed by the girls of Casterton
-to-day.</p>
-
-<p>But the causes of her dissatisfaction were by no means
-due entirely to the school, for the engagement seems to
-have been entered upon on Miss Beale’s part without
-a real understanding of all that it involved. Her father
-hints this when he writes, ‘perhaps we were to blame
-in not learning more.’ She was engaged, not by the
-Lady Superintendent, but by a member of the Committee,
-who probably did not explain matters so fully as a woman
-might have done. The work was taken up in a moment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-of impulse, as if she were glad of the opportunity it
-suggested of sending in her resignation to Queen’s
-College, instead of waiting till Christmas, as she had at
-first intended. Those who knew her best did not expect
-her to be happy in it. Mr. Plumptre wrote: ‘I am glad
-to hear you have found so important a work before you
-as that at Casterton. It may have altered within the last
-few years, as otherwise I should not have thought its
-tone, religious as well as social, likely to be congenial to
-you.’</p>
-
-<p>She had never lived away from home for any length of
-time. The short periods of school life had been shared
-with sisters. The north was an unknown land with
-which the Beale family had no connection. She knew
-nothing of country life. She would be entirely among
-strangers, and that alone, for a shy and sensitive nature,
-is often a great trial, while boarding-school life, such as
-existed at Casterton, was practically unknown to her. The
-salary was smaller than what she had received at Queen’s
-College. But in leaving Queen’s College she lost far
-more than salary. There she had been a beloved teacher,
-a valued tutor whose resignation was deplored; at Casterton
-she was simply a new governess. Her judgment
-was surely at fault in thus hastily and almost impulsively
-accepting such a post. Though she may have greeted
-the offer as guidance in her difficulty about leaving
-Queen’s, she must have known that at Casterton it would
-be impossible for her to work in accord with religious
-opinions which were alien to her; also that in going so
-far she was cutting off much that was congenial and
-delightful from her life—such as home, friends, libraries,
-lectures.</p>
-
-<p>Though Mr. Beale obviously doubted if his daughter
-could be happy in the atmosphere of Casterton, he did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-not fail to perceive the ideal side of the work there.
-Appreciating the aims and generosity of the founders of
-the school, he held that from the great advantages it
-offered, it ought to become a national institution. She
-too went to her post there in something of a missionary
-spirit. Her success with her classes, and with pupils of
-different ages, justified her in feeling that she would be
-able to introduce fresh and better methods, while the
-very fact that a teacher of her individual experience had
-been chosen pointed to the belief that the authorities were
-anxious to bring the school into line with the advance of
-women’s education.</p>
-
-<p>Casterton is a small village, near Kirby Lonsdale, in
-Westmoreland, where that county touches Lancashire
-and Yorkshire. Even to-day railway communication is
-defective, and the country thinly populated, so that the
-school in its isolated position is constrained to be as self-sufficing
-as possible. The beauty of its surroundings
-may surely be reckoned among its advantages, for it is
-placed amid lovely country within sight of Ingleborough.
-Members of the school speak with delight of rambles
-over the surrounding fells. Perhaps Miss Beale’s habit
-of thinking over her lessons out of doors began here,
-for she afterwards told Miss Alston of the long lonely
-walks she used to take at Casterton.</p>
-
-<p>This well-known school was founded in 1823 by Mr.
-Carus Wilson in order to help the clergy of the Church of
-England, principally those of the northern dioceses. Many
-of the clergy of the north were known to be absolutely
-unable to provide any education for their children, who at
-home led the simplest life with bare necessaries only.
-Several of these were received, boarded, educated, and
-partially clothed free, and the terms for all were ludicrously
-small. These facts should be remembered when comment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-is made upon the régime at Casterton, or at Cowan Bridge,
-where the school was originally placed, a position far less
-favourable and healthy than its present one.</p>
-
-<p>It should also be remembered that Dorothea Beale
-had never herself known what it was to be poor; she
-could hardly realise, for instance, the comfort that might
-exist in the uniform school dress for children whose
-parents were actually too poor to provide them with
-proper clothing.</p>
-
-<p>As an institution the school was destined not only to
-assist the poor clergy, but, springing as it did from
-devoted religious effort, to save souls and promote the
-highest kind of education. It was from the first definitely
-associated with those ‘Calvinistic opinions’ on
-account of which the Bishop of Chester had rejected its
-founder for ordination in 1814.<a name="FNanchor_21" id="FNanchor_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> The dark horror of
-Calvinism, permitted doubtless as a scourge after much
-open irreligion and careless living, was in mercy overruled
-in countless instances for the conviction of sin,
-and generally to prepare the way for a wider and more
-comprehending acceptance of the grace which is in
-Christ Jesus. But its direct results on the education of
-the young were disastrous indeed. Hearts, by its
-agency, were turned to stone, or depressed into hopeless
-terror; worst of all, religious forms, phraseology, even
-emotions were assumed by those who were prone to self-deception,
-or over anxious to please.</p>
-
-<p>About 1845 Mr. Carus Wilson’s health broke down
-as a consequence of his unsparing and strenuous labours,
-and the management of his schools passed into the hands
-of others. In 1857 the Clergy Daughters’ School was
-governed by a Committee of six clergymen, all personal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-friends of the founder, men of good standing in the
-neighbourhood. Archdeacon Evans was Chairman.
-This Committee sought to obtain the best teachers possible
-for what was then—even more than now—an out-of-the-way
-place, as far as the centres of education were
-concerned. They also aimed at fitting the girls in the
-school to earn their own living.</p>
-
-<p>High testimonials were given to Miss Beale by the
-professors and lady-visitors of Queen’s College, on her
-appointment as head-teacher at Casterton. One from
-Prebendary Mackenzie is of special interest, as it shows
-that in accepting the work she had not in any way
-identified herself with the particular religious views then
-prevailing in the institution.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Westbourne College, Bayswater Road</span>, <i>November 1856</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am happy to be able to give very satisfactory replies to
-your enquiries respecting Miss D. Beale. She is a young lady
-of high moral and religious character, sober-minded and discreet.
-Her parents have been careful to avoid party views, and I have
-no doubt Miss Dorothea Beale is free from them. She certainly
-is a most conscientious person, with a deep sense of her religious
-responsibilities. I feel certain that her influence will always be
-for good.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Plumptre wrote to the Lady Superintendent:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am unwilling that (Miss Beale) should enter on her work
-at Casterton without your hearing from me ... the high
-opinion which I entertained both as to her attainments and her
-conscientiousness in discharging any duties that may be assigned
-her.... I am convinced that in receiving her at Casterton
-you will gain a fellow-worker in whose zeal and Christian principle
-you may place entire confidence.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And Mr. Denton:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I should esteem any institution fortunate that had her
-services. She is a person of quiet, sincere piety, and an intelligent
-Churchwoman.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Dorothea Beale went to Casterton on the Epiphany,
-January 6, 1857. Her diary of 1891 records the
-memory of this and of the Holy Eucharist at St.
-Bartholomew’s at six o’clock, before her long day’s
-journey, a journey which ended almost in terror, so
-alarming to this daughter of the City were the ‘high,
-wild hills and rough, uneven ways’ which had to be
-crossed between the railway station and the school.</p>
-
-<p>At first, as was natural, she seems to have thought
-she would like her work. Mrs. Wedgwood, writing to
-her in February, says: ‘I felt so much our loss in you
-that I could hardly join in the wishes of the lady-visitors
-of Queen’s that you might find your new work pleasant.
-However, I am truly glad now that you find your new
-home more agreeable than you had been led to expect,
-and that you think the children are happy, and times are
-unlike Jane Eyre.’</p>
-
-<p>Very soon the strain of teaching the large number
-of subjects required to be taught began to be felt. A
-less conscientious worker might have entered lightly
-upon these at a period when only the most superficial
-textbook knowledge was required; but to Dorothea
-Beale, to whom each lesson meant much preparation and
-thought, they soon became a burden. She said afterwards
-that the work left her no time for exercise or
-recreation, and not enough for sleep. She found herself
-expected to teach Scripture, arithmetic, mathematics,
-ancient, modern, and Church history, physical and
-political geography, English literature, grammar and
-composition, French, German, Latin, and Italian. Of
-the last she had written when she accepted the post: ‘I
-do not know much of Italian, I will, however, take
-lessons till Christmas.’</p>
-
-<p>It was obviously impossible for one person to teach all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-these subjects properly, and it is not surprising that Miss
-Beale soon wrote home that she found the work hard;
-she does not seem to have complained of anything else.
-She said, among other things, that she took eight Bible-classes
-every week, two of which consisted of about fifty
-girls at a time. Her father replied with the evident
-intention of bracing and cheering:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Employment is a blessed state, it is to the body what sleep
-is to the mind.... I cannot be sorry when I hear you are fully
-employed. I am sure it will be usefully, and then by and bye
-when the body and the mind alike have perished, and work and
-sleep are no longer needed, but the soul shall burst into existence,
-how shall we wonder at the willing slaves we have been
-during our probation, for the meat which perishes. You see I
-am thoughtful,—it is fit.... I feel I can bear your being so
-far and so entirely away, with some philosophy, and I am
-delighted that your letters bear the tone of contentment, and
-that you have been taken notice of by people who seem disposed
-to be kind to you.... You will see I have not a thing
-to tell you, and I cannot now write any more about thick
-coming fancies, but give an old man’s love to all your pupils,
-and may they make their Fathers as happy as you do. God
-bless you, my dear Dorothea.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This letter was written in March 1857. Shortly
-after came another for her birthday on the 21st, showing
-how much her absence from home was felt, and that the
-parents were doubtful if she were in the right place.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘God bless you and give you many happy birthdays. I fear
-the present is not one of the most agreeable; it is spent at least
-in the path of what you considered duty, and so will never be
-looked back upon but with pleasure.... Do not, however, my
-dear girl, think of remaining long in a position which may be
-irksome to you, for thus I think it will hardly be profitable to
-others, and indeed I question whether you would maintain your
-health where the employment was so great and duty the only
-stimulus to action. You have heard me often quote: “The
-hand’s best sinew ever is the heart.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In May another letter is evidently called forth by some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-expression of a longing to be at home, and perhaps by
-hints of difficulties from Dorothea.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>May 1857.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I think I feel the weeks go more slowly than you do. I
-long to see you again very much. I cannot get reconciled to
-your position and feel satisfied that it is your place.... God
-bless you, my dear girl, and blunt your feelings for the rubs of
-the world, and quicken your vision for the beautiful and unseen
-of the world above us.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The last words show how well her father knew the
-sensitive nature hurt even by trifles, and prone to take
-small matters too seriously.</p>
-
-<p>So the long half wore on, and we know, from some of
-the few who remain to tell, that Miss Beale was making
-her mark at Casterton. There were many there who
-could appreciate her careful work and inspiring lessons.
-Some found especially valuable her accurate teaching of
-Latin and mathematics, and the enormous pains she took
-to make her lessons intelligible to the dullest; never
-content to let them merely accept a given fact or
-explanation, but leading them on step by step to see and
-comprehend. Her literature classes, again, led some
-into a new world of ideas and thoughts, and they
-responded to the thrill of some noble and beautiful line
-which would cause their teacher’s eyes to fill with tears
-as she read. One, who was Miss Beale’s pupil in the
-first class at Casterton at this time, speaks of it with
-extreme gratitude:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I was seventeen, and had only had home teaching before.
-Great was the delight to be taught by one whom you felt to be
-complete mistress of any subject she undertook. I was a dunce
-at Arithmetic and Euclid. She cut slips of paper to illustrate
-the Pons Asinorum, etc., and with her aid I mastered the first
-book of Euclid, which has always been useful to me. Latin
-grammar we also learned from Miss Beale. She instilled strict
-accuracy by making us write verbs and declensions from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-memory. Out of class she showed us much friendliness, inviting
-us to her room in the evening, when sometimes she would
-read aloud to us, sometimes tell us about the students at Queen’s.
-It interested us to hear of those not very young ones who wore
-caps. Her appearance, as I remember it then, was charming.
-Her figure was of medium height. The rather pale oval face,
-high, broad forehead, large, expressive grey eyes, all showed
-intellectual character. Her dress was remarkable in its neatness.
-She wore black cashmere in the week, and a pretty,
-mouse-coloured grey dress on Sundays.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A little notebook remains to show how she prepared
-her lessons; how little she was content with repetition
-acquired by rote. There are also one or two little books
-of Scripture notes belonging to this time, interesting as
-the first of an immense series, marking the beginning of
-the work which was to be her great means of influence.
-One of these is on the Book of Proverbs, a book she
-never read again with a class; it was probably not her
-own choice at this time. The lessons she drew from it
-were of the most practical nature for daily life, and
-contain much teaching on true and false unworldliness.
-She had even then the satisfaction of knowing that her
-Bible teaching was acceptable to many. She wrote
-home: ‘Several of the first class make a practice of
-taking notes and afterwards copy them out into a book.
-This I never tell them to do, nor do I so far encourage
-it as to look at the notes after they are written. In the
-lower part of the school I do not allow them to take
-notes without special permission.’</p>
-
-<p>Some notes on the Church services show traces of the
-pain she felt over instances of irreverence which she had
-seen in the school. Those who remember the almost
-awful silence in which Miss Beale’s Scripture lessons
-at Cheltenham were given, how she wished it to signify
-the humility and reverence of spirit necessary for those
-who would study God’s Word, can understand how she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-must have suffered when she saw flippant and careless
-behaviour at prayers and Bible classes.</p>
-
-<p>Amongst the numbers of children, many who had
-been comparatively untaught before they were brought
-into this continual round of religious exercise, it is not
-surprising to find that there were some who disliked the
-appeal made to heart and conscience, and who found
-this strict sense of reverence irksome. There was even
-one naughty girl who in these first days refused to
-attend Miss Beale’s classes.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear that Miss Beale conveyed to her classes and
-to her fellow-workers, that she had come to Casterton in
-a missionary spirit. Though there were many who
-could appreciate her sacrifice in doing this, it placed her
-at a disadvantage with others. She knew herself to be
-in the forefront of women’s education, she knew that
-this school, for all the excellent intention of the authorities,
-could not be abreast of the movement; but she
-failed to realise, until she personally experienced it, that
-a self-appointed guide is not always welcomed.</p>
-
-<p>In the summer holidays, which Miss Beale spent at
-home, it was noticed that she was much depressed. The
-second half-year’s work began in August. Doubtless
-she had talked over her difficulties, and her parents
-knew that she might soon give up her work. Soon
-after her return she seems to have written very strongly
-about things she would have liked to alter. Especially
-was she troubled by the low tone prevailing, the want of
-respect for authority, the mischief making and unhealthy
-friendships. She found this important school through
-which pious intention and effort strove to help the very
-poorest by protecting them from all dangerous influences,
-by instilling definite religious opinions of a certain type,
-by giving such an education as should be an effective<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-means of livelihood, very far from being the ideal
-college of her dreams. She began to specify her dissatisfaction
-and to form ideas for radical improvement.
-She thought its isolation against it, and that it was a
-drawback to have only one class of girls; she felt there
-should have been more communication with home,—some
-of the children did not even go home for the
-holidays;—that the life was too monotonous and uniform.
-Above all she deprecated a repressive system
-which had punishments but no prizes; a system in
-which all the virtues were negative, the highest obtainable
-being obedience to the ever-repeated ‘Thou shalt
-not.’</p>
-
-<p>It was not possible for Dorothea Beale to see anything
-wrong, and to act as if in any way consenting to it, by
-going on quietly with her own share like one not called
-upon to take a leading part. She felt that steps might
-be taken to improve some of the matters which distressed
-her, and after efforts which seemed to her ineffectual, she
-sought an interview with the Committee. Her father was
-kept fully informed of what she was thinking and striving
-to do, as may be seen by the following extracts from his
-letters to her:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>1857.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I think we must be content to wait, at any rate for the
-present, and see if any good comes from your interview with the
-Committee. You notice two points chiefly,—the low moral
-tone of the school, and the absence of prizes. The want of
-sympathy and love (the great source of woman’s influence in
-every condition of life) was the prominent feature of the establishment
-in my mind, after talking it over with you. But
-nothing can flourish if love be not the ruling incentive, and this
-must be awakened by the teacher and Principal showing that
-for it they sacrifice any consideration of self. This I know my
-dear girl, you entirely do, and you do it ineffectually, nay,
-perhaps worse than uselessly, if you are not supported. But, as
-you have gone so far, be not easily discouraged. Weigh the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-matter well before this Christmas, and if you find no changes
-are made, the same cold management continued, with the negation
-of confidence in the pupils as instanced in the matter of
-letters, etc., send in your resignation, and above all, state your
-reasons as they bear upon the school, and upon yourself and the
-class you represent.</p>
-
-<p>‘I cannot contemplate your not coming up at Christmas. As
-we grow older, each year makes us more desirous of the company
-of those we love; perhaps because we feel how soon we
-shall part with it altogether, perhaps because we are become more
-selfish, but such is the fact.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And again on the same subject:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>September 2, 1857.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I cannot think you would be right to say you sought to be
-put into communication with the Committee because you heard
-that they were not satisfied. Surely your application [to see
-them] came first. I wrote because I thought the position and
-designation of head-teacher to you implied responsibilities in
-connection with the authorities; because you thought the general
-moral tone of the school lower than it should be, and the discipline
-to correct it defective; because your counsel was not
-sought, or, if given, not much heeded. Perhaps we were to
-blame in not learning more, that the head-teacher was only an
-ordinary teacher at Casterton. But the world would [think
-it more]; and your own experience of classes ought to enable
-you to be a judge of what was reasonable to expect in the bearing
-of pupils, both educational and general. I know your
-feelings, not to quit hastily what you have chosen, and considered
-a post of duty, and in writing upon the subject I try to put out
-of the question my own feelings and those of your mother
-to have you at home, or at least nearer home, and really to view
-the matter from the same point of view as yourself. Your
-remaining at Casterton is, I think, only to be entertained if such
-changes in the management are made as are likely in your view
-to raise the character of the establishment. I feel your own education
-and standing are worthy of better things [than the position]
-of an ordinary teacher at Casterton, and of a better salary. But
-I cannot doubt if you fairly and without hesitation state your
-objections and views, you will convince some at least that you
-are acting independently and without any personal feelings ...
-I am much as I was, anxious about you all, conscious how little
-I can do, and praying that we may all see clearly that the game<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-of life, whoever may be the players, is not one of chance or
-destiny; ... Write to me when you can—Ever your affectionate
-father,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Miles Beale</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was unusual though not unknown for a teacher at
-Casterton to appeal to the Committee, and the six gentlemen
-who composed it, were not very eager to hear Miss
-Beale. They may have suspected personal motives, and
-some of them, no doubt, mistrusted her religious principles.
-Miss Beale has left notes of her interview, so
-interesting to us, as the first occasion on which she tried
-to gain her own ends—always the best—from a body of
-persons who were in the position of directors of education.
-It suggests a contrast with the Cheltenham Council
-meetings of her last years, when her lightest wish had
-weight.</p>
-
-<p>The way had been prepared for her by letters which
-had passed between the chairman (Archdeacon Evans)
-and her father. In her first interview, which was of
-a preliminary nature, she began by saying: ‘I wished
-before saying anything, to know whether it was their
-wish to hear what I had to say, or whether they would
-rather I did not speak. There was a hesitation. Then
-Mr. Morewood, in rather a doubtful way said they were
-always willing. I said I understood from the Committee
-last time, and the Chairman’s letters to my father, that
-they wished it; then the others joined in with “Oh yes,
-certainly.”’ After making her statements on the need
-for reform, Miss Beale concluded by saying she should
-be happy to resign if the Committee were dissatisfied.
-The reply was: ‘Oh no, certainly not.’</p>
-
-<p>At a second interview, the Committee allowed her to
-put before them her own suggestions for alterations.
-On this occasion Miss Beale began with a testimony to
-what the Lady Superintendent had effected in the school;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-then mentioned the prevailing faults which so much
-distressed her, especially irreverence and unsuitable
-language; then boldly went on to point out the details
-of the system which might easily be improved, notably,
-that some prizes might be given, and that letters to and
-from parents should not be supervised. She said:—</p>
-
-<p>‘I think an institution in which the government is
-entirely by punishments not likely to produce the best
-moral effects. I think that reports should be sent home
-more frequently than twice a year.’ On being asked to
-give instances of disregard of religion, she mentioned
-one or two in general terms, saying she should not
-think it right to give individual examples. Mr. Rose
-replied by saying, ‘Unfortunately, such things will occur
-in large schools; perhaps you came expecting to find
-clergymen’s daughters better than others.’ Some discussion
-took place on the subject of prizes, during which
-‘occurred the very sapient remark that we do hear of
-angels being punished, but not of their going up higher,
-etc.... I afterwards explained what I meant by rewards,
-viz., distinctions, privileges, and the opportunity of doing
-good ... and I concluded by saying that unless I felt
-that the institution were doing moral good I should not
-care to stay.’</p>
-
-<p>The interview had been less disagreeable than she had
-anticipated; she thought her complaint had had a fair
-hearing, and in spite of the strain of work and the
-anxiety connected with it, she felt her efforts were not
-wasted.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘So many,’ she wrote home, ‘ask if they may come and speak
-to me; more of them listen when I talk of religion, and come
-privately to ask advice which I know they try to follow. I do
-feel that I am of use.... I believe I ought to wait here until
-either I feel it wrong to stay, or God calls me elsewhere. He
-has given me much more strength than I had any reason to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-expect. I shall look forward with greater longing for Christmas;
-but do get me the papers I want as soon as you can. I
-want to do as much as possible before I leave.</p>
-
-<p>‘I wrote this last night; take care of it as well as the Committee
-paper; I may want them. I have a headache to-day,
-and I am afraid I show the effect. Do not tell Papa anything,
-if you think it will worry him, but let me have some advice and
-hear as often as you can.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But discomfort almost inevitably succeeds complaint.
-There were fresh interviews with the Committee; some
-of the matters which most tried her in the school régime
-were naturally more acutely felt, as she herself grew
-strained with both anxiety and work. The tone of her
-letters home grew more sad as she began to see that after
-all she must give up her post. She could not bear to
-relinquish work that she felt had been given her to do;
-but she wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I do not see how it is possible to do much good. I may
-work upon a few individuals, but the whole tone of the school
-is unhealthy, and I never felt anything like the depression
-arising from the constant jar upon one’s feelings caused by seeing
-great girls constantly professing not to care about religion....
-It is next to impossible to bear rudeness and hear so much
-evil-speaking about all set over them, and keep up one’s spirits
-so as to be able to teach energetically; I would not want to
-run away if I thought I could do much good by staying, but
-I have come to the conclusion that it is time to send in my
-resignation. I have gained valuable experience, and do not
-think I have been useless; but under present circumstances it
-does not seem possible to get on.</p>
-
-<p>‘I was very glad of your nice long letter before, and if you
-think I am right, should send in perhaps a slight summary of the
-causes for it with my resignation as soon as I can. I am glad
-to hear Mama is better.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s difficulties were no doubt aggravated by
-religious questions. Her chief friend on the Committee,
-one who appreciated her sense of duty and intellectual
-power, did not wish her to remain at the school. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-disliked her theological opinions. She seems hardly to
-have realised this at the time, though her father may
-have done so, as can be seen from the following letter:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>November 8, 1857.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Say, if you have an opportunity, as much of what you have
-written to the Committee as will show them you sought the
-situation at Casterton for the sake of the school. For this
-I accepted for you—for this alone. Do not retain it without
-sufficient authority to carry forward the minds and morals of the
-pupils. You went there in a missionary spirit, I know, as to a
-post of usefulness; and you have hitherto retained it in the
-same spirit. Maintain this feeling, but assert it with meekness.
-We shall all be rejoiced to find you are coming home; but
-I dare not urge you beyond this. I was a party to the compact
-by which your remuneration was arranged, and I felt no difficulty
-in making any concession between what I felt was due to
-the order of educated governesses which you represented, and
-what the institution could afford to pay; but I would not
-recommend you to compromise one iota of authority which may
-be fit to carry forward the minds of your pupils, or of discipline
-to enforce obedience. Your pupils are no longer children, and,
-as the daughters of clergymen and intended to teach others, are
-lights upon a hill, and in point of education, manners, and
-morals, great charges indeed. I am witness, too, how roundly
-and unequivocally you stated your religious principle.... I
-mention this much because I think you have been treated
-unfairly on this subject. If the denial of the doctrine of regeneration
-by baptism were a <i lang="la">sine quâ non</i> by the governess, it
-ought to have been so stated. Mr. Mariner represented their
-religious basis as far more broad. Doubtless the Committee
-have a right to limit the assent of their teachers to such points;
-and doing so, I cannot object to Mr. Shepheard’s voting for your
-exclusion, neither do I see how they can accept money from
-those who think differently from the Committee. It is a question
-which has divided larger societies than at Casterton ...
-and I can remember when it convulsed the Choral Society....
-You and I are both labouring to raise the status and influence
-of the governess, and you will do it, first by your attainments
-and education, and rectitude of conduct under all circumstances,
-and I by bringing before those public bodies interested in the
-matter, the influence and importance of legislating for their
-protection and recognition. We may neither of us live to see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-the changes which shall come, but even in our limited spheres
-we are breaking ground, and you are gaining whilst yet young
-most valuable experience.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... Above all things take care of your health.... I am
-quite sure that you have a long course of usefulness before you.
-The flattering regard in which you are held at Queen’s College,
-and the constant means you always have in London of constantly
-improving yourself, must teach you somewhat of your
-own value; though I would not indeed presume upon it farther
-than to give you confidence to act rightly. But good governesses
-are very scarce, and are far better treated than they used
-to be, though not as well as they deserve.</p>
-
-<p>‘Casterton ought to be from the great advantages it offers, a
-national institution; but it will not be so if its principles are
-narrowed by anything like sectarian jealousy, or if its standard
-of education be not high. But Casterton has not yet been
-as fortunate as the good intentions of its founder would seem to
-deserve. The time will come, I hope, when this and kindred
-establishments will seek the visit and inspection of examiners
-from the Board of Government, Inspectors of Schools, and governesses....
-I write to you when I begin <i lang="it">currente calamo</i>, and
-could do so much longer upon a theme in which we are both
-interested, and I fear I have given you no direction. Fear
-nothing; be firm, but very gentle.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The matter of the resignation seems to have been
-hanging on all through the month of November. Miss
-Beale evidently wrote home again for advice, for on the
-26th she received another letter from her father:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>November 26, 1857.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Far from dissuading you from sending in your resignation,
-I think it will be expected. We did not appeal to the Committee
-that their attention should end in talk, but in giving you
-support moral and professional. With less than this, it is inconsistent
-with self-respect, or the duty you owe to the children, to
-remain.... Now Christmas is approaching, and, as matters
-remain as they were, certainly not improved,—I would seek at
-once to be relieved. Do not suppose for a moment I shall consider
-you are forsaking an appointment to which you have been
-called, or in which time would afford you redress.... Leave it
-then, and if nothing more congenial presents itself, we can afford<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-to wait our time, and let us try together if we cannot carry
-forward, or at least make more widely known, our views of
-what might be effected if your half of the human family more
-extensively used that influence of which they are all the dispensers,
-as men are of their power. This is indeed, as Christ
-said to the woman of Samaria, “living water,” if derived from
-Him, satisfying all thirst from its welling up from within; and
-by its purity testing the value of everything it is brought in
-contact with. You say you have learned much at Casterton.
-What matters it if you have to wait for the Harvest that we are
-sure “we shall reap if we faint not,” and gather “fruit unto life
-eternal.” It is often in this world, indeed, that “one soweth
-and another reapeth,” but though delayed the seed is not lost.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Before Miss Beale could formally send in her threatened
-resignation to the Committee, she received the
-following letter from the Chairman:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘On your last interview with the Committee you implied an
-intention of resigning in case certain alterations should not be
-made by the Committee....</p>
-
-<p>‘The Committee are of opinion that under the circumstances
-it would be better that your connection with the school should
-cease after Christmas next, they paying you a quarter’s salary in
-advance.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It will readily be imagined that this summary step
-on the part of the Committee caused great distress to
-one of Miss Beale’s sensitive nature. Nor was it easy
-for her to see why the difficult part she had taken upon
-herself for the good of the school should be misunderstood.
-At that moment it must have seemed like a
-sentence of failure,—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘For who can so forecast the years,</div>
-<div class="verse">To find in loss a gain to match.’</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Among the crowning successes of later life she recognised
-that the blow had had its place in fashioning
-her life’s work. Her letter home on the subject is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-preserved, but the following is evidently an answer
-to it:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>December 1857.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My dear Girl</span>,—Be sure I have been with you in heart
-every day and all day.... We shall all be delighted to have
-you at home. I would not have you commit yourself to writing
-statements on any account. You have given proof of the
-truth of your assertion by offering and sending in your resignation,
-and thus relinquishing your salary and the occupation of
-teaching to which you had felt yourself called, because you
-could not retain the one or follow the other conscientiously.
-Though you have not accomplished all you sought, you have
-sowed seed which will bear fruit; it may be for others’ benefit
-altogether; but to doubt the ultimate result were a want of
-faith. Whilst I object to writing, I think you owe it to yourself
-to seek rather than shun an interview with Mr. Wilson.
-His countenance of you I should consider very valuable.... Is
-not this again an instance of the influence of women, ... the
-dispensers of influence for good or evil? How important, then,
-to cultivate that principle of rightly discerning. Do you remember
-the apologue of Esdras? “The first wrote: Wine is
-the strongest. The second wrote: The king is the strongest.
-The third wrote: Women are strongest. But above all things
-Truth beareth away the victory.” How irresistible, then, is
-truth, if urged by the self-denial and patient perseverance of an
-enlightened and Christian woman! It is very possible, my dear
-Dorothea, that you have never been fairly represented or appreciated
-at Casterton, and now you are called to rest content with
-the consciousness of acting from right motives, secure that you
-possess too the regard and love of all those who can value such
-sacrifices as you have made of home, and ease, and peace for
-others’ good. I write in great haste, but I will write as often
-as you like until we see you.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus was Dorothea cheered and supported from
-home. Encouragement came from others also. On
-December 7, Mr. Plumptre wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have been informed to-day that you are going to leave
-Casterton at Christmas. I fear from this that you have not
-found your work there so pleasant as you hoped. If there are
-any particulars connected with your change of plan which you
-would like to tell me, or anything as to your prospects for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-future, I need not say that I shall be glad to hear them. Should
-you feel disposed to resume any part of your work at Queen’s
-College? The place of Assistant is of course being worthily
-occupied, and so far as I know not likely to be vacant; but
-tutorships in Mathematics and other subjects might probably be
-open.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Shepheard, curate-in-charge of Casterton, and
-chaplain to the school, wrote thus to Miss Beale on her
-leaving:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘It is natural that you should wish to have my testimony,
-and right that I should give it you regarding the line of conduct
-you have persevered in, and the difficult position in which you
-have been placed, as well as regarding your general principles.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is no more than your due that I should say to others what
-I have said to yourself, that I think your conduct throughout
-the painful circumstances of your connection with the Clergy
-Daughters’ School has been such as to reflect the highest honour
-upon yourself. You have only done your duty in boldly expressing
-what you thought required correction in the school.
-And if your faithful discharge of that duty has brought discomfiture
-on yourself, you have the comfort of knowing that it is no
-dishonour to suffer for well-doing.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have the greatest pleasure in offering you my cordial
-esteem and regard. And though there are points of religious
-doctrine, and those not small nor secondary, on which we must
-agree to differ, this cannot affect my opinion of the high principle
-and conscientious conduct which you have manifested
-throughout your stay at Casterton.</p>
-
-<p>‘Of your abilities and acquirements I need not speak. They
-are well known here, and can better be described by those who
-have had the opportunity of witnessing and benefiting by them
-personally, than by myself; and of such witnesses there are no
-lack.</p>
-
-<p>‘We shall always be glad to hear of your happiness, and hope
-to retain your friendship when removed to a distance from us.—I
-am, dear Miss Beale, very sincerely yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">H. Shepheard</span> (Incumbent).’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The letter shows, what was indeed true, that difficulties
-and differences both in the Committee and the school
-were aggravated by bitterness on the subject of religious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-opinions. This comes out still more clearly in a correspondence
-Miss Beale kept up for a little time with
-Mrs. Shepheard, who was a daughter of Mr. Carus
-Wilson, the aged founder of the school, and at this
-time infirm and worn by the immense labours of his
-younger days.</p>
-
-<p>The Bishop and Dean of Carlisle, being called upon to
-advise the Committee, patiently heard evidence for eight
-hours. Mr. Carus Wilson also decided to visit the
-school himself; but before he went north, Mrs. Shepheard
-arranged an interview between him and Miss Beale,
-writing to her: ‘Do not be afraid of my beloved father—tall,
-grey-headed, and anxious, but clear and open as you
-please.’ A memorable meeting surely this, of two who
-with widely differing methods were alike in high, earnest
-aim and self-devotion. It took place in February, and
-in the same month Mr. Wilson made one of his last
-visits to his old home and flock. Mrs. Shepheard notes
-that ‘it is supposed that nine hundred were in this little
-church last Sunday to hear my father!’</p>
-
-<p>In the course of the year 1858 many changes were
-made in the management of the Clergy Daughters’
-School, and this chapter on Casterton may fitly close
-with an extract from a letter written to Miss Beale by
-her friend, Mrs. Greene, of Whittington Hall:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘ ... There was a little music yesterday evening at the
-Clergy School, and Miss Vincent asked me to be present. I
-know your kind heart will give interest to what goes on there,
-and so I waited till it was over to tell you how it went off, etc....
-I assure you the performance was extremely good, and the
-girls’ manners and appearance were those of young English
-Gentlewomen; this I consider good praise. Miss Vincent
-appears to me the very person to fill so important a post....
-We spoke much of you, she evidently appreciates you; and
-when the music was over, I went to one or two of the ladies
-near, and asked, “Were you acquainted with Miss Beale?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-One came forward with a beaming face and replied, “Oh, I
-know her well, and have heard from her.” I replied, “So have
-I; and I shall write to her to-morrow.” I do not know who
-my friend was, but perhaps you will.</p>
-
-<p>‘And now let me tell you how delighted I am you are so
-comfortable; that you are doing much good I am equally sure....
-I hope we may sometimes meet. Would you even spare
-us a little time here? If so, I would offer you a hearty
-welcome.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br />
-<span class="smaller">AN INTERVAL</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘O dignitosa coscienza e netto</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Come t’e picciol fallo amaro morso.’</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="attr"><span class="smcap">Dante</span>, <cite>Purgatorio</cite>, iii.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The early part of the year 1858 is the one period in
-the life of Dorothea Beale when she could have been
-called really free. It was a time when it became her
-part to choose what she would do; to wait for what
-was suitable, to decide between conflicting claims. She
-came home depressed, defeated, disappointed; but she
-had discovered her own weakness and real strength;
-she had increased her knowledge of human nature
-through some experience of a boarding-school and its
-Committee. She had learned for one thing, that it
-would be best for herself and for the world that she
-should be head of a school, and she submitted to wait
-for one. But in the meantime other calls and needs
-besides that of education were heard and considered.</p>
-
-<p>The fact of apparent failure in her recent position
-at Casterton might have been taken as an indication
-that her energies should perhaps be directed to a fresh
-field of action. She was not under the necessity of
-earning her bread; she loved her home and had a circle
-of friends and interests about her. Various kinds of
-good work for others appealed to her, and her ability
-and gifts made it clear that she might have succeeded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-in other walks of life than the one in which her steps
-were finally directed.</p>
-
-<p>Though Dorothea had inherited, in a strong degree,
-her father’s antipathy to a <i lang="fr">mariage de convenance</i>, though
-she was far from regarding marriage as the necessary
-completion of a woman’s life, she had not—at this time
-at least—made any definite refusal of it. This is a
-subject to which it will not be necessary to return in
-Miss Beale’s life, devoted as it became to one great cause.
-But here, before her vocation had distinctly declared
-itself, it is right to say that in the course of events
-she was not only not without opportunities of marriage,
-she also gave it her full consideration. Flippant scholars
-might echo the words of Punch, ‘How different from
-us, Miss Beale and Miss Buss!’ But in the sense in
-which the words were intended, this was not true in
-either case. Suffice it to say, that Dorothea Beale knew
-what it was to be admired, loved, even for a short time
-engaged to be married. She knew also, among other
-experiences, what it was to sacrifice a girlish romance
-because it was right to put away vain regret; to forget
-the things that are behind, and in this matter as in
-others, to use any sense of personal loss in such a way
-that it strengthened her character.</p>
-
-<p>To pass from this subject, which, as it happens, does
-not appear to have had any place in the short period
-which elapsed between Casterton and Cheltenham, it is
-interesting to note what kinds of work Miss Beale
-considered with a view to taking them up.</p>
-
-<p>Philanthropic occupations in the ordinary sense of
-the term she had had but few. Her duties as a tutor
-at Queen’s College were first undertaken when she was
-still eighteen, and up to then her time had been filled
-with interests arising from her own education and that of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-her brothers. Yet, while at Queen’s, busy as she was,
-she had made time to aid one less fortunate than herself.
-In 1853 her friend Miss Alston consulted her how best
-to help a clever boy brought up in a charity school.
-Miss Beale volunteered to teach him Euclid and algebra,
-and for four months gave him a lesson a week in each
-of these subjects. In that time he went through the
-first four books of Euclid and part of the sixth. Miss
-Beale enjoyed these lessons, for her pupil was keen and
-intelligent and took a delight in working out things for
-himself. Doubtless he too responded to the teaching
-of one whose method was ever to lead a pupil on to
-perceive a truth before accepting it. When, after a time,
-he came under the instruction of the headmaster of a
-public school, the latter remarked to Miss Alston <i lang="fr">à
-propos</i> of Miss Beale’s teaching: ‘What a well-balanced
-head your friend must have!’</p>
-
-<p>She had never, however, been engaged in the Sunday
-School teaching and visiting of the poor, such as was
-not infrequently undertaken by thoughtful girls of her
-day. Her strong intellectual bent, her well-defined
-sense of purpose possibly kept her from even good
-occupations which might have seemed desultory. But
-one kind of work for others seems actually to have
-been considered. This was in connection with Mrs.
-Lancaster whom for some years Miss Beale had helped
-by collecting money for the Church Penitentiary Association,
-and for a Diocesan Home at Highgate. Mrs.
-Lancaster became in 1861 the founder of St. Peter’s
-Sisterhood. She died in 1874. ‘She was,’ says one who
-knew her, ‘a very remarkable woman, of great charm
-and cleverness, and wholly devoted to the service of
-God.’ Her letters to Miss Beale at this time show that
-she was at once drawn to her young helper, so active in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-inspiring others to share in the good work, so punctual
-in her payments.</p>
-
-<p>It was work in which Miss Beale was interested all
-her life, to which she gave largely, and which she ever
-promoted as far as her much filled time and thought
-permitted. Mrs. Lancaster greeted her first sign of
-interest with a warm welcome to the new worker.
-‘Indeed, it was a great joy to me to see another drawn
-in by the Good Shepherd to help in seeking His lost
-sheep. May He bless and strengthen your will and
-power for the work.’</p>
-
-<p>Dorothea appears to have been an assistant secretary,
-and to have collected money from her sisters and friends
-for this object. It is unnecessary, perhaps, to say that
-this money was always paid on the same date of each
-year.</p>
-
-<p>After a time, when it seemed likely that Miss Beale
-would not remain at Casterton, Mrs. Lancaster obviously
-hoped to find in her one who would give up her life
-and talents to this cause. ‘I wish,’ she wrote, ‘for the
-sake of poor Penitents that you were more free, for
-I fancy you are a <em>real, steady, orderly doer</em>, and that
-is worth much in such a cause. Still, you do what
-you can, and may well be grateful to help in any way.
-Thank your sister too very much; it is very delightful
-to get young interest.’</p>
-
-<p>Then, when an occasion arrived on which it was
-absolutely necessary to find a worker for the Highgate
-Home, she wrote: ‘<em>Are you sure</em> that you don’t know
-of a really good young lady not <em>over</em> accomplished, and
-she need know neither Greek nor Hindostanee, who
-would come and <em>live</em> at the Home, with a salary of £30
-only, and <em>poor people’s</em> diet?’ This was followed by
-a still more practical suggestion: ‘Is there any chance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-(I don’t like the word) of your liking to take the
-Headship of a large Penitentiary to be worked by Sisters,
-but the whole under strict, honest, English principles—more
-like Kaiserwerth than anything we have now?’
-Dorothea’s answer seems to have emboldened Mrs.
-Lancaster to make a definite suggestion to her to come
-herself, either as a Sister or a lay worker, and the
-following note from Mrs. Lancaster, written during the
-summer holidays of the Casterton year, shows that the
-idea was to some extent entertained. It is interesting
-also in the history of the work and institution established
-by that lady.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘As your mind does not altogether say “No” to my proposal
-at once, I write a line to beg you not to <em>decide against</em> the
-thought of what I wrote to you about, without weighing very
-seriously these considerations:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘What is the highest work?</p>
-
-<p>‘What constitutes a call to God’s service?</p>
-
-<p>‘Is it lawful to give up a higher for a lower work?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>‘If, when you have considered it well, you feel at all drawn
-towards it, then will you write either to me or to the Rev. John
-Oliver of St. Mary’s House of Mercy, Highgate, appointing
-with him to see you (for the appointment is in his hands), and
-he will not make it unless he is fully convinced that the lady
-would work it on strictly English principles, and that her <em>heart</em>
-was given to God first. He is very earnest and very honest,
-and all there seems most hopeful if regarded as a beginning and
-a foundation, for at present there are only two Sisters and one
-other lady at work. The house and grounds are delightful,
-the Penitents in a good healthy state, and if but a <em>wise</em> lady
-is given to the work I should be very hopeful of seeing <em>there</em>,
-<em>such</em> a Sisterhood as we have talked about but have not been
-privileged to see growing up in English soil. Pray do consult
-your sister, or your parents, but please confidentially, as I think
-we ought to do these <em>preliminaries</em> as quietly as possible. I have
-mentioned your name <em>quite</em> in confidence to Mr. Oliver, and
-I <em>do</em> hope you will see him and talk it out to <em>the bottom</em> with him
-before you decide. I know you will do what is better than all,
-ask for guidance that cannot fail.</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not think your parents would object, after allowing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-you to go to Casterton and Queen’s College, because in point
-of position, this is <em>now</em> felt to be <em>all</em> that a lady need care about.
-I am so <em>very</em> anxious about Highgate because it seems so <em>hopeful</em>
-as regards soundness of principle <em>now</em>, but I will say no more
-excepting to beg you to remember that the appointment does
-not <em>rest</em> with me even if you felt you could and would take it.—Ever
-yours affectionately and sincerely,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Rosa: Lancaster</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It is probable that Mrs. Lancaster’s friendship and
-the glimpse of Sisterhood life which she obtained by
-means of it deepened the sense of vocation with which
-Miss Beale was prepared to take up the new work for
-which she was waiting in 1858. It may also have had
-its influence on outside matters such as dress, which we
-know, when engaged on her work of teaching, was in
-early days especially very plain and simple. Mrs.
-Lancaster was obviously a friend whom she revered,
-one to whom she could speak of religious matters, and
-with whose devoted work among poor women she fully
-sympathised; but the conventual side of it never really
-appealed to her.</p>
-
-<p>Through Miss Twining, who began her work in 1850,
-Miss Beale became much interested in the reform of
-workhouses, and the idea even passed through her mind
-of seeking a position as matron in order to help to
-promote a better state of affairs. We can only wonder
-what would have been wrought had that great personality
-and unwearied diligence, that refusal to accept anything
-but the best, been brought to bear on the Poor Law,
-on Vestries, or Boards of Guardians.</p>
-
-<p>The education of girls of her own class was of far
-deeper interest to her than any other work for women.
-She was trained for it, was conscious of her own power
-and knowledge of what a school should be, and she
-decided to wait till she could find a headship and carry
-out her own ideas. It was not quite easy to find the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-post she wanted. As she put it herself, ‘They might
-say, “She could not get on at Queen’s, she could not
-get on at Casterton”’; and it is obvious from her diary,
-that though she was actually told as early as January
-1858 of the possible vacancy at Cheltenham, she tried
-for more than one school before she was elected there
-in June.</p>
-
-<p>While she waited, she worked. There was plenty
-of home interest, a pleasant circle of friends about her:
-she took her share in the life of others, and yet led
-her own and accomplished a large amount in those few
-months. During a part of this time she gave weekly
-lessons in mathematics and Latin at Miss Elwall’s school
-at Barnes, a school which afterwards became well known
-under Miss Eliza Beale, already in 1858 an assistant
-teacher there. But the great occupation of these months
-was <cite>The Student’s Textbook of English and General
-History</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>In point of time this important work was the third
-book produced by Miss Beale, and a word on its first
-predecessor will not be out of place here.</p>
-
-<p>The little volume on the Deaconesses’ Institution at
-Kaiserwerth was the outcome of a visit there during
-one of two summers passed in Germany for the sake
-of studying schools and foreign methods of education.
-Miss Beale stayed for a few days with the founder,
-Pastor Fliedner, and his wife, and studied each department
-of work. She was specially pleased with the
-Hospital and Sunday-school, of which she wrote with
-much appreciation: ‘I never was present at a lesson
-which seemed to give so much pleasure to children and
-listeners, as well as to the teacher, who certainly understood
-the art of drawing out children by means of
-questions.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Germany, its schools and similar institutions, its
-literature and language, even its handwriting, had a
-great attraction for Miss Beale. She had a few German
-lessons at the Paris school and afterwards worked at
-it alone, finally perfecting herself in the language by
-two long visits to the country, when she stayed principally
-at Brunswick and Dresden. On one occasion
-she resided for some time in a German family. In after
-years she would talk of this time to the girls at Cheltenham,
-telling them how she would make a point of
-conversing with the person she understood least easily
-at any gathering, inquiring the meaning of any word
-she did not know, to make use of it herself at the first
-opportunity. ‘And of course I did not mind being
-laughed at a little,’ she would add with a smile. Hence
-the praise that German ladies teaching at Cheltenham
-would accord her knowledge of the language, saying
-that she never made a mistake either in speaking or
-writing. She frequently made use of the German
-character in writing her diary.</p>
-
-<p>The book on Kaiserwerth, written as it was for a
-special cause, has naturally long since had its day,
-though on its appearance it was accepted widely enough
-to justify the thought of a second edition. Mrs.
-Lancaster was greatly interested by it, and showed
-it to the Bishop of London,<a name="FNanchor_22" id="FNanchor_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> who had just signed the
-Rule of the newly-founded Sisterhood. Both Bishop
-Jackson and Dean Trench declined, in friendly letters,
-dedications to themselves of a second edition, and none
-appears to have been issued; possibly on account of
-difficulties suggested by Mrs. Lancaster, who wished
-the scope of the book enlarged to embrace work of a
-similar nature in England. In the event of this being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-done, she begged Miss Beale to add a notice of the
-infant Community of St. Peter’s, then in Broughton
-Square. To-day the book can scarcely be called extant,
-but there is certainly one copy in England and one in
-Kaiserwerth. It is interesting because it shows, like
-other writing of this time, the continuity of Miss Beale’s
-ideas and thoughts. Her sowing had been betimes and
-abundant, and she could already gather as she needed.
-She did not give till she had the wherewithal, and
-though in her long years she frequently sowed afresh—was
-ever disciple as well as teacher—she was an early
-husbandman, a wise householder, able continuously and
-opportunely to bring out things new and old. The
-simile of Jairus’s daughter, occurring for the first time
-in the passage quoted below, was one she often quoted
-in connection with that awakening of women’s energies
-it had been her lot to share; and one she finally enshrined
-for her children in the window placed in the
-College to the memory of Miss Buckoll in 1890. And
-like much of her later work, the little book shows also
-how much her religion went hand in hand with all her
-work for others. There was no thought of the emancipation
-of women, no word of rights; she spoke only of
-duties, of scope to do good; but even these were quite
-secondary to the desire, the will to make the effort, the
-ear to hear the bidding voice. Here is a passage to
-illustrate this:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘It has occurred to me that a more detailed description than
-that given six years ago by Miss Nightingale of an institution
-in which she was herself trained, and which has since that time
-many new features, might assist those who are considering the
-best way of turning to account the wasted energy of our country-women,
-of those whose highest happiness it would be to be like
-Mary, Joanna, and Susannah, to follow Christ.... There are
-many who, when they pray to God “to comfort and succour<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-all them who ... are in trouble, sorrow, need, sickness, or
-any other adversity,” cannot be satisfied without giving a small
-portion of their money, who tremble at the thought of being
-numbered with the women who are at ease, with the careless
-daughters. O that Christ would take us by the hand. He has
-but to speak the word: “Daughter, I say unto thee, Arise”;
-and we shall arise and minister to Him: then will the scorners
-acknowledge we were only sleeping, and our souls will magnify
-the Lord.’<a name="FNanchor_23" id="FNanchor_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Two other short extracts must be permitted:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I could not but contrast the aimless existence of many of
-my own country-women, the dreary regions of the fashionable
-world, with the wide field under cultivation by this band of
-Sisters, who, by God’s blessing, penetrate year by year farther
-into the wilderness, and rescue so many of their fellow-creatures
-from evils more to be dreaded than famine, pestilence, and the
-sword.’<a name="FNanchor_24" id="FNanchor_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Finally, the following passage tells how the strengthening
-thought of the Communion of Saints, of which
-she spoke to Miss Gore on the last Sunday of her
-life, was already beginning to be hers:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The happiness of a Deaconess does not arise from external
-circumstances; it is a peace which the world cannot give. She
-must be prepared to live away from the world, without any
-society but that of a few sick persons and children, without
-beautiful services; to believe, in the midst of unbelief and sin,
-in the Holy Catholic Church and the Communion of Saints.
-She must always be watching for her Lord’s coming, for in the
-midst of the pestilence and near the field of battle is her post.’<a name="FNanchor_25" id="FNanchor_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A second visit to Kaiserwerth, ten years later, gave
-Miss Beale great pleasure. She was delighted with the
-work being done and the extension of the small beginnings
-she had seen in 1856. In 1905, at Oeynhausen,
-she met accidentally a Deaconess of Kaiserwerth, was
-much attracted by her, and invited her to come and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-see her and talk to her of the institution, and after
-her return to England exchanged letters with her.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Textbook of History</cite> entailed a great deal of
-labour and study, which must have been a boon to its
-writer at a time of depression and uncertainty. Though
-the scheme of it was no doubt in her mind before
-she left Casterton, and the book was probably begun
-in the summer holidays of 1857, it was not till after
-Christmas that she was free to devote herself to it.
-Then she threw into the work every hour she could
-justly secure, striving at the same time not to neglect
-family claims. The conditions under which it was done
-were little short of heroic. In order to secure freedom
-from interruption both for herself and her books of
-reference, she chose for her study a large empty room,
-where she worked in the midst of open volumes spread
-round her on the floor. It was winter, but she was glad
-to avail herself of the difficulty of keeping up a daily
-fire at the top of the old City house, in order to give
-less attraction to any other members of the household
-to sit with her and take up time in conversation. The
-empty grate by which she wrote lends significance to an
-entry in the diary of March 1858: ‘Self-indulgence
-because of cold.’ The self-denial and concentration of
-the writer bore early fruit, for this book, a digest of
-world-wide histories, was published in August 1858, just
-after its author had come to Cheltenham. The production
-of this textbook is an instance of the way in
-which Miss Beale would see and seize an opportunity.
-There was a real need for such a work. In her introduction
-she alludes to objections which could be raised
-to similar books then in use, and which were stated
-in articles which appeared in the <cite>Times</cite> of January 1857.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s reference is doubtless to two letters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-headed ‘The Corruption of Popular School Books.’
-The first of these, by the noted Dr. Cumming, appeared
-on January 17, and dealt with certain changes which
-had been made, in a Romish direction, in a widely used
-textbook of English history by Henry Ince. A new
-edition had lately appeared, professing itself to be much
-extended and improved, in wide circulation, and sanctioned
-by her Majesty’s Committee of the Council of
-Education. This edition, pleaded the writer of the
-<cite>Times</cite> letter, contained statements which made it ‘unsuitable
-for use in Protestant schools.’ Those quoted,
-<i>e.g.</i> that ‘Queen Elizabeth was a mistress in the art of
-dissembling,’ do not seem very reprehensible, but enough
-savour of Papistry had been introduced into the book
-to cause the Committee above-mentioned and the
-Society of Arts to strike the book off their lists.
-Dorothea Beale was quick to see and seize the opportunity
-thus afforded for a new textbook.</p>
-
-<p>The very large scope of the work, embracing as it
-does the whole history of the world since the beginning
-of the Christian era, with the history of England given
-in rather fuller detail than the rest, makes it imperative
-that its hundred and seventy closely printed pages should
-be rather dry. The <cite>Textbook</cite> is intended for the teacher
-rather than the pupil; highly useful in its arrangement
-of facts, and names, and suggestions of ideas, but not in
-itself a complete lesson-book. Its clearness and fulness
-are not more characteristic of the writer than the
-dramatic instinct which led her to give such names,
-titles, and short quotations as tend at once to fix a fact
-in the memory, and to conjure up visions of the conditions
-under which such and such events took place.
-Miss Beale had a remarkable quickness in seizing on
-the important matter and stating it in a few telling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-words. It is interesting to take at haphazard her history
-of any century, and mark what a wealth of interest
-rather than of information is brought together in a few
-short pages to stimulate the reader’s thirst for knowledge.
-But it is sufficient to point out the titles chosen
-for the centuries, as showing what seemed to her of
-greatest importance to the progress of mankind.<a name="FNanchor_26" id="FNanchor_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
-
-<p>The book is completed with an account of the English
-Constitution and some genealogical tables. It reached
-a seventh edition, but Miss Beale was disinclined to
-bring it up to quite modern times, doubtless because
-she felt there are now other books to cover the ground
-as well or better than her own. Consequently the
-nineteenth century is left uncompleted. The book,
-however, played a useful part at a time when the teaching
-of history was very imperfect, and was well received
-by those who knew its author. ‘The plan of the book,’
-wrote Mr. Plumptre, ‘seems to me very good, and I
-cannot doubt that you have carried into the details the
-same painstaking accuracy with which we used to be
-familiar in your work with us.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mackenzie, at the writer’s request, made an
-elaborate criticism, from which it is enough to quote
-his ‘<em>chief</em> complaint’: ‘Your unfairness to your own
-sex, and your willingness to believe and repeat the
-calumnies uttered against them by male writers, a fault
-to which the old monks were especially prone; but they
-were not quite silent, as you are, upon the virtues of the
-royal and noble Anglo-Saxon ladies, who did so much,
-even in the darkest ages, towards educating and refining
-the barbarous people by whom they were surrounded.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Beale mentioned it more than once in his letters
-to the daughter in whose talent he had such pride:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-‘The success of your little book is very encouraging.
-E. says they call it “Beale’s Ince.” ... I dined at the
-Adams’ last week, a doctor’s party. Dr. Daldy was
-loud in praise of the <cite>Textbook</cite>.’ And again, ‘Underneath
-D. Beale in my own copy I have written “sed
-summa sequar festigia rerum.”’ And to the end it was
-a source of satisfaction to the writer herself. ‘You
-could not have done so well without my <cite>Textbook</cite>,
-could you?’ she said to an old pupil whose Histories
-for Schools have been widely accepted.</p>
-
-<p>The third work of this period was a little book entitled
-<cite>Self-Examination</cite>. This was chiefly designed for schools,
-and was edited by Mr. Denton, the vicar of St.
-Bartholomew’s, Moor Lane. This book, too, written
-when books of devotion were far less common than they
-are now, and in order to supply a real need of schoolgirls,
-has been long superseded by others, but in many
-cases the works for which it has been put on one side
-are less thoughtful and penetrating. The questions and
-meditations are arranged round the subjects of ‘My
-Duty towards God, and my Duty towards my Neighbour,’
-and with the comment of verses from the Bible
-are presented in that tabular form which Miss Beale
-loved.<a name="FNanchor_27" id="FNanchor_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> The actual questions for self-examination are
-throughout slight and few in proportion to what is
-suggested by the Scripture texts and the meditations;
-the reason doubtless being to make the reader think for
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>This little work brings us face to face with that religion
-which all her life long was the motive power of
-Dorothea’s life. Deep religious feeling was no phase
-nor change of thought which came to her with years or
-experience. It was not wrought for her in the furnace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-of sorrow, though many times there renewed and purified.
-It was so much the dominating force of her mind
-and life, that, by which every day as every year she
-was controlled and inspired, that it may be reverently
-regarded as a special gift to one called to a great
-service. ‘I cannot,’ she wrote, ‘look back upon the
-time when God was not a present Friend. I would
-throw myself on my knees in trouble, and He gave of
-His compassion. How (as a child) I used to follow the
-service and wish it were possible to think of what God
-was;—to think of Him as mere Light was the nearest
-approach.’ And as an old woman—despite the love of
-friends, and her well-deserved honours, often alone and
-sick and weary—she wrote, ‘The Lord is my Light.’
-But the religion of Dorothea Beale was far indeed from
-being a mere succession of beautiful and comforting
-thoughts. It meant authority. It involved all the
-difficulties of daily obedience, it meant the fatigue of
-watching, the pains of battle, sometimes the humiliation
-of defeat. Intense as was her feeling on religious
-subjects, it was never permitted to go off in steam, as
-she would term it, but became at once a practical matter
-for everyday life. Sorrow and regret for sin and
-mistakes passed into fresh effort against them; the perception
-of a beautiful thought or idea became a new
-motive for definite acts of charity and diligence. With
-regard to such a religious life as hers, the mind dwelling
-habitually in a region which is beyond controversy, it
-seems like a descent to a lower plane to speak of
-religious <em>opinions</em>. Yet no approximately true history of
-her can be related without reference to these. Even if
-there were no record of it as there is, it is obvious that
-one at once so large-minded and clear-headed, whose life
-displayed so much organisation and arrangement, must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-have definitely faced the great problems of eternity, must
-have listened to every appeal of Christianity, and with
-her own eyes have looked up each avenue of thought
-which promised an approach to Truth. And this she
-undoubtedly did. But in the knowledge of Divine
-things, as in that which she would scarcely permit to be
-called secular, her faithfulness and simple obedience to
-early teaching directed her mind to certain religious
-duties and opinions from which she never parted: ‘If
-any man will do His will he shall know of the
-doctrine,’ is a text she was fond of quoting to her
-Scripture classes. She lived to realise it. Very early
-and continuously she ruled her life by the commandments
-of the Lord, and when storms arose, when winds
-and floods of doubt threatened ruin, when she was herself
-ready to cry, ‘All is gone,’ the foundations of the
-house of faith were yet secure, and thereon love rebuilt.</p>
-
-<p>And so it may be truly said that the framework of
-her personal religion was in age what it had been in
-youth. She had her own distinctly outlined path to
-which she had been guided early by such friends as her
-father and Mr. Mackenzie. This has been sometimes
-lost sight of, possibly owing to her deep sympathy and
-interest in matters of doubt and difficulty. When any
-of her children turned to her in distress of this nature,
-she felt, more than at any other time, the yearning of a
-mother’s heart, and was fearful of saying any word or
-even of showing any opinion of her own which might
-alarm or seal up confidence. Hence people of widely
-different views wished to claim her as of their own way
-of thinking when often she was not. She did not think
-it of paramount importance when speaking to the unorthodox,
-or even to the agnostic, to state her own
-beliefs precisely. She did not seek to proselytise but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-to help, to remove, as far as power was given her, all
-hindrances to the light, to persuade those who were in
-darkness still to obey. But she knew that she could
-not make any <em>see</em>; she recognised faith as the gift
-of God.</p>
-
-<p>Miles Beale was a Churchman of the type known best
-by its nickname ‘High and Dry.’ His daughters were
-still quite young when they found this was a school to
-which not all the world belonged, and they began to
-appreciate religious differences. They heard, between
-St. Helen’s and St. Bartholomew’s, preachers of varying
-shades of thought. Mr. Mackenzie was succeeded at
-St. Helen’s by an incumbent of evangelical views. Some
-of Mr. Denton’s curates at St. Bartholomew’s went over
-to Rome; one became Father Ignatius.</p>
-
-<p>Dorothea was only sixteen when her father wrote to
-her on the subject of the Hampden-Gorham dispute, as
-of a matter she well understood and found interesting.
-And this recalls the fact that religious controversy of
-that day raged specially round the question of Baptismal
-Regeneration. A letter written to the Council of the
-Ladies’ College after her appointment<a name="FNanchor_28" id="FNanchor_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> shows how
-clearly and concisely, and without reference to books,
-Miss Beale could state her opinions. It deals with her
-views of the Sacraments, marking her religious position
-at the time and indeed to the end;—it was for her
-Prayer-book that she asked in the one clear moment of
-the last unconsciousness. This letter contains a bare,
-unemotional statement of belief, to which may well be
-added this: that while she held firmly the doctrine of
-‘Two only, as generally necessary to salvation,’ the
-life of grace through the Sacraments was the power by
-which she lived. She recognised herself as fortunate in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-her special heritage of Christian thought, writing of it
-thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘It was a time of great religious revival: the bald services of
-my childhood were beginning to develop into the musical
-services of our own time.... The beautiful music of to-day
-is not more dear to me than those plain services with often
-grotesque accompaniments where I learned to see Heaven
-opened. Miss Sewell’s writings, especially <cite>The Experience of
-Life</cite>, helped me in early youth to work out the problems of my
-daily life. Religion quickened the intellectual life, for Sacramental
-teaching was to the leaders of that movement no narrow
-dogmatism, but the discovery of the river of the water of life
-flowing through the whole desert of human existence, and
-making it rejoice and blossom as the rose, revealing a unity in
-creation, a continuity in history, a glory in art, a purpose in
-life, making life infinitely worth living.’<a name="FNanchor_29" id="FNanchor_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>When quite young she began the practice of Sunday
-Communion, and many a week day found her at the
-6 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span> celebration at St. Bartholomew’s Church. From
-first to last her scanty diary records this service among
-the leading facts of ordinary life.</p>
-
-<p>In the power thus gained she had ever before her the
-thought of co-operation, of working out salvation, of
-putting on Christ by daily dying to self by minute
-watchfulness, and in every sense of the word painstaking
-diligence. At a time when the pulpits of Cheltenham
-were ringing with statements which seemed to her to
-misrepresent the great doctrine of the Atonement, she
-was speaking to her children of the true nature of the
-Redeemer’s Blood, of the living stream flowing from the
-Heart through all the members; she was seeking for
-herself and for them the righteousness of Christ, not as a
-mere substitution, but as a real attainment won by the
-union of a soul wholly surrendered to the workings of
-the grace of God.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This chapter may fitly close with a passage from
-the diary, which she appears to have begun to keep
-for the first time this year, when she was to some
-extent forced back upon herself, when she was making
-her own scheme of daily work. Begun on Ash
-Wednesday, February 17, 1858, it was continued intermittently
-at least to 1901, when the increasing infirmities
-of age made all reading and writing difficult.
-Sometimes dropped for many months, it was taken up
-again as if with the suggestion of a sense of culpability
-for neglect. It was never full; never, so far as outward
-events are concerned, of any great interest. Some
-of these, indeed, as the writing of certain letters, the
-visits of certain friends, or business engagements, are
-just mentioned and no more; doubtless for the sake of
-reference only. It remains for us as a revelation of the
-keen self-scrutiny with which she, who had to guide and
-warn others, was daily searching her own soul. Very
-often for weeks there is no mention of anything done, or
-seen, or thought as far as the matters of this world are
-concerned; but she never failed to note what she
-regarded as the real life, spiritual growth or the reverse,
-right or wrong conduct, faithful or unfaithful performance
-of religious duties. This diary cannot be ignored
-if a true presentment of Dorothea Beale is to be given.
-Hence, intimate as it is, enough extracts as may display
-the persistent effort of her life are inserted here. They
-are not consecutive, but chosen as characteristic and
-interesting, and showing to some extent the occupations
-of the period. Scanty traces indeed of what she
-was doing and thinking, they are yet enough to show a
-little of the anxiety and conflict of which she wrote in
-1901 to Miss Margaret Richardson, in these words:
-‘Once I had an interval of work, and I thought perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-God would not give it me again—but after that interval
-He called me here. I think now I can see better how I
-needed that time of comparative quiet and solitude, and
-a time to think over my failures, and a time to be more
-helpful to my family.’</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Extracts from Diary of 1858</span></p>
-
-<p>‘<i>February 17th.</i>—Ash Wednesday. [To] S. M’s. [Applied]
-for school at Holloway. Lip-service. Snappish. <em>Resolution.</em>
-[to strive for more] humility, patience, charity.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>February 26th.</i>—Miss Alston came. Idle [meditation] on
-peace. To be less anxious.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>February 27th.</i>—History for seven hours. Church. Some
-idleness.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>March 5th.</i>—Went to see Mr. Sankey about boy’s evening
-school. To church. History. Many impatient answers to
-Mama.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>March 6th.</i>—History. Aunt E. came. Cross at not
-getting my own way. Some idleness. Impatient manner.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>March 7th</i>, Sunday.—Went to H. E. without prayer. Not
-a devoted service. Morning prayer nothing but vain thoughts.
-At evening Church. Very cross.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>April 14th.</i>—History. Elizabeth. Called on Mrs. Blenkarne.
-Dined at Chapter House. Idle. Indulgence in reading
-story at my time for evening prayer. Unpunctual in morning.
-Thoughtless about Mama.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>April 20th.</i>—History, 16th Century. Felt terribly cross.
-O grant me calmness.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>April 22nd.</i>—Went about servants till 11.30. Wrote to
-Miss Hyde. Still some tempest within.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>June 2nd.</i>—Copying. Dinner party. Eliza at home.
-Worldly.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>June 3rd.</i>—Headache. To Mrs. Northcote’s. [Wrote]
-preface.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>June 4th.</i>—Saw Mrs. Barrett. Copied. Neglected prayer
-greatly. Very worldly.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>June 7th.</i>—Wrote letters. A terrible blank of worldliness.
-Idle.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>June 9th.</i>—Wrote to Miss Elwall. Letter from Cheltenham.
-M. copied certificates. Worldly. Spoke angrily to A.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘<i>June 10th.</i>—Wrote to Cheltenham. Saxon Exhibition.
-Selfish and worldly.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>June 13th.</i>—S. Bartholomew’s twice. H. E. Inattentive
-twice. Unkind thoughts and words.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>June 14th.</i>—Letter to go to Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>June 16th.</i>—Elected.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-<span class="smaller">CHELTENHAM</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘He builded better than he knew.’—<span class="smcap">Emerson.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Dorothea Beale in age remembered that in youth she
-had planned ‘an air-castle school, with a central quadrangle,
-cloisters and rooms over.’</p>
-
-<p>To few is it given, as it was given to her, to realise so
-nearly the dreams of youth, for few possess the sense of
-purpose and the indomitable will which fell to her
-portion. But the college of her vision did not come
-into being without a process of development so slow
-that for some years progress could hardly be recorded,
-nor without infinite disappointment even in matters which
-seemed at the time vital; not without ceaseless effort,
-seen and unseen, on the part of the Lady Principal.</p>
-
-<p>We have reached, in the twentieth century, a period
-in the history of education in which schools may be said
-to be founded ready-made. A great and fine ‘plant,’
-opening ceremonies, royal patronage, appear necessities
-from the beginning. The Ladies’ College, Cheltenham,
-was twenty years old before it had a building of its own,
-its first stone was laid by an unknown hand, its opening
-rite consisted of school prayers in the ordinary way on a
-Monday morning, at 9 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span>, with the addition of a few
-words rather nervously read by the Lady Principal. The
-college has never had a patron, nor did it even have any
-specially distinguished visitor, till the Empress Frederick
-came in 1897.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Ladies’ College did not originate with Miss
-Beale. She brought to it, when it was but a weakling
-and like to perish, all her dreams and all her energies.
-She made it emphatically her own; but its first inception
-was with a small number of Cheltenham residents,
-notably with the Reverend H. Walford Bellairs, then
-H.M. Inspector of Schools for Gloucestershire,<a name="FNanchor_30" id="FNanchor_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> and the
-Reverend C. A. Bromby,<a name="FNanchor_31" id="FNanchor_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> Principal of the Training
-Colleges. Its foundation was a continuation of work
-already begun in the town with the opening of Cheltenham
-College, in 1843. This was one of the earliest of the great
-nineteenth century public schools, and one of the very few
-which has no ancient origin. A very slight glance at the
-history of the town, which has produced two great colleges,
-will serve to show that their work in its midst has been
-almost that of a quiet and beneficent revolution.</p>
-
-<p>The mild air and fertile soil of the great plain below
-the Cotswold Hills were recognised as early as the days
-of Edward the Confessor, when Cheltenham was called
-upon to furnish a large amount of bread for the royal
-kennels. For centuries only a little market town with
-a beautiful Early Gothic church on the banks of an
-insignificant stream, it crept out of obscurity in the pages
-of Ogilby who, in 1785, described it as inhabited by
-people ‘much given to plant tobacco, though they are
-suppressed by authority.’</p>
-
-<p>Forty years after this the discovery of the medicinal
-properties of its waters made the place attractive to those
-who could afford to take the remedy, and in the later
-years of George the Third, it came to be the ‘Queen of
-watering places.’ Details of the long royal visit of 1788<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-may be read in the pages of Fanny Burney and others.
-The King would afterwards speak of Cheltenham and
-the Vale of Gloucester as ‘the finest part of my kingdom
-that I have beheld.’ Other distinguished visitors
-followed: the Prince Regent, who gave a ball; Charles
-James Fox; Wellington, within a year of Waterloo;
-Louis Philippe and Marie Amélie in their exile; and
-many others, among whom, as a boy, came Byron, to
-wander, according to a continental biographer, ‘on the
-seashore at Cheltenham!’</p>
-
-<p>As late as 1870 there was in Cheltenham scarcely
-a house which did not testify by its grandiose, pseudo-classic<a name="FNanchor_32" id="FNanchor_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a>
-architecture to the past magnificence of a town
-which had striven to be worthy of a court. Even to-day
-there are but few which do not follow the lines laid down
-by the builders of the early years of the nineteenth
-century, a time at which the town grew with mushroom
-speed. It was a period when population was rapidly
-increasing all over the country; but in few places were
-the leaps and bounds so marked as in Cheltenham,
-where in 1840, a census return was tenfold larger than it
-had been in 1804.</p>
-
-<p>This rapid growth was due, less to the famous wells and
-pump-rooms than to the reputation of its climate, and
-the absence of any great winter severity, attractive to
-those who had lived in tropical countries. Hence Cheltenham
-became a favourite residence for Anglo-Indians,
-military and civil. The town grew perhaps a little less
-distinguished, but not less gay and popular. The fashion
-in Cheltenham waters passed; kings and dukes sought
-their ‘cure’ abroad; but it was possible to have balls
-and other amusements without a Prince Regent, while the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-hunting season especially became a time of festivity.
-And side by side with the lovers of pleasure, who
-formed so large and sparkling a part of Cheltenham
-society, existed those who took all life with deep, almost
-forbidding seriousness.</p>
-
-<p>To meet the needs of the rapidly growing population
-during the first forty years of the nineteenth century,
-several churches were built under the auspices of different
-persons. Church-building in the days of proprietary
-sittings was a not unprofitable investment; there were
-also liberal benefactors to support Mr. Close, who was
-incumbent of Cheltenham for nearly thirty years, in his
-schemes for the welfare of his flock.</p>
-
-<p>Francis Close, a disciple of Charles Simeon, came to
-Cheltenham in 1824, as curate-in-charge of Holy Trinity,
-a newly erected chapel-of-ease to the parish church. The
-living of Cheltenham was already at that time in the
-hands of Simeon, who had purchased it from its various
-patrons, and presented it to the Reverend C. Jervis. On
-the death of Mr. Jervis, Simeon appointed young Close
-to this important charge. From the first Mr. Close was
-a very popular preacher. ‘It was,’ says an admirer,
-‘a new and interesting sight to see so singularly handsome
-a young man filled with such religious zeal.’ A
-man of pronounced and narrow views, immense activity
-and determination, combined with geniality and cheerfulness,
-he sought to regulate the ways of society, and
-to some extent succeeded. He ruled the town from the
-pulpit of the parish church as from a throne, and earned,
-among those who loved him least, the name of the
-‘Pope of Cheltenham.’<a name="FNanchor_33" id="FNanchor_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> He preached against racing,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-acting, dancing. But if, as has been said, he established
-dinner-parties and destroyed the theatre, he acted only
-with others of his school of thought. Those were the
-days of eating and drinking, since some form of recreation
-was necessary, and, moreover, abstinence had a suspiciously
-Roman look. They were days when all forms
-of art, not that of the theatre alone, were regarded with
-distrust. It is true that Mr. Close gave a lecture on
-‘Literature and the Fine Arts considered as Legitimate
-Pursuits of a Religious Man’; he also preached a
-sermon entitled ‘The Restoration of Churches is the
-Restoration of Popery,’ and he said to the head-mistress
-of a fashionable boarding-school where dancing was
-included in the curriculum: ‘When Mrs. Close wished
-my daughters taught dancing, I reminded her of her
-marriage vow.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Close’s energies took visible and permanent shape
-in the buildings which arose during his long incumbency.
-Eight churches grew up around the parish church, but
-that, alas! was not their model. Most of the new ones
-displayed all the worst features of a debased style of church
-architecture: a diminutive chancel, three-decker arrangements
-for parson and clerk, high pews, with safe doors
-for the congregation.</p>
-
-<p>National schools were built, and training colleges
-founded, also under the direction of Mr. Close, and he
-took his share in the institution of the Proprietary
-College for Boys, in 1843.</p>
-
-<p>With the new churches came new clergy, among
-whom, the most popular name at the time, was that
-of Archibald Boyd, vicar of Christchurch, a very eloquent
-preacher who brought the little schoolroom in the hamlet
-of Alstone, where he lectured on Sunday evenings, into
-rivalry with the parish church. To-day, he is famous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-for having had as his curate, for five years, the young
-Frederick Robertson, whose afternoon sermons at Christchurch,
-in spite of the suspicion of unorthodoxy which
-early began to attach itself to his name, drew many
-thoughtful hearers, such as the Principal of Cheltenham
-College.</p>
-
-<p>The most leading mind at the time among the younger
-clergy was that of Charles Henry Bromby, who became
-vicar of St. Paul’s in 1843. He was a man of large
-mental gifts, and had special perception of the intellectual
-needs of his day. The Working Men’s Club, which he
-established in his parish, was among the very first in the
-country. All the great educational institutions of Cheltenham
-are indebted to his outlook and zeal. Joint-founder
-of Cheltenham College, and later, though he
-took no public part and earned no name in the matter,
-of that for ‘Young Ladies and Children,’ his most
-active interest and work was for the teaching of the
-poor. He became first Principal of the Training
-Colleges<a name="FNanchor_34" id="FNanchor_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> for headmasters and mistresses of national
-schools, starting the work on wise and secure lines, and
-rapidly bringing it to the front among that of kindred
-institutions.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Bellairs was actively as well as zealously associated
-with Mr. Bromby in all the great schemes, by
-which Cheltenham, rich and poor, was to be enlightened,
-and in the case of the Proprietary College for Ladies, it
-is his name which comes to the front, and it was in his
-house that the first meeting to draw up its constitution
-was held.</p>
-
-<p>There was every reason to hope that a high-class day-school
-for girls, then almost unknown, might succeed in
-Cheltenham, where parents had had a successful experience<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-of such a school for their boys. Everywhere, people,
-who cared about a good education for girls, found it difficult
-to obtain even at great cost. Many liked to keep their
-children with them; those who were indifferent would
-be glad to avail themselves of the cheaper method of the
-day-school, provided it could be run on exclusive lines.
-There had been for some years in the town, select boarding
-schools, where a few day-scholars were received.
-The advantage over these of a large public school, necessarily
-of a more permanent character than a small private
-institution could be, was obvious.</p>
-
-<p>At the meeting in the house of Mr. Bellairs, on
-September 30, 1853, a date which Miss Beale has noted
-as the birthday of the Ladies’ College, there were
-present but three others. These were the Reverend
-W. Dobson, Principal of Cheltenham College, the
-Reverend H. A. Holden, Vice-Principal, and Dr. S.
-E. Comyn. One other gentleman should be named
-among these early builders, namely, Mr. Nathaniel
-Hartland. Colonel Fitzmaurice was also a member of
-the first council.</p>
-
-<p>The founders of this college and day-school for girls
-were anxious to make it clear that their aim was to
-develop in the pupils character and fitness for the duties
-of later life. Hence the first report states that it was
-intended ‘to afford, on reasonable terms, an education
-based upon religious principles which, preserving the
-modesty and gentleness of the female character, should
-so far cultivate [a girl’s] intellectual powers as to fit her for
-the discharge of those responsible duties which devolve
-upon her as a wife, mother, mistress and friend, the
-natural companion and helpmeet for man.’ In framing
-the constitutions Mr. Bellairs and his colleagues had
-before their minds the successful College for Boys, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-adopted its rules with regard to religious instruction, and
-the social rank of the pupils.</p>
-
-<p>The draft of the resolutions, made at the first meeting,
-may still be read. Hardly less remarkable than the
-development of later days is the permanent nature of the
-impress given to the College at its first start. Some of
-the resolutions were:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘That an Institution for the daughters and young children of
-Noblemen and Gentlemen be established in Cheltenham, and be
-entitled the Cheltenham College for the education of young
-Ladies and Children.</p>
-
-<p>‘The College to be established by means of one hundred
-shares of £10 each; the possessor of each share to have the
-power of nominating a Pupil, and a vote at annual and special
-meetings.</p>
-
-<p class="center">...</p>
-
-<p>‘That the management of the College for the ensuing year
-shall be vested in the Founders, viz.... who for this purpose
-shall be constituted the Committee of Management after the
-expiration of the first year, exclusive of the Treasurer and
-Honorary Secretary, who will be <i lang="la">ex officio</i> members of the
-Board, they being shareholders and members of the Church of
-England....</p>
-
-<p>‘That the College be under the direction of a Principal,
-a Lady from whom the pupils will receive religious instruction
-at appointed times in accordance with the doctrine and the
-teaching of the Church of England....</p>
-
-<p>‘That at the end of each year the pupils be examined by
-competent persons appointed by the Committee.</p>
-
-<p>‘That the College shall consist of two departments, the
-Junior for children of both sexes, admissible after five years of
-age, the boys to be removed when they have attained their eighth
-year.</p>
-
-<p>‘The appointment of the Lady Principal and all subordinate
-teachers and officers to be vested in the Committee.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>With few alterations these resolutions passed into the
-prospectus issued to the public in November 1853, an
-exact copy of which will be found in the appendix.<a name="FNanchor_35" id="FNanchor_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
-Experimental prospectuses, which never left the hands of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-the Committee, exist to show how the founders formed
-and modified their views for the College. It was proposed
-at one time to have a noble patron and a visitor,
-besides the working Committee; but as Miss Beale somewhat
-whimsically relates, this was found to be impracticable.
-‘It was thought that it would add to the prestige
-of the College, and diminish the prejudice which then
-existed, to have a distinguished patron, and so Lord de
-Saumerez, then resident in Cheltenham, was applied to,
-but in vain. So there was no Patron.’<a name="FNanchor_36" id="FNanchor_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> There was also
-no visitor until 1875, when Dr. Ellicott, then Bishop
-of Gloucester, kindly undertook the charge. The difficulty
-of securing patronage was probably what caused
-the Council, in virtue of one of their own rules, to invite
-Mr. Close to accept the office of President, with a seat at
-the Board. At the same time Mr. Bellairs was appointed
-Vice-President.</p>
-
-<p>In the first instance it was intended that the College
-should be confined to day-scholars; then, in case this
-restriction should limit the scope of the work and perhaps
-injure it financially, a sort of half-measure was planned,
-and it was proposed to state that: ‘the Committee will not
-interfere with any arrangements made by the Parents and
-Friends of pupils for Boarding their Children, provided
-the numbers in any given Boarding-House do not exceed
-six. Should Boarding-Houses ever be opened offering
-accommodation to a greater number of pupils than six,
-the Committee reserve to themselves the power of insisting
-upon and conferring a License, before Children in
-such Boarding-Houses be allowed the privilege of becoming
-Students in the College.’</p>
-
-<p>As early as the 1st of November three ladies had been
-found to undertake boarding-houses, and they were not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-restricted as to numbers. The low terms of the boarding-houses
-(£40 a year including all expenses, of course
-without the tuition fees) suggest that the ideas of the
-liberal-minded Committee may have forestalled those of
-the future Lady Principal, ever eager to help on those
-who deserved but could not afford education. The
-tuition fees were on the same low scale; from six guineas
-to twenty guineas, and including pianoforte lessons, class
-singing, elementary drawing and needlework, besides
-English subjects and French.</p>
-
-<p>Shares had been taken up to the number of one
-hundred and fifty-seven, so the Council had enough
-money at their disposal to justify the necessary initial
-outlay. After an unsuccessful effort to obtain Lake
-House, which its owner declined to let for the purposes
-of a school, Cambray House, a fine old Georgian building
-with a beautiful garden, was taken at a rent of £200
-a year. Some hundreds of pounds were spent in making
-this house suitable for its purpose, arranging a schoolroom
-(40 by 30 feet), a system of heating, and so on,
-while a part of it was set aside as a residence for the
-Lady Principal. The Committee appointed in this
-capacity Mrs. Procter, widow of Colonel Procter, ‘a
-highly educated officer,’ but her daughter Annie Procter,
-who was called Vice-Principal, was the actual head of the
-College. ‘The former,’ ran the first report, ‘is possessed
-of that age and experience which are necessary for the
-training of the young; the latter of that youth and
-vigour which are necessary for teaching.’ A younger
-sister had the post of assistant secretary, and several
-regular teachers and professors were also appointed.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 650px;" id="illus3">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="650" height="460" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Cambray House.</i><br />
-<i>From an old engraving.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The College was actually opened on February 13,
-1854, the pupils, eighty-two in number, having been
-examined a week before that date. Thus the inauguration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-ceremony was the actual beginning of work. When
-writing her Jubilee history of the College, Miss Beale
-collected reminiscences from some who were present on
-the opening day. Nothing more impressive was forthcoming
-than a scrimmage of dogs in the cloak-room, the
-calling over of names, followed by immediate sorting
-into classes already arranged as a result of the examination,
-and that ‘various old gentlemen promenaded about
-the first few days, and held conclaves in a Board-Room on
-the right hand of the front door.’ The age of the pupils
-varied considerably from that of tiny mites to that of
-grown-up girls. They were arranged in different departments,
-the lowest being a kind of infant school on
-raised benches.</p>
-
-<p>At first the numbers increased rapidly, and by the end
-of the year there were one hundred and twenty pupils.
-But the fees were too low, and the Committee soon had
-cause for anxiety over expenses. In the first year, 1854,
-more than £1300 was expended in regular salaries and
-in payments to visiting teachers; the accounts in December
-showed a deficit of £400. Matters improved but
-slowly in 1855, and in order to lessen expenses, various
-changes were suggested, such as the substitution of German,
-which the Vice-Principal could teach, for Latin,
-and an arrangement by which the pianoforte should be
-taught on a class system. In the general meeting of
-that year, it was resolved no longer to admit boys to the
-College, and with them disappeared the whole of the
-infant department, not to reappear till the Kindergarten
-was opened in 1882.</p>
-
-<p>This change led to a slight diminution of numbers,
-and the report of the year 1856 (published in and dated
-February 1857), while it embodied many words of praise
-from the examiners and showed a balance of receipts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-above expenditure in the current expenses, yet breathed
-a consciousness of many difficulties and obstacles to be
-overcome. It was acknowledged that had it been desirable
-to purchase furniture for the Lady Principal instead
-of paying her £25 a year for the use of her own, it could
-not have been done from the funds in hand. ‘In conclusion,’
-said the Chairman, ‘your Council beg to express
-their thanks to those parents who, during the past year,
-have continued to place confidence in the College and its
-system. On their own part and on that of the Lady
-Principal and the Vice-Principal, they desire to assure the
-public that no efforts shall be wanting on their part to
-amend what may appear, on mature consideration, to be
-defective.... They cannot depart from their fundamental
-principle, which, as they stated, is soundness
-rather than show; <i lang="la">magna est veritas et prævalebit</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>Next year, 1857, the numbers crept down, first to
-ninety-three, then to eighty-nine, and the capital account,
-which had never gone up, was little above £400. Shares
-which should have been £10, were offered for half that
-sum. The want of success was partly due to want of harmony
-between Miss Procter and the Council on points of
-educational method. In May 1858, when the numbers
-were again reduced, and the prospect of improvement
-very small, the Procters resigned; also the ladies who
-took boarders one by one gave up. So poor was the
-outlook for the College at this time that the Council
-might have felt justified in abandoning the whole scheme.
-Fortunately, however, those who possessed the foresight
-and courage, which could still carry it on, were supported
-by the circumstance that the lease of Cambray House had
-a couple more years to run. So it came to pass that in
-May 1858, within a fortnight of Miss Procter’s resignation,
-the Council advertised for a Lady Principal thus:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Cheltenham Ladies’ College</span></p>
-
-<p>‘A Vacancy having occurred in the Office of Lady Principal,
-Candidates for the Appointment are requested to apply by letter
-(with references) before the 1st of June, to J. P. Bell, Esq., Hon.
-Sec., Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p>‘A well-educated and experienced Lady (between the ages of
-35 and 45) is desired, capable of conducting an Institution with
-not less than 100 day-pupils.</p>
-
-<p>‘A competent knowledge of German and French, and a good
-acquaintance with general English Literature, Arithmetic, and
-the common branches of female education, are expected.</p>
-
-<p>‘Salary, upwards of £200 a year, with furnished apartments,
-and other advantages.</p>
-
-<p>‘No Testimonials to be sent until applied for, and no answers
-will be returned except to Candidates apparently eligible.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The shareholders requested a general meeting in order
-to receive an explanation of the cause which led to the
-resignation of Miss Procter, and this was convened
-for June 2. The Committee was occupied during the
-fortnight which succeeded this in selecting and interviewing
-some of the fifty candidates for the Headship,
-and Miss Beale was elected on June 13. In July Miss
-Procter took her final leave in the following letter to
-Mr. Hartland:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Glendale House</span>, <i>July 28, 1858</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My dear Sir</span>,—I thank you much for your kind letter
-enclosing your cheque for £41, 10s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p>‘I take this opportunity of sending you the keys of the
-College. The house has been cleaned throughout. The
-Chimneys have all been swept.</p>
-
-<p>‘Some few stores,—nearly a ¼ cwt. of soap, some dip candles,
-and two new scrubbing brushes,—are in a closet in the pantry.</p>
-
-<p>‘The new zinc ventilator is in the press used for the drawing
-materials.</p>
-
-<p>‘Two cast-iron fenders, of mine, have been removed from two
-of the class-rooms.—I remain, my dear Sir, yours very sincerely,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">S. Anne Procter</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale heard of a vacancy on the staff of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-Ladies’ College in January 1858, when a Queen’s College
-friend, Miss Mulcaster, wrote her a letter interesting for
-the glimpses it gives both of Casterton and Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am anxious,’ the letter ran, ‘that you should as soon as
-possible receive this letter, which is the very earliest reply in
-my power to make to yours.... I cannot feel very sorry on
-your own account for your leaving Casterton, although I do so
-at the manner of it.... I am very glad that you feel the discipline
-and teaching have been useful to you. I do not know
-that anything better could be desired for you than a return to
-Queen’s, but I have something, or rather a <em>shadow</em> of something
-I wish you to know in case you are disappointed there. I
-believe a place in the Ladies’ College at Cheltenham is vacant,
-and if so it might suit you. Miss Procter the Superintendent
-and many of the Committee are considered High Church. Miss
-Brewer, I am sure, would be very much pleased to hear from
-you, and I think would be disposed to facilitate your appointment,
-if there is still a vacancy. She, being one of the teachers,
-could answer any inquiries better than I. There is no home
-provided for the teachers by the Committee, but they have
-hitherto made private arrangements to live together.</p>
-
-<p>‘Cheltenham, to my mind, presents unusual advantages as a
-place of residence; combining those of town and country, and
-last but not least those to be derived from Canon Boyd’s ministry
-and dear Mr. Bromby’s. I could give you some introductions,
-but it is too soon to talk of those things yet....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale must have answered this, and probably
-wrote at the same time to Miss Brewer, whom she
-had known at Queen’s; but there are no further letters
-existing on the subject. But she herself told in later
-life that she declined to apply for the post as she had
-resolved to seek a Headship. There is no mention of
-Cheltenham in the diary until May, but it appears that
-other schools were either applied for or considered.
-On February 17 we have ‘For school at Holloway.’
-On February 18, ‘A letter from a Greenwich school.’
-This was perhaps visited on the 22nd, when the diary
-mentions a journey to Greenwich; but it is not named<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-again. On March 2 we find ‘Mamma wrote to
-Mrs. Birch about school at Reigate.’ On March 24,
-‘Talked to Mr. Hyde about College at Camberwell.’
-This possibly appears again in the record of April 17:
-‘Mary decides against Camberwell scheme.’</p>
-
-<p>A letter mentioned in Miss Beale’s diary as received
-from Cheltenham on May 18 was doubtless in answer
-to her application, after the advertisement had appeared,
-to inform her that she was accepted as a candidate for
-the vacant Headship. The record of the next few
-weeks, brief as it is, bears marks of the zeal and
-activity with which everything possible was done to
-procure testimonials and the recommendations of friends;
-while, at the same time, the work went on at Barnes, and
-the sheets of the <cite>Textbook</cite> were passing through the
-press. The writer was obviously full of anxiety and
-hope, having perceived in Cheltenham a promising sphere
-of work; but she did not relax the daily spiritual combat
-to which we owe the existence of the diary.</p>
-
-<p>On receipt of a favourable answer she went at once
-to see Mr. Plumptre, and wrote to Dr. Trench. After
-the Casterton experience it was necessary to have further
-recommendations than those which she had taken there
-from Queen’s College. Among the friends to whom
-she wrote was Mrs. Lancaster, who replied by return:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Englemere</span>, <i>Whit. Tues., 1858</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am very sorry that you did not tell me about Cheltenham
-before: I am one of the Proprietors! or Committee or something!
-and my brother is Vice-Principal—indeed he almost
-established it. I have now written to him telling him my
-thoughts as to the maturity of your mind and judgment, and
-I hope it may be successful. If you are not quite determined
-against Penitentiary work there is a very nice thing for a Lady
-Superintendent ... about which the Hon. and Rev. C. Harris
-... would give you full particulars.... It is worked by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-Committee, but the Lady Superintendent would be allowed to
-do as she liked....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the course of the next fortnight many more letters
-were received. Among them one from Miss Elwall of
-the Barnes School. She wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘ ... You have succeeded in making subjects usually styled
-dry, positively attractive, whilst your plan has been successful
-in forming not merely superficial scholars even whilst producing
-results in a remarkably short period.</p>
-
-<p>‘Your gentleness of manner, patience, and lady-like deportment
-are all that could be desired, and should you leave me
-I shall feel the greatest regret at the termination of an engagement
-which has been equally agreeable to myself and to my
-pupils.—I am, dear Miss Beale, with much esteem, yours most
-sincerely,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">M. J. Elwall</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>One from Mrs. Curling, the wife of Dr. Curling, an
-eminent physician and her father’s friend, runs:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘39 <span class="smcap">Grosvenor Street</span>, <i>June 12, 1858</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... I shall be truly happy if any recommendation of mine
-can promote your success. I have had the pleasure of knowing
-you many years, and in your journeys with me abroad I have
-had frequent opportunities of witnessing your tact and common
-sense, as well as good temper, and believe you to possess in
-addition the power of management essential for such an appointment.
-I am sure that the College would be fortunate in
-obtaining your assistance.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Some friends wrote direct to the Cheltenham Council.
-The testimony borne to Miss Beale’s high character
-is genuine and strong, if quaintly expressed according
-to present-day notions in some of these. Mr. Shepheard
-wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Silverdale</span>, <i>June 1858</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have the greatest pleasure in expressing my high opinion
-of Miss Beale’s character and attainments generally. Though
-she holds opinions on the subject of sacramental grace entirely
-opposed to my own, it is no more than her due that I should say<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-that her high sense of duty, and inflexible integrity of principle,
-and conscientious following of the path of duty without regard
-to consequences, have won my highest respect and esteem.</p>
-
-<p>‘The circumstances under which she left the Clergy Daughters’
-School in this place, were such, that I cannot speak of them in
-detail, out of unwillingness to reflect on the conduct of the
-authorities there, but I consider her dismissal by them to have
-been highly honourable to herself.</p>
-
-<p>‘As a Teacher, I have reason to believe that she is very highly
-accomplished and has been very successful—though I say this
-from general impressions only.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">H. Shepheard</span>, M.A.</p>
-
-<p><i>Incumbent of Casterton, late Fellow
-of Oriel College, Oxford, and late
-Head Master of Cheam School, Surrey.</i>’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">and Miss Reynolds privately approached Mr. Bellairs:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Trinity Terrace, Cheltenham.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘A friend has asked me whether I can do anything to advance
-the interests of Miss Beale....</p>
-
-<p>‘Miss Beale is not personally known to me, but from all
-I have heard she is a very conscientious and hard-working
-person, as well as one whose attainments are very high in most
-and I believe <em>all</em> of the departments necessary for the successful
-discharge of so important an office. Whether her talents for
-government correspond with her educational skill, and her <em>very
-high religious and moral character</em>, I know not; but I have been
-anxious to fulfil her wish in drawing your attention to her
-application, which she feared might be overlooked as one among
-many.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The most interesting of this series of letters is one
-from Miss Alston to Mrs. Lancaster. This, through
-Mr. Bellairs, undoubtedly helped to influence the Council,
-whose members were wise enough to seek for character
-as much as attainment in the new Head. Others had
-dwelt on Miss Beale’s talent and power and single-hearted
-devotion to her calling; Miss Alston could also
-speak of her life and value at home.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Donnington Rectory</span>, <i>June 12, 1858</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... I heard from Miss Beale this morning that the Cheltenham<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-College had written for her testimonials. I hope she may
-obtain the appointment she desires, it seems one for which she
-is so well qualified. Of her power of teaching others, and
-making them delight in their studies, there is no doubt. But
-you do not know her as I do, in her home and daily life; there
-all look up to her and seek her counsel. Our friendship commenced
-when we were eighteen; since that time I have not
-only profited, I trust, by the instruction she has given me
-in the pursuit of various studies, but I have always consulted
-her on all my plans, where the welfare of others has been
-concerned, and have found her counsel full of common sense
-and kind consideration for the feelings of those we desired to
-help or instruct. She is good-tempered and has plenty of tact,
-but shows instantly her dislike to anything untrue in word
-or act. Forgive this long letter, but I thought you might have
-some influence, and I am much interested for my friend, and at
-the same time feel that I should rather place any one I loved
-under her than with any one else I have met. With kind
-regards,—Believe me yours very sincerely,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Eliza Ann Alston</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On June 14 came a letter summoning Miss Beale
-to Cheltenham. Her diary does not tell us where she
-stayed, or give any particulars of the interviews she had
-with the Council as a body, or with individuals. It
-records her election on the 16th, and the fact that
-Mr. Bellairs came to breakfast on the 17th. On the
-same day she saw Mr. Hartland and Dr. Comyn. By
-the single word ‘dress,’ which concludes her meagre
-entries of what were such momentous events for her,
-hangs a little tale of personal need supplied by the kind
-thought of a sister who willingly lent a blue silk gown
-for the would-be Lady Principal to wear at her first
-interview with her Council. Absorption in the <cite>Textbook</cite>
-and kindred subjects had precluded care of the
-writer’s wardrobe, and when this important moment
-came, it was felt that neither the simple black nor
-the mouse-coloured grey was equal to the occasion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-The conscientious care of the borrowed plumes is still
-remembered.</p>
-
-<p>On June 18 she returned from Cheltenham, full of
-hope, to write innumerable letters—stamps, under their
-ancient name of ‘heads,’ became almost a daily entrance
-in the diary, which sometimes served as account-book;—to
-finish the lessons at Barnes, for the school year had
-not yet ended; and to correct the proofs of the <cite>Textbook</cite>,
-with the satisfaction of feeling that she had in it
-something that would help in the formation of her
-teachers-to-be. She received many congratulations.
-Some letters were kept; Mr. Shepheard’s is given, as it
-bears upon a subject which was about to cause fresh
-trouble.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Silverdale</span>, <i>June 24, 1858</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... I must tell you how pleased I am on your account
-personally, at your success—and the triumph of justice in your
-case over unfairness and tyranny. My pleasure would be indeed
-great, if I had any hope that you might be led to reconsider
-those opinions on sacramental grace which have formed the only
-subject of division in opinion between us. The longer I live
-the more I am convinced of their danger as containing in fact
-the germ of all popery; and subverting the very nature and
-essence of vital godliness, by substituting the <em>form</em> for the
-<em>reality</em>, the outward <em>act</em> for the inward spiritual power and
-operation.</p>
-
-<p>‘I wish you would read Mr. Litton’s book, <cite>The Church of
-Christ</cite>, on that subject; it is unanswerable.</p>
-
-<p>‘What is exactly the name and nature of your College?—Very
-sincerely yours with all kindest regards,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">H. Shepheard</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There were also through these weeks a good many
-interchanged visits on matters both of business and
-pleasure. The name of Miss Vincent occurs twice
-among others mentioned in the diary. This is the lady
-who in August of 1858 became Lady Superintendent at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-Casterton, and remained there till 1888, when she died
-there in harness at the age of seventy-five.</p>
-
-<p>Dorothea Beale was not, however, destined to take
-possession of her kingdom without a conflict. The old
-religious dispute was handed on from Casterton, for Mr.
-Shepheard, with one other whose name does not appear,
-felt he could not but mention the points he held to be
-‘dangerous’ in her religious beliefs. And there was
-certainly still another letter to discourage the Council,
-from M. Mariette to Mr. Penrice Bell, questioning Miss
-Beale’s suitability for the post of Head Mistress on the
-ground that she was not sympathetic in manner. This
-appears to have been disregarded, but the partisans of
-Dean Close felt bound to consider the accusation of High
-Church opinions. Miss Beale first learned of the
-opposition which had arisen to her appointment on
-July 12, in the following letter from Mr. Bell:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 10, 1858.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—Letters have been put into my hand
-to-day which cause me much anxiety, and before consulting the
-Council upon the subject, I think it best to communicate with
-you, begging an immediate reply in the same spirit of unreserve
-and candour and frankness as that in which I now write.</p>
-
-<p>‘When here I took pains to impress upon your mind the fact
-that the Council could not in justice to those whom they represent
-accept a Lady Principal who holds High Church views or
-sympathises with them; and that they had rejected most satisfactory
-testimonials from one of the candidates solely on the
-ground of her professing doctrinal views of that character. I
-was thus explicit with you in order to prevent any misunderstanding
-upon this most important question, but nothing fell
-from your lips to lead me to suppose you were open to an
-objection of that nature. I forbore from motives of delicacy
-(and probably the other members of the Council did the same),
-to press this subject upon you in the shape of direct enquiry,
-feeling sure you would not conceal your real views if they were
-indeed such as I plainly stated to be opposed to those entertained
-by the founders of the institution. The letters are marked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-“Private,” so I am not at liberty to name the writers, but I
-will quote the material portions; and I may remark that both
-gentlemen speak in the highest terms of your qualifications in
-general.</p>
-
-<p>‘“She, Miss Beale, is very High Church to say the least, and
-holds ultra views of Baptismal Regeneration.” ... “She has
-also a serious and deep religious feeling, and a self-denying
-character. <em>But</em> she is decidedly High Church. Her opinions
-on the vital and critical question of sacramental grace are
-altogether those of the High Church or Tractarian School—assuming
-the <i lang="la">opus operatum</i> of the Sacraments to convey, of
-necessity and in all cases, the inward grace of which that Sacrament
-is the sign.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“It is right to add that Miss Beale avows her belief in the
-<cite>Bible</cite> as the rule of faith.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Now you have undoubtedly full right to entertain such
-opinions as in your conscience you believe to be true, but at the
-same time you are (and were) bound in honour of good faith, on
-such occasion as the offering of yourself for the important
-position to which you have been recently appointed, to <em>avow</em>
-your opinions openly and distinctly; especially when made acquainted
-with the views of those responsible for your selection.</p>
-
-<p>‘If it be the fact that you do hold opinions such as are
-attributed to you, it is clear that you will not only inflict serious
-injury on the Institution, but also on yourself, by assuming the
-office—for if you hold us to the appointment the Council would
-and must, I imagine, at once give you the three months’ notice
-(or salary equivalent), and cancel it at the earliest period,
-publishing their reasons for so extraordinary a step. If, however,
-you are misrepresented, I shall heartily rejoice on every
-account, but I beg of you, <em>by return of post</em>, to favour me with
-a definite reply to the two questions I feel it now my duty to
-put to you:—</p>
-
-<p>‘1st. Do you or do you not hold the doctrine of the <i lang="la">opus
-operatum</i> in the Sacrament of Baptism?</p>
-
-<p>‘2nd. Do you or not sympathise with and are attached to the
-principles of the High Church party?—Believe me to remain,
-yours very truly,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. Penrice Bell</span>, <i>Hon. Sec.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<i>PS.</i>—I think it better not to print the Prospectus until the
-present difficulty is settled in some way.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This letter, which must have come as a bolt from the
-blue, was a blow, but not of a crushing nature to one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-whose energies were ever braced by conflict. Miss
-Beale wrote at once to Mr. Bellairs to tell him what had
-happened, and to Mr. Bell in answer to his attack.
-Both letters are given, as they clearly state her religious
-position. To Mr. Bellairs she wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">31 Finsbury Square</span>, <i>July 12</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... Although our acquaintance has been very short, owing
-to the kindness with which you received me, I cannot help
-considering you in some measure as a friend, and feeling that
-you will understand me: perhaps, also, your office both as
-Clergyman and Vice-President of the Cheltenham Ladies’
-College gives me some right to trouble you upon this occasion.</p>
-
-<p>‘I received this morning a note from Mr. Bell, accusing me
-of want of candour in not speaking of my religious views,
-although they were in no way alluded to by the Council, and
-telling me he has been informed that my opinions are those of
-the Tractarian School. Now, as I have never seen more than
-a few pages of the “Tracts,” I cannot positively contradict such
-a statement. I have explained somewhat at large to him what
-are my opinions; I will not repeat them to you, as you will no
-doubt see the letter. That my views differ considerably from
-those of the ultra-evangelical party, of which Mr. Carus Wilson
-is one of the leaders, and the <cite>Record</cite> the accredited organ, I
-freely acknowledge; but I think them those of a moderate
-member of the English Church, and on seeing your name as
-Vice-President, I concluded the Ladies’ College was not
-identified with any exclusive party. I have endeavoured to be
-perfectly candid, for I could not undertake so great a work
-without the hope of God’s blessing. Should my own letter not
-be considered decisive evidence against me, perhaps you would
-think it worth while to write to Mrs. Lancaster or Mrs. Greene
-(with whom I think you said you were acquainted). With
-both of them I have spoken freely on religious subjects, and they
-would tell you whether they believed my opinions to be
-extreme. As nothing is farther from my wishes than to deceive
-the Council, I forward to you by this post two books, which I
-have published without my name—not because I was ashamed
-of expressing what I thought right, but because one naturally
-shrinks from exposing without necessity one’s inner religious
-life. I feel this more especially with regard to the smaller book,
-which I must therefore ask you not to mention to others. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-send them to you, because they may assist you in coming to a
-right conclusion, whether for or against my retaining the post
-to which I have been appointed, and I think the Council will
-be in a great measure guided by your decision.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Mr. Penrice Bell:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘31 <span class="smcap">Finsbury Square</span>, <i>July 12, 1858</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘On looking at the Prospectus of the Casterton School, I saw
-on the Committee the names of those who professed ultra-evangelical
-views; I therefore felt it my duty distinctly to
-explain, before accepting the appointment, wherein my opinions
-differed from those which I knew them to hold. It was <em>after</em>
-I had made that statement that I was appointed. On looking
-at the papers of the Cheltenham College, I found the name of
-Mr. Close in conjunction with that of Mr. Bellairs and others.
-From this and what I had heard privately I was led to conclude
-that you were not identified with any particular party in the
-Church; that your views were not more exclusive than those
-of the Educational Committee of Queen’s College, who had
-expressed themselves satisfied with my teaching. I also placed
-in your hands a testimonial from the Professor of Theology
-there; my opinion was still further strengthened by your accepting
-the recommendation of the Dean of Westminster and
-including the Liturgy of the Church of England amongst the
-subjects taught.</p>
-
-<p>‘Believing myself to hold moderate, certainly not ultra, views
-I did not feel myself open to the charge brought against me
-after my appointment. I think you will remember the subject
-of religion was in no way alluded to before.</p>
-
-<p>‘Having thus, I hope, justified myself from any accusation
-of want of candour, I proceed to answer your questions as briefly
-as I can.</p>
-
-<p>‘If you understand by the <i lang="la">opus operatum</i> “efficacy” of Baptism,—that
-all who are baptized are therefore saved (a doctrine
-which Mr. Shepheard assured me was held by some), I explicitly
-state that I do not hold that doctrine. I believe Baptism to be
-“an outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace
-given unto us” (Catechism); to be the appointed means for
-admitting members into the Church of Christ, according to St.
-Paul’s teaching that “Christ gave Himself for the Church that
-He might save it and cleanse it by the washing of water by
-the word” (Eph. v. 26); that “according to His mercy we
-are saved by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-Holy Ghost” (Tit. iii. 5); that we are therein made “members
-of Christ” and adopted “children of God”; but when I
-use the word “regeneration” I do not understand that spoken of
-by St. John when he says, “he that is born of God cannot sin,”
-but that gift of life without which we are unable even to <em>think</em>
-any good thing; a gift which the Bishop solemnly declares to
-have been already received by those who come to be confirmed
-(Confirmation Service), but which requires daily renewal, a gift
-which we may lose by grieving God’s Holy Spirit by neglecting
-the means of grace, by hiding our Lord’s treasure. And this
-teaching I hold because I find it in the Bible, which I acknowledge
-with the sixth article to be our only rule of faith—because
-it seems to me the basis of St. Paul’s teaching (1 Cor. iii.;
-2 Cor. vi. 10)—and it makes our responsibilities higher and
-deeper if we acknowledge with the Apostle in the language
-which he used to the whole of the Corinthian Church, that we
-are “the temples of the Holy Ghost.” I feel that any partial
-views which tell us of God’s grace being given to some and not
-to others are contrary to the whole tenor of Scripture. Your
-second question again cannot be categorically answered, since it
-has never been defined what are the opinions of the High Church
-party; I would say that I differ from some who assume that
-title....<a name="FNanchor_37" id="FNanchor_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> I think no one could entertain a greater dread than
-I of those Romish opinions entertained by some “who went out
-from us, but were not of us”; indeed during the last six months
-I have been engaged in preparing an English History for the
-use of schools, <em>because</em> Ince’s <cite>Outlines</cite> (a book used in your
-College) inculcates Romish doctrines.</p>
-
-<p>‘In conclusion, I must apologize for the unmethodical way in
-which I have expressed myself, as I am writing in great haste to
-catch the next post, and I have thought it right to reply to you
-without consulting any person or book, except the Bible and
-Prayer Book. I have endeavoured to be perfectly candid;—should
-the Council decide that my views are so unsound that I am unfit
-to occupy the position to which I have been appointed, I shall
-trust that they will allow me to make as public a statement of
-my opinions as they are obliged to make of my dismissal, for I
-shall feel that after this no person of moderate views will trust
-me, and my own conscience would not allow me to work with
-the extreme party in either high or low church.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The diary of these two days gives a hint of the anxiety<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-Miss Beale underwent when the attack was made upon
-her, and before she could receive answers to her own
-letters:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<i>July 12.</i>—Mr. B(ell)’s letter about H(igh) Church from
-Cheltenham, and my answer. Some vanity. (Prayer) for
-resignation.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>July 13.</i>—Sent proofs to Cheltenham. Dined at the Curlings.
-Dr. Clarke very agreeable. Felt angry with Mr. Shepheard.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Bell’s reply to Miss Beale’s letter suggests that
-the difficulty before the Council was less directly one of
-religious principle than that of working a school where
-certain precise opinions were not professed.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 13, 1858.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My dear Miss Beale</span>,—I have to-day laid your reply before
-Mr. Hartland and Dr. Comyn, the only two of my colleagues
-now here, and we have no fault to find with its tenor, which is
-explicit enough. Whether or not the fact of your holding the
-opinions thus avowed will lead to difficulties hereafter, we cannot
-say. If you feel conscientiously bound in and out of class to
-make known and inculcate your distinctive views of doctrine
-according to your interpretation of scripture and of our Liturgy
-and Articles, then it is easy to foresee the result. If, however
-(as I hope), you regard it of primary importance in the instruction
-of the children to inculcate love to God and His Son, and
-charity (in its manifold phases and with its relative duties),
-towards our fellows—treating as of far minor importance the
-doctrinal points about which good men differ so widely,—then I
-should not anticipate any active opposition from those to whom
-your peculiar opinions may be known.</p>
-
-<p>‘The gentleman (a resident clergyman of some influence) to
-whom the two quoted letters were addressed, is now absent for
-a few days; and it remains to be seen whether his scruples and
-objections are, if not removed, at least rendered quiescent by
-your reply. If he should withdraw his children, and make known
-the grounds of doing so, the effect would undoubtedly be prejudicial
-to the College, and the experiment of conducting it under
-your auspices might be futile. Much may depend on what
-answer you can conscientiously make to this question:—</p>
-
-<p>Holding the opinions you have expressed, should you consider<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-it a duty and feel it incumbent on you to inculcate
-them in your Divinity instruction to the pupils?</p>
-
-<p>If you could favour me by a few lines by <em>return</em> of post (as I
-leave before post hour on Friday morning) on this point, which
-I can annex to your letter of to-day, I could see my colleagues
-on the subject once more, and arrange what shall be done in my
-absence.—Yours truly,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. Penrice Bell</span>, <i>Hon. Sec.</i>’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Among Miss Beale’s papers exists an undated and
-much erased note, which appears to be her answer to the
-above. It begins with the remark: ‘I am glad to find
-the Council has not decided that I am so great a heretic
-as from your first letter I feared they would’; and it
-closes with the statement: ‘I quite feel it to be a Christian
-duty, if it be possible to live peaceably with all men,
-not giving heed to those things which minister questions
-rather than godly edifying, but I am sure you will feel I
-should be unworthy of your confidence could I through
-any fear of consequences resort to the least untruthfulness.’
-Meanwhile Mr. Bellairs also wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘ ... Mr. Bell’s letter was, I imagine, of a private character,
-as I had heard nothing of the subject of it before the arrival of
-your note of to-day.</p>
-
-<p>‘So far as I am concerned, my impression is that we of the
-Council have nothing to do <em>now</em> with your private Theological
-opinions, whatever they are, unless they are so extreme as would
-damage the College (and within tolerably wide limits, I individually
-am very indifferent on the matter). I trust you have
-good sense and propriety sufficient to induce you to avoid all
-teaching which would in any degree disturb the character which
-the College ought, in my opinion, to maintain: viz. a place of
-learning in which all members of the Church of England may
-receive religious instruction in an honest and straightforward
-way, according to the teaching of the Bible and the formularies
-of the Church, without extreme interpretation one way or the
-other. I shall probably hear more of this matter when I see
-Mr. Bell.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The storm was over. Though individuals of quite
-opposing views would, later on, occasionally cavil at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-points in Miss Beale’s method of teaching Scripture, she
-never really experienced further trouble on this ground.
-There are many, like the unknown lady to whose ‘High
-Church’ opinions the Council took objection, who would
-have felt they could not work in the spirit of compromise
-implied in the letters of Mr. Bell and Mr. Bellairs.
-There are some who might have agreed to do so, and in
-terror of offending, would have shirked the difficult task
-of religious instruction to the point of making it a lifeless
-thing. Miss Beale undertook it with her eyes open,
-and in spite, or possibly because of the hindrances in the
-way, her Scripture lessons became the very pivot of her
-teaching.</p>
-
-<p>The diary again is very characteristic at this point.
-The anxiety of mind caused by her trouble was not permitted
-to excuse ill-temper. ‘July 4. Letter from
-Cheltenham. Neglect of prayer. Several times rude.’
-This was the day which practically settled the fate of the
-Ladies’ College, and was the greatest visible landmark in
-Miss Beale’s life. In the ensuing fortnight, the last she
-spent at home, though there is an entry for every day,
-the name of Cheltenham does not occur. Two visits
-from Miss Brewer, who had been re-appointed to the
-Cheltenham staff with the title of Vice-Principal, ‘shopping,’
-and ‘turning out,’ suggest preparations. There is
-no entry of the day on which she went, but from deduction
-it was August 4, and in the company of her mother.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-<span class="smaller">EARLY HISTORY OF THE LADIES’ COLLEGE</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Old fables are not all a lie</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Which tell of wondrous birth;</div>
-<div class="verse">Of Titan children, Father Sky,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And wondrous Mother Earth.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Earth-born, my sister, thou art still</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">A daughter of the sky;</div>
-<div class="verse">Oh, climb for ever up the hill</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Of thy divinity.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse center">...</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">For cause and end of all thy strife,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And unrest as thou art—</div>
-<div class="verse">Still stings thee to a higher life</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The Father at thy heart.’</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="attr"><span class="smcap">George Macdonald</span>, <cite>To my Sister,<br />on her Twenty-first Birthday</cite>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Cambray House, which was Miss Beale’s home for
-fifteen years, is one of the finest buildings erected in the
-period when Cheltenham was being laid out with a view
-to royal visits. The Duke of Wellington himself stayed
-there in 1823.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 460px;" id="illus4">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="460" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Miss Dorothea Beale</i><br />
-<i>1859.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The garden, mentioned in the early College reports as
-the ‘pleasure grounds,’ was a special delight to Miss
-Beale. In 1858 it was still untouched, and had many
-beautiful trees; one, a standard apricot tree, was—happy
-omen! covered with golden fruit in that first autumn of
-her life at Cheltenham. The house itself was beginning
-to change its character of family residence to that of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-building adapted for school purposes, and before very
-long even the rooms given up for the use of the Principal
-and the Vice-Principal were encroached upon. Nor
-were those rooms furnished in character with the stately
-outside of the house. ‘The second-hand furniture procured
-would not have delighted people of æsthetic taste.
-Curtains were dispensed with as far as possible, and it
-was questioned whether a carving-knife was required by
-the Principal in her furnished apartments.’<a name="FNanchor_38" id="FNanchor_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> To such
-domestic details Miss Beale was indifferent, but it must
-have been less easy to practise an economy which limited
-the extension of her work. ‘The teaching staff was
-reduced as low as possible, and the Principal and Vice-Principal
-gave up their half-holiday to chaperone those
-who took lessons from masters. The Principal taught
-all the English subjects to Classes I. and II., besides
-giving weekly lessons in Holy Scripture throughout the
-College.’</p>
-
-<p>So long as the chief task of the Lady Principal was
-to prevent the College losing further ground, so long as
-her time and thought outside school hours were absorbed
-by anxiety over every pupil who came and went, still
-more over those who failed to come, there could be no
-rapid process of development. But it would have been
-impossible for Miss Beale to take up an existing educational
-work without at once making her individual mark
-upon it, and from the first the school felt the grasp of
-her able hand. At Casterton she had longed at once
-to change, to reform. At Cheltenham remodelling
-rather than revolution was her aim—fulfilment and wise
-development.</p>
-
-<p>To understand the way in which she gave fresh life,
-and gradually refashioned the methods she found, it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-necessary to go back to the prehistoric days before her
-arrival in 1858. There is little record of the educational
-system and teaching of that period, but it is certain
-that both were liberal and thorough, free from narrowness
-and petty tyranny, in advance of those existing in
-the ordinary boarding-school of the day. The curriculum,
-it is noteworthy, was arranged with a view to
-developing the mind and character. Latin was taught
-at first ‘very thoroughly,’ and the change by which
-after the first year it was replaced by German, which
-the Lady Principal could teach, was a question of
-economy, not of conciliation of parents who might think
-dead languages useless subjects of study. In making
-the substitution it was hoped, so runs the report of
-1856, that instruction in German ‘might be made
-equally instrumental with that in the Latin language
-for conveying an accurate, exact, and logical knowledge
-of the principles of general Grammar. In this impression
-(your Council) find ... that they have not been
-mistaken.’</p>
-
-<p>This attitude with regard to German was no new idea
-to Miss Beale, and she pursued the aims of the founders
-when she made the language a necessary subject of study for
-all pupils above the lower classes. Latin she discouraged,
-except in the case of those who were near the top of the
-College, maintaining that girls of seventeen and eighteen
-could learn in a few months as much Latin as would
-absorb the greater part of a boy’s whole time at school.</p>
-
-<p>On the question of music the founders had shown
-themselves out of sympathy with the fashionable practice
-of a day when every ‘young lady’ was expected to perform
-on the piano, every governess to teach it. They
-conceded so far as to include music in the regular curriculum,
-but the expense of providing the requisite number<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-of teachers and pianos for so many pupils was heavy.
-To meet this a system of class instruction was devised,
-by which the teacher gave a lesson to four pupils at
-once, the same piece being performed simultaneously
-on the treble and bass of two pianos. Whether such
-an arrangement was conducive to the production of good
-music or the formation of taste may be doubted. It
-suggests, indeed, a certain irony in those who hit upon
-a scheme that might just satisfy a foolish popular demand,
-assured that any who really cared for music would not
-grudge payment to the good teachers provided for the
-extra classes. The music difficulty occupies some space
-in the early reports which, in somewhat stilted and
-solemn fashion, set forth new ideals for the education
-of the ‘fairer sex.’ The following is quoted from the
-report of February 1856:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Your Council cannot refrain from stating their belief that as
-long as the singular and extraordinary notion continues to prevail
-in the minds of those forming the upper classes of English
-Society, that dexterity of fingering on a single instrument is
-<em>the</em> most important part of female education, against, it might
-have been thought, not only the suggestions of common sense,
-but the practical lessons of later life, so long will the time
-required to be given for attaining even a low amount of proficiency
-in this sleight of hand, most seriously interfere with
-progress in all education and mental cultivation worthy of the
-name.</p>
-
-<p>‘How far the acknowledged deficiency of many of the fairer
-sex in logical qualities and reasoning powers is due to this
-strange delusion, it is not for your Council to discuss; but they
-are not without hopes that the time may not be far distant
-when they will be supported in an arrangement which will
-place instrumental music altogether among the extra subjects,
-and leave them and the teachers free to elevate and improve,
-morally and intellectually, the condition of the female mind,
-unembarrassed by so unessential an accomplishment.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>These remarks were followed in 1857 by others:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Your Council have nothing to add to or retract from what
-was said upon this subject in that Report: but, while they
-believe that the instruction in this so-called accomplishment is
-as efficient within these walls as it is capable, under all circumstances,
-of being made, they must repeat their regret that so
-vast a portion of valuable time should be sacrificed, in the
-earlier years of almost every Englishwoman who hopes to become
-a wife and mother, to that which is confessedly of no
-value in an intellectual point of view; and can, by no possibility,
-be of service to her in either of these two most important,
-and generally much coveted capacities.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The College had opened with a goodly array of
-teachers of ‘accomplishments,’ as it was hoped thus to
-attract bye-students. These were gradually dismissed,
-and it cannot have added to the reputation of the school
-that some of the best-known masters, such as M. Théodore
-Colson, were considered too expensive. When the new
-Principal came there were only two teachers of music,
-one of whom was Mrs. Lloyd, mother of the great
-singer. Of this lady’s skill and loyalty Miss Beale
-always spoke with affectionate remembrance. The Lady
-Principal gained her support in a reform instituted very
-early in her reign, when separate piano lessons were
-again introduced, and the class system, disliked by Miss
-Beale on other than musical grounds, was swept away.
-She could not permit an arrangement which withdrew
-four pupils at once from the ordinary work of the
-school; through which important lessons were lost,
-and ‘collisions between class and music teachers made
-frequent.’ That the Council allowed such a change to
-be made is a testimony to their confidence in the new
-Principal. The immediate result was disastrous to the
-funds, and continued to be so until Mr. Brancker introduced
-his new financial scheme in 1860.</p>
-
-<p>The founders of the College were not men to be
-content with knowledge obtained from epitomes; Miss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-Procter, also, was earnest and devoted in her work, and
-took trouble to teach by means of lectures; but only
-dictated notes were given, and these were not corrected.
-Her lessons were evidently interesting:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘We worked hard, and the teaching was very thorough. I have
-no doubt many of the pupils beside myself would willingly own
-the great debt of gratitude they owe to Miss Procter; not so
-much, perhaps, for what she taught, as for the way in which
-she educated us by developing and enlarging our minds. She
-possessed a good library, and we were often sent for books of
-reference, and shown the bearings of the subject we were studying.
-Physical geography was taught by Miss Brewer, who
-always carefully prepared her lessons. M. Tiesset made our
-French lessons delightful, even the grammar was a pleasure,
-and he seemed to enjoy teaching us as much as we did being
-taught by him.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>So wrote Mrs. Coulson (<i lang="fr">née</i> Hartland) for Miss
-Beale’s <cite>History of the Ladies’ College</cite>, and another old
-pupil added:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘We had interesting lectures on Ancient History in general,
-and Greek History and Literature, from Miss Procter....
-M. Tiesset and his sister taught French very well indeed, and
-I especially remember a chart of irregular verbs, M. Tiesset’s
-own arrangement, which, I believe, was a valuable help.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Greek history was a favourite subject with Miss Procter,
-who neglected for it the teaching of any other. Miss Beale,
-fresh from her <cite>Textbook</cite>, at once began English and general
-history with her young first class. Regardless of the
-additional labour it brought her, she also taught the
-children to take notes, which she corrected for them.
-She gave weekly examinations on the subjects studied,
-thus affording opportunity for English composition.</p>
-
-<p>No science nor mathematics were taught in the early
-days. Miss Beale would have liked to introduce Euclid
-at once, but says, ‘Had I done so, I might have been the
-death of the College, so I had to wait for the tide. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-began my innovations with the introduction of scientific
-teaching, and under the name of physical geography I
-was able to teach a good deal. This subject was unobjectionable,
-as few boys learned geography.’</p>
-
-<p>In one particular Miss Beale found the authorities of
-her new school striving to be abreast with the times. It
-was a rule of the constitution that the pupils should be
-examined annually, and each year a graduate of Oxford or
-Cambridge had undertaken the task. The first examiner
-(in 1853) was Mr. Nicolay, then Dean of Queen’s
-College, Harley Street. In the succeeding years a
-College master or some other local scholar conducted
-the examination and sent in a report to the Council.</p>
-
-<p>The few specimens left of those early examination
-questions, even without the answers, mark a tide-line now
-interesting to trace.</p>
-
-<p>At first the review of all knowledge was comprehended
-in twelve very simple questions, the most difficult
-mathematical calculation set before the first class being,
-‘The Price of 3 ozs. of tea at 4s. 4d. per lb.’ The paper
-concluded thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘11. Write out that part of your duty towards your neighbour
-which explains the fifth commandment, and prove each assertion
-from Scripture.</p>
-
-<p>‘12. Write out the following sentence in large text, and
-small hand, as specimens of your handwriting:</p>
-
-<p>‘Integrity of understanding, and nicety of discernment, were
-not allotted.</p>
-
-<p>‘(Attach to this paper specimens of your needlework and of
-your drawing).’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the true teacher the interest of her work lies,
-beyond and above all subjects and methods, in the child.
-No tale, alas! nor letter remains to show what Miss
-Beale thought of her children when she first came among
-them. In one respect there must have been disappointment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-Miss Procter had opened a rival school, which
-had drawn off the elder pupils; consequently the first
-class consisted of girls of thirteen and fourteen. But
-fortunately there are some of those same children who
-can recall the first impression made upon themselves by
-the new Principal, as she appeared on August 19, 1858.
-Mrs. Mace, a daughter of the late Bishop Bromby, was
-among these. She writes:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I well remember Miss Beale’s first appearance at College,
-and how I and three or four special friends, who were already
-there ... felt fiercely loyal to the former rule, and told each
-other we knew exactly what the new Principal would be like,
-“thin, tall, spectacled, and old-maidy.” I can see her now as she
-appeared in reality,—the slight, young figure, the very gentle,
-gliding movements, the quiet face with its look of intense
-thoughtfulness and utter absence of all poor and common stress
-and turmoil, the intellectual brow, the wonderful eyes with their
-calm outlook and their expression of inner vision. You may be
-sure it was not long before the captious thirteen-year-olds were
-changed into warm admirers.</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not think her quiet dignity, her strength and personality,
-her power of influence, could at any time of her strenuous and
-successful life have been greater or more impressive. We were
-few in number then, and, of course, saw more of her than was
-possible for later pupils.</p>
-
-<p>‘I never remember her raising her voice, scolding us,
-being satirical or impatient with dulness or inattention. She
-was not satirical even when a small girl, on being asked what criticism
-might be passed on Milton’s treatment of <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>,
-ventured the audacious suggestion that the poet was “verbose.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Small instances of the new Principal’s own powers of
-observation and use of outside facts stand out through
-the mists of time; for instance,</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">‘an afternoon when she visited the needlework room and found
-me being most justly blamed for inefficiency. In kindly tones
-she said to the shy and clumsy culprit, “You ought to sew well,
-for your mother has such beautiful long fingers,” and somehow
-I felt comforted and encouraged. Then there was a day when
-I summoned up courage to go and tell her that I had been guilty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-of some small disobedience, as well as others who had been
-detected and punished. She seized the opportunity of impressing
-upon me that as I was (though only fourteen) a teacher in
-my father’s Sunday-school,—a fact of which I did not know she
-was aware,—I must surely see that obedience to rule was
-necessary. I can still hear the low, earnest tones in which she
-made her appeal to my sense of justice and right.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The incident suggests a laxer state of discipline than
-was ever known after. Assuredly on this point Miss
-Beale found a good deal to do. Some of the ‘young
-ladies’ treated the good-natured French master as their
-brothers at Cheltenham College might have done. There
-is a story, too, of a convenient cupboard at the end of
-the schoolroom, large enough for a quiet game or gossip,
-and of the consternation produced on a little knot of
-girls who thought they had assembled unobserved, when
-the door was quietly opened upon them by the Lady
-Principal herself.</p>
-
-<p>In the matter of discipline, as of tuition, Miss Beale
-appears to have worked on lines already laid down.
-Perhaps she kept before her mind counsel which she later
-gave to a pupil who left Cheltenham to be head of a
-Foundation School: ‘Remember the school belongs to
-the governors, not to you.’ But we are equally certain
-that she would not have worked on any lines which she
-did not approve. She found no system of rules and
-penalties. She did not wish to introduce one; but she
-made real and abiding, in a manner hardly credited by
-those outside, the rule introduced by Miss Procter, by
-which no pupil might speak to another without leave.
-With regard to this rule, which at once taught self-control
-and produced order, the ‘quietness which minimises
-irritability,’ it may be further remarked that in
-a place and time of ‘exclusive’ views, the College could
-hardly have existed without it. The rule, kept, in itself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-prevented any pupil from making friends for the first
-time in College; at any rate, it enabled her not to do so.
-There was, however, when Miss Beale first came, a good
-deal of speaking without leave. This disobedience with
-other irregularities she gradually overcame, not by an
-overawing personality alone, but with the ‘quiet’ ways
-and the word in season of which more than one old
-pupil speaks.</p>
-
-<p>Tracing in sequence the history of Miss Beale’s first
-two years, when the College, though in the eyes of the
-world slowly perishing, was really sinking strong foundations,
-the Report of 1859 stands out with its commendation
-of the new Lady Principal. ‘Of Miss Beale
-herself it may suffice to remark, that to varied and
-extensive knowledge in all branches of Education, and
-skill in imparting it, she unites a manner and disposition
-which at once command the respect and win the affection
-of her Pupils, and renders it pleasant to your Council to
-maintain that frequent personal communication with her
-which is greatly conducive to the wellbeing of the
-Institution.’ Beyond this there is little definite to record,
-save the steady half-yearly diminution in the number of
-pupils and of the balance at the bank, and the consequent
-retrenchments, implying fresh burden and effort
-for the small teaching staff.</p>
-
-<p>In her <cite>History of the College</cite>, Miss Beale dismissed
-as with a smile the tale of her early struggles, when
-each quarter it seemed less likely that the school could
-live, till in the last half-year of 1859 there were only sixty-five
-pupils and but a few pounds in the bank. But she
-admitted that perhaps only a barrister sitting in his
-chambers, and waiting in vain for briefs, could sympathise
-with the anxiety of that time, when upon one or
-two pupils more or less depended the very existence of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-the College. The story she tells of recalling pupils, sent
-from the door by a servant who said she was at dinner,
-shows her unwearying zeal: ‘I sent her to fetch them
-back, saying, I am never at dinner.’ No pupil was lost
-for want of watchfulness. None could give notice
-without her knowing the reason, and in many cases
-getting the notice recalled. The problem was to live
-on, working in a way the public had not learned to
-appreciate. Those were days when nervous strain was
-little known and scarcely feared. School hours were
-long; the time-table of the College then involved
-morning and afternoon school for most days in the week.
-To one who sought ever to instruct with freshness and
-zeal, and to take trouble to make her pupils think for
-themselves, the work of teaching twice a day through
-the long half-years would now be counted an undue
-effort and strain. In addition to this, Dorothea Beale
-took upon herself, as if it were her own personal need
-(and she made it so), the daily fretting anxiety of making
-the College pay. This she never really threw off, though
-in the last years of established success it became somewhat
-modified. The economic strain was relaxed when
-Mr. Brancker’s able hand was laid upon the finances;
-the labour of teaching was lightened when the hours
-were changed, and when with gradually improving
-fortunes more and better teachers were engaged.
-Doubtless she might have taken advantage of these improvements
-to give herself more ease of body and mind.
-But she cared for no reward, save the ‘wages of going
-on.’ Her eager, nobly ambitious nature responded but
-too quickly to the claims of the College, so with each
-step made certain, there was ever immediately before her
-another to be fought for and won. It were hardly
-possible to say too much in praise of the enthusiastic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-self-sacrifice which made the College what it is; but
-some of the results of the early strife with fortune were
-to be deplored. It left her too conscious of the place
-of the institution in the public eye; it made it hard for
-her to justify a more generous expenditure than was
-possible at first.</p>
-
-<p>The improved discipline, the invigorating teaching,
-even the efforts of the new Principal herself, failed to
-attract pupils, and when in 1860 the lease of Cambray
-House expired, no one was willing to take the responsibility
-of renewing it.</p>
-
-<p>Forty years later, when looking back on that time of
-gloom, Miss Beale wrote: ‘How often I was full of
-discouragement. It was not so much the want of money
-as the want of ideals which depressed me. If I went
-into society I heard it said, “What is the good of education
-for our girls? They have not to earn their living.”
-Those who spoke did not see that for women as for men
-it is a sin to bury the talents God has given; they seemed
-not to know that the baptismal right was the same for
-girls as for boys, alike enrolled in the army of light,
-soldiers of Jesus Christ.</p>
-
-<p>‘But helpers were sent with a faith and courage greater
-than mine.’</p>
-
-<p>First among these was Mr. J. Houghton Brancker,
-who, already a member of the Council, became at the
-moment of deepest need, auditor of the accounts, and
-brought to the service of the College his great knowledge
-of business and enthusiastic interest in education. Mr.
-Brancker had come to live in Cheltenham for the sake
-of his daughters, in the year that Miss Beale became
-Principal. He was churchwarden to Mr. Bromby, whose
-liberal views he shared. Mr. Brancker had more than
-zeal and interest; he could think out a plan and pursue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-it. He spared no effort or trouble where a good end
-was to be obtained. When he became financier of the
-College he gave it ‘a large share of his time, and as a
-paid secretary could not be afforded, he undertook all
-duties gratuitously.’ He made out a new scheme by
-which the ordinary fees were lowered, but music and
-drawing became extras. It was too great a venture to
-renew the lease of Cambray House; but the owner of
-the house consented to take the College on as a yearly
-tenant. The new scheme of payment helped at once to
-bring improvement, the number of pupils went up, and
-Mr. Brancker went so far as to order ‘seven new benches,
-three of them with backs.’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 420px;" id="illus5">
-<img src="images/illus5.jpg" width="420" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Mr. T. Houghton Brancker</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This act of extravagance was followed almost immediately
-by an enlargement of the schoolroom, making it
-seventy feet long. Mr. Brancker proved that this additional
-space was really a financial economy; for with it
-all the pupils could be contained in one room, and the
-necessity of increasing the staff was deferred. As an
-alternative to the extension he breathed the suggestion,
-for the first time probably in the history of the College,
-of a new building, a building of its own, should a suitable
-site be obtained. In his letter on this subject to
-Mr. Hartland, the ‘young ladies’ for the first time
-appear as ‘children.’ Mr. Brancker’s dream was destined
-to be deferred for ten years; but was borne in mind by
-those whom it most concerned. It may be thought he
-was premature even in the enlargement, in spending at
-once the small profit made out of the increasing number
-of pupils. But he did not aim at making a fortune for
-the College. From the first it was proposed that the
-shareholders should reap no financial profit, and Mr.
-Brancker wished it to be evident that every penny was
-needed for the improvement of the work: hence, it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-no part of his plan to have a balance in hand. His effort
-was to keep up the prestige of the College in every way,
-and in order to do this he limited the number of shares
-issued to the actual number of pupils, in order that they
-might not be advertised for sale at a lower price than
-that at which they were purchased.</p>
-
-<p>In three years from the time at which Mr. Brancker
-became auditor, he was able to write: ‘February 1863.
-We promised assets over £1000, they are £1076.
-We promised a money balance of over £200, and it
-is £356. So I think the shareholders may have confidence
-in their Chancellor of the Exchequer. We may
-well be proud of the result, but we are <em>deeply</em> indebted
-to Miss Beale’s exertions for it, and I am glad her
-remuneration (by capitation fees) is so much increased.’</p>
-
-<p>By 1864 all pressing anxiety for the existence of the
-College was over. With its one hundred and thirty pupils
-it was practically full. A regularly constituted boarding-house
-was opened. Here the day-pupils, whose parents
-were leaving Cheltenham, could be taken, and thus
-another cause of diminution in the number of pupils was
-put an end to. Undivided attention and care could now
-be given to the work.</p>
-
-<p>In February a change which greatly told on this was
-made, a change which now seems to have been only wise
-and reasonable, but which was at the time regarded as
-extraordinary and revolutionary. Longer morning hours
-were substituted for morning and afternoon school each
-day, Thursday afternoons being set apart for dancing
-and needlework. Possibly Miss Beale anticipated the
-outcry that would be raised; for she asked the mother
-of one of the pupils, one likely to be opposed to the
-change, to be with her at the Council meeting at which
-it was determined, ostensibly because she herself dreaded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-the meeting, but doubtless in order that a representative
-of the parents might hear the subject fully discussed. No
-notice of the change was sent to the shareholders, parents
-and guardians received an intimation scarcely a week
-before it took place. Before that week was over, stormy
-articles appeared in the local papers, notices of removal
-were sent in, and a memorial from the shareholders and
-others caused Mr. Brancker hastily to summon another
-Council meeting, and to write to Mr. Hartland, ‘May I
-specially beg that you will attend ... as I consider the
-vital interests and the future prospects of the College are
-at stake.’ Mr. Brancker and Miss Beale recognised that
-now or never the battle must be won. Either the College
-authorities must rule, or the local papers and popular
-clamour.</p>
-
-<p>The objections of the memorialists were that the
-change was a <i lang="fr">coup d’état</i>; that four hours’ continuous
-study was too much for the children; that the governesses
-were idle in wanting a half-holiday every afternoon. But
-the real ground of dislike was doubtless that parents
-shirked the responsibility of looking after their children
-in the afternoons, and preferred schoolroom arrangements
-which would provide them with occupation during
-the whole day.</p>
-
-<p>The Council replied in a circular to the parents that
-they would limit the experiment to a period of two
-months, after which they would act upon the opinion of
-the parents; and should the new plan be adopted, the
-quarter’s fees should be returned to those who wished to
-remove their children. The advantages of the change
-were then set forth.</p>
-
-<p>It had been made to meet the objections raised to
-physical and mental effort following immediately upon
-a hurried meal; to the young ladies passing constantly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-through the streets, to the trouble of sending servants,
-the exertion of so much walking, the time wasted in
-dressing and undressing, and to many others.</p>
-
-<p>Medical men, among whom were Dr. Barlow and Dr.
-Gull,<a name="FNanchor_39" id="FNanchor_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> were asked for their opinions; these were uniformly
-favourable to the change. The long morning hours were
-lightened by the introduction of calisthenics, drawing,
-and needlework, and it was arranged that certain teachers
-should attend the College every afternoon to supervise
-the preparation of lessons when the parents desired it.
-When a general meeting on the subject took place at the
-end of the specified two months, only eight voted for the
-old system. ‘It was found,’ says Miss Beale, ‘that more
-work was done in less time, for attention was closer ...
-teachers and children had been able to get some afternoon
-exercise.’</p>
-
-<p>What was then thought so extraordinary has since
-become the order of the day for girls’ schools. In this
-matter Cheltenham led the way, a similar change was
-made by Miss Buss in 1865, and when the hours of the
-Girls’ Public Day School Company were arranged in
-1873, it was on the plan of putting all regular studies
-into the morning hours.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of Miss Beale’s first six years the College
-was in a much improved condition. There were ten
-classes, where she had found six. The notable changes on
-the staff, which was now larger, were that Miss Brewer had
-left to open a school for little boys in Brighton, and Miss
-Anna Beale and the Miss Eatons had joined. Increased
-prosperity, and above all an older first class, enabled
-Miss Beale to introduce some of the subjects which at
-first were thought to be too unacceptable to be safe.
-There was, of course, opposition from those who were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-constantly repeating that ‘girls would be turned into
-boys by studying the same subjects.’ What, it was asked
-by some parents, do girls want with Euclid or advanced
-arithmetic? There were, however, a few who understood
-Miss Beale’s aims, and she was ever grateful for
-the support they gave her.</p>
-
-<p>The method of annual examinations was gradually
-improved. When there was so little money available,
-local examiners, some of whom had no claim to the position,
-were chosen. Miss Beale records her conviction
-that a German examiner, who was at the time teaching in
-a local school, was a waiter from some hotel who had
-come to England out of the season. One English
-examiner recommended that history should be taught
-backwards. This was then regarded as an astounding
-proposition. Mr. Brancker fully sympathised with Miss
-Beale’s wish to improve the standard by obtaining examiners
-from one of the universities, and obtained permission
-from the Council to seek them himself in Oxford.
-The result was that for two or three years Mr. Sidney
-Owen undertook the principal part of the annual examination.
-His name was the first of a long list of men
-notable for scholarly achievement or educational progress,
-who in later years conducted these examinations at
-Cheltenham. In his first report Mr. Owen said much
-for the moral characteristics revealed by the intellectual
-work it was his business to survey. He concludes a very
-favourable judgment by saying he must not omit to mention
-that there were particular instances of remarkable
-excellence of which the College may justly be proud.
-Some of the papers he said, ‘would do credit to any
-Institution and gain high marks in any public examination....
-May the College long give the lie to the
-miserable and pernicious fancy that accomplishments<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-ought to be the staple of a lady’s education, and that
-her reason is not designed by the Almighty to be highly
-cultivated.’ But he thought the papers too long. Mr.
-Owen was indeed the very first adventurer into that
-flood of response which examination questions cause to
-flow from uncontrolled feminine pens. Mr. Dodgson
-(Lewis Carroll) was in 1863 the first university
-examiner in arithmetic and mathematics.</p>
-
-<p>This year was a fruitful one to Miss Beale for yet
-another reason. It was the year of the completion of
-her <cite>Chart</cite>. Always interested in history, ideally and
-practically, she had as early as the Queen’s College days
-adopted a French scheme by which the learning of dates
-was to be simple and easy, and the connections of history,
-the bearing of facts and events upon each other, were to
-be seen at a glance. She now perfected and brought it
-into use. The plan was based on the assumption that a
-fact is more readily grasped through the eye, than by
-the ear. By means of large squares, which were to represent
-centuries, enclosing smaller ones, which should
-denote years, the whole coloured in different shades
-according to the different ruling dominions and dynasties,
-a complete outline of the history of a country was to
-appear on one page. The reckoning was made by which
-ninety-nine was counted as the last year of a century,
-with the result that in the year 1900 the chart found
-itself somewhat discredited. But this method of counting,
-of course, in no way interfered with the system. In
-learning dates at the College, great stress was laid upon
-having a chart open before the student, so that she might
-grow familiar with its look, and become able to call up
-the knowledge of any special event by remembering the
-position of a dot in a certain square. There were those
-to say with Canon Francis Holland, founder of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-Church of England High Schools in London, ‘Why was
-I born before such aids were given to the understanding?’
-Whether this system was indeed the royal road Miss
-Beale had planned for her pupils may well be questioned;
-but the <cite>Chart</cite> had at any rate the value of a simple <i lang="la">vade
-mecum</i> of chronology, introducing every girl at College
-to the minimum of facts she should know in the history
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Chart</cite> drew for its author a last kind word of
-recognition from an old friend, when Mr. Mackenzie
-wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Westbourne College</span>, 1863.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... I am proud to think that I had any part, however
-humble, in directing your mind to the Tabular style of teaching;
-and I am gratified to find that one of whom I had so early
-formed a favourable opinion, has proved to be so able a worker in
-the great cause of Education.</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope that you and your sisters, as well as my Godson,
-quite understand that I entertain for you all the feelings of an
-old friend, who values you on your own account as well as for
-the sake of both your Parents.—Believe me to be always your
-sincere Friend,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">C. Mackenzie</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>So, in the best sense the College grew. Not in
-outward prosperity alone, in teaching power, in class
-rooms; but within. The invisible fabric of mind, and
-will, and heart, co-ordinated by one great idea, was slowly
-being raised. The ‘aborigines,’ as those who were girls
-of the Cambray House time call themselves, even insist
-that at no time of her career was Miss Beale’s personal
-influence so direct as then, when teaching so many
-subjects herself, and in small classes, she came personally
-in contact with nearly all the older pupils. All classes
-had their place and desks in the long hall; but the
-lowest division had a separate schoolroom as soon as
-funds justified it, and the rooms of the house, even on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-occasion those appointed to the Principal, were used as
-classrooms. Miss Beale did not often teach in the
-large hall. The young ones were cleared out of their
-division room when she gave a big lecture; a small
-class, such as one for German translation, would be
-taken in her drawing-room. There came a moment
-when even her bedroom was invaded. Those small
-classes of mathematics or German were more especially
-the ones which endeared teacher and pupils to each
-other. There was always enough personal awe and
-inspiration about the Lady Principal to ensure a well-prepared
-lesson from really interested pupils, and often
-beyond the lesson there would be delightful talk.
-<cite>Iphigenie in Tauris</cite> recalls many thoughts beyond German
-translation, and the verbal exercise itself was deprived
-of every vestige of dulness by her great interest in the
-growth and development of words. No noble thought,
-no fine simile was allowed to pass unnoticed; other
-poems were compared, or perhaps a passage would be
-given to be translated into English verse. In the mere
-suggestion of this, what hope and encouragement lay for
-many who hardly liked to own their pleasure in such an
-attempt, or who had found earlier efforts of the kind
-thwarted by criticism too bracing for beginners! It
-may indeed be thought that Miss Beale had always an
-unwarranted admiration for the verse-making of her
-pupils. If in this she sometimes offended the cause of
-pure literature, her attitude towards it was yet surely the
-right one for a teacher.</p>
-
-<p>This must indeed have been one of the happiest
-periods of her work, when she first came into near touch
-with the children she had seen grow up about her, and
-felt herself able to give impetus and training to growing
-aspirations and developing thought, when her sympathy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-was constantly appealed to in the way in which she could
-best give it.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘It is my peculiar privilege to have spent all my College
-career in her class, to go through years of her special personal
-teaching. In later days, when the College assumed larger
-dimensions, such an experience must have been rare; to those
-who could claim it, it meant a potent influence for life. How
-vividly can I recall her sitting on her little dais, scanning the
-long school-room and discovering anything amiss at the far end
-of it; or making a tour of inspection to the various classes with
-a smiling countenance that banished terror.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>So writes one old pupil of that time. Another speaks
-of that deep tenderness which she ever felt, but often
-concealed, and was not afraid of showing in a case of
-special need.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘When I was almost a child at College I lost my mother, and
-shall never forget Miss Beale’s tender sympathy and help. She
-took such interest in my preparation for Confirmation, and
-brought me herself to my first Communion,—just she and I
-alone; a day I shall always remember. All through my girlhood
-she was a kind and ready adviser, and continued her interest
-throughout my married life. One always felt whatever happened
-to one, Now I must tell Miss Beale.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It is sad to know that Miss Beale was often depressed
-in that hopeful spring-time of the College by the tongues
-of gossip and slander. She had so profound a horror of
-petty talk about other people’s business, that she possibly
-exaggerated the importance of carelessly repeated and
-untrue reports. She mentions the local gossip from
-which the College had to suffer.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Tales were handed about that it was impossible to trace. It
-was said that accomplishments were neglected, that the pupils
-played on dumb pianos. Persons who did not exist, and others
-who would never have been admitted, were said to attend the
-College. News was sent out to Canada that the cattle plague
-was prevailing, and the report was half believed. The mere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-circulation of absurd falsehoods is, however, often enough to
-decide a mother to place her daughter elsewhere; sometimes no
-falsehood at all, a contemptuous tone is enough. Such things
-can only be met by silence and steady and unobtrusive work.
-Perhaps one is better off without the children of those who
-accept their rule of life from Mrs. Grundy. Certainly such
-opposition and persecution prove an excellent tonic, and I personally
-feel grateful for it, though it was a bitter draught. We
-had to remember that the interests of some were injured by the
-establishment of the College; the wish being father to the
-thought, people would sometimes believe what they said.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Matters reached a climax when an absolutely untrue
-statement concerning cruelty to animals was set on foot
-about Mrs. Fraser, who had opened a boarding-house in
-connection with the College. The real gravity of the
-report lay in the circumstance that some in the College
-had listened to it, and it was necessary to address the
-teachers on the subject. It was a painful task, but
-bravely faced by the Lady Principal, who said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Now I have nothing to do to judge them that are without.
-We must cheerfully bear evil-speaking. But if it come from
-within, the matter is for that reason a serious one; for this
-reason I feel it must be traced up to its source.... I feel I
-can appeal to you as lovers of truth, as those who feel that no
-advantages of education, of health, or any other, can compensate
-for the disadvantage which would arise to any children who lived
-in an atmosphere of evil-speaking, lying, and slandering.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus grasped, the nettle ceased to sting. It was
-perhaps a small incident scarcely worth noting. But
-Miss Beale remembered it as one which caused great
-discomfort at the time, and it had far-reaching consequences.
-Her power then was more limited than in
-after years. She learned through this difficulty the need
-for more liberty to act independently of the Council in
-the internal management of the College. In her efforts
-to get the evil rooted out from their midst, she nearly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-exceeded her powers. This, doubtless, taught her to
-prosecute her reforms more warily. Above all, it may
-be believed that she gained a fresh access of that self-control
-so necessary to all governors. For it is only in
-fiction that difficulty can be overcome by a sudden word
-or action; in real life work has to be carried on despite
-the obstacle;—growth takes place under pressure.</p>
-
-<p>Outside the work of the College there is not a great
-deal to relate about Miss Beale’s life at this period.
-Her holidays were sometimes spent in visits to her
-family.</p>
-
-<p>After the deaths of Mr. and Mrs. John Beale, Hyde
-Court, the old family house came into the possession of
-Miss Beale’s mother, who had been left a widow in 1862.
-In 1868 Mrs. Beale came with two daughters to reside
-at Hyde Court until her death in 1881. There the
-Lady Principal often went in the holidays, finding
-pleasure in the beautiful surroundings. An old pupil
-tells of the delights of a visit to her there,—of Mrs.
-Beale, whom her daughter Dorothea greatly resembled,
-calm and majestic looking, of the glorious view from the
-windows of the room appropriated to Miss Beale and her
-large correspondence.</p>
-
-<p>A good part of the holidays even then was spent in
-Cheltenham, but there were some visits abroad. One
-year Miss Beale accompanied her brother Edward, then
-recovering from illness, to the Black Forest. On another
-occasion she went with her sister to Chamounix, and
-enjoyed the mountain walks. In 1864 she spent
-some time at Zürich. More than once she went to
-Paris. This continental travel was by no means for
-recreation and refreshment only. It nearly always implied
-visits to schools, where fresh and foreign methods
-were studied. No opportunity of gaining new ideas was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-ever neglected, for Miss Beale could not understand ever
-living apart from her work. In the holidays, as in
-school-time, she was still working, though in a different
-way. In Cheltenham itself there was little time or opportunity
-for recreation. Society, as the word is generally
-understood, had little to say to the new head-mistress,
-whose insignificant figure and plain dress did not provoke
-much interest. Her absence of small talk, her quiet
-intellectual face, her reputation as a clever woman, her
-connection with Queen’s College, all represented something
-unwonted and new. She had received no welcome
-from the religious world of Cheltenham, whose leaders,
-Mr. Close and Mr. Boyd, though one of them had
-accepted a seat on the Council, remained aloof from the
-interests of the Ladies’ College, perhaps sharing the
-prejudice still prevalent against any departure from the
-beaten track of women’s education.</p>
-
-<p>It was of little moment to Miss Beale to find herself
-unsought by society, for she seldom cared to spend an
-evening from her work. She could not understand the
-position, which some have thought it wise to take up,
-that it is good for a school to have its head seen in
-society. She held it to be best for a school that its
-head should give herself unremittingly to her work,—disastrous
-to the welfare of any pupils for their teacher
-to sacrifice to social engagements the time she ought
-to give to the preparation of lessons. The friends of
-that early time were a few thoughtful people who were
-interested like herself in education.</p>
-
-<p>On first coming to Cheltenham Miss Beale, to please
-Miss Brewer, she said, attended Christchurch, but she
-soon left this for St. Philip’s and St. James’ at Leckhampton,
-and for St. Paul’s. Both these churches were
-less obviously in the possession of wealthy seat-holders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-than the churches in the town. To St. Philip’s she
-went at that time when she ‘wanted to be quiet,’ taking
-up a position near the door. All the middle of that
-church was then occupied by charity children and the
-poor, but there were in the rich part of the congregation
-many whose names have interest from one cause or
-another.</p>
-
-<p>The incumbent of St. Philip’s, the Rev. A. E. Riddle,
-was a man of much learning. He had been Bampton
-Lecturer in 1832, and was the author of a well-known
-Latin Dictionary and other books. Miss Beale felt at
-home in his great library, and visits to Mrs. Riddle at
-Tudor Lodge were among the few recreations. Mr.
-Riddle died in 1859, and for the next few years she
-seems to have regularly attended St. Paul’s or Holy
-Trinity churches. She found real friends in the parsonage-house
-at St. Paul’s, but the immediate tie was
-soon broken, for in 1864 Mr. Bromby was made Bishop
-of Tasmania.</p>
-
-<p>The claims of relationship and early friendship were
-not forgotten, but there was little time for letter-writing
-beyond the ever-growing correspondence connected with
-work. Mr. Beale wrote playfully of his daughter’s
-growing absorption:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘You always write as if you were at the top of your speed,
-and this is not good. I doubt not you have a great deal to
-occupy your time and your attention, but pray do not be always
-in a hurry, you will inevitably break down if you are so—you
-will lose in power what you gain in speed, as certainly as in
-mechanics; and with greater danger to the regularity of the
-machine.... I am really fearful to take up your time....
-I daresay now you are scrambling through my note without
-that respect to which the writer and the subject are entitled.
-But pray remember that to neglect (the care of your health)
-is the worst economy in the world....</p>
-
-<p>‘I will now release you, but I was unwilling quite to lose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-your correspondence, though do not write to me until you have
-a little patient leisure.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus, in difficulty and obscurity, the life-work of
-Dorothea Beale was begun. But hers was a light which
-could not long be hid. Each year it burned more
-surely and shone further afield. By 1864, when the
-Endowed Schools’ Inquiry Commission was instituted,
-she was known as a successful head-mistress whose views
-and methods were worth hearing. With Miss Buss and
-others she was asked to give evidence.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-<span class="smaller">A ROYAL COMMISSION</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘I learnt the royal genealogies</div>
-<div class="verse">Of Oviedo, the internal laws</div>
-<div class="verse">Of the Burmese Empire,—by how many feet</div>
-<div class="verse">Mount Chimborazo outsoars Teneriffe,</div>
-<div class="verse">What navigable river joins itself</div>
-<div class="verse">To Lara, and what census of the year five</div>
-<div class="verse">Was taken at Klagenfurt....</div>
-<div class="verse">I learnt much music, ...</div>
-<div class="verse indent11">fine sleights of hand</div>
-<div class="verse">And unimagined fingering.’</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="attr"><span class="smcap">E. B. Browning</span>, <cite>Aurora Leigh</cite>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This volume, which memorialises one great name in one
-field of women’s work, is not the place in which to
-dwell upon the details of that work in other departments.
-But it may be remarked in passing that the
-educational movement itself was but a part—an essential
-part—of a larger one. It seemed, Miss Beale often
-said in speaking of this time, that women, like the
-damsel of old, heard the Voice of the Master penetrating
-the slumber of death, bidding them Arise. And
-they obeyed. They arose in many and various ways to
-minister to Him.</p>
-
-<p>The first sign of this awakening was publicly seen in
-1844, when Dr. Pusey engaged several leading laymen,
-among whom was Mr. Gladstone, to help him in the
-foundation of an Anglican Sisterhood. Two or three
-Orders date from before the opening of Queen’s College
-in 1848; those at Clewer and Wantage followed soon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-after. The devotion of Florence Nightingale and her
-little band in 1854 led many to follow her example, and
-the reform of nursing steadily if slowly followed. In
-1866, before the reports of the Schools’ Inquiry were
-published, Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell took an M.D. degree
-in Switzerland, and Miss Garrett began to study for one
-in London. The desire for better teaching and training
-was widespread. The establishment of the Cheltenham
-Ladies’ College was a part of a larger movement which
-was affecting the whole country. Sixteen years had
-passed since the opening of Queen’s College had unsealed
-the fountain of knowledge for women. Immediately
-after, in 1849, a college had been established on undenominational
-lines. This was Bedford College, which
-found a liberal donor in Mr. Reid, and among its first
-teachers counted Francis Newman, De Morgan, and
-Dr. Carpenter. These led the way. Then in 1850
-the great school which will for ever be associated with
-the name of Frances Mary Buss was opened in Camden
-Road, its enterprising head-mistress having there removed
-the private school she had carried on successfully for
-some years, to develop it on the lines of a public school,
-under the enlightened supervision of Mr. Laing. Cheltenham
-followed four years later, and these two, for many
-years the only public schools for girls in the country, may
-be considered the direct offspring of Queen’s College.</p>
-
-<p>The general condition of girls’ education remained
-unimproved some years longer. Yet amid the thousands
-of private schools where worthless or poor teaching prevailed,
-there were a few which had come into the hands
-of capable women who had been inspired by the noble
-ideals of those who led the religious and intellectual
-thought of the day. The name of Elizabeth Sewell
-is representative of these; but for the most part they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-lived and died unknown, because their work was of less
-public moment than that of the great leaders. Yet,
-in an account of women’s education it seems ungracious
-to name only the well known, however great, and to
-pass unnoticed the wise virgins, less prominent but not
-less faithful, whose lamps shone and were replenished
-through the night. In her death, as in her work on
-earth, Dorothea Beale was not alone. Miss Sewell, aged
-ninety, passed but a few weeks before her, and very
-shortly after two other unknown fellow-workers, who
-had not laboured in vain. The <cite>Times</cite> of January 1907
-told of Miss Piper, the founder and head of Laleham.
-Of Miss Piper it could be said, that at a time when
-the instruction given to girls was of a formal character,
-‘she set herself to make her pupils think, to stimulate
-interest, to enforce thoroughness.’ These were the very
-points on which the Schools’ Commission found girls’
-education defective. A fortnight later died Emily
-Milner, who was for fifty years head of St. Mary’s
-School at Brighton, to which she devoted all her small
-income. She taught with marvellous energy and freshness,
-inspiring her pupils themselves to be zealous and
-persevering, and keeping them in touch with all that
-was best in the rapid advance and change of modern
-education. But such head-mistresses were rare. The
-Commissioners seldom found either thoroughness or
-freshness in the schools they inspected.</p>
-
-<p>The Schools’ Inquiry Commission was instituted in
-1864, a year in which John Ruskin, in a lecture at
-Manchester, made a passionate appeal to rich women
-to claim their right to serve—and reign. His cry did
-not reach a larger public until, eight years later, the
-lecture was published under the title ‘Of Queens’ Gardens’
-in <cite>Sesame and Lilies</cite>. Like the simultaneous discovery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-of some great star, by watchers strange to one another
-and half a continent apart, the movement for enlarging
-the scope of women’s work was furthered by men
-of divers ways and methods, heralded by visionaries
-like Tennyson and Ruskin, marshalled into deliberate
-order by high-hearted officials like the Secretary of the
-Governesses’ Benevolent Society and the School Inspector
-Joshua Fitch. Possibly no Assistant Commissioner, as he
-drew up his report, recalled the ringing words of Ruskin.
-But though the medium varies to the stretch of difference
-between the inspiration of a great poem and the deliberate
-statements of a blue-book, we recognise the
-same force behind both, and see both alike to be channels
-for one great stream of tendency. The conclusions
-drawn from the report, the resulting effects seen in
-new schools and organised public examinations, miss
-nothing of their special value if regarded in connection
-with such words as these:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Let a girl’s education be as serious as a boy’s. You bring
-up your girls as if they were meant for side-board ornaments,
-and then complain of their frivolity. Give them the same
-advantages that you give their brothers ... teach <em>them</em>, also,
-that courage and truth are the pillars of their being.... There
-is hardly a girl’s school in this Christian Kingdom where the
-children’s courage and sincerity would be thought of half so
-much importance as their way of coming in at a door....
-And give them, lastly, not only noble teachings, but noble
-teachers.’<a name="FNanchor_40" id="FNanchor_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Schools’ Inquiry Commission was instituted to
-examine into the existing state of education above the
-elementary grade, and to report on measures needed for
-its improvement, having special regard to all endowments
-applicable, or which could rightly be made applicable,
-thereto. By the instance of Miss Emily Davies,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-girls’ schools were included in the inquiry. Among the
-Commissioners was Lord Lyttelton, who was regarded
-by those who wished to improve women’s education as
-a friend to girls. He had manfully asserted their right
-to a share of the endowments, and of women to a share
-in the management of girls’ schools. Sir Stafford Northcote,
-Dr. Temple, and Mr. Forster were also members
-of the Commission. Among the Assistant Commissioners,
-whose business it was to visit and report upon
-schools, were such well-known names as those of T. H.
-Green, J. G. Fitch, and J. Bryce.</p>
-
-<p>No schools outside the eight selected districts were
-visited, but the Principals of some beyond their limit
-were requested to give evidence before the Commissioners
-in London. In the year 1868-9 reports
-and evidence were gradually issued in a series of twenty
-large blue-books. Of these volumes about nineteen-twentieths
-related to the education of boys and general
-questions, and about one-twentieth to the education of
-girls alone.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale hailed the Commission as a means of
-bringing the thousand inefficiencies of girls’ education
-to the light. She took advantage of it in an address
-she gave in 1865 at Bristol, at a meeting of that now
-extinct body, the Social Science Congress, when she
-pleaded that, for boys and girls alike, education should
-be planned with the view of developing character. Her
-argument was none the less weighty because so carefully
-guarded:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Let me say at once that I desire to institute no comparison
-between the mental abilities of boys and girls, but simply to say
-what seems to be the right means of training girls, so that they
-may best perform that subordinate part in the world to which,
-I believe, they have been called.</p>
-
-<p>‘First, then, I think that the education of girls has too often<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-been made showy, rather than real and useful; that accomplishments
-have been made the main thing, because these would, it
-was thought, enable a girl to shine and attract, while those
-branches of study especially calculated to form the judgment, to
-cultivate the understanding, and to discipline the character
-(which would fit her to perform the duties of life) have been
-neglected; and thus, while temporary pleasure and profit have
-been sought, the great moral ends of education have been too
-often lost sight of.</p>
-
-<p>‘To the poorer classes the toil and struggle of their daily life
-do, to some extent, afford an education which gives earnestness,
-and strength, and reality; and if we would not have the
-daughters of the higher classes idle and frivolous, they too must
-be taught to appreciate the value of work. We must endeavour
-to give them, while young, such habits, studies, and occupations
-as will brace the mind, improve the taste, and develop the moral
-character. They must learn, not for the sake of display, but
-from motives of duty. They must not choose the easy and
-agreeable, and neglect what is dull and uninviting. They must
-not expect to speak languages without mastering the rudiments;
-nor require to be finished in a year or two, but impatiently
-refuse to labour at a foundation.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>These words were pioneers of the Commissioners’
-reports, in which they find a literal echo. The reports,
-with her own evidence and that of other ladies
-interested in education, were by Miss Beale preserved
-for posterity. She perceived instinctively that if they
-were not brought into general circulation all would soon
-be forgotten, much never known at all. With that
-stern sense of economy which caused her never to waste
-an opportunity or a scrap of material, she took the task
-upon herself. She obtained permission to republish the
-matter relating to girls’ schools in a single volume, for
-which she wrote a preface. In this she dealt with the
-evidence of the Commissioners, discussing at some length
-the questions of examinations and overwork. But she
-sought chiefly, as she had already done a few years
-before in an article in <cite>Fraser’s Magazine</cite>,<a name="FNanchor_41" id="FNanchor_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> to show the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-need of real study for women, the advantage to be
-gained for character and mind from such subjects as
-history and literature.</p>
-
-<p>The general report of the Commissioners on Girls’
-Education forms the first chapter of Miss Beale’s blue-book.
-It opened with a quotation to the effect that an
-educated mother is of even more importance than an
-educated father. Miss Beale may have thought this
-an exaggerated statement; but she must have welcomed
-and republished it with some satisfaction. She was
-for ever having it dinned into her ears, by those who
-opposed all serious study for their daughters, that girls
-should be educated to be wives and mothers. Mrs.
-Grey showed the real fallacy of the statement, in a paper
-which was the direct result of the republished reports,
-when she pointed out that girls were not being educated
-to <em>be</em> wives, but to <em>get</em> husbands. A happy marriage
-Mrs. Grey held to be ‘the <i lang="la">summum bonum</i> of a woman’s
-life ... not an object to be striven for, but to be received
-as the supreme grace of fate when the right time
-and the right person come.’<a name="FNanchor_42" id="FNanchor_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> With Miss Beale and
-Miss Emily Davies she deprecated the education which
-is designed from the first to fit and prepare for a special
-position in life. She would have women and men alike,
-working men, tradesmen, men of fortune educated as
-human beings, not technically instructed for some special
-walk in life. In eloquent words she pictured the ideal
-for which she and others like-minded were striving,
-and were seeking to attain by the practical method of
-enlightening public opinion, founding schools, asking
-for public examinations. She wrote:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The true meaning of the word education is not instruction....
-It is intellectual, moral, and physical development, the
-development of a sound mind in a sound body, the training of
-reason to form just judgments, the disciplining of the will and
-affections to obey the supreme law of duty, the kindling and
-strengthening of the love of knowledge, of beauty, of goodness,
-till they become governing motives of action.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mrs. Grey’s conclusions were the same as those of
-the Commissioners, who complained that there was no
-demand for the education of girls, the cause of the
-indifference being that low idea which regards only the
-money value of education, and estimates it solely as a
-means of getting on. Girls were taught with a view to
-increasing their attractiveness before marriage, rather
-than with that of increasing their happiness and usefulness
-after. This was the general cause of dissatisfaction,
-but there were many details.</p>
-
-<p>One and all complained that, with the exception of
-quite a few schools, the education of girls in the middle
-classes was much worse than that existing in the elementary
-schools of the day. This was of course specially
-the case in subjects like arithmetic, and arose greatly
-from the mistaken notion that they were of no use to
-girls. The Commissioners were unanimous in condemning
-the prevailing method of instruction by means of such
-books as <cite>Mangnall’s Questions</cite> and the like, termed by
-Mr. Bryce ‘the noxious brood of catechisms.’ Of this,
-be it said, Miss Mangnall’s famous work, which bears
-witness to its author’s well-stored mind, and which
-reached nearly a hundred editions, was the best. The
-‘Questions’ demanded indeed the knowledge of such
-useless facts as the number of houses burned in the
-Great Fire of London; but there were in use, in the
-numerous small private schools of the period, cheaper
-and more stupid books, in which the information was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-not merely useless, but even defied common sense. A
-small catechism on ‘Science,’ entitled ‘Why and Because,’
-concluded a long list of inept questions with:
-‘Why do pensioners and aged cottagers put their teapots
-on the hob to draw?’ In some books, facts of
-varying nature—of history, geography, grammar, etc.—were
-all jumbled together. It is not surprising that
-girls instructed by the parrot-like, inconsequent methods
-of such lesson-books, passed from school with no love
-of reading.</p>
-
-<p>The Commissioners complained further, that though
-French and music were held to be the most important
-subjects to which a girl should devote herself, they were
-nearly always very badly taught. They spoke of time
-wasted at the piano; they calculated the thousands of
-hours given to music which was not worth hearing at
-the last. They gave instances of ludicrous mistakes
-in French, which no effort of visiting masters could
-improve into anything like a real knowledge of the
-language, because rudimentary grammar had never been
-mastered. They spoke of drawing taught with an equal
-disregard of thoroughness, and with still more disastrous
-result. ‘The common practice of masters touching up
-their pupils’ performances for exhibition at home fosters
-a habit of dishonesty, and that too prevalent tendency running
-through the whole of female education, the tendency
-to care more for appearance than reality, to seem rather
-than to be.’<a name="FNanchor_43" id="FNanchor_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
-
-<p>Some spoke of the absence of healthy interests, of the
-need for games, a need which appealed but little to Miss
-Beale, in whose own youth play was marked by its
-absence only. Many urged the necessity for founding
-in every town public schools similar to boys’ grammar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-schools, where girls could obtain a sound education,
-without accomplishments, at a low cost.</p>
-
-<p>These reports embody a number of facts concerning
-a state of things now happily passed away. Hundreds
-of small private schools might have read their doom
-in them, for the establishment of many public schools,
-endowed and otherwise, soon followed the inquiry. We
-see the poor sham education, with its wrong notions of
-the beautiful and the best, vanish without a regret. Yet,
-since all human effort has its worth and place, is it
-possible and fair to say one word above its grave?
-Was there no genuine wish to give pleasure pleading
-in the miserable pieces of the boarding-school young
-lady, and even in the painful drawings which the master’s
-touch failed to make tolerable? They testify at least to
-something out of the work-a-day sphere, to the desire
-for the ‘something afar,’ often the first step to a truer
-vision. Precious years of girlhood spent on the vain
-effort to attain accomplishments speak of some dim perception
-of the refinement and uplifting which men look
-for in women. Ill-devised, badly attempted, poorly
-carried out, the thought of giving delight was not only
-mercenary in aim; behind it was some consciousness
-of a real human need. The educators of women to-day
-should know better than to despise its pleading,
-however imperfectly expressed. ‘May I not have <em>one</em>
-ornamental one?’ said a brother when a third sister
-was about to devote herself to obtaining certificates for
-mathematics.</p>
-
-<p>Nine ladies, including Miss Emily Davies, Miss Buss,
-and Miss Beale, were asked to give evidence before the
-Commission. Miss Beale’s, which was taken in 1865,
-is of double interest, at once touching the state of girls’
-education in general, and the advance being made in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-Ladies’ College, Cheltenham. She took with her a
-hundred entrance examination papers arranged in order
-for inspection. Actuated perhaps by the marvellous
-carefulness which lost nothing, and seeing a use even in
-what would often be considered waste papers, as well as
-by the definite aim of preserving a record of progress,
-she had kept all the answers written by her pupils to
-entrance examination questions. With the College
-papers, she showed also some written by children in one
-of the national schools at Cheltenham, in order that
-the Commissioners might make a comparison for themselves.</p>
-
-<p>On being questioned, Miss Beale explained in detail
-the whole system of the College, interesting the Commissioners
-in the method of teaching Euclid, one which
-at some points antedated by many years the present
-teaching of geometry in the public schools, and which
-has lately been adopted by the universities. At a time
-when schoolboys were learning Euclid by heart, Miss
-Beale was teaching it to girls by a method of explanation
-which they had to follow and finally reproduce without
-any learning by rote.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the teaching of Holy Scripture she
-said, ‘Each class teacher takes her own class, and that, I
-think, very important’; but on this subject little was
-said.</p>
-
-<p>On the question of discipline and moral difficulties she
-explained that the government of the College was chiefly
-by personal influence, and that her plan was to make use
-of very simple means, such as changing the seat of a
-child who was suspected of being dishonest in her work.
-‘It is a small thing, but it indicates want of trust, and it
-is by small things we govern.’ Such discipline obviously
-appeared slight to Dr. Storrar, who asked on hearing it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-‘Perhaps girls are more sensitive than boys in such
-matters?’ ‘I will not attempt to decide,’ replied Miss
-Beale, ‘but my opinion is that they are not.’</p>
-
-<p>Asked her opinion on a system of examination, Miss
-Beale recommended a general Board for the examination
-of teachers, to be founded with national sanction, and an
-inspection of the schools under the management of those
-who had passed the examination. ‘There is one other
-point,’ she added: ‘the cause might be helped on by the
-establishment of a model school for the training of
-teachers; I hardly know how such would work.’</p>
-
-<p>The evidence of the Commission, published in 1868,
-produced a great impression on Mrs. William Grey and
-her sister, Miss Shireff. Under their able leadership
-there was formed, in 1871, ‘The National Union for
-Improving the Education of Women,’ for the purpose of
-organising effort and helping to create a sounder public
-opinion with regard to education itself. The work of
-this society led two years later to the foundation of the
-Girls’ Public Day-School Company. By this agency,
-which was commercial as well as educational, High
-Schools were established in most of the important towns
-of England. There followed the numerous independent
-efforts and companies which have covered the country
-with a network of secondary schools for girls. In 1872,
-Miss Buss giving up her private property in her very
-successful school, by an act of self-sacrifice and generosity
-made it a public school by placing it in trust. A lower
-school was also established in Camden Town under the
-same management.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Emily Davies also found her work aided by the
-Commission. She was largely instrumental in the opening
-of Local Examinations to girls. The foundation of
-the first women’s college at a university was laid by her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-when, in 1873, the college she had opened at Hitchin
-four years earlier was removed to Cambridge, where it
-became known as Girton. This step was perhaps even
-less of a venture, though more startling to the public
-mind, than the first beginning at Hitchin. Of this Miss
-Maria Hackett had written to Miss Beale:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The proposed Foundation of a College for the Superior Education
-of Women is another most important measure in the same
-direction. I had much correspondence about twenty years ago,
-with your dear father, Mr. Mackenzie, and Mr. Storrs, on the
-subject, but I did not venture upon so extensive a scheme.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Public examinations for girls necessarily followed the
-work of the Commission, the opening of women’s
-colleges, and the establishment of public schools for girls.
-Head-mistresses were called upon to face all the difficulties
-and drawbacks of these, as well as to accept their advantages,
-and in some cases also to incur odium, as they
-worked with measures which they knew to be not in
-themselves the best, but only the best attainable. Miss
-Beale had her own vision of what a public examination
-for girls should be. She had said at Bristol in 1865 that
-parents</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">‘are afraid of popular outcry, afraid that their children should
-take a low place, forgetting that (if the examination be conducted
-without any of the improper excitement of publicity), it
-is also a test and means of moral training, since those who work
-from the right motives simply do their best and are not overanxious
-about results. I do not desire that there should be
-a system of competitive examinations, but a general testing of
-the work done, and if this cannot be responded to in a quiet,
-lady-like manner, it does not speak well for the moral training
-of the school.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>She had also said:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I do not think the plan for admitting girls to the same
-examination with boys in the University local examinations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-a wise one; the subjects seem to me in many respects unsuited
-for girls, and such an examination as the one proposed is likely
-to further a spirit of rivalry most undesirable. I should much
-regret that the desire of distinction should be made in any
-degree a prime motive, for we should ever remember that moral
-training is the end, education the means. The habits of obedience
-to duty, of self-restraint, which the process of acquiring
-knowledge induces, the humility which a thoughtful and comprehensive
-study of the great works in literature and science
-tends to produce, these we would specially cultivate in a woman,
-that she may wear the true woman’s ornament of a meek and
-quiet spirit. As for the pretentiousness and conceit which are
-associated with the name of “blue-stocking,” and which some
-people fancy to be the result of education, they are only an
-evidence of shallowness and vulgarity; we meet with the same
-thing in the dogmatic conceit of the so-called “self-educated
-man,” who has picked up learning, but has not had the benefit
-of a systematic training and a liberal education.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The formal admission of girls to the Cambridge Local
-Examinations took place in 1865, though they had been
-informally accepted as candidates as early as 1863.
-Miss Beale did not accept the examination at Cheltenham,
-mainly because its arrangements did not fall in with
-those of the College year; but she closely observed its
-working, noted each set of questions and reports, recognising
-that with these examinations new impetus had
-been given to the progress of education. She wrote
-and spoke on the subject, holding it to be the duty of
-the teacher to seek to guide this movement, which must
-increasingly affect girls’ schools.</p>
-
-<p>The following extract from one of her papers is chosen
-because of its bearing on the larger and still unanswered
-question of university degrees:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Examiners must be prepared not to domineer but to learn
-that the art is yet in its infancy, and their knowledge of what
-girls can or ought to do is at present very slight. They must
-be ready to admit the possibility of a teacher knowing better
-than his judges. The latter are sometimes tempted to exclaim,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-<i lang="la">Quis custodiat ipsos custodes?</i> If the school curriculum and the
-examinations are so far out of harmony that a large amount of
-special preparation is required, either the curriculum is at fault
-or the examination an evil.... I know that some make a great
-point of having the actual University examinations opened,
-because a mere “women’s examination” is spoken of contemptuously.
-I believe that in trying to avoid this, we should
-encounter greater evils, and that the wish is connected with
-a misplaced reverence which many women entertain for the
-learning of a “pass man.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After some years of consideration a decision was
-practically forced upon Miss Beale. She must choose
-for her clever girls either to pass a public examination
-which she thought more suited for men, or to fall behind
-in a path which was surely leading in the right direction.
-She did not hesitate, but saw that on this, as on many
-occasions, it must be her part to labour to remove
-obstructions, to overcome obstacles.</p>
-
-<p>In her interview with the Commissioners, on being
-asked if she would approve of the establishment of a
-special examination for ladies up to the standard of
-attainment of the London matriculation, she had
-replied, ‘Certainly,’ but advocated that it should be
-made possible for women to take German instead of
-Greek. This examination, she agreed, might be taken
-as a measure, though the measure might not be filled
-with the same subjects as for men. She was soon called
-upon to act in this matter, for in 1869 it was opened
-to women, and the University of Cambridge also instituted
-an examination for women over eighteen years
-of age.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale accepted both for the College, but for
-some years there was no regular organisation of work
-for those who were taking the Cambridge examination.
-This was partly due to the higher limit of age. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-then thought extraordinary that girls should stay at
-school after they were eighteen. It was difficult to
-persuade many to do so. Some were ‘wanted at home,’
-some wished to ‘come out’; those who were intending
-to be teachers thought they should be already earning.
-Then the absorbing work for the London examination
-made it difficult to arrange for much of a wholly
-different character. Consequently, at first, the older
-pupils and the young teachers who sought to pass the
-Cambridge examination had to look after themselves
-a good deal. Miss Beale would certainly not consider
-this a drawback. They had the additional advantage of
-lectures from herself on literature and history.</p>
-
-<p>The ‘London’ must have seemed better worth while for
-many reasons. It might prove a first step to a definite
-degree. The degree examinations were not opened till
-ten years later, and might not have followed at all had
-zeal and courage not been shown by women over
-the matriculation. Again, the matriculation certificate
-enabled men to offer themselves as candidates for further
-examination with a view to certain careers, such as the
-medical profession. This would hold good for women.
-For it had the real advantage of being a recognised
-standard, while a certificate for an examination arranged
-specially for women would be like ‘foreign coin.’</p>
-
-<p>One cannot too much admire the qualities which bore
-teacher and pupils up that steep initial step of the
-London examination; for steep it was. At that time it
-demanded a certain knowledge of subjects which were
-generally regarded as the prerogative of men. Hardly
-any of the girls who hoped to pass in them had, when
-they began their special preparation six terms before the
-examination, learned any Latin, chemistry, geometry, algebra,
-or natural philosophy—this last being a term which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-embraced some acquaintance with optics, statics, dynamics,
-and hydrostatics. Little more than the rudiments of
-these new subjects had to be mastered, for the examination
-at that time required ‘a collection of minima, a
-smattering of everything, enforced with Procrustean
-rigour on Philistine lines.’ Primarily designed for boys
-with a grammar-school education, the Latin paper
-included some knowledge of Horace. It is scarcely
-necessary to say that disappointment as well as hope was
-woven into the strand of these brave beginnings. Many
-failed. Some who were not really equal to the work
-were persuaded to enter. Some who passed, complained
-that they could not retain knowledge which had been
-acquired too rapidly and not assimilated. Not avowedly,
-not ever consciously to herself—her sense of responsibility
-for the individual was too great for that, and she
-reckoned the training of value even if there were no
-success at the end—but in actual fact, the failures were
-accepted by Dorothea Beale as a necessary complement
-of victory to be.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Let the victors when they come,</div>
-<div class="verse">When the forts of folly fall,</div>
-<div class="verse">Find thy body by the wall!’</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>All the weakness of the position was known to her.
-And she showed not only courage and daring, but
-patience and humility still harder to practise. On one
-occasion, after a specially difficult Latin paper, which had
-proved too much for many examinees, she wrote to
-another head-mistress whose disappointment was as keen
-as her own:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The more I reflect, the more I think any protest unadvisable.
-No doubt some have passed (even in Class I.) in former years,
-who were worse in Latin than one at least who has failed this
-time. But then there are many things that may be urged.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-Perhaps the good have not done themselves justice, and the bad
-more than justice. Besides, I cannot myself, even in looking
-over one set of papers, unless I correct all at a sitting, mark them
-fairly even to my own mind; how much more difficult it must
-be when the examiners change, and the papers come in after a
-year’s interval. We, by submitting ourselves to examination,
-pledge ourselves in some sort to be content. It will never do,
-in my opinion, to impugn the justice of a University, and I
-really think they will do justice. Any expression of discontent
-would tend to throw back the granting of degrees. I believe
-the unification is more likely to take place soon, if we are
-patient. Remember, too, the decision has not been that of one
-individual examiner, but has been in some sort confirmed by the
-Senate.</p>
-
-<p>‘My impression is that the papers will be very carefully set
-next year, and that we must bear our disappointment this year
-as well as we can. I am very sorry you feel it so much. Your
-candidates have done so well in other subjects, that if they should
-try again next year, you might be certain of a large measure of
-success, and <em>then</em> a protest, or any remarks from us would tell so
-much more. I certainly do not mean to send in a large number,
-but I am pledged to a few, and to those who failed, if they like
-to go in again.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This conclusion showed special insight, willingness to
-bear, and readiness to learn; for the Latin paper was a
-far more real test of knowledge than any of the others.
-To have complained of it might have been to acknowledge
-inferiority which did not seek improvement. And looking
-back, it may be seen that the failures and mistakes
-were not of much moment. The real importance and
-the real triumph lay with the aim and effort. Miss
-Beale early foresaw what has been literally fulfilled.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is clear,’ she said, ‘that it will before long be impossible
-in England, as it is now on the Continent, for
-any one to obtain employment as a teacher without some
-such attestation,’ <i>i.e.</i> as a certificate. If she could help
-it, Miss Beale would not let girls who were intending to
-teach, pass from her without one; she persuaded the pupil,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-she reasoned with the parent, she frequently mastered
-both; she silently bore contradiction and misconception.
-She refused to be thwarted by any obstacle, much as she
-might wish to change it—such as the time of year at
-which it was held, the difficulty of sending candidates to
-London, or by any hesitation on her own part. She might
-write to a newspaper, ‘it is to some extent an open question
-what education is most suitable for girls,’ but she
-inspired her class to prepare for ‘the London’ with
-zealous drudgery and in the power of self-denial, as the
-best they could do to fit themselves for work.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the College list of successes was from the first
-good. In 1869, the first year of examination, eight in
-all England went in for the matriculation examination,
-and six failed. The only candidate from Cheltenham
-passed. This was Miss Susan Wood. In the next year,
-of the three who passed from Cheltenham one was the
-famous Greek scholar, Miss Jane Harrison, another bore
-the name—so dear to its generation—of Marian Belcher.</p>
-
-<p>There was plenty of criticism. There were many to
-repeat the old complaint that women were being unfitted
-for their proper duties. It was Miss Beale’s delight to
-show that those who did well in examinations could also
-excel in domestic duties. She would tell how one successful
-candidate of the London examination proved first
-a helpful sister, then a devoted wife and mother. She
-would show with pride a letter she received from one
-of whose ability and success she had great reason to be
-proud, signed ‘Yours in flour and dripping.’</p>
-
-<p>It may be mentioned here that there is a home distinction
-connected with the Ladies’ College, Cheltenham.
-In 1868 it was resolved at an annual general meeting
-that pupils who reached a certain specified standard in
-the College examinations, and whose general conduct<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-was approved, should be entitled to receive certificates.
-The first certificates under this resolution were awarded
-in 1869 to four pupils. In 1875 it was resolved at a
-Council meeting that those who obtained the College
-certificate should be entitled Associates of the Ladies’
-College, Cheltenham. These associates are, with the
-consent of the Lady Principal, allowed to attend any
-ordinary classes of the College without the payment of
-fees.</p>
-
-<p>Following hard upon the introduction of public
-examinations for girls came the cry of overwork. There
-was some reason in it; but it was much, very much due
-to timidity and want of knowledge, as well as to exaggeration.
-It is not necessary to repeat here the evidence
-which Miss Beale began to collect even before she was a
-teacher herself, and to which she was ever adding, to the
-effect that idleness and <i lang="fr">ennui</i> have more and sadder
-victims than even misdirected energy and overwork.
-A healthy prejudice against an empty, self-centred life is
-steadily growing. The movement which its followers have
-named Christian Science—also that which is preferably
-called Faith Healing—daily bring to light instances of self-destruction
-caused by the slothful mind and unruled will.
-None the less, the cry of overwork was not an empty
-one. When first girls began to work for examinations,
-it was not known how much or how little they could do.
-Miss Beale’s own opinions upon this, as put before the
-Commission, were quite tentative. Clever teachers did
-not always allow for slower-moving brains than their
-own. Nor was the difference of temperament sufficiently
-observed and considered. The eager and artistic mind
-would feel strain and fatigue where one less delicately
-balanced might toil unwearied. It was not recognised
-how willing girls are to be pressed, how eager they are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-to please, how unreasonable they often are in their own
-arrangements for work, or how easy it is for them to fall
-into the insincerity of making protracted hours of reading
-take the place of concentrated mental effort. Head-mistresses
-and others who had mastered difficulties alone,
-and who still carefully prepared every lesson they gave, in
-spite of the pressure of daily affairs, had to learn to reckon
-with these drawbacks. Examinations when first introduced
-must from their very novelty have been a great
-anxiety to both teachers and pupils. The best way of
-working for them and of resting before them had to be
-discovered by experience. The pressure was less obvious
-with those actually first in the field, as they would
-naturally be all of good ability. The danger began when
-girls of smaller brain-power and equal ambition, but
-ignorant of their limitations, dared to follow.</p>
-
-<p>Complaints of overwork came often from homes
-where there was little cultivation or regard for the things
-of the mind. Girls who could produce, in what they
-called their ‘notes of lectures,’ statements concerning
-‘<em>heroic cutlets</em>’<a name="FNanchor_44" id="FNanchor_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> and ‘<em>Lincoln’s hotel</em>’<a name="FNanchor_45" id="FNanchor_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> had not, it may be
-well understood, much intellectual background. Yet
-the wholly unfounded complaints of the parents of such
-pupils would receive public attention that was little
-deserved. There were others, whose parents would have
-had them play a pretty part in home life in the afternoon
-and evening, but who naturally did not find enough time
-for lessons unless they sat up late or slurred them over.
-As it was never Miss Beale’s intention that day-pupils
-should consider themselves to be anything but ‘in the
-schoolroom,’ the home work was not arranged to allow
-time for more than the necessary walk or recreation.</p>
-
-<p>The question of overwork is one that still agitates<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-the scholastic world. The real difficulty, at Cheltenham
-as elsewhere, is not with the schoolgirl whose life is
-under supervision, but with the young teachers and the
-elder pupils who have the management of their own
-time and health, and have not yet learned their own
-limitations, or acquired a due measure of self-control.</p>
-
-<p>During the early period of the history of the College,
-Miss Beale came in contact with minds and ideas outside
-her own school, chiefly by means of the Schools’ Inquiry
-Commission, and the matter of public examinations.
-Those who wished had the opportunity of learning her
-views through her magazine articles and the pamphlets
-which she began at this time to publish. The most
-notable of these was ‘The Address to Parents.’ Much
-of this valuable little paper—one which in her early years
-as head-mistress made Miss Beale’s ideas widely known
-among those who cared for real education—had been
-anticipated in her address to the Social Science Congress
-in 1865. Then she pleaded the cause of day-schools,
-urging for them that they offered a training which did
-not separate children from the influence of home.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Of course when children are educated at home, and an
-anxious mother daily sees and suffers from her children’s faults of
-temper and disposition, she will be tempted to think that she
-had better give up the training into other hands, and send them
-away. Doubtless this is sometimes wise, often unavoidable;
-but how frequently without necessity is the burden of parental
-responsibility temporarily cast aside, only to press with tenfold
-weight in later years. How many parents have learned bitterly
-to regret that they removed a daughter from the divinely
-appointed influences of home, and severed by long separation
-those bonds of affection which might have checked the young
-in the hour of temptation, and been the support and comfort of
-their own declining years.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In 1869, in another address to the same Society, Miss
-Beale unfolded for the first time her ideas of the help<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-which should be given to girls who were in need of
-education they could not afford, more especially to those
-who wished to prepare for a life of teaching. ‘I
-propose,’ she said, ‘the foundation of a new Benevolent
-Society, which shall be distinguished from other societies
-by its rigid adherence to the principle of giving nothing
-away.’ Instead of gifts, she suggested yearly loans of
-money, for the use of which an exact account and report
-of work done should be rendered. This Society has
-never been founded, but the work Dorothea Beale
-wished it should do was carried on by herself, quietly
-and thriftily, but with ever-widening operations, to the
-day of her death.</p>
-
-<p>At one other point did Miss Beale at this period
-touch opinion outside her own sphere. This was by
-writing for the Kensington Society,—a little semi-educational
-association which during its short life included
-many names of women who were in their day
-leaders in philanthropic work and thought. The topics
-on which its members wrote or deliberated were such as
-these:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">17 Cunningham Place, London, N.W.</span>, <i>November 15, 1865</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>The Kensington Society.</i></p>
-
-<p>1. What are the limitations within which it is desirable to
-exercise personal influence?</p>
-
-<p>2. What are the evils attendant upon philanthropic efforts
-among the poor, and how may they be avoided?</p>
-
-<p>3. How does the cultivation of artistic taste affect the wellbeing
-of society?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the general work of the Ladies’ College,
-Cheltenham, was going on quietly and steadily, developing
-in every best way. The valuable time of the
-Principal was no longer taken up with the superintendence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-of lessons and chaperoning music pupils. A larger
-and gradually improving staff enabled her to arrange her
-own work so that it might be of the greatest service to
-the College. But her increasing interest in education at
-large, her ever-growing sense of having a special place
-in a large movement, were never allowed to distract her
-mind from the work of the hour. Rather, she used
-them as an inspiration for daily drudgery.</p>
-
-<p>The preparation of lessons, the minute and careful
-correction of notes of lectures,—monotonous work which
-demands a continuous strain of attention, went on week
-by week. By means of this quiet, diligent toil she and
-her fellow-workers were building the real College, of
-which the fine structure whose first edition was opened
-in 1873 is but a sign and a symbol.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">ORGANISATION</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<p>‘Shepherds of the people had need know the Calendar of Tempests
-in the State; which are commonly greatest when things grow to
-equality, as natural tempests about the equinoctia.’—<span class="smcap">Bacon.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘With no feeling of exultation should we meet to-day, my
-children. Those of us who have long laboured at the work
-are indeed grateful that we have been permitted to see its
-accomplishment, but we are also deeply sensible that every
-increase of influence means an increase of responsibility;—that
-he who had five talents was required to bring other five. With
-larger numbers there is a stronger sense that we are a collective
-power for good or evil. And shall we doubt which is stronger?
-We dare not be so faithless. There is such a mighty prevailing
-power in the spirit of earnest devotion, that when only two or
-three are gathered together in His Name, for work as well as
-for prayer, His power is felt. What a power might we be
-for good if we were His disciples <em>indeed</em>.</p>
-
-<p>‘Some say our school is Church-like. I am glad, for Churches
-are built to remind us that God is not far away, but very near
-to us, and this is the thought which should keep us from evil
-and fill us with gladness. May His Presence be seen in this
-house, seen in the lives and hearts of His children: May they
-remember that they, too, form one spiritual building. As each
-stone stands here in its appointed place, resting on one stone,
-supporting others; so are we a little community, a spiritual
-building; each is placed in her own niche, each has her
-appointed place, appointed by the Spiritual Architect; each is
-needful for the perfection of His design.</p>
-
-<p>‘May we ever form part of that spiritual building, whose
-foundations are laid in faith and obedience. “Whoso heareth
-these sayings of mine and doeth them, he is like a man who laid
-the foundation and digged deep, and built his house upon a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-rock.” St. John wished for one of his converts that he might
-“prosper even as his soul prospered.” Let us desire only such
-prosperity. Let us ask for true wisdom, for lowliness of heart,
-that we may esteem others better than ourselves. Let us ask,
-above all, for that most excellent gift of charity, without which
-all else is as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. Something
-of this spirit of love for one another does live among us, as we
-see by those who have come to join their prayers with ours
-to-day. I would ask them not to forget us afterwards, but to
-remember us when they return to their homes; and I would
-fain hope that this bond will last through coming years, and
-that the College, though transplanted to a new place, will always
-be to you “<em>the old College</em>.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In these words the Lady Principal addressed her staff,
-pupils, and a small sprinkling of friends on the first
-morning of assembling in the new building which, begun
-in January of previous year, was thus opened on March 17,
-1873. As the school hours ended on Saturday the 15th,
-a simple order had been given to take home all the books,
-and to bring them to the new College at the usual time on
-Monday. In the course of the afternoon all desks and
-portable fittings were moved and arranged in order for
-work. The appointment of places in the new hall
-was, so far as can be remembered, a matter of a few
-minutes only, so quiet and free from fuss was all College
-organisation. There was certainly not half an hour of
-the ordinary lesson time lost. Yet it was a change
-which made an undying impression. The quietness
-with which it came was wholly in accordance with the
-spirit of the school. The regular work, undisturbed
-even for an hour by the totally new surroundings, spoke
-emphatically of the response of duty to every fresh
-inspiration and larger freedom.</p>
-
-<p>And how beautiful those new surroundings seemed
-to the hundred and fifty girls who were privileged to
-experience the change from the square, unadorned rooms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-of Cambray House. Two churches at that time, one
-with its high, fine spire, another with its lavish decoration,
-were all that the town could show of the Gothic
-Renaissance which followed the teachings of Ruskin and
-Morris. The Ladies’ College was early among non-ecclesiastical
-buildings of this type. To some it may
-have seemed florid, but not to the eyes of youth and
-hope, which took delight in the pierced and patterned
-stone, the flowers in the coloured glass, the arch of
-the windows, the unusual design of the lecture-rooms.
-These caused teachers and pupils to ignore for the most
-part the undoubted chilliness of the new rooms, and the
-‘currents of air,’ about which some parents wrote complaining
-letters, for at that time people were even more
-afraid of draughts than they are to-day. It is worth
-mentioning, as characteristic of Miss Beale’s mind, that
-she forgot very soon the exact date of entrance into the
-new College; though when reminded of it each year by
-her own birthday, or by the approach of spring and
-Lady Day, she would on some suitable March morning
-say a few words at prayers: ‘It is —— years to-day since
-we entered,’ etc.</p>
-
-<p>In 1873 the building was but begun. It is a question
-if Miss Beale herself dreamed of all that was to follow.
-There was as yet no house for the Lady Principal, and
-for a year, while it was being built, she lived with Mrs.
-Fraser, who had one of the three boarding-houses then
-existing. The house completed in 1874, there followed
-in 1875 the first enlargement of the College, the two
-hundred and twenty pupils for whom it was first designed
-having rapidly become three hundred. At this time a
-second large hall and more classrooms were added. In
-seven years the College had doubled its numbers; hence
-in 1882 were built the art and music wings and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-kindergarten rooms, to be followed almost immediately
-by science rooms and laboratories. After this the sound
-of the hammer was not heard for nearly four years; but
-it is one which has a resounding echo in the memories
-of College life. There were a few peaceful half-hours
-when it was stopped for Scripture lessons, at all other
-times it was but a too persistent reminder of prosperity
-and growth. A memory also abides of crowded doorways
-and passages, overfull lecture-rooms, and a continual
-looking forward to the increased accommodation
-which each new enlargement would give.</p>
-
-<p>This constant expansion as funds permitted was
-entirely after Miss Beale’s heart. In 1891 she wrote to
-Miss Arnold:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Yes, I do hope you will build, a good building is the best
-investment for money, if you have it. Let it be done gradually,
-as ours was. Plan for more than you can do at first, and build
-only what you can afford at the time. Don’t beg: it is much
-better to earn one’s living.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Strange as it may appear, the building of a fit home
-for the College had not taken place without opposition.
-Miss Beale relates in her <cite>History</cite> that after the site for
-it had been purchased, the annual general meeting of
-proprietors in 1871 voted by a majority interested in the
-Cambray property that it should be re-sold. Dr. Jex-Blake,
-the Principal of the Cheltenham College, and a
-member of the Ladies’ College Council, came to the
-rescue, and in a special meeting of the same year spoke
-earnestly in support of the plan for building. ‘Teachers
-so able and energetic and successful have a right to the
-greatest consideration, and the very best arrangements
-for teaching. A Ladies’ College so distinguished, second
-to none in England, has a right to every advantage that
-can be secured for it, a right to be lodged in a building<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-of its own, a building perfect in its internal arrangements,
-and outwardly of some architectural attractiveness; one
-that should be a College, and should look like a College.
-It is quite right to say, “Let well alone,” but that does
-not involve letting <em>ill</em> alone. The College has achieved
-brilliant success, but that was not due to its having been
-cramped for room; and when no longer cramped, its
-success will be greater.’ The resolution of the earlier
-meeting was rescinded by fifty-nine votes to nine, and
-two months later a contract was accepted for building
-from Mr. John Middleton’s design. The site, for
-which £800 was given, was a part of the old Well Walk
-where, between their glasses, George the Third and
-other famous water-drinkers had once taken their daily
-constitutional.</p>
-
-<p>In the matter of the building, Miss Beale had a
-struggle to get her bold and comprehensive ideas carried
-out, but eventually she won the day. It was hard for
-her, at the very moment when she seemed about to
-realise her dreams for the expansion of the work of the
-College, to receive orders which she felt to be new limitations.
-She had constantly to explain her reasons and
-requirements to those who had a deep interest in the
-welfare of the school, but who had not also the knowledge
-needed for arrangements which Miss Beale felt
-and intended should be in the hands of the Principal
-alone. The following letter which she wrote to a
-member of the Council suggests some of her difficulties,
-and also her method of skilfully and apparently accidentally
-stating the inconvenience or disaster which
-would ensue if another arrangement than her own were
-adopted:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have drawn up a ground-plan and tables, by the help of
-which I hope I may succeed in making clear to you the impossibility<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-of conducting the College without the use of four class-rooms.
-I have never in the slightest degree departed from my
-original intention. Time-tables, classes, teachers, furniture, and
-building were all arranged to harmonise. It never occurred to
-me that any one would wish to interfere in the internal management,
-as it had never been done during the fifteen years I have
-been here. Great, therefore, was my surprise to receive a letter
-saying,—“I have had strict injunctions not to have desks put
-back into room 2.” If it is thought well to reduce the number
-of pupils, it can be done after Midsummer but not now, and to give
-up two class-rooms we must reduce our numbers not by twenty,
-but by fifty, <i>i.e.</i> by two whole classes. Our Hall is only ten feet
-longer than that in Cambray, and we then had the use of four
-class-rooms and one supplementary room, besides that assigned
-to Drawing and Callisthenics. With fifty additional pupils we
-cannot do with less, even though the class-rooms are larger. It
-is not impossible to teach a class sitting on chairs, I should not,
-therefore, insist on having desks, but they will certainly be
-much more convenient, and much more sightly; chairs will
-always look untidy. The desks I have match the furniture, the
-room was built to fit them, for examinations. I am therefore
-unwilling to have them sold for nothing. It is certainly necessary
-for the well-being of the College that the internal arrangements
-should be in the hands of one person; if this is not done,
-I can only foresee the occurrence of such disasters as we are
-familiar with, when the Head Master of a public school is
-interfered with by those who cannot see the daily working, and
-know all the complications.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The new building was not the only cause of difference.
-The Lady Principal, with her advanced ideas on women’s
-examinations, her desire to help teachers, to increase
-the number of the pupils, seemed to some members of
-the Council to be pushing the work into other fields
-than those for which it was intended when first the
-Proprietary College for Ladies was founded. ‘Local
-interest,’ a term not ominous of good in the ears of
-great educators, demanded a good day-school for the
-daughters of gentlemen, and nothing more. Some felt
-that, in the pursuit of mathematical and scientific attainments
-for which special teachers and classrooms were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-required, accomplishments such as drawing and painting
-would be neglected. Some, who had watched the growth
-of the infant College, and looked upon it almost as their
-own, interfered in small ways, as in the arrangements
-of seats and rooms. The gossip mentioned already was
-at its height during the first year in the new College,
-and Miss Beale thought that it might have been prevented
-or much minimised had all connected followed
-her counsel of perfection by being superior to town
-talk.</p>
-
-<p>More than all she felt the need of a larger outlook.
-The Council should in her view include some members
-whose personal acquaintance with the College and the
-needs of the town would give them a special interest in
-it; but she desired to unite with these men and women
-of intellectual power and large views whose experience
-would rank them among educationists. And for the
-management of the boarding-houses, which were now
-becoming each year a more important element in the
-College life, opinion which could be untouched by local
-prejudices was needed.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the anxieties of this time were expressed by
-Miss Beale in a paper which she may have thought of
-reading to the Council. It began thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Until we moved into the new College a year ago, I had
-been singularly free from interference. The lesson learned
-when Miss Procter resigned and our College was nearly
-wrecked, had not been forgotten. Besides, we were poor, so
-there was little to quarrel about. With the removal to Bays
-Hill our real difficulties began. I had drawn the ground-plan
-with the greatest regard to economy of space. I was told the
-porch must not be used for entrance, and I was obliged to show
-we could not do without it.... Then I was asked to do with
-two instead of four or five lecture-rooms, and so on. I was
-obliged to prepare elaborate documents with ground-plans, etc.,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-ere I could get leave to use the space provided, and without
-which the College could not be carried on.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There were perhaps others who cared for the College,
-who realised no less strongly than Miss Beale the advantage
-it would be to bring on to the Council those who
-were less interested in it as a local institution than as
-one of educational value for the country at large, but
-it was she who undoubtedly took the lead in the steps
-made to this end. In this she showed courage, for even
-those members of the Council who best understood her
-views hesitated to support them, fearing an abrupt
-change which would do more harm than good. They
-wrote to caution her:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘You must not expect men of Mr. Lowe’s mark to work on
-the C.L.C. Council; and you must not expect to see all go as
-you would wish at the meeting. You will find no member of
-Council but myself anxious to increase the powers of the Lady
-Principal, and probably they will not be much increased. And
-if you secure the majority of Council being non-local, which
-will be hard to secure, you will not secure their attendance at
-meetings held out of London.</p>
-
-<p>‘And to get a satisfactory List to propose to Shareholders
-will be hard, for the best-known men in England will not join;
-and those who will join will not command votes largely; and so
-I advise moderation. I did my best at this last Council meeting
-to prepare the way for a “bloodless revolution” or quiet transition
-... and I have seen Mr. Verrall. He is very friendly to
-you and to the College, and is a man of very good judgment as
-well as energy, and you are safe in talking or writing to him.
-For myself I feel less and less inclined to advise strong measures;
-and I do not see my way to getting the College on as broad a
-basis as I think it should stand on.... I advise you to think
-well and long before you get into an inextricable difficulty;
-and I think you will find your best friend and best support in
-one who for fifteen years (or nearly) has given much time and
-thought to the College, Mr. Brancker.</p>
-
-<p>‘At the last Council meeting you showed great wisdom in
-accepting the adverse Resolution with equanimity.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Differences of this kind pointed to a change of administration.
-As early as 1865, in her address at
-Bristol, Miss Beale had pointed out the difficulties besetting
-a school organised on the lines of Cheltenham:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The machinery of proprietary colleges is somewhat complicated,
-and it is liable to get out of order. Thus, for example,
-if the shareholders agitate when a measure does not at once
-commend itself to their judgment, they may interfere with
-the efficiency, and endanger the existence of the institution.
-Secondly, none must attempt to carry out reforms in education,
-unless they have faith enough in their own system to work on
-quietly for a time, in the face of popular opposition, and unless
-they have a capital to fall back upon.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Union for the general good—a single purpose in
-Principal, Council, shareholders alike—this alone could
-prevent all serious and hindering differences of opinion
-among them. It was for this union Miss Beale was
-specially striving now. Her paper to the Council went
-on thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘ ... I should like this and other matters fixed, not in reference
-to my personal wishes, but according to what the most
-experienced persons think best. I shall see the Heads of all the
-principal Girls’ Schools probably when I am in London, and
-probably also an Endowed Schools’ Committee, and I shall learn
-from Mrs. William Grey what has been done at the Board of
-the Girls’ Day School Company; perhaps this may modify my
-views. Meanwhile I enclose a few suggestions I sent to Mr.
-Verrall.... I feel very strongly with you that if the College
-is at all to go on doing good work, it must not be governed by
-local members, and that it is a matter of the greatest importance
-that we should have upon our Board men of experience and
-judgment in educational matters. I would not keep more than
-two or three members of the present Council. It should be
-made a rule that no person who derives pecuniary profit, either
-directly or indirectly, should be a member of it. The point
-on which I feel most strongly just now is that the Principal
-must be able to select her fellow-workers, to appoint and
-dismiss.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There is also an interesting letter to Mr. Verrall on
-the subject of her authority:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Of course, you are more likely than I am to know what is
-best in matters of government, still I think it may be well to
-express, as clearly as I can, what I feel in reference to the
-subject of my authority.</p>
-
-<p>‘It does not seem to me as if things would be likely to go on
-long without revolutions in an institution governed by two
-irresponsible powers. The authority of an irresponsible Principal
-must of course be checked in <em>some way</em>, if not by constitutional
-means, then by a Russian system. It may be that
-the Czarina has been trying to carry out some good reforms,
-but if her plans differ from those of the Councillors, there
-is an end of them. Our present Councillors are now afraid
-of being in their turn made an end of by a shareholders’ meeting,
-but if the constitution, as I understood it, were carried, the
-shareholders would be powerless, and the Council might, for
-mere personal dislike, get rid of a Principal who opposed what was
-wrong. Of course, it will not do for a Committee to interfere
-with the Principal’s choice of teachers, and there will be anarchy
-unless she has the power of dismissal; but virtually there will
-always be a power of appeal to the Committee inasmuch as they
-<em>would</em>, if partisans of any official, dismiss the Principal to reinstate
-her.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Many members of the College Council desired change
-and enlargement. One wrote: ‘I cannot think it right
-to leave Miss Beale or any other Lady Principal to the
-mercies of a purely local Council ... for I think with
-such a Council no good Lady Principal could long
-agree.’</p>
-
-<p>Among those whom Miss Beale consulted at this crisis,
-and from whom she received sympathy, were Dr. Jex-Blake,
-then head-master of Rugby, and Sir Joshua
-Fitch, who later on became a member of the Council.</p>
-
-<p>The desired reform was brought about in 1875, when
-at a general meeting in March the relative powers of
-the proprietors, Council, and Principal were more clearly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-defined and the number of the governing body increased.
-The Council then elected consisted of the following:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Life Members</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Right Hon. Earl Granville, K.G., D.C.L.,
-F.R.S., Chancellor of the University of London.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Right Hon. Lord Lyttelton.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Right Hon. Sir Edward Ryan, M.A., F.R.S.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">J. Storrar, Esq., M.D., Chairman of Convocation of
-the University of London.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Rev. H. Walford Bellairs, Rector of Nuneaton.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Rev. Canon Barry, Principal of King’s College,
-London.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">Miss Buss, Principal of the North London Collegiate
-School for Girls.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">W. Dunn, Esq., Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">H. Verrall, Esq., Brighton.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">T. Marriott, Esq., Victoria Street, Westminster.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">S. S. Johnson, Esq., Nottingham.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Ordinary Members</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Rev. Herbert Kynaston, Principal of the Cheltenham
-College.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Rev. W. Wilberforce Gedge, Malvern Wells.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Rev. Dr. Morton Brown, Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">E. T. Wilson, Esq., M.B. (Oxon.), Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">General M’Causland, Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">F. D. Longe, Esq., Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">John Middleton, Esq., Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">T. Morley Rooke, Esq., M.D. (London), Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">Miss Mary Gurney, London.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">Miss Lucy March Phillipps, Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">Mrs. James Owen, Cheltenham.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">Miss Catherine Winkworth, Clifton.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Much was gained by this remodelling, but the period
-of uneasy development was not yet over. One annual
-meeting which discussed the constitution of the College
-appears in private notes made by the Principal for her
-<cite>History</cite> as ‘Bear Garden.’ Reorganisation was seen to be
-essential. The College, founded in 1853 as a voluntary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-association, had by 1880 grown far beyond the calculations
-of its founders. Besides the school buildings and
-the Lady Principal’s house, it possessed Fauconberg
-House and the sanatorium at Leckhampton. To give
-it a safe legal foundation it was therefore registered
-‘with limited liability’ under the Companies’ Acts of
-1862 and 1867, without the addition of the word
-‘limited’ to its name. New regulations concerning the
-holding of shares and property—the appointment of
-officers—were also made.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The Shareholders formally renounced all interest on their
-shares, and on January 31, 1880, the College was duly incorporated.
-On May 1 of the same year, the Lady Principal and
-other officials were formally re-elected.</p>
-
-<p>‘The new Constitution provided for a Governing Body of
-twenty-four Members, of whom eighteen, namely twelve men
-and six women, were to be Members elected by the Shareholders,
-and the remaining six Representative Members, each
-holding office for six years. The six Representative Members
-were to be appointed by: (1) The Bishop of Gloucester and
-Bristol; (2) The Hebdomadal Council of the University of
-Oxford; (3) The Council of the Senate of the University of
-Cambridge; (4) The Senate of the University of London;
-(5) The Lady Principal; and (6) The Teachers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale did not often speak of the difficulties
-which necessarily she had to meet, as one called upon
-to direct the development of a great institution. But
-she had counsel and sympathy for those who were
-similarly placed. Miss Buss wrote thus to Miss Ridley
-of help she obtained from her:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I had a long and grave talk to Miss Beale, who counsels
-fight, but not on any personal ground. She says, “Resign, if
-there is interference with the mistress’ liberty of action. That
-is a public question, and one of public interest.” She was so
-good and loving; she was so tender; and she is so wise and
-calm. She told me some of her own worries, and said that
-sometimes she quivered in every nerve at her own Council<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-meetings. People came in and asked for information, involving
-hours of work for no result; ignored all that had been done,
-and talked as if they alone had done everything and knew
-everything. She urged me to try and be <em>im</em>personal, so to
-speak; to remember that these and similar difficulties would
-always occur where there are several people. She said that
-<em>women</em> were always accused of being <em>too personal</em>, and harm was
-done by giving a handle to such an assertion.’<a name="FNanchor_46" id="FNanchor_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The first efforts of the new Council to grapple with
-their task revealed that one source of difficulty lay in the
-government of the boarding-houses. The early founders
-had foreseen this when, in their first prospectus, they
-announced that they would not be responsible for any
-houses. Experience, however, soon showed that by this
-policy, grave dangers were at the same time incurred.
-Into Miss Beale’s early struggle for pupils the question
-of boarding-houses scarcely entered, though for the
-want of them she often had sadly to witness the loss
-of good pupils to the College. There were among the
-day-pupils many children of Anglo-Indians in England
-for a time. On the return of these parents to India,
-they were forced to make boarding arrangements for the
-children left behind. It was not till 1864 that the first
-regularly constituted boarding-house was opened under
-Miss Caines. This was at 24 Lansdown Place, now
-joined to No. 25, and known as St. Helen’s. In 1870
-Miss Caines removed to Fauconberg House, the first
-property purchased by the College.</p>
-
-<p>It was only through actual experience that the position
-of the boarding-house and its head could be defined.
-In point of fact, this situation had to grow and develop
-according to the requirements of the College, which as
-formerly had to constitute precedents and make experiments.
-It is but seldom that the details of any great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-scheme can be arranged beforehand with deliberate judgment,
-that all difficulties can be foreseen, and occasions
-of conflict avoided. They are more often worked out
-by single-minded intention which can endure through
-small errors and trifling disputes. The Lady Principal’s
-position was rendered more difficult by the tacit opposition
-of ‘local interest’ to the extension of boarding-house
-accommodation. The very existence of the College had
-been for many years precarious. Few people in Cheltenham
-wished it to become anything more than a suitable
-day-school for the sisters of boys at the College.
-Consequently a lady who took boarders was regarded
-with no special favour, and her actions were very often
-severely criticised.</p>
-
-<p>In the difficult work of forming and increasing boarding-houses,
-mistakes were made by many. Miss Beale’s
-own belief in others, her habit of accepting people at
-their own estimate, of believing they were what she
-wished them to be, of judging character from her wide
-experience of books rather than from that of life, sometimes
-led her astray in her choice of fellow-workers.
-She who in her lonely position often felt the need of
-sympathy, to which she was ever responsive, was anxious
-to give it, even where she could not understand. This
-made her slow to bring about a change, lest sufficient
-opportunity for amendment had not been given. On
-the other hand, sometimes she could see that a change
-should be made promptly, but as she could not act alone
-a dangerous delay would ensue.</p>
-
-<p>At first the position of a head of a boarding-house
-was little defined, and it was hard sometimes for a clever,
-well-intentioned woman, anxious to do the best for the
-children in her care, not to regard the work of the house
-as primary, that of the College as secondary only. One<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-lady, who was extremely capable and interested in her
-work, was ambitious to make her boarding-house a complete
-institution in itself, rather than an integral part
-of the College. Many of the girls in her charge came
-as her own relations or friends; she chose to adopt
-the position that it was right for her to decide whether
-they should be taught at her house or sent to College,
-and she denied the right of any one to interfere in her
-management. She also claimed the right to take another
-house for herself and her own children, where she could
-receive and entertain her friends. As soon as Miss
-Beale’s eyes were opened to the danger of such independent
-action, she did not hesitate a moment on the
-right course to be pursued with regard to the boarding-house
-management. She perceived that in this matter,
-as in the work of the school, there was no standing
-ground between obedience and independence. ‘I
-am so sorry for Miss Beale,’ wrote Mrs. William Grey
-to Miss Buss, ‘and so glad our Council determined to
-have nothing to do with Boarding-Houses. I cannot
-help thinking that the wisest course for the Cheltenham
-Council would be to wash their hands of them, only
-reserving to themselves, as we have, the right to refuse
-pupils from a house they disapprove of. There seems to
-me no tolerable alternative between this and the hostelry
-system.’</p>
-
-<p>It may be safely said that never, even in moments
-of worst annoyance, did Miss Beale ever propose to
-‘wash her hands’ of the boarding-houses. She felt they
-should be ‘organically related’ to the College life, a part
-of it which she could not do without, one which had
-in it great possibilities for extending and strengthening
-the influence of the College teaching, one which, neglected,
-must be an infinite source of difficulty, by which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-standard of the corporate life might be lowered, and
-its best work hindered.</p>
-
-<p>So she persisted, lending her whole mind and strength
-to help in the evolution of a system which should be
-fair to individuals and the best for the College as a
-body. In 1890, after she had won her point, she wrote
-to Miss Arnold, then head-mistress of the Truro High
-School, who had consulted her on the subject:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I think I told you that after many years, I have prevailed
-on our Council to take the whole risk of the boarding-houses,—the
-pecuniary risk is of course very great, and in case of war
-or sudden depression, I don’t exactly see how we should meet
-it, but one must have risks, and we find the moral risks of
-not taking pecuniary ones so great that we decided for the
-latter—and indeed we had to pay pretty considerable sums in
-law expenses and to get rid of unjust claims too. We could
-not <em>prove</em> that these ladies had not lost money, if they said they
-had—and if they were bad managers they did perhaps lose—and
-an outcry was raised that we ruined poor ladies!’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But the difficulties to be encountered on the way to
-this consummation were by no means slight, and involved
-great personal anxiety and pain. It was especially hard
-to her that she should be known by her own pupils
-to be in opposition to any who had been set over them.
-It was hard to feel that many with their partial knowledge
-of facts must misunderstand her, or childishly
-attribute her actions to commonplace motives of jealousy
-and love of power. Some part of these difficulties
-became fully public in 1882, when the College was involved
-in a libel case, and a lawsuit which was settled
-by arbitration. Exoneration from all blame followed
-in both instances. In the arbitration case the judgment
-was delivered by Mr. Justice Charles, and placed in a
-sealed envelope with the injunction that either party
-might open it on payment of £350. The Council did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-not think it necessary to pay this money. Eventually
-those who had brought the action against the College
-did so, to find that the judgment had been pronounced
-against them on every count. It was a victory for
-the College and the Principal, but it had not been
-achieved without great toil and suffering on Miss Beale’s
-part. She dreaded the cross-examination with all the
-nervousness of a sensitive nature. Speaking of it afterwards,
-and of all it had cost her, she ever associated
-with the pain the remembrance of the immense help
-and sympathy she had received from her friend Mrs.
-James Owen, then a member of the Council, and
-would say, ‘Mrs. Owen said I should not be scorched
-in the fire.’ She was also upborne by the loyalty of her
-fellow-workers, both teachers and boarding-house mistresses,
-who signed a joint expression of their sympathy
-with her in her time of anxiety. Miss Buss gave more
-than words of sympathy, she was present herself in the
-arbitration-room when the case was tried. When it was
-over she wrote to her friend to this effect: ‘Yesterday
-I made the personal acquaintance of Miss ——. I fell
-in love with her because she is so intensely loyal to
-Cheltenham and to “dear Miss Beale.” I think if you
-could have heard her talk, unknown to her, you would
-have felt that the severe trial you have had to go through
-was more than compensated for by the love and loyalty
-it has called out to you and the College.’</p>
-
-<p>The increase in the number of the boarding-houses,
-with their slightly different characteristics, brought an
-obvious advantage to the College. It led the way to
-still cheaper houses, and to the promotion of that work
-so dear always to Miss Beale, helping poor students
-and training teachers. Never heartily sympathetic with
-what is generally called charitable work, afraid of seeing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-money given without a really equivalent return in usefulness
-and good work, there was one appeal to which she
-never turned a deaf ear. Probably she never knew any
-case of a girl honestly trying to improve herself, and
-failing in the effort for want of means, without trying
-to help her. Her usual plan was to advance money,
-which she found was almost invariably returned to her
-in the course of time. She would, wherever it seemed
-right, ask for its return on the ground that it might
-be of use to others, and because she was ever careful
-to make those she helped recognise that the possession
-of money is a stewardship only. But it was offered and
-lent and sometimes given in such a way that there should
-be no personal feeling of obligation and debt. ‘There
-is a loan fund,’ she would say when there occurred a
-question of the removal of a promising pupil from the
-College on the score of expense. And hardly any one
-ever heard her say more than this of the large system
-of help which she initiated and to a very great
-extent sustained alone. Some of the boarding-house
-mistresses generously took one girl free, or for very
-low terms, but the work was quietly done, known
-only to few.</p>
-
-<p>The establishment of scholarships did not fit into
-Miss Beale’s educational schemes. She was not wholly
-opposed to them. One, in 1870, was accepted for the
-College, when Colonel Pearce bestowed a gift of £1000
-to found the Pearce Scholarship for the daughter of
-an army officer, and Miss Beale in the last year of her
-life established one for Casterton. But she had a great
-horror of a system by which one school or college could
-buy promising pupils from others, and she held that it
-was hard on earnest students who were not naturally
-quick to see assistance given only to ability. ‘I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-refused,’ she said at a later period, ‘all scholarships
-except one, the chief condition of which is poverty.
-Three scholarships have been offered unasked, and an
-endowment for two prizes, which would have formed
-a good advertisement, every year, but I have refused all.’</p>
-
-<p>As the College grew, Miss Beale felt more and more
-the need of a house where those who were trying to
-train themselves to be teachers could board inexpensively,
-and in 1876 was made that beginning which, as she
-said, was ‘full of blessing to the College, and of much
-use beyond its bounds.’ This was before the Maria
-Grey Training College was opened, and when there was
-no institution at all in which women could receive
-definite preparation for becoming teachers in secondary
-schools.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Mary Margaretta Newman, member of a family
-which had shown itself sympathetic and interested
-in Miss Beale’s work from the first, offered to take a
-furnished house for a small number of students, to give
-her services, and contribute besides £75 a year towards
-expenses. Miss Newman had seen, whilst helping Miss
-Selwyn in her school at Sandwell, how much some such
-assistance was needed; how many girls of good social
-standing were struggling to obtain the training necessary
-to fit them to earn their living as teachers. She therefore
-provided a home for a few, and by her quiet, gentle
-influence supplemented the College work, and won the
-affections of her household. ‘What we felt most was
-the simplicity with which she gave so much. She seemed
-unconscious that she was doing anything remarkable in
-going to live in a small house, with one servant, and
-undertaking all the labour such an economy implied.’<a name="FNanchor_47" id="FNanchor_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
-
-<p>Miss Newman’s work went on for scarcely a year,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-for at the end of 1877, after a very short illness,
-aggravated by the burden she had willingly laid upon
-herself, she died, leaving the work but just begun indeed,
-yet full of promise, and rendered by her sacrifice and
-death a sacred charge to the College and the Lady
-Principal. So indeed Miss Beale felt it to be, and in
-after years she would remember the life given in the
-cause she herself had so much at heart, and would
-write in her diary on December 31: ‘I think of Miss
-Newman’s death. Shall I not follow her example?’
-Then for the first time Miss Beale, who had always
-maintained and acted on the principle that the College
-should earn its own living, asked for money to buy
-and furnish a suitable house for girls who could not
-afford the terms of the boarding-houses. She could not
-bear to refuse the many applications she received from
-those who were too poor to help themselves. About
-£1200 was immediately collected, one half being contributed
-by the College staff.</p>
-
-<p>The work thus begun extended so rapidly that in
-little more than five years it was seen to be necessary
-that it should have a building of its own, and the trustees
-who had the management of the funds decided to build
-a residential College. This was opened under the name
-of St. Hilda’s in 1885.</p>
-
-<p>The first ten years in the new buildings were a time
-of larger development for the College than any other
-in its history. Miss Beale’s own active life was also
-more full, and not less anxious, than it had ever been.
-There was never again a time of depression such as
-the year 1871 had been, when the College seemed to
-be almost losing ground, when in the whole course of
-the year only three fresh pupils entered. But the rapid
-increase on every hand of new, good, cheap schools<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-naturally fed her anxiety at a period when she had to
-justify to the Council her constant demand for more
-classrooms, music-rooms, halls, laboratories. She saw
-the immense importance of keeping ahead in these things.
-Other schools had endowments or guaranteed capital,
-the College could only increase and improve its plant
-out of the fees paid by the pupils. The Lady Principal
-did not wish it otherwise; but the constant remembrance
-of this made her very careful in expenditure, and ever
-desirous that all individual interest should be lost to
-sight in regard for the common welfare. There was
-something sharper than anxiety to bear over the boarding-house
-difficulties and the reconstitution of the Council.
-So much patience was needed, so much judgment in
-decisions, in avoiding mistakes, in retrieving them when
-made, that time and thought might well have been
-occupied with the care of actualities alone.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it will not be surprising to some to know that
-it was just in these years that her inner life also became
-more full and more active, and that she was called upon
-to go through mental crises of great moment. The
-habit of prayer, difficult to maintain in a busy life, was
-strengthened by attendance at Retreats; a practice begun
-in 1877 to be continued yearly. Reading of every kind,
-with the exception of fiction, was diligently kept up, and
-thought was never more active.</p>
-
-<p>The intellectual and spiritual struggles of this time
-permanently affected Miss Beale’s work and teaching.
-They cannot be passed over.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-<span class="smaller">DE PROFUNDIS</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Es sind die, so viel erlitten</div>
-<div class="verse">Trübsal, Schmerzen, Angst, und Noth,</div>
-<div class="verse">Im Gebet auch oft gestritten</div>
-<div class="verse">Mit dem hochgelobten Gott.’</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="attr"><span class="smcap">Theodor Schenk.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Dorothea Beale—largely owing to her sensitive nature
-and high ideals—had had her full share of the sufferings
-and disappointments of youth. And when she had
-gained the experience and habits of more mature years,
-when she had schooled herself to bear, when her position
-was assured, when she was free to associate largely with
-those most sympathetic to her, her zeal for the best ever
-caused a pressing sense of effort and strain. Certain
-commonplace troubles she had not known, as, for example,
-the want of money—a need which in fact she never
-experienced, and never really understood in others. And
-on the whole her health had been good. She regarded
-it as one of her first duties to consider this, and except
-for the fact that she had an inherent indifference to the
-character of the food she ate, the duty was not neglected.
-But in 1878 she was called upon to go through a period
-of weakness and anxiety which limited her powers for
-the time. In spite of her great self-control she was
-obliged to relax a little, to take more rest, while the
-effort to preserve that self-control made her seem, to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-some who knew nothing of it, hard and unsympathetic.
-Very little indeed did she say of what she went through
-at this time, because she thought it best for others that
-she should be reserved and silent on the subject. The
-College and Miss Beale seemed to have a stability which
-could not be touched or changed, and she knew the value
-of this characteristic to her work. Probably no one in
-the College, and hardly any one outside it, perhaps none
-except her sisters and Miss Clarke, knew how near
-she was at this time to an absolute breakdown. The
-diary, still persistently kept, continued to be little more
-than a record of struggle against particular faults; yet
-here, from an occasional word and expression, the weariness
-and anxiety of the time may be gauged.</p>
-
-<p>The year opened for Miss Beale with a special renewal
-of effort. Canon Body’s addresses at a Retreat she
-attended in Warrington Crescent in the first days of
-January were full of inspiration to her. This meant
-actively fresh effort, keener self-scrutiny, more watchfulness.
-‘I remember,’ she wrote on January 24, the
-opening day of College, ‘I remember with grief the
-many neglects of the past. Forsake me not, neither
-reward me after my deserts.’</p>
-
-<p>The next few weeks show a pathetic struggle against a
-growing sense of weakness. At first she blamed herself
-if duty was neglected, then as she knew herself to be ill,
-still felt that more might have been done, refusing to take
-sickness as an excuse. There are many living who were
-at College at this period, and to them the picture of this
-effort and suffering going on in the background of all
-that then seemed unfailingly vital and positive must have
-a double interest,—increasing tenderness for the memory
-of her who for their sakes was bearing a daily burden of
-pain, encouraging to fresh zeal by showing what a brave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-spirit may do even in weakness and depression. A few
-extracts to show this follow:—</p>
-
-<table summary="Diary entries">
- <tr>
- <td>‘Jan.</td>
- <td class="tdr">26.</td>
- <td>Nothing of real work done since school, and but little in the morning.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">31.</td>
- <td>Inattentive. Spoke unkindly without cause. Irritable.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Feb.</td>
- <td class="tdr">3.</td>
- <td>Did not do best for literature class. Felt feeble and did not try as I ought.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">9.</td>
- <td>[There] ought to be more industry in writing for Saturday lectures. The night cometh.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">11.</td>
- <td>I grieve for the stupid lesson I gave Division III., because not well prepared.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">14.</td>
- <td>Still great waste of time. How much have I to learn in this little time of life left to me.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">15.</td>
- <td>Too much depressed, feeling I <em>can’t</em>. Perhaps more variety and exercise wanted.
- Certainly more trust and energy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">16.</td>
- <td>More than one hour wasted in idle thoughts, 5-6 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span>, and yet I
- have work for others which I ought to have thought of, and lessons. I deserve to be left without
- help. <i>Evening.</i> Not much matter or order in lessons. Tired and discontented with self.
- Neglect of books. More trust and energy wanted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">26.</td>
- <td>I have idled away precious time, neglected individual work. Because my own will is weak, I could
- not strengthen [another].</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">27.</td>
- <td>In bed all day. There are duties still undone, though I see death near.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">28.</td>
- <td>Not in College. Much time wasted and [I was] disobedient to the voice of duty.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>March</td>
- <td class="tdr">1.</td>
- <td>Still great waste of energy in idle thoughts. Talk of zeal but no religious work done to-day,
- though there are so many individuals I am ever putting off.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">2.</td>
- <td>Omitted teachers’ class, which with less of idle thoughts I might have done.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">5.</td>
- <td>Too exhausted to do much. Give me true contrition for the past.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">6.</td>
- <td>Time not well used in afternoon. Letter to Miss Clarke.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">14.</td>
- <td>Was ill last night. Almost no individual work.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">15.</td>
- <td>A little more work for my children to-day. I thank Thee for some help. May I consecrate time and
- energies to Thee.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">17.</td>
- <td>Have not prayed well for to-morrow—was tired, but did waste some time. Not attentive enough
- at Church.... Surely to-day’s negligence might humble me!</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">18.</td>
- <td>Rose thirty-five minutes late through carelessness.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">19.</td>
- <td>Back to College. Shall I patiently resign my work as soon as He bids?</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">20.</td>
- <td>Evening examination shortened because delayed. It was not necessary, though I am idle. Ordered
- away. Thy will be done.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">21.</td>
- <td>Sent to Hyde. Forty-seven. (This was her birthday.) For the grievous neglect of past time enter
- not into judgment. Sanctify the future!</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">22.</td>
- <td>Make me ever more constant to resign to Thee my will.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">23.</td>
- <td>More ill, so tried to be idle, but did what thought I could. Vain thoughts of self-pity.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">24.</td>
- <td>No Church. Have wasted time. Great inattention at prayer.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">25.</td>
- <td>Talking, and therefore late, at least half an hour. Miss Belcher came.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">27.</td>
- <td>George came. Was ill most of afternoon. Did nothing.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">28.</td>
- <td>I thank Thee for hopes of more work. Make me more restful and faithful. Power of prayer fails.
- Grant me the spirit of holy fear.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>April</td>
- <td class="tdr">2.</td>
- <td>Back at Cheltenham.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">3.</td>
- <td>I ought to have specially husbanded strength.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">5.</td>
- <td>Tried, but not successfully, with my Confirmation children. Feeling too ill to do well. Thy
- will be done.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">7.</td>
- <td>Holy Eucharist. Ill at night. The Lord thy refuge, and underneath the everlasting arms.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">8.</td>
- <td>Better class. Was helped.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">13.</td>
- <td>Not punctual because sleepless. Read Mr. Hinton’s <cite>Life</cite> and was helped by it.
- Confirmation at Christchurch. <i>Summary</i> [of the term]. Time wasted, idle prayer,
- boasting. Intercessions [neglected] because too selfish.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">16.</td>
- <td>Came to Hyde [for the holidays].’</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>So ended a term of great anxiety. One medical
-opinion, doubtless referred to in her diary of March 20,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-was of such a nature, that Miss Beale thought she must
-resign her work at once. At Hyde her sisters persuaded
-her to rest and to see another doctor, who took a more
-hopeful view, which was wholly justified by her gradual
-return to health.</p>
-
-<p>Among the few who knew of this sorrow was the old
-pupil and friend, Miss Margaret Clarke. To her Miss
-Beale wrote from Hyde before she had received the
-second medical opinion, and the reply shows, far more
-than the diary can tell us, how deep was the gloom
-which hung over her way at this time. It might well
-have been written three years later, when Miss Beale was
-called upon to undergo greater suffering than any bodily
-pain alone can give, and suggests to those who read it
-now, that the darkness of that later time was shadowing
-her spirit even as early as this. The interest of it is the
-greater because it shows another who like Dorothea
-Beale, while faithful to her work, unsparing in care and
-thought for her children, had been called upon personally
-to know spiritual anguish. Such suffering, such loss,
-such deeper realisation of Divine love as are read in this
-letter are surely the portion of those who, having given
-much and helped many, are called to some further work
-of sympathy, needing perhaps ‘heart’s blood.’</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My very dear Friend</span>,—Your letter touches me so nearly,
-and calls out such true sympathy, that I cannot help yielding
-myself to the impulse to answer you, as one who, by her own
-experience, knows the pain and suffering you are now passing
-through. Last year at this time I was in it, and possibly just
-where you are now, where my complete faith in all that was
-most dear to me was tested; yes, tested and sifted, till all human
-longings and cravings, even those the most lawful, were laid
-low; God Himself seemed to draw near, and strip the soul of
-all it prized, and was proud of, asking one thing after another of
-it, and last of all the heart, whole and unshared, until, when
-Good Friday came, it could sympathise with the Crucified, as it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-had never done before. Not that all that had not been done
-before as I believed, but this was in a way deeper, more searching
-than the soul had yet realised. I do not know if I am making
-myself clear to you, for it is difficult to put it into words. It
-was the unlearning human wisdom, and the getting ready to be
-“a little child,” to learn Divine Wisdom, in the school of the
-Kingdom of the Incarnate Word.</p>
-
-<p>‘And then, when all was yielded, at least in will, then came
-a desolation time, which none but those who have passed through
-it can know—a living death, as it were; the soul having just
-power to cling to the Invisible Cross, and say the Creed, as a
-witness perhaps more to itself, that faith was alive, than to God
-as an act of faith in Him. I never slept, (I was for) whole nights
-awake, (the) brain always at work trying to solve the difficult
-problems of God’s wisdom, and circumstances in my own life,
-and to find out what <em>was</em> right, what <em>was</em> His Will. At last I
-was given a simple faith <em>blindly</em> to give myself to God for whatever
-He wished for me. To let go reasonings and what I
-thought, etc., and say just as a little child “Our Father” with
-intention for what He willed. I did not know what it might
-be, but He knew, and I would trust Him, and then I went on
-to (think of) that seventeenth chapter of St. John, and claimed
-my share in the benefits of that prayer, in the answer that is
-ever coming to each separate member of Christ’s Body all along
-the years since it was prayed.</p>
-
-<p>‘And so, gradually, the passage was made into a nearer region,
-a nearer relationship to God, if I may so express myself. But
-I must not go on writing in this way. I can only tell you
-that what was then only a trembling venture of Faith has become
-a substantial reality in the life of the soul; the whole being,
-body, soul and spirit being penetrated by it, and the whole of
-life transformed by the “sunshine” which makes itself felt, even
-through stray clouds, which must come sometimes, and there
-is rest and peace in the soul—divine peace.</p>
-
-<p>‘Forgive me, dear Miss Beale, for writing in a way I scarcely
-ever do to any one.</p>
-
-<p>‘I know how impossible it will be for you to rest, but do try
-to do so, as long as you can.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After the Easter holidays Miss Beale was much better
-in health, and though her work through the summer was
-carried on with a good deal of strain and weariness, she
-was able to do it as fully as usual. The summer holidays<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-were spent partly at Hyde Court with her mother,
-and partly at Cheltenham, and by the end of them she
-was much rested and again able to take the walks she
-enjoyed. The opening day of the autumn term was
-September 17. ‘Help me not to disgrace my profession!’
-she exclaimed in her diary of that day.</p>
-
-<p>Two years after this date Hyde Court ceased to be the
-regular holiday home, for in November 1881 Mrs. Beale
-died. In one of her later letters to her ‘Principal’
-daughter she had written: ‘I hunger to see you, my
-darling. You have been so good to me always, your reward
-will come.’ Such words of praise are dear indeed
-when the lips that spoke them are cold. They were
-treasured by Miss Beale. But in this bereavement, as in
-all times when made conscious of the shadow of death,
-specially of her own, she tried to face the mystery with
-clear-sighted gaze, to realise sincerely the impression it
-was meant to produce. She would not let expressions of
-comfort and hope, which she welcomed and accepted to
-the full, or any brightness brought by the kindness of
-the living, hide for her the penitential aspect of death.</p>
-
-<p>The following fragmentary thoughts seem to come
-from the very chamber of death, and were written on
-the day of the month which was to be the date of her
-own death, twenty-five years later:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>November 9, 1881.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘At first death seemed, as I looked at that pale face, simply
-terrible—how could I die? This morning I went again and
-touched the cold hand, and gazed into the face, so calm and
-wax-like. She who had rejoiced over my birth fifty years ago
-was now perhaps watching me. Does the spirit linger round
-its earthly tabernacle for a while? The memory of old times
-came back—not only the love and unselfishness, but the harshness
-too, the faults, the sins, I find in myself—surely she feels it
-now as the light shines on her. Does she not see herself more
-as God sees her? For every sinful word we shall give account.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-Surely this sorrow is a purifying fire, and the words are true, if
-we would judge ourselves here we shall not be judged.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here, where we have partaken together of His Body and
-Blood, I kneel near that empty tabernacle—but a spiritual
-Presence is with us—purifying us both and drawing us nearer
-to Him in Whom living and dead are one.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bless and purify our spirits, O Lord, with the dew of Thy
-grace, make us gentler and holier. Through the veil we seem
-to see Thee nearer. Longing, praying that we may not, as
-the rich man, have to feel the burning shame for our unloving
-spirit, now that we see His love, His tender, searching eye.</p>
-
-<p>‘It becomes to me a sacred chapel, I can scarcely bear to part.
-The room is fragrant with the gifts of tender flowers from
-loving friends, and there is a peace here abiding in the sense of
-God’s continued, loving, healing discipline. “I change not!”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>During these years outside interests multiplied. New
-friendships were formed; some old ones were strengthened.
-The College Magazine, the first definite link
-forged with old pupils, was begun in 1880. Miss
-Beale made more acquaintances outside the College. In
-London she met many who shared her educational interests.
-In Cheltenham she attended, and often read and
-spoke at, a small literary gathering called the Society of
-Friends, which met from time to time at different houses.
-The diary becomes full of reference to Mrs. Middleton
-and Mrs. Owen. Through Mrs. Middleton she came
-to know Mr. Wilkinson’s<a name="FNanchor_48" id="FNanchor_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> great evangelistic work in
-his fashionable London parish. She often went to hear
-him preach, read his books, and showed them to others.
-Mrs. Owen introduced her to the <cite>Life</cite> and philosophy
-of James Hinton, which made a very deep impression.
-At Mr. Owen’s house she met many earnest social
-workers and thinkers. Among these was Miss Ellice
-Hopkins, whose devoted work revived in tenfold force<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-her early pity for those who need to be ‘found.’ The
-increasing vigour of the College life and work was ever
-bringing in new ideas. Men who were making their
-mark as thinkers and teachers of their own special
-subjects often came to lecture. Among the most enthralled
-listeners to the eloquence of Professor William
-Knight, to the marvellous fairy-tales of science told
-by Professor Barrett, was the Lady Principal herself.
-Teachers and educationists of widely different views
-came to see the work of the school, often to find that the
-successful head-mistress who was able to show them so
-much was willing and eager to learn from them, and to
-see matters from their standpoint. Meanwhile she was
-reading as widely and eagerly as ever.</p>
-
-<p>It was a time when long-accepted opinions were unsettled
-for many, by new scientific theories, or by a
-greater sensitiveness to the mystery of pain and the
-apparent indifference of a part of the so-called religious
-world in presence of the deepest wrongs and suffering.
-Dorothea Beale had to take her part in the special difficulties
-of her own day. The battle has been shifted to
-another ground for this generation, which scarcely knows
-what resistance was made, what suffering was endured
-by some heroic souls in the last, and at what a price a
-larger spiritual consciousness was bought.</p>
-
-<p>The contact with so many minds, the widening circle
-of acquaintance with workers of different views and
-methods, and especially the appeal for aid in religious
-perplexity constantly made by those who came under her
-influence, doubtless helped to precipitate that sorrow,
-which, though in its acutest phase of short duration,
-was the sharpest trial Miss Beale was ever called upon to
-experience; one on which she never ceased to look back
-with horror. She who had said that she ‘could truly take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-to herself the words of Faber,’<a name="FNanchor_49" id="FNanchor_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> who had been from
-earliest childhood conscious of a protecting Presence, and
-had even then ‘found prayer a joy,’ now in late middle
-life felt herself, as it were, cast out. At an age when the
-inexperienced questionings of youth were over, when she
-hoped to find faith and hope strengthened by knowledge,
-it seemed for a moment as if they had died down
-altogether.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Nel mezzo cammin di nostra vita</div>
-<div class="verse">Mi ritrovai per una selva oscura</div>
-<div class="verse">Che la diritta via era smarrita.’</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>To write of it is to turn a page of soul-history so
-intimate, and for a moment so painful, that it may well
-be thought it should be passed over in silence. But to
-omit it would not be wholly faithful to the memory
-of one who wished certainly that this story of her inner
-life should be known to all who could be helped by it.
-To tell it, moreover, is to use her own words, for she
-wrote of it herself, more than once or twice. She felt,
-when she looked back on it afterwards, that she was
-obliged to go through this time of suffering in order that
-she might be better fitted to do the work given her, in
-order that others who had lost faith and hope might be
-helped to regain them, by knowing how she herself
-had passed from destruction and despair to hope and
-rebuilding.</p>
-
-<p>The diary of this whole period is more than ever indicative
-of inward strife and unrest from which she would
-not by her own will escape to any comfort other than
-the highest. Among the entries, which are for the most
-part self-analytical and depressed, it is curious to find
-this: ‘Letter from —— Some vanity perhaps in the
-refusal.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was an offer of marriage from an old friend.</p>
-
-<p>Once or twice there is a hint of coming sorrow before
-she was conscious what its nature would be. Once, when
-marking the anniversary of a friend’s death, she noted
-herself as ‘perplexed with the Incomprehensible.’ On
-June 27, 1881, a year before the darkness closed in,
-she wrote: ‘A great dread of coming sorrow, as of
-a calvary before me. If some bitter cup is to be poured
-out, Thy will be done. Only forsake me not! <i lang="la">Salvator
-Mundi!</i>’</p>
-
-<p>The new year (of 1882) opened as usual with renewed
-self-dedication; but she mentions that she came back to
-Cheltenham on January 14, after the annual Retreat,
-‘very broken.’ Though a persistent effort to keep up
-her religious rule was maintained, the clear shining of
-faith was much clouded. One who went to her for help
-at that time writes of it thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I went to her in sore trouble at the beginning of 1882, in one of
-the overwhelming griefs of extreme youth, when the whole aspect
-of life has suddenly changed from a lovely rose-garden ... to a
-hideous waste. The very things which made it lovely seemed
-to be shining and horrible shams, with undreamed-of treachery
-and horror lurking behind everything. It was the culminating
-disillusionment to turn to her who had been such a tower of
-patient strength all through school-life, and find <em>nothing</em>, no help,
-no comfort, no explanation, no hope to give! Yet while there
-were many at that time whom I could not endure to see, or do
-with because of the feeling of betrayal all round, there was
-never that with her. It never dawned on my <em>mind</em> for a moment
-that she was herself in the horrible mire, but I understood,
-I suppose, in my heart. I felt sorry for her and loved her better
-than ever before, and I never understood till now the reason of
-the tender intimacy of that time, which lay under the apparent
-disappointment of finding no help or comfort where I had made
-sure of it.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This powerlessness to help those who turned to her
-in their spiritual need made more poignant the sense of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-loss to one who loved to give freely as a mother to her
-children. ‘Then others came,’ she wrote afterwards of
-this time, ‘and one felt like the starving mother who saw
-the babe at her empty breast. I had no simple truths,
-no milk of the word to give them that they might grow
-thereby.’</p>
-
-<p>A letter to a friend mentions books which had a
-destructive effect as read at this time. It was not Miss
-Beale’s habit deliberately to read a book which was likely
-to disturb or weaken faith. To an old pupil who once
-wrote to her of Strauss’s book, <cite>The Old Faith and the New</cite>,
-she had replied:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>September 1873.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I feel sorry you have read Strauss, but, of course, if you felt
-it your duty to do so, you <em>were</em> right. Still, I do not think one
-is bound to read everything, any more than one is to listen to
-all that can be said against all one’s friends. I mean a person
-might be ever so good, yet if we were constantly to listen to
-insinuations against them, if we were frequently <em>with</em> those who
-disbelieved in their goodness, and looked contemptuous when
-we trusted, a most well-founded confidence might result in
-doubt and distrust. I think we should act in religious matters
-as we ought in a case of friendship—refuse to hear insinuations,
-but ask for the grounds, arguments—not let our mind be biassed
-against our will and better judgment. I believe with many
-that these doubts are “spectres of the cave,” that if we have
-courage to face them, we shall see them fade away. But then
-we must be very much in earnest, spend time and labour and
-much thought upon this, as upon other subjects, and pray for the
-spirit of truth. I have not read Strauss, I know the general line
-of his arguments, but as you say he gives none here, I need not
-get the book to meet them.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Now, in this period of doubt and anxiety, books by
-any whom Miss Beale thought to be earnest seekers for
-truth, whether they were orthodox or not, were freely
-read.</p>
-
-<p>The sense of loss and discomfort seems to have grown
-gradually all the year. ‘Poor lesson because depressed,’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-she notes on a day in February. A fortnight later in
-church she was ‘wrestling like Jacob; Tell me Thy
-Name.’ Palm Sunday, however, brought some peace.
-‘I think I touched His garment’s hem.’ Each day in
-that Holy Week she was at an early service before
-school hours began, and on Easter Day wrote: ‘This
-Lent has been blessed.’ In Easter week she notes
-that she finished reading Jukes’s <cite>New Man</cite>, ‘a beautiful
-book.’</p>
-
-<p>But before the holidays were over there was ‘a dread
-of coming sorrow,’ a renewed feeling of deadness and
-want of devotion, only ‘passive following the inward
-guide.’ ‘Much troubled this morning,’ she wrote on
-Whit-Sunday, and the need for a ‘new life-pulse’ grew
-larger as the summer term wore on. Yet she persisted
-in striving to keep her devotional rules, and for her
-apparent want of zeal blamed only herself. At the end
-of that busy term, so full of work and interests and
-anxieties, she wrote: ‘Be with me in the holidays. I
-fear them.’</p>
-
-<p>Of the suffering of that time she afterwards wrote
-fully, tracing the steps by which she was gradually led
-to think that the historical evidence on which she
-thought her faith rested was of no value. An extract
-from one account is given:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Even if historical evidence were there, it could not be for
-all. And was it there?</p>
-
-<p>‘No, [only] fragments by nobodies, inconsistent versions. If
-God gave a perfect Man, He could not be for an age, but for all
-time, and how if His life passed, and we have no writing, only
-untrustworthy accounts? Surely, then, the life was worthless
-which God did not care to save for us. He stored up coal and
-light, our physical life, but He cared not to preserve Jesus, the
-spiritual life, He who had been called the Light of the world.
-Then it must be a delusion that He was, and God has deceived
-us, and we were deceived. The Pharisees were right in testing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-His claims. They watched Him on the Cross and there bade
-Him cry to the God Whom He had claimed as Father,—and He
-cried as the fabled prophet of old, Eli! Eli! and God disowned
-Him, and the words followed which proved that He was
-forsaken, that the thirst of soul was unappeased and His life was
-indeed over. And so the darkness gathered round the Cross,
-ever darkening as I listened to the cry. Was God indeed mocking
-our hopes? The old pagan vision rose before me. The
-symbols of the Christ were confounded with grotesque forms.
-I could not utter the Creeds of the Church. Yet strange to
-say I yet clung to a consciousness of a Father of the visible. In
-my troubled dreams, which haunted me day and night, I still
-seemed to feel there was a God, though no voice was heard for
-me among the trees of the garden.<a name="FNanchor_50" id="FNanchor_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></p>
-
-<p>‘I said I will not give up my trust in God, I must reconstruct.
-I will not, as some who have lost faith in Christ and
-the eternal, give away the trust in a Father. This I thought
-would survive without, but with that (my faith in Christ) went
-all belief in the existence of any other. As I listened to the voice
-of creation unharmonised by the interpretation of generous love
-proceeding from the soul, it seemed simply horrible: the martyr
-slowly consuming in the fire, God looking on, refusing to interfere
-with natural causes. I had seen this before, but, as in that
-beautiful parable of the Septuagint, I had seen God was with
-him, and the joy overpowered the pain, and the true life was
-purified, and they thanked God in the fires. Now I saw no
-immortal hope, no resurrection; all was dark horror and amazement.
-No; could I keep belief in a God who had deceived
-mankind? Should I trust Him, pray “to Him”?<a name="FNanchor_51" id="FNanchor_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a></p>
-
-<p>‘For months I read and thought of nothing else; whenever
-the pressing claims of work left me for a moment, I felt the
-light was gone from my life. Sometimes a deeper sympathy
-filled me,—as I seemed like a gladiator standing with my
-fellows. <i lang="la">Morituri te salutant.</i> But generally I felt myself
-growing hardened by the want of power to find sympathy in my
-sorrow, nor could I pray. I did not often, and when I did, it
-was one cry—“Why, why hast Thou left us, O God—without
-answer to our cries? Why hast Thou uttered no word of
-consolation to all the groans of earth? If Thou hast not heard
-Jesus, none of us need pray.” He trusted in God that He
-would deliver Him, and was forsaken, and men have waited
-through the ages, as a little child would wait, shut up in prison
-by some cruel father, and would not at first believe that he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-to be starved to death. And at last they realised that God for
-them was not,—only the prison-house He had built, in which
-they passed away their lives, in which, like a starving man, they
-dreamed of palaces and feasts, the delusions of their fevered brain.</p>
-
-<p>‘How that old passage came home to one’s fevered soul,—“the
-desert shall blossom as the rose”—as the thought of one’s
-old Christian faith came back. What would one not give, I
-thought, to believe it true once more! For that lighted up the
-whole world, then there were living waters, consolation in every
-sorrow, a well-spring of divine sympathy, inexhaustible,—wells
-from which one could drink for ever, and pour out of one’s
-abundance.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sometimes one did look up to the parched heavens, and
-though no rain fell, each time there was a little refreshing dew,
-as if God were answering when one let Him speak, instead
-of running into desert places, crying with Io, forsaken and
-maddened by a cruel God. Sometimes the words came then,
-“I will see you again.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But the vision of green pasture, of waters that would quench
-the parching thirst of the desert, it seemed a mirage,—and no good
-Shepherd waded out to me in my desert. Sometimes I found
-other wanderers, who asked of me the waters, and this seemed
-to fill my heart with deeper anguish; like Hagar, I could die in
-the wilderness, but I could not see my child die. So I tried to
-escape, but I could not, and I was obliged to lift my eyes to
-Heaven for their sakes. I did not tell them that what I took
-for mirage was real,—I did not try to turn stones into bread,
-I could only tell them of what I felt must be the creed of
-Goethe, that creation is the garment of God, and these shores
-of earth could not be all; there must be something true and
-substantial behind the phenomenal. The philosophy of St. John
-interpreted by Browning, the consciousness of love in my own
-nature, bore witness to the greater love of God. The Spirit
-within bore witness that there was a Father of spiritual life, and
-therefore that a divine sonship was possible for us. And as in
-our desolation we looked up together, it seemed as if the old
-truth <em>was</em> coming back to us, but in a new way. Jesus had
-taught it, only we had not seen it before.... If we felt the
-witness of the Spirit prompting us to cry, Abba Father, and if
-there was a Father, this prompting must come from Him. And
-so I listened once more for this Voice. And I was not left
-alone in the desert, as I waited in my first grief. God sent to
-me messengers when I had lain down there in the stupefaction
-of spiritual sleep. They offered me angels’ food. I watered it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-with tears, but I took it,—I ate it, whilst praying that God
-would take away my life,—take it, lest I should tempt others
-into the stony desert. Yes, I, who had refused to take others
-to the Lord’s Table, because they were faint and hungry, and in
-the highways of the world,—I, who had thought it profane,
-thought now that my mere hunger gave me a right to come.
-If He was indeed there, He might fill the empty cruse with oil.
-He might hear me as I said, “We have no wine.” And I
-remembered as I dared to come in my unbelief, the words I had
-been taught, of the hungry being filled. I thought I had once
-been of the mighty and rich, now I knew I was weak and
-hungry, so I came. But I saw not the Master, only a stranger
-whom I knew not, for my eyes were holden, and I did not
-recognise Him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh how often did I pine for death, not but that I could have
-taken the suffering. I thought that was possible, if I could have
-borne it alone. The grief was to feel that I should lead others
-away, whether I spoke or was silent. This only was right,
-never to say an untrue word, to teach what truth I had. But
-I was pledged like a clergyman. Still I did not yet know what
-I thought. I might read a little, for if I must find Christ was
-dead, I hoped, begged, God would take my life, that others
-might not die through me. With what joy did I see sickness
-come, and what disappointment there was when it was not unto
-death.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sometimes I thought I would take some spiritual opiate,—think
-no more, but try to kill self into a state in which probability
-should content me. But I could not work nor pray by
-such means. And if I could content myself by a sedative, could
-I my children? No; I must go on till I could feel the truth
-of those words ever recurring to me, “And dying rise, and
-rising with Him, raise His brethren, ransomed by His own
-dear life.”</p>
-
-<p>‘In darkness, I thought, “He descended into hell,” and
-I felt I would not rise unless I could bring my children too
-with me.</p>
-
-<p>‘What was the state of thought [at that time]? One could
-only look and read and see amongst the most intellectual the
-loss of hold on Christianity, and with those who believed, one
-felt it had been as with oneself, the belief would not bear the
-strain that would come; the tints were put on, were not our
-life through assimilation.’<a name="FNanchor_52" id="FNanchor_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Probably those to whom Miss Beale turned at first
-realised little of the distress that prompted her questions.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I said, “Surely there must be some one who can help where
-I am too weak and ignorant,” so I went to a distinguished
-[teacher] whom I thought so able and strong, and his concluding
-words sounded like a knell. “Nothing can be done.”’<a name="FNanchor_53" id="FNanchor_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The darkest hour came during the early days of
-August when staying with friends, from whom she vainly
-hoped to conceal her sorrow.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘At first I was silent, but as I could only weep day and night,
-I was obliged to tell them.... They kept me when I could
-not pay other visits. Whilst wondering at my misery they
-tried to help me by getting [books].’<a name="FNanchor_54" id="FNanchor_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was perhaps some relief—as of one who faces the
-worst—to note in her diary each fresh incoming wave
-of sorrowful thought.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<i>1882, August 6, Sunday.</i> At church. A nice sermon on
-the parable of the Unjust Steward. Talk of Newman’s books.
-J. said A. had some. I, thinking of J. H. N., asked to borrow.
-[The book] proved to be by the brother, F. Newman.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Monday, August 7.</i> Read some [of F. Newman’s book].
-Pitied him much.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Tuesday, August 8.</i> 6 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span>-8, read more. Miserable. After
-breakfast walked alone. No letter. Could not go to dinner.
-Terrible neuralgia. Wept nearly all day.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Wednesday, August 9.</i> Awake at 4 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span> Not up to breakfast.
-Decided must write [my resignation]. All is dark.
-“Such clouds of nameless sorrow cross, All night before my
-darkened eyes.” The light has gone out of the heavens. Why
-[does] God leave us without one word, His children orphans?
-Can He have left us to delusions? Tears are my meat day and
-night. I cannot live an untrue life. If Jesus be what I once
-believed Him, He would not wish it. “Every one that is of
-the truth heareth My Voice.” Tried to pray harder. Woke
-[as] in a dreary pine forest with beautiful ferns. Felt there
-must be a presence behind them. Then the trouble revived
-once more.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Thursday, August 10.</i> Wrote my resignation. May my
-children never know this sorrow. Christian teaching spiritualised,
-as I have seen it, is the holiest and purest. Their
-souls need not be orphaned as mine. [I] cannot stay [with
-them]. I could not play the hypocrite, I should hate myself.
-Without Christ, I should not be what I was. If I could
-attempt to go on, which I could not for a moment contemplate
-since it is untrue, think if I were found out, the
-moral blow for my children. They would think I had been
-false when teaching them my deepest faith,—the joy of my
-life,—that which made all the suffering bearable, and all gladness
-double, the love of Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I
-would suffer the loss of all things if I might win Christ and be
-found in Him.</p>
-
-<p>‘O Lord, Thou hast deceived me, and I was deceived.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The immediate sequel to the story of these few days
-was told in a letter to a friend:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 1882.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I was engaged to attend a religious conference at the end
-of a week. I did not quite like to give it up, for there might
-<em>possibly</em> be some hope of help, though I felt there was none. My
-friends begged me to go,—there was just a chance. I went,—but
-almost turned back after I had started, for I was so broken
-down I could not restrain my tears, and I was ashamed to be
-seen. Well, I met there [some] men of powerful mind, leaders
-of thought in their different departments, who had gone through
-periods of darkness, but had waited for the dawn, and now they
-believed.... After two days I told my grief to a sympathising
-friend, who was surprised at my wretchedness, and her calm
-faith gave me a little calmness too. So the day before we were
-to leave I ventured to tell all my trouble to the clergyman who
-had invited me. I think I may dare to say that my faith has
-come back—not as it was before, but more spiritual; once
-more I can say the Creed, and I think I shall be able to teach
-again....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The ‘religious conference’ was at Stoke, a little village
-in Shropshire, where the rector, the Rev. Rowland
-Corbet, was in the habit of gathering some who were
-earnestly studying the difficult questions of the day.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-Miss Beale wrote of these gatherings in the letter
-already quoted:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘There are only about twelve staying in the house. No one
-is put out of the synagogue for not seeing the truth, and they
-are not afraid to ask questions, but none are invited who are
-not supposed to be seeking for the light.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>That a door to the light was at this conference
-quickly opened for Miss Beale may be seen in the
-letters she wrote, on her return to Cheltenham after it
-was over, to the friends who had helped her so much:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 19, 1882.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Corbet</span>,—I could not say one word of thanks
-this morning: I think you understood.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is good for us tempest-tossed people to see the restful faith
-of the veterans who come to help us. Certainly the old ship in
-which I have somehow sailed upon the waves for so many years
-is a wreck. I must try to believe He will set my feet upon a
-rock.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yesterday things began to get clearer: your kind and
-patient explanations of the alphabet of the spiritual made me
-follow the discussion better afterwards, and I felt I could begin
-again to join in the Church’s Creed with a deeper meaning than
-before. I suppose one can’t expect to come out of the grave
-at once,—but how different is this Saturday from last, it seems
-as if some æon had gone by. I don’t know yet what I think,
-except that I believe I shall see the light and rise and always
-remain, yours very gratefully,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">D. Beale</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Mrs. Russell Gurney:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 27, 1882.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Mrs. Russell Gurney</span>,—I have had such a happy
-Sunday,—I can hardly believe it is the same earth that seemed to
-me so dead the week before, when I could not go to Church,
-but wandered about quite desolate.</p>
-
-<p>‘Three weeks ago, if any one had spoken, as I am doing
-now, I should have thought it superstitious, and I don’t think
-it will be well either for myself or others to speak much of it
-now, only to one who, like you, understands—and who helped
-to take off the “grave-clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>‘I want to use my limbs first, to get back to my old work<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-now, and see if there is really a new life; I want to see if I can
-help some for whom I could do nothing before.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am with delightful people. Mr. Webb is just a living
-picture of Chaucer’s Good Parson and well known in the
-scientific world: his special field is astronomy. He showed us
-a wonderful gas-nebula on Saturday night. He quite believes
-in spiritual manifestations, and seems to think with Professor
-Barrett about the ether.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have to thank you much, dear Mrs. Gurney, for your
-sympathy. It was such a help to me to be able to speak to
-you. I meant to say nothing to <em>any one</em>, but I could not help
-it. The story of your own vision helped me, as it was something
-like my own: it is so much what Browning describes at
-the end of “Saul,” when David has realised the Divine love,
-and feels the living pulse beating in all nature. Everybody
-helped me in some way, but especially Mr. Corbet’s teaching,
-which seems wonderfully beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>‘I dare say it was the same last year; but different to me,
-because I was comparatively satisfied then, not poor and needy
-(as I came this time), and therefore ready to understand.</p>
-
-<p>‘“I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice”: my text
-for to-day.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>She felt like one set free from prison, but the newly
-recovered liberty was used with caution. ‘You will like
-to know,’ she wrote to a friend in the following year,
-‘that the fitful gleams of sunlight, which used to come
-after the dark night, have become now something like a
-steady shining. I was able to get a few quiet days at
-Christmas, and then first I began to feel that I should be
-able to give thanks for this terrible experience, and the
-thankfulness has grown ever since.’</p>
-
-<p>As she said, the thankfulness grew. But in the very
-heart of the fire she had felt no regret, known no complaining.
-She was willing to suffer, if by that means
-she might help the more. On August 15, just a week
-after the day she always remembered as ‘Tuesday the
-8th,’ she wrote of one whose calling in life was to teach
-others: ‘You say he has been reading sceptical books;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-I want him to go on doing so. He must know how
-deep the questions go, or he will be fighting windmills,
-as I have done.’</p>
-
-<p>It will be asked by what steps the ascent was made,
-and what the height from which the new spiritual
-horizons were discerned; what was the train of thought
-which brought back the possibility of saying the Church’s
-Creed? The mental process, if it can be disentangled
-from an exercise which engaged all the faculties of
-soul and spirit, was probably that suggested in the
-words of Amiel: ‘Chacun ne comprend que ce qu’il
-retrouve en soi.’ But the research and the retrieval were
-not simply individual and within, they involved the
-scrutiny of widespread religious instincts, cravings and
-needs. They were aided above all by the contemplation
-of martyr deaths and martyr lives, which in their continuous
-and abiding witness to the faith are seen to
-constitute a claim to authority.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale herself strove to show how the doubting
-spirit was silenced by an answer of faith, in a little paper
-called ‘Building,’ which is dated September 8. Here
-she wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Sweep away external proofs, we must believe in a God and
-in His love.</p>
-
-<p>‘We see He speaks to His children through the wondrous
-language of Nature, drawing them to His Heart and teaching
-ever new trust through it.</p>
-
-<p>‘He shows His Father Heart in the love of the human,
-ignorant,—for the child.</p>
-
-<p>‘In all ages He has made man feel His Presence in the heart
-and yearn after Him.</p>
-
-<p>‘There is a long witness down the ages that to those who long
-for His Presence and follow holiness, He gives the great reward
-of His conscious sympathy, speaking in their hearts, so that they
-know it is His Voice. In different ages, in different ways, as
-men need the language they understand.</p>
-
-<p>‘To Abraham and the prophets, to Socrates, to Buddha teaching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-the Karma, to Moses the divine writing,—to saints who
-sought Him in later times.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why impeach the testimony of Christendom as to the
-Resurrection, if it is what we must believe in, if it is just the
-good news for which the world was then dying? We know
-Paul and John believed it, and men believed them then; and
-the miracle of the Christian Church which is before our eyes,
-and the teaching of the Christ is found to be the food of the
-soul, and in prayer as men drink it in, they hand on Sacramental
-life, which is its own witness. We want that!</p>
-
-<p>‘We can believe that for some inscrutable reason the Eternal
-educates His children in time.</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps we have to go through these depths of blankness
-that we may not bottle up the spiritual to one time or church or
-country, but believe God is really eternal, omnipresent; that He
-does dwell with him who is of a contrite and humble spirit, and
-who trembles at His Presence felt in the darkness. We have to
-learn to see the Spirit of Christ dwelling in each man, regenerating
-him to the true and higher life.</p>
-
-<p>‘We have to see it is God’s method to work through the man,—therefore
-the treasure is in earthen vessels,—the light is dimmed
-by the medium. But if it were given whole and complete by
-angels, the moral nature could no more be drawn out than the
-intellect could have been, had God revealed the kalendars and
-Kepler’s Laws.</p>
-
-<p>‘So through the Man Christ Jesus, Who emptied Himself ere
-He could speak to man, Who, as His wondrous teaching, life and
-resurrection testify, stood in some different relation to God than
-other men, God has spoken to the whole world.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Another paper of this period, entitled ‘Of my Religious
-Opinions,’ concludes thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Yes, it was this. The consciousness of a universal life of
-God in man which lifted me up once more to see God in Christ,
-to see the New Man coming to the birth in all for whom Christ
-lived, and the whole world existed that this might be, that the
-whole being of the creature might be lifted into responsive sympathy
-with a sympathetic Father, and those followers of Christ
-Who was ever preaching the religion of Humanity were to lift
-the imperfect yet real Church of Christ to a higher life. Upon
-a world which seemed dead, which no prophet staff could restore,
-they were to stretch themselves, heart to heart, their own warm
-palpitating life was to rouse, and the power of love could raise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-the dead. We must learn that old lesson that no creature is
-common or unclean. We must enter as never before into the
-full meaning of the Name by which God was known to Abraham—I
-AM,—the Eternal. Ours has been a God of time, He is the
-Living God, lighting every man that cometh into the world.
-But here, light is struggling with darkness. There shall be no
-night there in that day dawn beyond the tomb.</p>
-
-<p>‘Have you not been taught that the written word is imperfect
-without the heavenly interpretation, and does not your own
-experience confirm this, and the history of the records of the
-Christ bear it out? Enough we have as a foundation, but we
-must build thereon, or there will be no home for our soul.
-This is the method of God, revealing to us that we can only
-<em>help</em> one another. God must <em>teach</em> us all. They shall be all
-taught of God, here and hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here the phenomenal and the imperfect is the only possible
-revelation to man, but through these he is being educated for
-the real, the actual. He will one day know God.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The writer of these words might indeed have sung,
-‘Thou hast set my feet in a large room.’ But the daily
-journal shows no trace of exultation, far less of relaxing
-watchfulness. It is surely impossible to exaggerate the
-importance of the jealous care with which devotional rules
-were guarded. More than all the high thoughts and
-noble imaginings with which she was so wonderfully
-gifted, this lifelong obedience came to her aid in the great
-crisis. Habits of prayer, daily acts of self-sacrifice and
-self-consecration, had been maintained even when their
-meaning seemed to be clouded. When sight was restored,
-when a greater sense of spaciousness came into her life,
-they were there to protect her in the newly found liberty.
-The tale of them remains to show that the doubts of this
-dark year were akin to that thirst for God which in all
-ages has been the portion of the saints.</p>
-
-<p>May it not be said that they were the outcome of a
-passionate desire to help; that this descent into darkness
-as of the grave was necessary to one who yearned to give<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-herself utterly to aid others to find the way to the light?
-‘Can ye drink indeed?’ was asked of those who willed
-to share the divine work and joy, and in all times it has
-been given to a few to be brought through suffering into
-that region of consciousness in which they are made
-‘able.’</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE GUILD</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<p>‘We have a picture which gives the ideal of a College—the Golden
-Staircase—whence each should go forth into the great world carrying
-some beautiful instrument with which to utter the music which is in
-her heart.’—<span class="smcap">D. Beale</span>, Guild Address, 1894.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s circle of influence definitely widened beyond
-the College itself in 1880 when the first number of the
-Magazine appeared. It opened with a characteristic
-introduction from the Lady Principal, who up to her
-death remained the editor.</p>
-
-<p>The Magazine was started, said Miss Beale, in order
-that past and present members of the College might
-enrich each other by interchange of thoughts. Mere
-information concerning the temporary doings of one’s
-friends was a secondary consideration, the value of which
-was, however, fortunately seen by sub-editors and others.
-A column of births, deaths, and marriages became established
-in the Magazine as early as the second number.
-This naturally in time developed in interest. The
-obituary column came to include all who had the
-slightest connection with the College; newspaper accounts
-of those who were in any way distinguished were also
-added.</p>
-
-<p>In 1887 the first Chronicle of passing events belonging
-to the College and its old members was inserted,
-though the space for it was grudgingly afforded by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-editor, who could not bear to limit her space for the
-budding ideas she loved to foster. Soon, however, she
-came to value what was practically a contemporary history
-of the College, and as her pride in her old pupils
-increased with years, it became a great pleasure to notice
-all their doings in varied walks of life. Engaged in
-philanthropic work, in literature, in art or society, they
-were all of interest to her, and not among the least dear
-were those whose homes lay in foreign parts, those closely
-connected with the diplomatic service and the growth of
-the British Empire.<a name="FNanchor_55" id="FNanchor_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> The Chronicle was a portion of the
-Magazine sure of finding readers, but there was no page
-more welcome to all than the brief but pithy preface in
-which the editor named the chief contents, touched on
-some matter of note to the readers, or urged forward the
-lagging subscriber.</p>
-
-<p>As the College interest widened with the ever-increasing
-number of old pupils, the Chronicle became too limited
-a record to stand alone. When the Magazine was about
-seventeen years old ‘Parerga’ appeared for the first time,
-telling of activities which lay outside the immediate scope
-of College work, yet were due in part to the influence
-of the Alma Mater, to ‘the spiritual force, the higher
-volition and action.’ Miss Beale, who found in the
-Magazine a strong link with her large scattered family,
-also in later years freely printed letters she received from
-various members abroad. She did not care much for
-articles on travel, writing on one occasion that she received
-too many descriptions, and would like in their
-place to have more records of observation in the fields of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-natural history and other sciences. But she treasured
-letters, and showed them widely. Indeed, it was sometimes
-startling for the writer of a private letter to Miss
-Beale to find whole extracts published in the Magazine
-for all the world to see.</p>
-
-<p>Almost from the beginning there were reviews of
-books. These were generally written by the editor.
-There were also notices of books by old pupils. Of
-these Miss Beale was proud, and she never failed to
-mention them, often reprinting portions of reviews by
-the press; but she would not review them herself, saying,
-‘Books by old pupils claim our <em>notice</em>; we must
-leave criticism to those less interested in the writers.’</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately Miss Beale was not content with merely
-reviewing and editing. Many a number of the Magazine
-contained a long contribution from herself, such as an
-article reprinted from another periodical, an address
-given at a gathering of old pupils, or at some more
-general meeting. The first two editions of the <cite>History
-of the College</cite> were also printed here. Of her articles
-which were not of special College interest, the most
-notable were those upon Browning. One of these,
-written in spring 1890, shortly after the poet’s death,
-contains a brief clear statement of the value of his philosophy.
-The other writers of the Magazine have been
-chiefly old pupils, some of whose names, as, for example,
-those of Jane Harrison, Beatrice Harraden, Bertha Synge,
-May Sinclair, are known in wider fields of literature. But
-any who made a sincere effort were welcomed, encouraged,
-and—edited. Present pupils have rarely written, but of
-late an attempt has been made to secure more contributions
-from these. Members of the Council, and others
-connected with the College by the ties of friendship or
-work, frequently helped the Magazine with papers or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-verses. For years every number was enriched with a
-poem or article from the pen of Mrs. James Owen, that
-friend whose keen intellectual interests and strong sympathy
-were put so largely at Miss Beale’s service when
-this literary venture was first made.</p>
-
-<p>To find contributors Miss Beale went even beyond
-the outer circle of the College. ‘We always hope to
-have some good writing in our Magazine, thus to maintain
-a high standard,’ she had said at the beginning. She
-liked to gain the notice of those who were eminent in
-literature or science for this dearly loved literary child,
-and as occasion brought her in contact with any who
-were distinguished for the things she appreciated she
-would send them the Magazine, often asking for a
-paper. Letters from people of widely differing thought
-and position, acknowledging the receipt of the Magazine,
-are now in the College archives. They vary in
-warmth and interest. The late Bishop of Gloucester
-and Bristol wrote in 1889: ‘However busy I may be,
-I always find time to read portions of [the Magazine],
-and I am always thankful to recognise not merely the
-cultivated, but the wise and—what we men specially
-value—the womanly tone that characterises it. I read
-with much interest your article on the Sorbonne gathering.’
-Bishop Westcott in 1890 wrote, on receiving
-the number containing Miss Beale’s ‘In Memoriam’
-article on Browning: ‘May I confess that when the
-copy of the Ladies’ College Magazine came this morning
-with the letters, my correspondence was at once
-interrupted? I felt constrained to read your words on
-Browning, just and wise and helpful and suggestive.’
-Some notes are little more than the acknowledgment
-of a polite friend who had ‘already cut the pages.’
-The request for contributions was not always granted;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-sometimes it was won by a little importunity. It
-brought about rather an amusing incident with Mr.
-Ruskin, whose letters on the subject and on some of
-Miss Beale’s own Magazine articles are too characteristic
-to be omitted.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale sent him the number containing her paper
-on ‘Britomart.’ He replied at once:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>March 12, 1887.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Have you not yet to add to your Britomart, at p. 219, due justification
-of Feminine—may we not rather call it Disguise—than
-Lie? And, for myself, may I say that I think Britomart should
-have sung to the Red Knight, not he to Britomart.—Ever
-faithfully yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. Ruskin</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Five days later he wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘But I much more than like your essay on Britomart.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am most thankful to have found the head of a Girls’
-College able to do such a piece of work, and having such convictions
-and aspirations, and can only assure you how glad I
-shall be to find myself capable of aiding you in anything....
-I trespass no further on you to-day, but have something to say
-concerning ball-play as a Britomartian exercise, before saying
-which, however, I will inquire of the Librarian what <em>ground</em>
-spaces the College commands, being so limited in its bookshelves.—And
-believe me, ever your faithful servt.,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">John Ruskin</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale replied to this by sending her paper on
-‘Lear,’ to which came this response:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>March 22, 1887.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I am entirely glad to hear of the Oxford plan, which seems
-faultless, and am most happy to get the King Lear, though
-I hope you have never learned as much of human life as to be
-able to read him as you can Britomart. What I want to know
-is whether Cordelia was ever so little in love—with <em>any</em> body,
-except her Father.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Two days later came the following:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>March 24, 1887.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I have been reading your Lear with very great interest. It
-is one of the subtlest and truest pieces of Shakespeare criticism
-I ever saw, but just as I guessed—misses the key note. You<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-never enter on the question what it is that drives Lear mad!
-And throughout you fall into the fault which women nearly
-always commit if they don’t err on the other side,—of always
-talking of love as if it had nothing to do with sex.... I am
-extremely glad to note your interest in and knowledge of music.—Ever
-faithfully and respectfully yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. Ruskin</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After this letter there was a pause in a correspondence
-which had been kept up pretty briskly on various subjects.
-In June, however, Miss Beale wrote again,—the
-purport of her letter may be gathered from the answer.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 8, 1887.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I never have been ill this year; the reports you heard or
-saw in papers were variously malicious or interested. But I
-have been busy, in very painful or sorrowful business—at Oxford
-or at home—nor even in the usual tenor of spring occupation
-could I have answered rightly the different questions you sent
-me. Especially, I could not tell you anything of your paper on
-Lear, because I think women should never write on Shakespeare,
-or Homer, or Æschylus, or Dante, or any of the greater powers
-in literature. Spenser, or Chaucer, or Molière, or any of the
-second and third order of classics—but not the leaders. And
-you really had missed much more in Lear than I should like to
-tell you.</p>
-
-<p>‘I really thought I had given the College my books—but if I
-haven’t, I won’t—not even if you set the Librarian to ask me;
-for it does seem to me such a shame that a girl can always give
-her dentist a guinea for an hour’s work, and her physician for
-an opinion; and she can’t give me one for what has cost me
-half my life to learn, and will help her till the end of hers to
-know.</p>
-
-<p>‘Please go on with your book exactly as you like to have it.
-I have neither mind nor time for reading just now.—Ever most
-truly yrs.,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. Ruskin</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Ruskin permitted the reprint of a few extracts
-from his own writings in the Magazine, on which his
-criticism as a whole was not very encouraging. One
-of his letters, indeed, called forth a protest from Miss
-Beale, to which he replied thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 15, 1887.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—I am grieved very deeply to have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-written what I did of your dear friend’s verses. If you knew
-how full my own life has been of sorrow, how every day of it
-begins with a death-knell, you would bear with me in what
-I will yet venture to say to you as the head of a noble school of
-woman’s thought, that no personal feelings should ever be
-allowed to influence you in what you permit your scholars
-either to read or to publish.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And again a few days later:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Brantwood, Coniston, Lancashire</span>, <i>June 19, 1887</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—So many thanks, and again and again
-I ask your pardon for the pain I gave you. I had no idea of the
-kind of person you were, I thought you were merely clever and
-proud.</p>
-
-<p>‘These substituted verses are lovely.—Ever gratefully (1) yrs.,</p>
-
-<p class="right">‘J. R.</p>
-
-<p>‘(1) I mean, for the way you have borne with my letters.
-You will not think it was because I did not like my own work
-to have the other with it that I spoke as I did.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Shorthouse also once contributed to the Magazine,
-sending a little story called ‘An Apologue.’</p>
-
-<p>The work entailed by the Magazine was, on the whole,
-pleasant and interesting to its editor. But she was
-grieved sometimes if she thought old pupils did not
-appreciate it, or if contributions fell short. It was not
-always easy to get enough articles of the kind she
-desired, and the difficulty was increased by the severe
-censorship she exercised. ‘About one hour wasted in
-fretting over Magazine,’ runs the diary of April 2, 1891.</p>
-
-<p>The Magazine was not without its faults. ‘How bad
-the best of us!’ says <cite>Punch</cite>, according to Ruskin. But
-it had the conspicuous merit of offering encouragement
-to young writers, of promoting a spirit of unity, and
-fostering sympathetic interest among those whose lives
-were necessarily far apart. ‘We hope,’ Miss Beale had
-said in her first preface, ‘that the papers on work may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-be helpful in suggesting ways of usefulness.’<a name="FNanchor_56" id="FNanchor_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> This
-hope was practically realised. How far the young
-writers profited by each other’s thoughts can be less
-easily gauged; but doubtless some learned at least one
-lesson the Magazine was meant to teach, that if they
-intended to work, they ‘must not shrink from the hardest
-and most fruitful work, i.e. <em>thinking</em>.’<a name="FNanchor_57" id="FNanchor_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s influence was again extended in manifold
-and ever-developing ways when, in 1883, the first meeting
-of former pupils was held in the College.</p>
-
-<p>At this date the number of regular pupils was five
-hundred. Only six years before a proposal had been
-made to limit the numbers to three hundred, but each
-year saw an increase, and a consequent addition to the
-ranks of those who carried the influence of the College
-into the larger world outside.</p>
-
-<p>It had been felt for some time by the Principal and
-others to whom the College was dear, that an association
-of old pupils should be formed, but of what nature and
-name could not be determined without a representative
-meeting. A suitable occasion for this presented itself
-in 1883, which was a sort of Jubilee year for the
-College, Miss Beale having then been its Principal for
-twenty-five years. Many old pupils expressed a wish
-to mark the great occasion by a personal gift to Miss
-Beale; she, as was to be expected, asked that it might
-be given to her ‘husband,’ the College. It was a
-moment of almost unsullied prosperity, as could be seen
-by the buildings which were constantly growing more
-stately and suitable. In the previous year they had
-been much enlarged, and the whole College life benefited
-by the addition of the Music and Art wing. The
-old music-rooms were little better than cupboards, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-new ones contained light, air, and space, as well as the
-necessary pianoforte. The first drawing-room was but
-an insufficient classroom, in which a cast of any size
-could not be placed. The new studio was spacious and
-properly lighted. Both additions at this period spoke
-of Miss Beale’s method in educational development, also
-of the order in which her own full mental life unfolded.
-First she would have the exact, the severe, the discipline
-of grammar and rule, then the expansion of beauty in
-thought and symbol.</p>
-
-<p>And the gift of the old pupils could not have been
-better chosen. It took the form of an organ for what
-was then the largest hall, the First Division Room.
-Here the daily prayers of the three divisions took place.
-Sir Walter Parratt settled the specifications for the organ,
-which was placed above the Lady Principal’s dais.</p>
-
-<p>The choir, which up to this time had been dependent
-on the aid of a harmonium, was augmented and improved,
-and the daily music at the school prayers became
-a feature of College life in which Miss Beale took delight.
-Occasionally her directions to the choir were embarrassing.
-She liked music to be very <i lang="it">piano</i>, and required a
-great deal of expression to bring out the full meaning of
-the words sung.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Ruskin was also momentarily interested by it.
-He was as suggestive and dogmatic on the subject as on
-any other that he touched. Once he wrote to Miss Beale,
-‘All music properly so called is of the Celestial Spheres.
-It aids and gives law to Joy, or it ennobles and comforts
-Sorrow.’ On hearing of the organ and ‘girl-organist,’
-he hoped ‘to be able to work out some old plans with
-her,’ and unfolded them thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I think <em>you</em> may be willing to help <em>me</em> in the plan chiefly for
-the last four or five years in my mind, of getting a girls’ choral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-service well organised in a college chapel. The most beautiful
-service I have ever heard in any church of any country is that of
-the Convent of the Trinità at Rome, entirely sung by the sisters,
-unseen; and quite my primary idea in girl education—peasant
-or princess, is to get the voice perfectly trained in the simplest
-music of noblest schools. Finding your organist is a girl, and
-that she is interested in the book on Plain Chant I sent her, it
-seems to me my time has come, and I am going to write to Miss
-Lefevre at Somerville, Miss Gladstone at Newnham, and Miss
-Welch at Girton, to beg them to consider with you what steps
-they could take to this end. If <em>you</em> could begin by giving enough
-time for the training of the younger girls, I think I could, with
-that foundation, press for a more advanced action in the matter
-at Cambridge and Oxford.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale obviously replied to this with some questions
-about the training of the choir, for Mr. Ruskin’s
-next and rapidly following letter closes thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘As for the choir, nothing is necessary but a due attention to
-girls’ singing, as well as their dancing. It ought to be as great
-a shame for a girl not to be able to sing, up to the faculty of
-her voice, might I say, as to speak bad grammar. You could
-never rival the Trinità di Monte, but could always command
-the chanting of the psalms with sweetness and clearness, and a
-graceful Te Deum and Magnificat.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Besides the organ, Miss Beale’s wedding gifts included
-the first light of a stained-glass window above the new
-grand staircase. This was drawn by Miss Thompson,
-and executed by Clayton and Bell. Miss Beale herself
-chose the subject for the whole—a series of scenes from
-her beloved story of ‘Britomart.’</p>
-
-<p>Over and above the opening of the new buildings, and
-the installation of the wedding gifts, there was in the
-early part of the summer term some excitement and
-much pleasant sense of preparation for the gathering of
-old pupils fixed for the 6th and 7th of July.</p>
-
-<p>Then, into the midst of the glad anticipation, came as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-with transcendent suddenness Mrs. Owen’s death on
-June 19. Hers was indeed</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent8">‘a spirit that went forth</div>
-<div class="verse">And left upon the mountain-tops of death</div>
-<div class="verse">A light that made them lovely.’</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But for many the happiness of the coming meeting
-was marred, most of all for her in whose honour it had
-been largely arranged. Miss Beale made no change, but
-went through all the proceedings as they had been planned,
-dwelling never for a moment on her sense of bereavement
-and loss, but speaking calmly even in public of the
-life that had passed out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>The first meeting, on the evening of July 6, was a
-conversazione in the Upper or Second Division Hall.
-An unexpectedly large number of old pupils were present,
-and on the next day at the ordinary College prayers Miss
-Beale gave what was practically the first Guild address.
-Though made on an occasion of so much personal interest
-and gratification to herself, this address was remarkable not
-only for the piercing insight with which she ever penetrated
-below what was apparent or obvious, but also for what,
-for want of a better word, must be called its soberness.
-Touched, emotional as the speaker always was, keenly
-alive to the sense of union and communion with all lives
-that in the highest sense had come in contact with her
-own, happy in recognising the College to be a step by
-which souls might ascend out of mere material interests,
-marking with joy its noble work in the progress of the
-‘higher education’ of women, she chastened all excess of
-feeling by the calm sincerity with which she could contemplate
-‘Even in the green, the faded tree.’ ‘Schools
-too,’ she said, ‘like the members of which they are composed,
-have their period of growth, manhood, and decay.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-Some tell us the first is over for us, and that we, too,
-have settled down into vigorous manhood. I am not so
-sure that we have quite done with growth, even in the
-outside body; but however that may be, I trust there
-is that among us, which is not even like the most substantial
-building, not like the outward form, liable to
-decay and death.’</p>
-
-<p>Thus quietly she spoke, marking for all that heard her
-that there was no commonplace elation or poor ambition
-in her thoughts and feelings for her school. On this
-really momentous occasion for the College, when its
-members as a whole were summoned to catch a glimpse
-of all it could be of help and blessing in a far larger world
-than its own, the Principal spoke less of work accomplished
-than of growth, and ‘the silent witness of a
-beautiful life as a power to bless.’ She said less about
-the gifts with which the College had been enriched, than
-of some visible sacraments of Nature with which these
-gifts should bring them into touch. She dwelt specially
-on the great meanings of music. ‘In the Psalm of Life
-each is necessary to the perfection of that glorious music,
-which we shall hear and understand when the discords
-of earth have been resolved.’</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion Miss Beale sketched the possibility of
-an association of old pupils, such as already existed in
-some boys’ schools, and was not wholly unknown among
-girls. ‘When I read of meetings of old Etonians,
-Rugbeians, Marlburians, and of works undertaken by
-them in common, and know how strong is the tie of
-affection which binds many of our old pupils to their
-Alma Mater, I have often wished there were some means
-of uniting us into an association.’ She named also the
-uses and aims of such an association. It is needless to say
-that though its members strive to bear in mind the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-objects their Principal and President put before them,
-rules, precisely to embody them, could not be framed.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Members should consider themselves united together to help
-in sustaining, especially in distant countries, as high an intellectual
-and social standard as possible, first amongst those of their
-own class. Thus reading societies, mutual improvement societies,
-libraries, etc., would be helped on by them. They would
-bear in mind the College motto, “Let no man think or maintain
-that a man can search too far or be too well studied in the Book
-of God’s Word, or in the Book of God’s Works; but rather
-let men endeavour an endless progress and proficiency in both;
-only let men beware that they apply both to charity and not
-to grovelling; to use and not to ostentation.”<a name="FNanchor_58" id="FNanchor_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> Some articles
-of their creed would be—(<i>a</i>) that influence radiates from a
-centre, and hence it is a duty all through life to continue one’s
-own education; (<i>b</i>) that the nearer we stand in intellectual
-and social position, the stronger are our ties to any, and the
-greater are our duties; (<i>c</i>) that the worst thing one can do
-with any talent one possesses is to bury it. Rules would have
-to be framed concerning admission.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale added that secretaries to the proposed
-association had already been appointed: Mrs. Ashley
-Smith for the general work and organisation, Miss Flora
-Ker as local secretary. This announcement of her
-appointment to what proved to be a very strenuous
-work was the first suggestion that Mrs. Smith received
-that she should even undertake it. In an article in the
-next Magazine Miss Beale unfolded her plan more
-fully, suggesting a few rules. She proposed further
-that the badge of the association should be a little brooch
-engraved with a figure of her beloved Britomart.</p>
-
-<p>The idea of a guild of old pupils was eagerly received,
-and a committee at once formed to deal with its
-organisation. In all these arrangements Miss Beale
-showed great strength of mind and self-control in being
-able to stand aside and let others work out the details of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-the scheme, even submitting her own judgment to that
-of the younger ones, whom she thought called upon to
-do the work. Yet she was in a true sense President of
-the Guild, guiding and directing where she would not
-command. Indeed, this ever-growing society which
-multiplied interests for her was largely her own inception,
-at a time when her special work, the College, was also
-increasing rapidly. The power of mind which could
-keep the right hold on both is certainly rare.</p>
-
-<p>The first committee consisted of associates of the
-College and a few other old pupils. Meetings were held
-to draw up the organisation of the new society, and this
-was made known at large in a delightful article by Mrs.
-Ashley Smith in the Magazine for spring 1884. In
-this the writer adventured far enough into the future to
-be able to suggest the possibility, at no very distant date,
-of some corporate work, ‘such as is done by many boys’
-schools,’ but in 1884 the time for this had not arrived for
-Cheltenham girls.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 460px;" id="illus6">
-<img src="images/illus6.jpg" width="460" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Lower Hall, Ladies’ College Cheltenham</i><br />
-<i>from a photograph by Miss Bertha Synge.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The second large gathering of old pupils, which took
-place on July 8 and 9, 1884, is always reckoned as the
-first meeting of the Guild, the association being on that
-occasion formally founded under the name of ‘The Guild
-of the Cheltenham Ladies’ College.’ It is interesting
-to note that what then seemed a large gathering really
-included less than eighty former pupils of the College; ten
-years later, at the fourth Guild meeting, there were
-nearly five hundred, and the number has increased ever
-since. The daisy was chosen as an emblem for the
-Guild: its choice and its significance were explained by
-the President in her address on Saturday, July 9. In a
-second address at this time, given after the candidates for
-Guild membership had received their ‘Masonic sign,’
-Miss Beale dwelt chiefly on the practical questions arising<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-out of the existence of the new association. She spoke
-of the difficulty of decision among the many opinions
-which must necessarily exist in a large college; she
-hoped that ‘whatever decision might finally be arrived at,
-all would cheerfully submit to it, and if their own individual
-tastes were not in every case gratified, would find
-their satisfaction in giving up their own wishes for the
-sake of the majority. She herself had had to submit, she
-hoped cheerfully, to an adverse vote.’ The rules were
-then read. Of these it is sufficient to say here that they
-made it difficult for any one whose life was spent in a
-mere pleasure-seeking spirit to be a member of the
-Guild. The rules were accepted for two years, and two
-courses of study were suggested for junior members.</p>
-
-<p>In the year following these meetings, Mrs. Ashley
-Smith wrote an article for the Magazine on the reports
-received from various members and on the general
-working of the Guild, which by the end of 1885 numbered
-nearly two hundred members. This is now an old
-story, nor is there anything specially remarkable in the
-many details of work in Sunday-schools and coffee-clubs.
-Yet even at the time when the Guild, compared with
-its present self, looked little more than ‘seven maids
-with seven mops,’ the tale of individual work done shows
-that already much quiet persistent effort was being made
-by Miss Beale’s old girls. This association, founded on
-principles rather than rules, was indicative of its origin
-in a mind which habitually dwelt rather on <em>being</em> than
-<em>doing</em>. The small beginning, the gradual steady growth,
-the outcome of ideals and thoughts, were consistent with
-the whole of the College history. And to re-read the
-story of the foundation of the Guild is to remember
-once more how many quiet, unobtrusive, untiring
-workers have helped to make that history. In especial,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-the immense work and patience of the secretaries can
-perhaps never be adequately recognised: the labour of
-merely reading and tabulating the reports was considerable.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The General Secretary,’ wrote Mrs. Ashley Smith on one
-occasion, ‘on receiving the reports enters under more than sixty
-different headings the occupations of all the Guild members.
-It will be easily understood that the task of reducing to order
-and collating a chaotic mass of miscellaneous information on all
-subjects, from the keeping of poultry to the study of Hebrew,
-from making the beds to organising institutes, is not a very
-simple affair, and that therefore an immense saving of time and
-trouble is effected when the proper form is used, and it does not
-become necessary to wade through a letter full of apologies and
-exculpatory remarks, before one can arrive at the gist of the
-report.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On another occasion, after enumerating the different
-charitable and self-improving societies to which Guild
-members belonged, she said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘It almost gives one a headache to read this long list of
-occupations; and when at the end, hoping for a little breathing
-space, we come to an “odd minute society,” it puts the finishing
-touch to the bewildering sensation of restless activity, and
-one begins to wish for a “Sit-down-in-peace-and-calm-yourself
-Society.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The reports, a matter of obligation to the junior
-members of the Guild, were often looked over by the
-President, who would surprise the secretaries by her
-detailed knowledge of the home surroundings and characters
-of girls whom she hardly knew by sight. ‘What
-is so-and-so doing now?’ she would ask, and on being
-told, would say, ‘She ought to be doing more,’ or ‘less,’
-and perhaps make some other criticism. Not less surprising
-was her memory of former discussions. ‘She
-never forgot,’ writes Mrs. Griffith, ‘what had been said.
-Sometimes she began again, continuing the conversation
-just where we left off, after a three months’ interval.’</p>
-
-<p>The secretaries were also impressed by the way in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-which the President held herself bound by its smallest
-rules. Miss Helen Mugliston, who succeeded Mrs.
-Griffith as General Secretary in 1898, said Miss Beale
-was ‘perfect to work under. Having given you the task,
-she gave also her absolute trust and support throughout
-the whole of it.’</p>
-
-<p>The second meeting of the Guild was held in June
-1886, lasting from a Friday evening to the following
-Tuesday morning. The President’s opening address
-dealt with work and duty. This year, for the first time,
-the Guild was also addressed by an outside speaker, the
-Dean of Gloucester. Mrs. Ashley Smith, in summing
-up her impressions of the gatherings of this year, rejoiced
-in the interest the members took in the proceedings.
-‘We cannot,’ she added, ‘certainly be accused
-of a servile unanimity in opinions or in the expression
-of them; but I hope we are united in underlying
-principles.’</p>
-
-<p>It was not until two years later that the sense of
-fellowship was strengthened, and the individual desires to
-help others directed by the resolve to organise a corporate
-work, a work in which not only all Guild members
-might help according to their opportunities, but in which
-also all old pupils and others connected with the College
-might be invited to join. This was formally proposed
-at the Guild meeting of 1888, and an idea as to what
-shape it might take was thrown out in a paper then read,
-which told for the first time something of what Miss
-Beale had done by means of the Loan Fund.</p>
-
-<p>To say that Miss Beale wished the corporate work to
-be of such a nature as to carry on that which she had
-long been doing for impecunious students, but feebly
-expresses what was really an earnest desire and hope.
-The claim she had upon the Guild, the importance that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-must attach to her lightest wish, was recognised; and
-yet,—yet, many felt that there were stronger reasons
-still why another kind of work should be chosen. Consequently
-no decision could be made at once, and those
-who had heard and discussed the paper parted after
-merely voting that the Guild ‘should undertake some
-corporate work.’ Among so many workers there were
-necessarily many ideas; the question was too important
-to be hastily decided, and it was resolved to give time for
-suggestions to be made and considered before anything
-final was done. The Committee appointed to consider
-these reduced them to three schemes of work, on which
-all members were asked to vote. These were:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>1. A scheme for educating at College a few pupils who were
-worthy of education, but unable to pay the fees.</p>
-
-<p>2. A scheme for taking over an elementary school in order
-to work it through teachers who had been trained in College.</p>
-
-<p>3. The third scheme, which was carried, was submitted to
-the Guild in these words: ‘That the corporate fund be devoted
-to starting and supporting a mission in one of our large towns,
-the place to be decided by the votes of the Guild Members.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was but natural that President and members should
-have different ideas on such an occasion. Dorothea
-Beale, who had never ceased to hear and obey the call
-she had received as a girl to help women, and with them
-the race, by means of improved education, longed to see
-those she had taught and trained freely sharing with
-others the very same advantages they had received. The
-difficulties which beset her own youth were still fresh in
-her mind. The need for good teachers still existed.
-She had seen the work she wanted the Guild to take up
-in operation for years, knew that it did not pauperise,
-that it blessed giver and receiver, and was increasingly
-fruitful, like good seed in good ground. On the other
-hand, she had a profound suspicion of much charitable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-work of the day, thinking that ‘it will quickly perish
-because it does not aim at developing energy, inward
-power. To do for others what they ought to do for
-themselves is to degrade them in the order of creation.’<a name="FNanchor_59" id="FNanchor_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a>
-She could far more easily bear to see people
-suffering from hunger and nakedness than from loss of
-will power and sense of responsibility. This was partly,
-perhaps, because she did not know nor in the least realise
-the miseries and difficulties of extreme poverty.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s misgivings about the East End work
-were probably never quite set at rest. Writing to Mrs.
-Charles Robinson in 1899, she said: ‘I shall perhaps
-sleep two nights at St. Hilda’s East. I feel the whole
-question of Settlements most difficult. It was undertaken
-against my judgment, and yet the guidance all the
-way seems to point to its being right. Sisters and
-Deaconesses are much better for this work, yet there are
-some whom we can enlist who will never join and could
-not join “Orders.”’</p>
-
-<p>The Guild members who had been trained by their
-head not always acquiescingly to ‘do the next thing,’
-but to think out questions, to plan carefully for the best
-if hardest, belonged to a new generation and had received
-another call. They saw how greatly educated women
-were needed to deal with charity organisation, with labour
-problems, with the children of the poor in schools and
-workhouses. Many of them were already at work for
-these. They felt, too, that they should take their part
-in helping to rouse others to study and work for the
-poor. On the other hand, they saw the need for cheap,
-good girls’ education to be one which was lessening every
-year. They had never felt it themselves, had had no
-struggle for training under pressure of adverse circumstances.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-Finally, they must have known that it was work
-which Miss Beale would not fail to carry on, meeting
-every necessity which was brought to her personal
-notice.</p>
-
-<p>On May 6, 1889, a general meeting of the Guild was
-held in London to consider further the lines on which
-the adopted scheme should be carried out. It was
-decided that the Guild Settlement should be made in
-London, in the parish of St. John’s, Bethnal Green,
-described by its vicar, the Rev. G. Bromby, who warmly
-welcomed the Cheltenham workers, as a ‘typical East
-End parish of the better sort.’</p>
-
-<p>At this meeting the President introduced the subject
-by saying:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I trust we shall be able to try to win harmony out of notes
-not altogether concordant. Some of us come with a feeling of
-disappointment that the scheme we desired has been rejected;—I
-am one of these. I not only accept my defeat, I feel sure that
-you have sought guidance of that inward oracle which must ever
-be our supreme ruler, you have done what conscience bade, and
-so it is right. As regards my own scheme, I only allude to it to
-say, that having now to continue it single-handed, I cannot help
-you as much as I could wish, and I just refer to it to-day in the
-hope that you will remember it when I am no longer here.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In these few words only did Miss Beale at the
-time announce her own disappointment and anxiety.
-There was much more she might have said, which
-she did in effect say in an early draft of her speech,
-which she fortunately did not destroy. Here her
-misgivings show themselves plainly. They were due
-to her foresight and judgment, yet it is likely that in
-some ways the untried workers, whom she feared were
-lightly taking upon themselves responsibilities to which
-they might prove unequal, really knew more than herself
-of the scope and details of the actual task before them.</p>
-
-<p>This is what Miss Beale wrote but did not say:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘It is no use concealing from you, for I could not, that I am
-greatly disappointed. But when I have said that, I have done;
-I accept the defeat. Others whose schemes have equally been
-rejected are suffering, thinking, perhaps, it is hard they have
-been met with so little sympathy. If they do not think well to
-join in this, no one will blame them, I hope, but will believe
-that they refuse because they ought not to give except as
-conscience requires, but let them give or spend in the best way
-they can all they would have bestowed on the Guild scheme of
-their heart’s choice.</p>
-
-<p>‘This matter has brought before me many things which seem
-to show that our organisation needs some more distinct ideal.
-Like some “Topsy,” it could say in its infancy, “’spects I
-growed!” But when it undertakes to do something on its own
-account, then questions of power and how much power it should
-exercise, the questions of law and liberty which need to be faced,
-and which we shall, I trust, grow stronger and wiser in facing,—these
-have come before me with painful strength because as
-your President I had to face them. I was strongly opposed to
-the London scheme; I felt we were far too young, both in the
-age of the majority of our members, and also in the age of our
-organisation, to undertake such a great scheme. I had the
-strongest dislike to fashions in philanthropy, and especially is it
-most undesirable to familiarise the young with lives led in the
-slums of heathen London. Only those whose faith has had
-years to grow strong seem called to such work.</p>
-
-<p>‘I could not see the Head whom I could trust with its
-management, and such a centre of work could not be ruled by
-several equal Heads, or by a committee with almost no experience
-and but little <em>individual</em> responsibility. The whole thing seemed to
-me a mistake, and my heart sank as I thought of myself as President
-over our Guild, working what seemed an impossible scheme.
-Yet it is one of the first principles of education to let children
-who are not grounded properly make mistakes and so learn
-where they fail.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Much happened to reconcile Miss Beale to the Settlement
-scheme. Miss Catherine Newman, as her sister
-had done ten years before in aid of poor students, volunteered
-to undertake the management of the work gratuitously,
-and to pay her own expenses. Miss Newman
-was an old College pupil and a member of the Guild.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-She was also a trained nurse, with long experience of
-work among the poor. Miss Newman’s offer and the
-appeal of her old friend, Mr. Bromby, had weight with
-Miss Beale. She felt less anxious about the efforts of her
-‘children’ if safe-guarded by the experience of those
-she knew and trusted. Miss Newman could also sympathise
-with Miss Beale’s own disappointment and anxiety,
-while she was confident of her large-mindedness in this
-matter. This may be gathered from a letter she wrote
-to her in the course of the proceedings at this time:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘ ... It is very good of you to set aside your own wishes
-and to throw yourself into this scheme. I have thought many
-times since the corporate work was talked about, that the freedom
-both teachers and old pupils felt in proposing schemes of
-work spoke volumes for their confidence in your generosity.
-Several members of the Guild who felt drawn towards the
-mission scheme said to me, “If I thought Miss Beale would
-wish me to vote for the Loan Fund because it was her scheme I
-would do so, but I believe that she would prefer that we should
-think for ourselves and vote for the scheme which most commends
-itself to us individually.” This confidence in your
-generosity and sense of justice struck me greatly; they knew
-you too well to fear for an instant that you might resent their
-taking a different line, and I felt sure from all I had ever known
-or seen of you that their confidence was not misplaced. Had
-you been able to unfold your scheme to them the result might
-have been very different, but of course it is too late now. If we
-were to renounce the idea of the Home for workers in the East-end,
-the elementary school would certainly take its place, and I
-am sure that you have realised ere now that it would be unjust
-both to the workers and the parish in which the Settlement is
-made to make it a temporary thing. Either it must be the
-corporate work of the Guild or it must be given up altogether,—at
-least so it seems to me. We could not expect enthusiasm
-either to work or support if it might be withdrawn at any
-moment. As regards your scheme, dear Miss Beale, I am truly
-sorry that it had not really a fair chance from the accident of
-its not being ripe yet for publicity. Two years hence might
-have been soon enough, yet I need not remind you that the
-“corporate work” was suggested by <em>yourself</em>. I am not afraid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-to say, however, that your scheme is sure of support and success,
-and this I trust while your powers are still unimpaired; but if,
-unfortunately, your strength should oblige you to limit your
-useful labour before it is fairly launched, I have every confidence
-that your friends and “children” would look upon it as a sacred
-legacy, which it would be their pride and pleasure to inherit
-from you.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>At the very moment that the Cheltenham Settlement
-was about to be opened in Bethnal Green, the ladies of
-Oxford were prepared to start one in the same district.
-For the convenience of both, an arrangement was made
-by which the two sets of workers could live together for
-a time, under one head, Miss Newman, until the resources
-of each, and the work they were called upon to
-do, were better known. Mayfield House, close to St.
-John’s Church, was therefore taken and formally opened
-as a Ladies’ Settlement (at that time the second in London),
-on October 26, 1889. Four years later, as suddenly
-as her sister at Jersey House, Miss Newman died at her
-post. ‘What can one feel,’ wrote a friend to Miss Beale,
-‘except that her death seems to seal the whole life with
-the heroism of <em>service</em>.’</p>
-
-<p>This trouble was the first link in a chain of circumstances
-which led, in the course of three or four years, to
-the removal of the Settlement to Shoreditch, where it
-became an important branch of that work to which Miss
-Beale gave the title of St. Hilda’s.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br />
-<span class="smaller">ST. HILDA’S WORK</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Thy kindred with the great of old.’</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="attr"><span class="smcap">Tennyson</span>, <cite>In Memoriam</cite>, lxxiv.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Those who had often the advantage of hearing Miss
-Beale speak, either in general addresses to present or
-past pupils, or in the more regular course of literature
-lessons, soon learned that there were certain heroic names
-which had for her an almost romantic fascination.
-Among those of great women who influenced her imagination
-are specially to be remembered St. Hilda, St.
-Catherine of Siena, la Mère Angélique, Mme. Guyon.
-Of these the most dominant, the most inspiring was
-that of the great Northumbrian abbess, known to those
-whom she taught and ruled by the name of ‘Mother,’
-not by virtue of her office, but on account of her signal
-piety and grace.<a name="FNanchor_60" id="FNanchor_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> Hilda, the earnest student who ‘had
-been diligently instructed by learned men, who so loved
-order that she immediately began to reduce all things
-to a regular system.’ Hilda, the patron of the first
-English religious poet, ‘who obliged those under her
-to attend much to the reading of the Holy Scriptures;
-who taught the strict observance of justice and other
-virtues, particularly of peace and charity.’<a name="FNanchor_61" id="FNanchor_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> This great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-Hilda and her work were to Dorothea Beale not merely
-romantic names, they were an ideal, an inspiration.
-And when the due time came, though for the sake of
-Miss Newman she hesitated for a moment over the
-alternative title of St. Margaret’s Hall, the name of
-St. Hilda was the one she chose to grace her own
-foundations. There are, possibly, members of the
-Ladies’ College who felt a pang of envy when the
-Students’ House became St. Hilda’s College. They
-could have borne to exchange the prim early Victorian
-title bestowed by the godfathers of 1856 for this more
-inspiring name. There is, however, consolation in the
-thought that the Ladies’ College is still free to adopt
-the name of its second founder.</p>
-
-<p>St. Hilda’s Hall, as it was at first called, was formally
-opened on November 27, 1886; but its real building
-was a much longer process, even if dated only from Miss
-Margaret Newman’s death at the close of 1877. Miss
-Beale thought much and anxiously how she could best lay
-out the money which she and her staff and some friends
-had given in order that Miss Newman’s work might
-be carried on and enlarged. She advised with a few
-who cared for education and for the College. Among
-those who helped and counselled were Miss Soames, who
-subscribed largely to St. Hilda’s, and Mr. Brancker,
-some of whose letters on the subject remain. If there
-seems now to be little that is original in the suggestions
-and plans discussed by Miss Beale and Mr. Brancker,
-it is because they were to a great extent pioneers, and
-among the first to bring about a real system for attaining
-the educational objects they had at heart. In 1878 Mr.
-Brancker wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The object you advocate is a very desirable one, and one
-I have longed for many a time as an adjunct of the Ladies’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-College—but while we were struggling upwards I could never
-see an opportune time to advocate my ideas on the subject.
-The means you suggest are very undesirable, to my mind at
-least, as partaking too much of the “charitable object” idea to
-commend themselves to me.</p>
-
-<p>‘So necessary do I consider the future training of those who
-in their turns have to teach that for the present I should be
-inclined to treat every case on its own merits; as there may
-be many who may be anxious to get their education on such
-easy terms and yet have not the very least idea of imparting
-that knowledge to others, and in such cases the object you seek
-is not attained.</p>
-
-<p>‘My idea, which is perhaps a crude one, would be that the
-capabilities of each pupil as regards teaching should be tested,
-and if she showed suitable powers she should be drafted into one
-of the boarding-houses, or if thought better into a separate
-house; that the fees of the College in her case be remitted,
-and that the expense of her board be paid all or in part by the
-College. That for this she should engage to become a regular
-teacher; that the College should have the first claim on her
-services, and that she should pass all the necessary examinations
-appointed by the College. If in a boarding-house she might
-assist in keeping order and authority, not as a governess but
-as an elder pupil,—not as a spy but by moral power, keep her
-position, something like a præpostor in a public school; a
-great deal of evil might then be prevented by being nipped
-in the bud. Should she eventually wish to take a College
-degree she should be assisted by the College if she remained
-with them or under their control. My great object would be to
-get ladies to accept such a position, as there must be many who
-would come within the rules of the College as to position who
-would be very glad to have such a vocation in prospect, and the
-College ought to be in a position now, unless the funds have
-been unnecessarily squandered, to afford to assist such cases in
-the hope that in the future they would help it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Such are my rough ideas on the subject, as I do not believe in
-the isolation of those who want a practical knowledge of human
-nature to enable them to become teachers worth their salt.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In a second letter on the same subject Mr. Brancker
-said:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I <em>quite</em> understand what you feel about this matter relating
-to the governess of the future, and it was only my fear that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-you might be unwittingly getting into troubled waters that
-induced me to write you at once about it. It is a <em>very</em> difficult
-question to solve, and one that wants a good deal more thought
-so that no mistake may be made. My plan is to take up the
-idea of a “pupil teacher” in Government Schools, and from
-that form some plan for the education of those who aspire
-to be the teachers of the future. I should then carry out
-the idea I have always entertained of giving a preference to
-our own pupils, and working them up to our standard. I have
-always regretted that we missed Bessie Calrow, as she was a
-born teacher and would have delighted in the work. It seems
-to me that as you do not take these pupils until they are
-seventeen, you have a great chance among your own pupils,
-and would certainly know their own character better than any
-stranger; therefore, to any one who had passed through the
-College—could pass the necessary examination, and was willing
-to be such pupil teacher—I would pay the College fees and half
-the boarding-house expenses, or all if you like, and would give
-her a fair trial, and if at the end of twelve months, or longer as
-might be thought desirable, it was not satisfactory to all parties,
-let her depart and no harm would be done. This is a far better
-and more dignified position than being educated by <em>charity</em>; and
-the person enjoying it would lose nothing of her dignity,
-if it was not even added to by the position. If the plan is
-to do any good it must be grafted on to the College, and I
-for one should be very sorry to see that obliged to go to the
-public for any funds it requires to do good. I would make the
-pupils sign nothing on my plan, my hold upon them would be
-their association with the College. I can quite understand the
-difficulties raised by the boarding-houses about new pupils at
-that age, but with old ones that difficulty is at once removed;
-as, like the præpostors, they would have certain privileges, but
-at the same time they must submit to the discipline of the
-house. My plan may be, and no doubt is very crude, but these
-are the lines I should start from and feel my way tentatively,
-so as not to destroy the independence of the individual. Look
-where you get the best masters of public schools:—The man
-who succeeds is a scholar and very likely Fellow of his College;
-he may have been Bible-clerk, sizar, or undergraduate, and so
-has worked his way upwards and obtained his position from hard
-work, thus adding to his dignity and power of teaching. And
-I should follow as much as possible in these tracks.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Eventually the ideas expressed in these letters were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-carried out in the arrangement of St. Hilda’s, which
-became not only a home for pupils who could not afford
-the normal boarding fees, but also a residence for senior
-students who needed more liberty than they could have
-in the other houses. By this means the house was put
-on a self-supporting basis. Miss Beale could have borne
-with no other. The Loan Fund, up to this time, had
-been the means of assisting over a hundred students.
-Miss Beale now asked a few personal friends to support
-it, pointing out that such a means of help was far better
-than any system of scholarships, which she never ceased
-to dislike, and against which she continually spoke and
-wrote. Her chief objections to scholarships have been
-already noted.<a name="FNanchor_62" id="FNanchor_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> She was moreover opposed to the principle
-of material giving involved in the system. She
-only cared, at any time, to give what would embrace
-and ennoble character. She thought it best that people
-should pay for advantages received, thought they would
-value them more, thought it made girls more careful
-and self-denying when first the management of money
-came into their own hands, to feel that it was not
-their own to do as they pleased with. A mere gift
-seemed to her like a dead thing compared with the
-money which, lent and returned and then lent to others,
-was thus used over and over again. Yet the want of
-response to appeals for the Loan Fund must have
-been partly due to a difference of opinion on its method
-rather than to want of sympathy with Miss Beale’s
-aims. There are many who feel an objection to
-saddling with a loan a young teacher starting on her
-work, or who recognise that an unpaid loan may help
-to lower the standard in money affairs, and on that
-account shrink from giving help in this way. There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-are few indeed who could lend money so successfully
-as Miss Beale could, because there are few who could
-so successfully command repayment. Of the first £500
-advanced by the Loan Fund, £495 was repaid in a
-very few years. The pressure she would exercise for
-repayment sometimes led to the wrong notion that she
-cared for money for its own sake. She had at all times
-great skill in wringing the utmost use out of a sum
-of money to promote those ends for which she lived;
-but in the ordinary commonplace sense she was indifferent
-to money and the things for which it is usually
-exchanged. Her own personal life was as bare of luxury
-when she was a rich woman as it was when her capital
-was reckoned in hundreds only. But she did care
-deeply for character, and anxiously avoided all forms of
-easy generosity which might injure those she sought to
-help.</p>
-
-<p>For several years before a turf was cut for St. Hilda’s
-College, Miss Beale was, as she would herself have expressed
-it, building it: student teachers were being
-trained in the College, and in 1881 one of these passed
-the Cambridge Examination in the Theory and Practice
-of Education. Gradually she gathered an increasing
-body of students in a separate house—a house which
-was as unlike as any could possibly be to the beautiful
-home which was shortly to be opened. She waited year
-after year for money with which to build without interrupting
-the work she had begun in assisted education,
-and for the reasons named made no public appeal for
-it. It was enough, she maintained, to state the real
-needs—to show the value of a work by the way it was
-done—and thus let it make its own appeal for support.
-She had a horror of <em>plant</em> which might be a mere empty
-shell, or which in its establishment might become a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-diversion of energy from spiritual work. She felt this
-especially in the matter of church building, as may be
-seen in the following extract from a letter: ‘What I
-disapproved of was the amount of begging for the
-Cathedral. I do not disapprove of <em>it</em>, but I think you
-know what I felt. However, the Bishop will do all he
-can to make it a strong spiritual centre. I can never get
-over the feeling of spiritual destitution at one very
-beautiful cathedral.’ It was also, perhaps less consciously,
-a principle not to take money except from those who
-were willing for her to carry out her own ideas. She
-wrote to one friend in 1888:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘As regards our Students’ Home, I have given up the idea
-of a public meeting. It seemed not right to refuse the offer
-at first. But I shall go on with the work, and I doubt not the
-money will come. There is such a great need for training
-teachers. If we had a meeting things might be said and money
-be given in a way which would pledge us, or be thought to
-pledge us, and now we shall be free.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And again in 1884 to one who helped her Oxford
-scheme:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I grieve over that Protestant spirit which forbids people to
-read books, to associate with people, who do not think precisely
-in their way. Is this done in Science? No; we put various
-theories before the student and show <em>why</em> we accept them. But
-we don’t ever want to impose our beliefs; so I want not to
-impose mine in religion, but to bring the learner to the “fountain
-of living water.” Any transferred opinion is without root, and
-cannot endure the storm. Teachers must, if they are to help,
-gain the sympathy they need by entering into the religious
-modes of seeing and feeling of many different souls. I think
-in a University town they would come in contact with various
-influences, and in a house like St. Hilda’s I should want thoughtful
-people who have gone through some of the experience of
-life,—old teachers to help the young. There is a little more
-of my dream, but I am quite content to wait. If it be God’s
-will that such a house should grow up, the way will be pointed
-out. I felt I could not say all this to you when we meet, and
-I have got to care that you should not misunderstand me.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As the time to begin the actual erection of the house
-drew near she had no exultation over the fulfilment
-of a dream. Yet in the beginning of August 1885,
-surrounded by young teachers from her own and other
-schools drawn together for a Retreat and a brief educational
-conference, her mind was naturally full of that
-dream. Some few of her own thoughts about it she
-wrote down; such as the following, with their characteristic
-heading:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<i>Sunday, Aug. 2, 1885</i>—on St. Hilda’s. Some thoughts at
-church.</p>
-
-<p>‘God fulfils Himself in many ways. Lest one good custom
-should corrupt the world.</p>
-
-<p>‘How often have we seen endowments thus rendered injurious,
-not helpful. So it is with many of the institutions around us.
-Can we hope better things from this one? No, we can only
-hope for it not a perfection but a temporary usefulness. “He,
-after he had served his generation according to the will of God,
-fell on sleep”;—so it is with men, so with institutions, they
-need not a body but a spirit. As long as the spirit lives the
-body is the instrument of all good works. When the spirit
-dies, the body becomes the source of disease and corruption.
-For this reason I have cared more to awaken the spirit than
-to gather funds and build first. The spirit will, I hope, shape
-the body.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now what we want is a body of women whose one desire is
-to consecrate themselves to the ministry of teaching.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Get work in this world.</p>
-
-<p>‘Be sure ’tis better than what you work to get.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Ye are the salt of the earth,—light of the world, said the
-Lord to the teachers He sent forth.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The first stone of St. Hilda’s College was quietly laid
-by Canon Medd (one of the trustees and a member of
-the Ladies’ College Council) in 1884. The opening,
-which took place on November 27, 1885, was far more
-dignified than that its illustrious parent had known
-in 1856.</p>
-
-<p>‘The ceremony of opening the institution,’ so ran the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-account in the Cheltenham <cite>Examiner</cite>, ‘which was performed
-by the Bishop of the diocese, took place at three
-o’clock, and was attended by a large and influential
-company, who assembled in the study, a spacious—but
-on this occasion none too spacious—apartment on the
-ground floor.’ Among those present were the Dean of
-Winchester,<a name="FNanchor_63" id="FNanchor_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> then Chairman of the College Council, who
-conducted the short service, the late Bishop of Ely, and
-many of the clergy of the town, besides the friends and
-benefactors of St. Hilda’s. On entering the study the
-eye was caught at once by the words which Miss Beale
-quoted so often that they seemed like the motto of her
-work: ‘Knowledge puffeth up, but charity buildeth
-up.’ Here, in this ‘Godly Place,’ as he called the
-house, the Bishop of Gloucester, who since 1875 had
-been both nominally and actually Visitor of the Ladies’
-College, gave an address full of sympathy for the ideals
-of the founder.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the first resident Training College for teachers,
-other than elementary, was planned, and built, and
-opened. In order to make its position more permanent
-it was constituted into a separate College with a Council
-of its own. In 1886 a statue of St. Hilda was presented
-and placed in the hall. On unveiling it, Miss Beale
-spoke of the Saint’s life, and especially of her work as a
-teacher. She concluded with a thought, the deeper for
-the personal touch in it, of memory of what she had had
-to bear in the past, and indeed in later years also, of
-misconception and misrepresentation.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Shall I touch in conclusion upon the mythical elements in
-St. Hilda’s story? Myths are truths expressed in poetry. You
-see the ammonite at her feet, one of the serpents that she, like
-St. Patrick, is fabled to have turned into stone. There may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-have been, once, at Whitby, serpents who, with the poisoned
-tooth of calumny and evil-speaking, wounded and slew. I think
-she turned them into stone with her look of sorrow. We have
-not represented the wild geese, whom she is said to have destroyed
-because they wasted her lands. I half believe that story
-too; I feel sure that all these disappeared from her abbey lands,
-but perhaps they were turned into swans.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>St. Hilda’s College was scarcely built and opened
-before it was necessary to enlarge it by adding a new
-wing. It was not until this had been done that Miss
-Beale felt free to devote herself to another foundation,
-which also was to bear the name of the sainted Abbess.</p>
-
-<p>As early as the year 1882 Miss Beale, attracted by
-the increasing facilities offered to women by the elder
-universities, had purchased three acres of land in north
-Oxford. These she retained for building uses should
-the right moment or a definite reason for such a purpose
-occur. But no one showed much sympathy with the
-scheme, there was no offer of money, and for long much
-of her own capital was absorbed in St. Hilda’s, Cheltenham.
-Impulsive to a fault as she often was, Miss Beale
-could school herself to wait. After five years came an
-opportunity of purchasing a ready-made college in Dr.
-Child’s beautiful house on the Cherwell. It seemed
-well to accept this, and begin there the new house of
-education.</p>
-
-<p>There were many reasons why Miss Beale allowed so
-long a time to elapse between her purpose and her act.
-Her own ideas and her aims for her Hall at Oxford
-shaped themselves but gradually. Somerville College<a name="FNanchor_64" id="FNanchor_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
-and Lady Margaret Hall were still in their first youth.
-Miss Beale’s scheme seemed uncalled for where there
-were already so many workers for the cause of women’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-education in the field. Her educational experience had
-been different from that of those whose minds had
-developed among university surroundings; her methods
-were unacademic, unconventional. Consequently there
-were some to warn her as she prepared to take her new
-step: ‘The University may easily receive a shock from
-which it will take long to recover.’</p>
-
-<p>It may well be asked even now, as it was often asked at
-the time, why Miss Beale wanted to come to Oxford at
-all, and particularly while she was uncertain of the value
-of University Examinations for women. But she valued
-even more than the certificate gained by taking schools
-the atmosphere of Oxford. She saw that the students of
-St. Hilda’s, Cheltenham, missed this. When she founded
-that institution she had written of it, that she hoped it
-‘would be a Hall similar to the Halls at Oxford and
-Cambridge.’ Now she felt the need of what only the
-older universities could give. She hoped her new house
-might become a place of intellectual enlargement and
-refreshment such as Oxford could best supply to some
-who had already begun their work of teaching, and who
-needed new thoughts and inspiration, more time for
-thought, a higher intellectual standard. She thought
-that a year at Oxford could supply that feature in
-education which is sometimes more developed at home.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have often felt ... that a year in which they should be
-allowed to expatiate in intellectual pastures in a way that we
-older women used to do before examinations for women existed,
-would be of great value. And they can do this best in some
-University town, where they can have libraries and museums
-and such lectures and private help as they most require—both
-hearing and asking questions, rather than being asked and
-answering.... Many could take one year who could not take
-three.... The students of St. Hilda’s (Oxford) will have the
-same opportunities of attending lectures and offering themselves
-for examinations as at the other Ladies’ Colleges—but we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-should not press examination upon any who can do better work
-without. Of course we must be assured that those who come
-to us will work seriously.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Yet these reasons were secondary. The purchase of
-three acres of ground at Oxford was a definite result of
-her own suffering of mind in 1882. As she emerged
-from that she at once began to build in vision a house
-where teachers should be established in the faith, where
-they should learn to feel that their calling was not to
-do mere journeyman work, but to deal with the deep
-problems of life.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, it may be added that, whether conscious of it
-or not, she could not keep herself out of the great
-movement which was enabling women to share with men
-many of the incomparable advantages of University life,
-she had also her own conception of what University
-life might do for women, and by means of a College
-at Oxford for her own College at Cheltenham. For
-Cheltenham the connection would be of great value.
-Seeing all that might be won by a well-placed move, she
-planned that move, waited, then made it at the right
-moment. ‘I bewail your news,’ wrote an Oxford friend
-to whom she communicated the fact that St. Hilda’s
-was about to be opened, ‘and disclaim all responsibility
-for your mistake.’ Miss Beale opened her Hall and
-begged the students to accept the words <i lang="la">Non frustra
-vixi</i> as their motto, that being the thought which the
-ammonite at the feet of St. Hilda’s statue now suggested
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>In October 1893 seven students took up their residence
-at St. Hilda’s. Mrs. Burrows, who had had a
-College boarding-house at Cheltenham, came to be
-head of the new Hall, assisted by her daughter, who had
-been a student at Lady Margaret Hall. The house was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-formally but quietly opened on November 6 by the
-Bishop of the diocese, Dr. Stubbs, who placed himself at
-Miss Beale’s disposal for all arrangements. ‘I will
-keep,’ he wrote, ‘November 6 free for Miss Beale, but
-she must let me hear what, when, and how what is to
-be done’; and to Miss Beale, ‘You do not want me to
-bring robes on the 6th, do you? A line to reassure me
-would be grateful.’</p>
-
-<p>On the occasion of the opening, after the little service
-conducted by the Dean of Winchester, the Bishop of
-Oxford spoke a few ‘grave and weighty words’ on the
-duty of ‘self-culture of the whole mind, soul, and
-spirit.’ The Dean, who thanked him for his address,
-said that ‘the new venture of the Cheltenham Ladies’
-College was by no means so ambitious as the Bishop
-seemed to think.’ He spoke of the way in which it
-might prepare women to be of real service in their
-generation, and added: ‘One cannot think of this opening
-day for the Oxford St. Hilda’s without strong emotions
-of gratitude and hope. This is the crown and highest
-result of all that work for women’s education which has
-been carried on under Miss Beale’s wise rule at Cheltenham
-these many years past; the College, with its
-varieties of activity, and its eight hundred students,
-justly claims to be represented here in the home of
-highest education.’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 650px;" id="illus7">
-<img src="images/illus7.jpg" width="650" height="460" alt="" />
-<p class="caption-r"><i>Photo. W. H. Rogers</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>S. Hilda’s Hall, Oxford.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Among the friends gathered for this opening ceremony
-was the founder of the Ladies’ College, Cheltenham,
-Canon Bellairs. He welcomed this house in Oxford,
-though he would have named it differently.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am very glad to hear,’ he had written a month before,
-‘that you are starting what will no doubt become a veritable
-College. You should christen it at once. St. Clare would be
-appropriate. She founded an Order, and your College will be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-the foundation of an order. I do hope the G. W. R. will alter
-its time-table to suit your convenience. It would do so if it
-had as high an opinion of your excellence as the Father of your
-College, and your Pupils and all that know you have. Fancy,
-thirty-five years since we first met! What a period for evolution....
-I should like very much to have a chat with you to
-see where you are now.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After five years, St. Hilda’s, Oxford, was recognised by
-the Association for the Education of Women in Oxford
-as St. Hilda’s Hall. Miss Beale finally, in 1900, connected
-it with St. Hilda’s, Cheltenham, by presenting
-it to the Association of that College.</p>
-
-<p>That Miss Beale was fully alive to changes that must
-come in the course of time to such an institution as
-St. Hilda’s Hall, and could be content to see her own
-personal wishes set aside in everything that did not affect
-the essential life of the place, is clear from the following
-letter to Mrs. Wells in January 1903:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Thanks for your nice letter and the suggestions. I think
-with you that the giving of scholarships will have to be reconsidered,
-and some clear rules made. I am, however, no less
-strongly opposed to the modern slave trade than before, and
-should be much grieved if we entered upon it. I see you would
-limit the giving to those who need help. Of course I see that
-I can no longer have the freedom I had in choosing scholars
-when the house was mine, and I alone was responsible for all
-expenses, and Mrs. Hay allowed me to dispose of her gifts, but
-I do hope we shall go on somewhat the same lines.</p>
-
-<p>‘1. That we shall not ask for money.</p>
-
-<p>‘2. That we shall not advertise in order to get scholars.</p>
-
-<p>‘3. That we shall not pledge ourselves to choose merely by
-intellectual pre-eminence.</p>
-
-<p>‘4. I think we are justified in giving the preference to
-Cheltenham girls.</p>
-
-<p>‘Might we not say that a scholarship should be offered on
-certain fixed conditions to certain girls, say to associates and to
-those who, not having been long enough to gain this, should
-have taken a high rank in the Cambridge room.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The year marked by this crown and result of labour
-was saddened by the death of Miss Catherine Newman
-at Mayfield House. It was a death which caused not
-only personal sorrow, but extreme perplexity and loss to
-all connected with the Mission. They found themselves
-at the end of four years’ trial of their scheme without a
-head, with a scattered band of workers, and an insanitary
-house. No one felt the sorrow of it all more
-than Miss Beale; no one was more courageous in
-meeting it. The necessary, difficult, and toilsome work
-which was the result of the crisis did not indeed fall to
-her share, but to that of some members of the committee
-on whom the responsibility specially pressed.
-But such difficulties to be met, such a death for a cause,
-were exactly what roused Miss Beale to feel the worth
-of it as she had never done before.</p>
-
-<p>A small untiring sub-committee was formed, with
-Mrs. Batten as secretary, to re-arrange the work. The
-cost of efficient drainage operations was so heavy that
-at first it seemed better to seek a new house for the
-Settlement than to undertake such a great expense. A
-long search in the neighbourhood for such a house
-proved fruitless. It therefore became a question whether
-the Guild members should move their work from the
-place they had deliberately chosen at a large general
-meeting, or go to the expense required for making
-Mayfield House fit for habitation. However, an appeal
-to the surveyor resulted in the cost of the drainage
-work being thrown upon the landlord, who consequently
-made harder terms for his tenants. The question
-whether to stay or go came before the Guild in 1894,
-and a vote for continuing the work at Mayfield House
-was passed by a large majority. After an interval of
-some months the house was re-opened under a new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-Lady Warden, Miss Corbett,—no Cheltenham worker
-having been found to undertake it.</p>
-
-<p>In her first report Miss Corbett was able to show a
-full complement of workers. There was no falling off,
-but in less than two years it became evident that a more
-complete change must be made. The Oxford workers,
-who by a temporary arrangement lived at first in Mayfield
-House, had now a prosperous Settlement of their
-own—St. Margaret’s—in the very same square as
-Mayfield House. This Settlement of the Ladies’ Branch
-of the Oxford House could not well be in any other
-neighbourhood. It was seen to be ludicrous that two
-large communities of women workers should concentrate
-their energies on one small corner of the vast field of
-London work. Added to this, the high rent and rates
-of Mayfield House pointed to the need of a change,
-and at the Guild meeting of 1896 it was definitely proposed
-to move either to East Ham or Lambeth.
-Finally, however, Shoreditch was chosen, a district having
-sore needs, and near enough to Bethnal Green to
-enable those members of the Settlement engaged there
-in Board School management, charity organisation, and
-other extra parochial work still to carry it on.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the question of a house. There was none.
-It was clearly necessary to build, but for so large an
-undertaking the reserve fund was insufficient. Miss
-Beale, always averse to begging for money, refused to
-make any definite appeal for charity, but as a happy
-inspiration, the idea came to her that the Guild should
-meet the difficulty with the same kind of means used by
-Mrs. Grey in starting high schools in 1874. This idea
-took shape in February 1897. Miss Verrall, who had
-been Treasurer of the Settlement from the beginning,
-sent out notices to members of the Guild to inquire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-whether shares for £3000 would be taken up, and a
-ready response was given, all the shares being quickly
-appropriated within a fortnight. This, which seems to
-be a mere business transaction, was really a great deal
-more. It was rather a channel for interest and help
-which had been so far unable to force their way freely.
-The money was subscribed in the form of debenture
-stock at three per cent., repayable at the end of eighty
-years. £3800 was subscribed within a fortnight by
-310 subscribers. A large part came from women to
-whom the sacrifice of control or recovery of the capital
-made it practically a gift. To most the yearly-paid few
-shillings of interest meant little in comparison with a few
-pounds available for immediate expenditure. Of the
-money subscribed, over £400 has now been released by
-gift from the holders. Other holders have authorised
-the Council of St. Hilda’s East to retain their interest.
-This brings in about £30 a year. The transaction was a
-fine example of Miss Beale’s use of this world’s goods,
-as means to great ends, and a fine instance of the response
-she could command from those she had led to her own
-point of view. Generous aid came also from Mr.
-Dutton, whose sister was an old Cheltonian,<a name="FNanchor_65" id="FNanchor_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> and who
-undertook all the legal business gratuitously; also from
-the honorary architect, Mr. Philip Day, the husband of
-an old pupil, who volunteered his services for the new
-house. The workers found temporary quarters during
-the building, which took less than a year; and on
-April 26, 1898, the house was opened by Dr. Creighton,
-the Bishop of London, under the name of St. Hilda’s,
-Shoreditch. For Miss Beale remained faithful to the
-name and all the ideas it implied for her. On the letter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-of a friend who wrote, ‘Could not the new house be called
-Cheltenham House or some such, binding it to the
-College? It would be better than a picturesque saint’—she
-wrote, ‘I disagree.’ Mrs. Reynolds, an old pupil,
-became head of the Settlement during the busy time of
-furnishing and organisation of work in a new centre. A
-year later she was succeeded by another old pupil, Miss
-Bruce, the present Lady Warden, who had worked in the
-Settlement from the first. Since that time the house has
-twice been enlarged. The growth of the Settlement, as
-its beginning had been, was marked by the loss through
-death of an enthusiastic worker when Mrs. Moyle, who
-was for a time its secretary, died in July 1899.</p>
-
-<p>As the permanence of the Settlement became assured,
-and the interest of both past and present pupils increased,
-being augmented by the organisation of shares, and by
-the formation of St. Hilda’s Association, Miss Beale’s
-own interest in the work grew. She regarded St. Hilda’s
-East less as a centre of help for the poor than as a place of
-training for workers. In this aspect it appealed to her
-as rightly an integral part of the work of the College.
-In the year 1898, which she said might be called for the
-College an <i lang="la">annus mirabilis</i>, she was able to point to the
-three institutions bearing the name of St. Hilda, each
-firmly established, flourishing, and full of promise of
-future usefulness.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘This year St. Hilda’s, enlarged from six to sixty students, is
-full and free from debt.</p>
-
-<p>‘This year the link with the University of Oxford, so early
-formed, has been made permanent by St. Hilda’s, Oxford, becoming
-a Hall of the University.</p>
-
-<p>‘Above all, this year St. Hilda’s East has been built by the
-spontaneous co-operation of past and present girls, and this has
-specially cheered us, that those who have left us for other spheres,
-the Heads of other great Schools, still stretch out their hands to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-us, work with us in the Guild and the Mission, and the old ties
-are not broken.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But the three great institutions bearing the name of
-St. Hilda by no means included all that thought-training
-work which was what Miss Beale specially associated
-with it.</p>
-
-<p>The existence of St. Hilda’s College at Cheltenham
-made it convenient, if not imperative, to find exercise
-for the energy there inspired and directed, and to supply
-classes for practice. To keep this stream of energy
-within her own guidance for a longer period than the
-time of training involved, it was necessary to have scope
-for it at hand. Even the great and growing College was
-not large enough to employ all the workers it trained,
-and the Principal was ever alive to the necessity of having
-a certain number of teachers from outside, bringing with
-them fresh ideas and methods.</p>
-
-<p>The Kindergarten was the first addition to the Ladies’
-College proper to need such young helpers as Miss Beale
-now had at her disposal. It began, like Miss Beale’s
-other creations, without a local habitation of its own in
-1876. The College, owing to the quick perception of
-its Lady Principal, who was sensitive to each fresh
-tendency in education, was one of the first schools in
-England to avail itself of the Kindergarten mistresses
-trained by Madame Michaelis, who began her work in
-her own house at Croydon as early as 1874.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale at once secured a mistress, and on her
-arrival a number of little boys and girls were immediately
-found to constitute a Kindergarten in Miss Beale’s own
-drawing-room. ‘The’ drawing-room, as she always
-called it, did not well bear out its title. As a baby-class
-room it looked well. Morris’s daisy and columbine
-paper, then a new thing, was on the walls, to suggest the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-thought, which was probably correct, that in first choosing
-it Miss Beale had already an intention of beginning
-a Kindergarten, though she did not find it advisable to
-mention it then to the Council. Some of the younger
-teachers in College helped a little with this baby-class.
-The system and organisation, the carefully trained head,
-all seemed rather alarming in those days when Froebelian
-ideas and German methods were little known in England.</p>
-
-<p>As early as 1876 there were twenty-five children in
-the Kindergarten, for which a classroom had to be found
-in the College. In 1881 Miss Welldon came to Cheltenham
-as head of the Kindergarten. Hers was one of the
-first appointments made by the Croydon Kindergarten
-Company, which had been founded in 1876, with Madame
-Michaelis as Principal.</p>
-
-<p>In 1882 the new room, purposely built and fitted for a
-Kindergarten, was opened. It was much enlarged in 1887.
-But soon again more scope was needed for the large
-number of students who now flocked to Cheltenham.
-Miss Beale could not bear to let one of these escape her.
-She recognised their needs, she saw their possible value.
-There were then very few places in England where they
-could be trained; the demand for Kindergarten mistresses
-daily increased. The immediate difficulty was met in
-1889 by the establishment of a Kindergarten school in
-connection with St. Stephen’s Church in Cheltenham,
-supported by the vicar of the parish and a few voluntary
-contributors. This was staffed by Kindergarten students
-of the Ladies’ College. Fifty-seven children actually
-appeared in the school the first day, and the numbers
-rapidly increased in spite of the fact that each child paid
-twopence weekly. Five years later College students
-penetrated into a still poorer school at Naunton, a
-hamlet adjoining the town of Cheltenham. In 1896 the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-infant school of the parish of Holy Trinity in the town
-invited teachers from the College.</p>
-
-<p>In 1889 Cambray House was offered for sale. Miss
-Beale, who had a strong lingering affection for this first
-home of her school, had with regret seen it ‘alienated to
-barbarian boys,’ the trees cut down, and the garden turned
-into an asphalted playground. The building was well
-fitted for the school purposes for which it had been
-adapted and long used. There was enough space in the
-part which had not been altered, and which was not wanted
-for a day-school, to be utilised as a boarding-house.
-Miss Beale seized the chance she saw of opening a school
-which should serve the double purpose of taking overflow
-pupils or others for whom, for many reasons, the Ladies’
-College was not suited, and of affording an opening under
-her own eye for some of the teachers she was training.
-The rules for admission, discipline, etc., were identical
-with those of the College. By this time, too, she saw the
-use of the racquet-courts and tennis-grounds. It was a
-great satisfaction to get back this house. She wrote of
-it to Miss Arnold:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I dare not take any extra fatigue, as I have so much on my
-hands—I must try to be alone for a while. I have just bought
-back the old Cambray House in which I began thirty-one years
-ago. I want a second Miss Wilderspin, I have got to put it in
-order and furnish by May.... I heard Canon Body at All
-Saints, Margaret Street, last Friday. It was a very good sermon,
-and seemed to fit in well with the thoughts that came to me, as
-I had just got my offer for Cambray accepted, rather to my
-surprise.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In 1895 Cambray was enlarged at a cost of about
-£2000, and in October 1897 Miss Beale, by deed of
-gift, made over the property to the Ladies’ College,
-though it was arranged that she should still continue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-there the school and boarding-house. Miss Beale marked
-this return of Cambray House, ‘enlarged and alive again
-with girls,’ into the possession of the College, as another
-notable event of the <i lang="la">annus mirabilis</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Cambray House, on its acquisition by the College
-through the gift of Miss Beale, was leased to her for a
-nominal rent; the school and boarding-house being
-carried on as a private venture until 1906, when their
-existence was recognised in the College prospectus for
-the first time. Miss Beale spent another £2000 out of
-her own income upon additions and improvements after
-she had made over the house to the College. This was
-a large sum, but even from a financial point of view by
-no means wasted. In five years the profits of school
-and boarding-house amounted to £1000, for which Miss
-Beale planned further fruitful use.</p>
-
-<p>Cambray School, or, to give it its true title, Cheltenham
-Ladies’ College School, and Cambray boarding-house,
-which took pupils belonging to both the new
-school and the College, was not the only undertaking for
-which Miss Beale made herself personally responsible.
-She also started, and placed in a good financial position,
-two cheap boarding-houses, St. Helen’s and St. Austin’s,
-and in course of time presented them to the College.
-Her position in regard to all these institutions was surely
-very unusual, not to say unique. The foundation of a
-school of over one hundred pupils, and of houses containing
-the same number of boarders, would be a respectable
-life’s work for many a woman. This work appears
-to have been only one of the many occupations Miss
-Beale found for the little leisure left her by the cares of
-the great College and its ever-multiplying interests.</p>
-
-<p>It was perhaps primarily interest in young teachers
-which led Miss Beale to join a movement made in 1897<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-to induce ladies to take up work in elementary schools.
-Miss Beale was present at a large meeting held that
-year in Westminster Town Hall, when the need and
-importance of this work were set forth in speeches
-by the Bishop of Stepney,<a name="FNanchor_66" id="FNanchor_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> Sir Joshua Fitch, and others.
-As a result a Government Training Department was
-at once formed at the Ladies’ College, and work
-began with seven students, who in the same year were
-encouraged by addresses from Sir H. E. Oakeley,
-H.M.I., and Sir Joshua Fitch. The field of practice for
-these students was found in All Saints’ Schools, where
-there were four departments all supplied with the best
-apparatus. Other schools in the town were also glad at
-different times to receive these teachers. Miss Beale
-became much interested in the work, and proposed to
-build a practising school of her own for the elementary
-department of the College, engaged a head-mistress, and
-bought land for building. Then in 1901 came the
-regulations for local education committees, which would
-have put Miss Beale’s school under local control. She
-therefore gave up the idea of building and sold her land.
-Later regulations made her find it impossible to continue
-the elementary work on the lines she wished. The
-Government demands proved a fetter to one who felt
-she should be free to work towards her ideal. To her
-mind the real progress of elementary education in the
-country depended, not on the ‘introduction of new subjects
-of instruction, which must impose new and burdensome
-labour on teachers and children. It should be
-gained by the better training of teachers, by the adoption
-of better methods, by a wiser economy of time, and by
-showing teachers how to put more knowledge, more
-skill, more thought, more love, and more enthusiasm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-into their work.’ The legislation of 1901 made her feel
-that ‘My Lords’ did not recognise these principles as
-all-important; that they undervalued such an effort as
-she was making at Cheltenham; that they were unjust to
-voluntary schools. She felt as if she were playing an
-unfair game, and declined any longer to help forward a
-movement of which she could not see the goal. It may
-be marked also that she could never feel full sympathy
-for <em>free</em> education. From this time she again limited
-herself to training secondary teachers. Conditions which
-made elementary training the one serious work which
-Miss Beale took up only to abandon it, are indeed to be
-regretted. The magnificent plant, the fine opportunities
-for learning and practising, such as the Ladies’ College
-could supply, above all the large-minded teaching, the
-sense of real education which the Lady Principal would
-give, were thus lost to a cause which affects the wellbeing
-of the whole nation.</p>
-
-<p>The Secondary Training Department became a recognised
-division of the College in 1885. So high a value
-did Miss Beale put upon this that she wrote of the work
-of the mistress in whose charge it was, as ‘only second
-in importance to that of the Head.’</p>
-
-<p>St. Hilda’s work, using the term which Miss Beale
-herself would have used, meant much more than teaching
-definite subjects and preparing for examinations: it
-meant inspiration and the leading out of minds. It
-demanded unlimited devotion to a cause. It is probable
-that Miss Beale had for long cherished, and had only
-gradually relinquished a hope, though she never formed
-any definite plan, of seeing arise out of her work for
-education a body of women willing to form a teaching
-order. Opposed to sisterhood schools as she was, chiefly
-because her ideal of education was so high and apart,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-that she could not bear to see it receive in any way
-a secondary place, she recognised the immense value that
-some kind of rule would have, if voluntarily imposed <em>for
-the sake of education</em>. In other words, while she did not
-like to see people taking up teachers’ work because they
-were Sisters, she would have liked to see those she
-inspired and trained voluntarily take upon themselves
-some of the restrictions of a Sister’s life because they
-were teachers. The thought may have come to her first
-when, in 1856 and 1858, Mrs. Lancaster pressed her to
-undertake penitentiary work under rule. It was this
-which led to the severity of her dress and grave demeanour
-at Casterton, this which was echoed in a half-expressed
-wish that her staff at Cheltenham should wear
-black. When, after long years of waiting, it became her
-part to train women for the work of education, the aim
-of inducing them to adopt a separate devoted life, with
-or without visible signs of it, was ever before her.</p>
-
-<p>Now that St. Hilda’s work may be witnessed in the
-three great institutions bearing this name, it is of no
-common interest to trace Miss Beale’s own plan for its
-development. The plan itself and the noble ideal behind
-it are not more remarkable than the ability with which
-she waited, resigned her individual fancy, and became
-an agent rather than an author. The following extract
-(<i lang="la">circa</i> 1884) states her first design:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘It is thought that a protest in act is specially needed in these
-days, now that teachers are so highly paid, and that an association
-of teachers who should be ready to take up any work
-required, whether it was paid or not, would be able to carry on
-work more effectively and continuously than an unorganised
-body of women.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is proposed, therefore, that after three years,—ten of those
-who agree in this general principle should unite together as
-members of the Society of St. Hilda,—that they should pay, if
-young, into the funds of the Society whatever they earn from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-that time (but keeping complete control over any invested property),
-the Society providing them a fixed salary, a home when
-disengaged or out of health, but holding a right to send them out
-to any work which seems needed. The community may, if two-thirds
-agree, reject any member on returning to her what she
-has paid in, minus a fair sum for her maintenance. A member
-may withdraw with half any calculated surplus of earnings over
-expenditure, on giving one year’s notice. Some members might
-reside permanently and assist in various ways as writers and
-editors.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is proposed that the members contributing the money
-should form the governing body,—elect a Superior,—that the
-votes should be in proportion to the money contributed. That
-all the money should, after paying maintenance, be expended,
-after leaving a moderate reserve fund, on providing some charitable
-work, and that the members should, at the will of the
-Superior, be assigned to any post she may think fit.</p>
-
-<p>‘The work should be primarily teaching or assisting in some
-way in educational work amongst rich or poor, specially religious
-teaching, to which, it is hoped, some members will chiefly
-devote themselves, <i>e.g.</i> by lectures, by corresponding with those
-who need advice or help in religious matters, opening the house
-to receive as visitors any who need a time of quiet and retreat
-doing mission work at home and abroad. There should be
-only a very simple rule to be signed by the workers. Prayer at
-morning, evening, and midday; and such special rules as seem
-desirable. A holiday in proportion to the character of the work.
-The dress should be simple, but not conspicuous, and some
-badge should be worn by the members.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In this connection it is interesting to read this extract
-from a letter written to a teacher who was unsettled as to
-her vocation, and was contemplating entering a sisterhood:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>April 89.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I was much interested in your letter. I feel strongly that
-when in God’s Providence we have been trained for one work,
-we should not lightly turn to another. As you say, there is more
-scope in a large sisterhood. Miss —— is very happy at Clewer.
-Still, I think the rules of an ordinary sisterhood are difficult to
-combine with the life of a teacher. I cannot help thinking
-that out of the Society of the Holy Name may grow up a somewhat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-freer teaching sisterhood.... I hold strongly that there
-ought to be some women, whose energies should be devoted to
-sending out young teachers, with a true sense of their vocation.
-You have gifts as a teacher; you ought not, it seems to me, to
-bury them....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Among the women whose saintly lives were a source
-of inspiration to Dorothea Beale, there was one whose
-acquaintance (so to speak) she did not make until herself
-in mature life. None the less did the name of Mary
-Astell become a thought of encouragement and hope
-to one whose heart was ever fresh. When in 1890,
-after various unsuccessful experiments, a properly
-managed house was opened for the regular teachers
-in the College, Miss Beale named it Astell House,
-after the lady who, in the reign of Anne, put forth
-‘a plan of a College for the higher education of
-woman, which should be at the same time a religious
-house. The ladies were to spend some time in study as
-well as prayer, Mrs. Astell holding that they had as
-much right as men to improve their minds.... Their
-special work was to be the education of girls of the
-higher class, and also, if their means would admit, of
-the daughters of poor gentlemen, who must otherwise
-remain untaught.... Mrs. Astell’s scheme aroused
-considerable interest, and an unnamed lady (supposed
-to be the Queen) was ready to give £10,000 for the
-foundation of such an institution; but Bishop Burnet,
-who seems to have been consulted in the matter, put an
-end to the plan, saying it would be too much like
-a nunnery.’ Miss Beale certainly wanted a nunnery no
-more than did the timorous Bishop. As time went on
-she cared less for the outward shape the spirit she strove
-to foster might adopt; but she grew more and more
-earnest and active in seeking to influence young teachers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-to become serious and high-minded and self-sacrificing.
-The Quiet Days, which were instituted chiefly to this
-end, affected many wholly outside the College. They
-are therefore better mentioned in connection with those
-other interests which, to borrow her own nomenclature
-in the Magazine, may be included under the title of
-‘Parerga.’</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br />
-<span class="smaller">TEACHER AND PRINCIPAL</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Languor is not in your heart,</div>
-<div class="verse">Weakness is not in your word,</div>
-<div class="verse">Weariness not on your brow.’</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="attr"><span class="smcap">M. Arnold</span>, ‘Rugby Chapel.’</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A true history of the Cheltenham Ladies’ College would
-not be merely a faithful record of dated events, of building,
-enlargement, expansion, of the introduction of
-examinations, of distinctions gained; it must also suggest,
-if only in outline, the working of the spirit
-which informed the whole, that by which it grew and
-became, in spite of its size and the different elements
-it embraced, homogeneous in itself and full of force.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 650px;" id="illus8">
-<img src="images/illus8.jpg" width="650" height="540" alt="" />
-<p class="caption-r"><i>Photo. G. H. Martyn &amp; Sons.</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Ladies’ College and Garden 1908.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That she was but one worker among many, that she
-was only part of an ‘order’ which must be temporary,
-were facts ever before Miss Beale’s eyes. Those who
-remember their school-days at Cheltenham with love and
-gratitude think not only of the Principal, but of many
-others, some of whom passed out of sight before her,
-some of whom are still faithfully carrying out the ideas
-she inspired, but whose influence, like her own, left an
-abiding impression. One spirit, one aim, an equal
-strenuous effort were what she strove before all things to
-gain for her fellow-labourers, and did undoubtedly to
-a marvellous extent produce throughout the College.
-Though Miss Beale did occasionally make mistakes in
-her choice of workers, expecting too much, or perhaps
-taking too much for granted, this was very rarely the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-case where class-teachers were concerned. These, who
-had the responsibility of forming character as well as of
-giving instruction, were always teachers whom she thoroughly
-knew and trusted, and had generally trained
-herself. By these, the thought and inspiration of the
-Head were handed on. But beyond this, all who passed
-through the College, even if they did not have the opportunity
-of knowing Miss Beale personally, came in contact
-with her in one way or another. Even the youngest
-heard her Scripture lessons; all the pupils in Division I.
-had their marks read by her, and thus came individually
-before her. Those who were confirmed while at school
-were brought into closer touch with her, and many
-through some incident in their school career, or through
-peculiar circumstances of home life, learned to know her
-as a friend. The highest class in College, and the pupils
-who were hopefully named B.A.’s, saw a good deal of
-her even to the end. And from first to last in her long
-headship, it was possible for any child, big or little, in any
-part of the College, to know the Principal,—by herself
-taking notice of her. Miss Beale’s fastidious honesty,
-which led her to dread even the least appearance of
-stealing hearts away from home, largely held her back
-from making personal friends among the girls still at
-College. ‘Yearned to be loved,’ she wrote once in her
-diary; but consistently brought to her work a special
-gift of self-sacrifice in never seeking affection for herself
-personally. She had, moreover, a horror of the unhealthy
-attachments which are often a source of danger
-in girls’ schools. In this connection may be read one
-of her many letters to Miss Clara Arnold:<a name="FNanchor_67" id="FNanchor_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a>—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Yes, you are right, that does point to a fatal error. If we
-make our children lean on us (broken reeds), they will not stand
-long. If they make an idol of any human being, when the idol<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-is broken their faith goes too. We must try to bid them fly
-upwards into the sunlight; they must not tumble about on the
-ground like those poor birds whose wings are clipped. They
-must look up, not to us, but with us, to our common Lord.
-What miserable, weak, sickly creatures many women are, who
-must always have a Pope. The children should give you
-respect and esteem, and you can give them sympathy and affection
-too, and as they are children they may have a helping hand,
-but make them give up, if possible, sentimental worship. They
-must not do right for love of you, but because it is right.</p>
-
-<p>‘How fight against this? Well, tell the children some of
-these things, and talk it over with Miss —— and the other
-teachers. There must be harmony of action. I speak strongly,
-because I have seen this spirit eat away the higher life of one
-large school. I have such a dread of its getting in here.</p>
-
-<p>‘I know there must be a certain amount of hero-worship in
-the young. They need help from parents and teacher, but we
-must train them out of dependence. This sort of thing, too,
-leads to injustice to those who are not worshipped. They are
-“puffed up <em>for</em> one, against another.” They waste time and
-strength in day-dreams about their idol. When a little older they
-are always fancying themselves in love, because they have got
-used to an excitement of feeling.</p>
-
-<p>‘I feel inclined to say I wish I could help you more; always
-ask me if you think I can. But I advise you chiefly to make
-this a subject of prayer. I say daily that Collect for Whitsunday,
-about a “right judgment in all things.” Then I think I should
-see where the evil is most apparent, not speak to the whole class
-but to some few. Very likely, if you try to prevent this wrong
-worship, you will create an antagonism which will give you
-much trouble; such affection easily turns to hatred.... This
-sort of thing does make homes so unhappy because the wife
-takes “tiffs.” Try earnestly to brace them, my dear child.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s own shyness also stood in the way of her
-personal intimacy with her pupils. She liked to be met
-more than half-way. She liked the birthday-book
-brought to her to sign,<a name="FNanchor_68" id="FNanchor_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> the rare wild-flower found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-and gathered for her, the little note of sympathy or
-inquiry or thanks. A hundred reasons would keep
-most girls back from taking the simple steps which
-would have led them early to find a friend in Miss
-Beale. While they were reverencing in silence and at
-a distance there would come along some bright thing
-of quick perception, accustomed to society and to be
-welcome everywhere, untroubled by self-consciousness,
-who would approach the throne with no ‘unaccustomed
-awe,’ but stand, and chat, and smile, and be obviously
-acceptable to the lonely sovereign. ‘You know, A.,’
-she said once to an old girl, ‘it was your freedom from
-shyness with me that first drew me to you.’ And, as
-a matter of fact, Miss Beale was really the most accessible
-of sovereigns. She longed to know all her children,
-and to help each personally. It was only a girl whose
-career was very short or wholly uneventful, and led in
-the lower classes of the school, who could remain wholly
-unacquainted with her. Even then, it would be found
-that the ten minutes’ individual talk which the Principal
-had with each as she left the College finally, impressed
-itself on the mind of the hearer. Her sympathies were
-ever most readily drawn out by those likely in after
-years to exercise influence—in some prominent, possibly
-Imperial position, or as teachers.</p>
-
-<p>At all times a silent, strong, unconscious impression
-was produced upon most by Miss Beale’s rare absence
-from her post, her minute attention to her own share
-of the work of the College, her obvious self-devotion.
-‘I can’t picture the College without her, she always
-seemed to be everywhere,’ one wrote after her death.
-Another said, ‘Although she might never speak to you,
-still the fact that she was not there on any day always
-made the College feel strange and empty.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Her memory for all who had passed through the
-College was simply extraordinary. A married pupil,
-visiting Cheltenham after many years’ interval, writes
-of her amazement at finding that Miss Beale could tell
-her of every girl she had been with in class, and in
-many cases by whom she had sat, whom she had liked,
-and so on. Another, who was for two years at the
-College, only spoke twice to the Principal during that
-period, and left without the least idea that Miss Beale
-could know her as an individual. Two years after
-leaving the first great sorrow of her life came, in the
-death of her class-teacher, Miss Aitken. ‘That friendship,’
-she writes, ‘had never degenerated into any foolish
-or selfish attachment. I still count it as one of the
-strongest motives of my life.’ In the deep grief over
-her friend’s death came a letter from Miss Beale: ‘Just
-the fact that she remembered and understood was like a
-revelation. It was through that that I first realised the
-possibility of the individual love and care of God.’</p>
-
-<p>Naturally, it was in the earliest days, when the first
-class was small and Miss Beale taught many subjects
-herself, that an intimate tie between the head and the
-pupil was most easily formed. But Miss Beale’s wonderful
-freshness of mind and heart enabled her to continue
-not only the old friendships so made, but yearly to
-make new ones. She had a wonderful way, too, of maintaining
-friendship. A girl might pass through the school
-knowing her but a little, but loyalty to College fostered
-by the Guild meetings would each year bring her into
-closer touch with the Principal. ‘I hope we may meet
-again,’ she wrote in 1876 to one who had had a deep
-love and reverence for her, but not much more than a
-slight acquaintance with her in College. Twenty years
-after, when events drew them together again, a close<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-mutual friendship which greatly brightened Miss Beale’s
-declining years grew out of the seed sown so long
-before.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale herself held that the influence of the
-Principal on the school should be through the teachers.
-‘She can do more with five hundred if she has a staff
-thoroughly in sympathy with her than if she brought
-direct personal influence to bear upon a school of a hundred.
-“If you want a thing done, do not do it yourself,”
-should be the motto of a ruler for everyday use.
-Act through others, educate them thereby to independence,
-and reserve your strength for things that none but
-a Head can do.’</p>
-
-<p>In teaching, Miss Beale’s definite aim was to inspire.
-She sought but little to inform, but much to kindle a
-thirst for knowledge, a love of good and beautiful
-things, and to awaken thinking power. This she undoubtedly
-did, though the process was slow; working
-itself out quietly in the mind and character of those
-she taught, in nobler views of life, more refined appreciations,
-improved sense of proportion. When there was
-a question of preparation for examination, or of the
-definite knowledge such as was required in mathematical
-subjects, it was necessary to supplement the lessons of
-the Principal. Yet her teaching of the exact sciences
-was hardly less illuminative than of those which make
-a more direct appeal to the imagination. She would
-interest the class in a mathematical problem, induce the
-mind to work, leave it at the end of a lesson impressed
-and roused, but at the same time not clear about the
-subject she had been putting before it. Then afterwards
-the explanation up to which she had been leading
-would often come like a flash to the puzzling brain.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally the teaching of history was a great opportunity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-to one who could so clothe her subject with life.
-In this she was more than merely picturesque and vivid,
-she would allow her own delighted interest to show
-itself. Who that heard them could forget her lectures
-on the reign of George the Third, in which she and her
-whole class were transported to the old Parliament
-House, listening, it might be, to the younger Pitt’s
-maiden speech, or to some stirring debate between him
-and his rival, hearing the applause, the dissentient murmurs,
-even a joke under the breath of some listener?
-She would lead up to a climax with dramatic force.
-With what astonishment did her audience hear, as if it
-were a startling piece of political news of their own
-day, of the Coalition Ministry!<a name="FNanchor_69" id="FNanchor_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a></p>
-
-<p>The study of history has now become organised and
-scientific. Miss Beale’s own methods were out of date
-long before her death; she ceased indeed to teach the
-subject herself about 1874, but she never lost the enthusiasm
-with which she first entered upon it. As an
-example she was always anxious that those who were
-lecturing on history should adopt the views she considered
-just about certain personages. Once, when the
-Tudor period was being studied in the College, she
-summoned the teachers, as the school hours ended at
-one o’clock, into a classroom to hear what she believed
-to be the truth about Cranmer—with a few words
-making a terrible picture of time-serving and cowardice.
-On the other hand, she was always anxious that what
-was great in Elizabeth should be recognised; that every
-possible excuse should be made for her faults.</p>
-
-<p>But if Miss Beale’s methods of teaching history have
-been to some extent superseded, it should be remembered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-that she was among the first to insist on the importance
-of general history. Though assured of the value of
-detailed and special knowledge, she was not content
-to let one period stand alone unlinked with its context.
-She would not cut off the history of England
-as a thing by itself, but showed its place in the stream
-of time, in the lives of the nations. So almost every
-class was obliged to learn something of outline and
-general history, and here it was that the <cite>Chart</cite> and <cite>Textbook</cite>
-played so important a part.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s English literature lessons may, more than
-any others she gave, be described as <i lang="la">sui generis</i>. ‘Miss
-Beale gives literature lessons of a peculiar kind,’ was
-the appreciation of a new pupil who had studied the
-subject before coming to Cheltenham. Her literature
-lesson, indeed, had many functions. The subject became
-the vehicle of much teaching that it was not convenient
-to give in a Bible lesson. She sought to interest
-her class in books, in reading, in noble thoughts, in fine
-prose and poetry. But this was by no means all. She
-sought primarily to give views of life, conduct, and
-character such as would enable her hearers to go from
-school into a larger world, already prepared to know
-what to find. Under the names of friend and friendship
-much was said which might apply equally to the
-choice of a husband and to marriage. Knowledge of
-character, she would often say, is so important for women.
-Hence she liked, if possible, once a year to read and
-lecture upon one of Shakspere’s great plays to the first
-class. Though ever fresh and interesting, and herself as
-interested as ever in these readings, though the lectures
-were constantly brightened and enriched by new books
-and thoughts brought to bear upon them, there was very
-little variation in the treatment of the main theme. At<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-certain crises in the story, over certain characters, hearers
-of long standing knew what to expect. Ophelia, to take
-an instance, was for all the generations of girls who read
-<cite>Hamlet</cite> at Cheltenham the woman who failed a man because
-she could not dare to be true. A matter like this
-was vital to Miss Beale. Could any class-teacher in the
-College have represented Ophelia in any other light, the
-Lady Principal would have spared no pains to point out
-the error of the treatment, both to her and to those she
-had misled. Desdemona, again, was always marked as
-the wife who not unnaturally roused the suspicions of a
-jealous-minded husband, because he knew that in marrying
-him she had deceived her father. The misery that
-may follow a secret wilful marriage was always hinted
-at when this story was told.</p>
-
-<p>But there were other and less weighty considerations
-than influence and marriage in these lectures. They
-supplied opportunity for suggestions on simple affairs
-such as the choice of books, ways of spending time and
-money, manners, conversation, and the like. Often
-questions of the day, politics in a very general sense,
-and social problems were led up to.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale might be unacademic to a fault in these
-lectures, but she had that power of inspiration which
-made every poem she prized, every character she admired,
-live immortally for those who heard her speak
-of them. The actual reading—specially of poetry—was
-a delight to both reader and hearers. Miss Beale
-had a strong dramatic instinct, a keen enjoyment of
-poetry and the right use of words. She had also a
-wonderful voice, which she managed well, and though
-always quiet and restrained in manner carried her
-audience with her unweariedly. The literature lesson
-was long, specially in the early days when, owing to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-short distances and small numbers, no time was occupied
-by arrangements for prayers. For thirty or forty
-minutes corrected notes were returned and criticised,
-then the lecture proper would begin and go on for a
-full hour. Sometimes the whole time, an hour and a
-half, was taken up by the lecture. It was certainly very
-unusual for any one to find it too long.</p>
-
-<p>A further interest in these lectures lay in an effort
-to make them language lessons. As a matter of fact,
-though much interested in language herself, Miss Beale
-did little more than inspire a wish to study it further.
-Perhaps this was her aim in touching upon it at all. She
-would often bring to her lesson a table of Grimm’s Law,
-explain it very rapidly, and appear to expect that it
-should be as rapidly remembered.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s literature was by no means confined to
-Shakspere’s plays. All the greatest and many lesser
-works in the English tongue were taken in their turn.
-But she would seldom take the works of any whose
-thought seemed to her inferior; would have little,
-for instance, to do with Dryden and Pope. Style in
-itself had no attraction, and the growth of literary form,
-unless accompanied by the development of noble thought,
-was of little interest. No subject, perhaps, was more
-after her own choice than the poems of Spenser.
-She would dwell with unfailing delight on the complicated
-allegories of the <cite>Faëry Queene</cite>, or on the Hymns
-to ‘Heavenly Love’ and ‘Heavenly Beauty.’ Nor was
-a school year ever allowed to pass without her introducing
-the higher classes in the College to some of
-Browning’s works. How many must have learned to
-know his greater short poems by hearing her read them.<a name="FNanchor_70" id="FNanchor_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the subject with which the name of Dorothea
-Beale as a teacher will ever be associated is that of Holy Scripture.
-For this her greatest force was reserved.
-This was the soul of her work, as any who listened to
-her lessons with a hearing ear, or who marked the deep
-reverence prevailing in her class, could not fail to observe.
-Trammelled she was in many ways, at first by
-the narrowness which had almost prevented her coming
-to Cheltenham; increasingly, as time went on, by the
-numbers of her hearers who held opposing views on
-religion or who had no views at all; much always by
-her own dread of ‘offending’ or of hindering an earnest
-seeker for truth by a positive assertion. These causes
-made it inevitable that her teaching should seem to many
-vague or insufficient, since she could not bear to miss
-putting herself beside those who were as babes, unable
-to venture a step into the untried. An old pupil has
-well described this attitude:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘She did not go very much into every sort of detail, but I
-wonder what use can be made of doctrinal details by people
-whose general scheme of things is one into which they don’t
-fit? and that, I suppose, is the trouble of most people who are
-puzzled by such things at all. Whereas Miss Beale, in anticipation
-of this difficulty, always seemed to me to set forth a
-spiritual construction of the universe, into which no spiritual
-truth learned afterwards could possibly fail to fit, supposing it to
-be a truth in very deed. I do not see how any teacher can
-possibly do a greater work; though I do not say for a moment
-that she did no more.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Certainly in the weekly lesson to the whole First
-Division of the school she did a great deal more. Another
-old pupil may be quoted here:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Speaking for myself, I can say without hesitation that it was
-from her that I learned the truth of the sacramental life. One
-thing she said to me, and she repeated it with emphasis at the
-time of my Confirmation, is as fresh in my mind to-day as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-day she said it. Again, I can say for myself, and my reading
-has been fairly wide, that her influence has been entirely
-against any weakening of faith. Knowing something at least of
-her character and intellectual power, it was natural to feel that
-where she was steadfast one need not be afraid. More than
-that, her direct teaching by its sympathetic insight into the
-deepest aspects of life was always, and always will be inspiring.
-If it is true that there was something vague in her utterances, I
-believe it was because she had reached a plane of thought where
-the words which have become the current thought of everyday
-life are inadequate forms of expression.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>If, in order to seek some erring spirit, Miss Beale did
-at times seem to neglect others, it must be remembered
-that in teaching the Bible, more than at any other time,
-she really took up the humble position of simply bringing
-her hearers to think and listen for themselves. This
-was the intention which lay below the reverent behaviour
-exacted from a Scripture class. By means of this she
-strove to impress the importance to the hearer of being
-still, ready, attentive, free from selfish or idle thought.
-She prepared not only the lesson, but also herself to give
-it, with a devotion and self-denial which she never allowed
-to become relaxed by pressing business, age, or infirmity.</p>
-
-<p>Not only was Friday evening strictly kept for the final
-preparation of the lesson, but the ordinary details of
-school business attended to before prayers were put aside
-on the day it was given. No one in the College would
-have thought on those days of speaking to Miss Beale
-beforehand except on some urgent matter. Writing to
-a young teacher in 1880, she said: ‘I used to prepare
-my lessons on my knees, (don’t say this to others).
-You would find it a help, I think, to do this sometimes.’</p>
-
-<p>This earnestness and diligence were shared by many of
-the class-teachers. In a short account of Miss Belcher,
-which appeared in the College Magazine of 1898, Miss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-Beale said: ‘Only those who knew her intimately were
-aware of the long study and extreme pains she took with
-her Scripture lessons. Every Friday at Cheltenham we
-used to meet and go over the Saturday lesson together.’</p>
-
-<p>The annual midsummer examination was no mere test
-of knowledge gained, but, like the weekly notes, a real
-exercise of thought. In this matter Miss Beale received
-the full sympathy and co-operation of the Rev. E.
-Worsley, who for many years examined the upper
-classes of the College in Scripture.<a name="FNanchor_71" id="FNanchor_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a></p>
-
-<p>The subject of Miss Beale’s Scripture lessons was
-generally a Gospel or an Epistle. Occasionally she
-would take the book of Genesis, from which she would
-draw much instruction on Sin, Freewill, Faith. Perhaps
-her favourite subject was the Gospel of St. John. Remembering
-the Saturday class, the awe with which she would
-speak of the Logos, or with passionate devotion follow
-the sublime teaching of the later chapters of that book,
-the glowing ardour with which she would heap up fact
-and proof concerning the Resurrection, occur at once to
-the memory.</p>
-
-<p>Letters to old pupils who had become teachers in
-other schools show Miss Beale’s reasons for dwelling on
-certain points. To Miss Wolseley Lewis, head-mistress
-of the Graham Street Church High School, she wrote in
-1897 concerning 1 Cor. vii.:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Yes—I have taken it. There is no need to insist on every
-word. In reading one’s Bible some things are not suitable for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-children, but the teaching of those chapters regarding the
-sacredness of the body is extremely valuable. Robertson on
-Corinthians is very helpful.</p>
-
-<p>‘I will see if I can find my notes, they would be useful to
-you; but you need not be afraid to take it, you will like it.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And again in January 1898 on the same subject:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have looked in vain for my notes on Corinthians. I think
-Robertson will give you much useful help in working out the
-more difficult chapters. It is very important with elder girls not
-to leave out the teaching which comes naturally out of the Epistle,
-on the sacredness of marriage, and the responsibility of choice,—on
-the certain promises that if we ask guidance it will be
-given. The example of Abraham in choosing a wife for his son
-may be cited,—the necessity of waiting for guidance,—praying
-for light until it comes, when we are called on to decide the
-most important question of our whole lives. One may insist on
-the duty of being so equipped that we can earn our own living,
-and not be tempted into the disgrace of a mercenary marriage.
-One may just touch upon the detestable teaching of some
-modern works, that our affections and acts are beyond our control.
-I feel sure you will find you can do much to help girls
-thus.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Miss Arnold at Truro she wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘As regards Acts: I should say not; because one is so much
-drawn aside to history and geography; but one may work in
-Epistles, etc., if there is an examination required. I made up
-my mind I would not take it again.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And again, in 1891, on the use of Scripture teaching:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I think what we should do is to make it come home to the
-children in their daily life as a clergyman hardly can. We know
-their faults and temptations. I often take the baptismal vow.
-I really can’t find time to write much, and it is so impossible to
-suggest much. I am sure you will find things easier when you
-begin.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The immense detail of the teaching, following as it
-did the innumerable suggestions that one text might
-give, was sometimes confusing to a new class. A term’s
-lessons might be occupied with a few verses only. Then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-there is no doubt that Miss Beale’s large way of thinking
-and comprehensive form of expression was difficult to
-follow. This did not lessen with age. New pupils, particularly
-of late years, were often filled with despair at
-the prospect of having to write out the lessons. Many
-felt the Sunday work it involved to be a strain. This
-was less the case at first, when perhaps intellectual interests
-had more undisputed sway. The life in College,
-as in other spheres, has become more full and offers
-fewer spaces for uninterrupted thought. Sometimes a
-whisper that her Scripture lessons were too difficult
-reached the Lady Principal. It grieved her, but she
-never quite believed it. She wrote of it to Miss
-Arnold:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I like you to tell me what is said, but then I do not like to
-know more.... There are others much older to whom I
-address myself, and I see they do enter more and more as the
-year goes on, and I am teaching more now for the future. I do
-think I fortify some more for the trials of their future life than
-I did when you were here. Those who cannot follow, ought to
-be put into a class where the teaching is less difficult. They
-do not say this, I hope, about my Monday lessons, only the
-Saturday....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The patient correction and explanation of the pupils’
-essays on the lessons was not the least part of the Scripture
-work. How full, elaborate, and diligent this correction
-was will not readily be understood by any who do
-not know the Cheltenham system. But though Miss
-Beale wrote a great deal in the girls’ books, her corrections
-were often framed on the Socratic method so much
-prized by her. To take an example. A vague use of
-the word <em>infinitely</em> has written against it, ‘Do you mean
-from eternity?’ ‘The <em>universe</em>,’ writes one pupil lightly,
-to have the word underlined and with ‘<em>Meaning</em>’ written
-above it. And she had a wonderful eye for thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-and effort. No writer, however poor, whose work
-showed signs of these was discouraged. One writes of
-this:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have one of my old Scripture books, and on looking it over,
-for the first time for many years, I am most struck by her power
-of seeing good in the very crude attempts of a girl of sixteen. It
-seems to me marvellous that she, with her great intellect, could
-have put herself on our level, so as to see when we had <em>thought</em>,
-and to encourage us with the “s” and “g” that we valued so
-highly. I am afraid I used to look out more for the “g’s” than
-for the comments and corrections that showed how much pains
-she took <em>herself</em> with each attempt of ours.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A good deal of enthusiastic drudgery was needed for
-the corrector of twenty or thirty Scripture books every
-week. Even Miss Beale found it hard at times, and
-would write:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Much idle time again. At 10 <span class="smcapuc">P.M.</span> Thursday not touched a
-correction. Thus unfaithful while I am so much helped.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Tired, but terribly negligent. Put off books in a really unpardonable
-way, and felt irritable at work.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In dealing with individual character, faults, and weakness
-Miss Beale showed no common tact, and often
-surpassing astuteness. To begin with, she was herself so
-well disciplined, so well attuned to the highest thought
-of work for others, that probably she did not even feel
-irritated by the errors and mistakes of her children.
-Certainly she never showed annoyance. It is impossible
-even to think of her being satirical or sarcastic either in
-teaching or in dealing with faults of manner or character.
-She would have considered it unpardonable in an under-teacher
-to be so, almost as reprehensible as to treat or
-speak of a child as stupid. She had indeed a special
-love for ‘ugly ducklings,’ in whom she would frequently
-perceive and draw out a latent swanhood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Some things—such as what she termed the ‘petty
-larceny of her time’ by those who prolonged an interview
-by aimless small talk—did irritate her; but she
-would no more have been annoyed by the shortcomings
-of a child than a doctor would be at the illness of a
-patient. Though able to adapt herself spontaneously to
-individual characteristics, she had certain distinct lines
-along which she worked. Dealing with ordinary childish
-faults she would make no appeal on high religious
-grounds, used no set or stock phrases. Always, in big
-and little things, she would show the child some ground
-for expecting right action from her, pointing out something
-probably connected with her home which, a legitimate
-source of satisfaction, should be also a spur to do
-well. Or she would treat a rebellious act in such a way
-as to rob it of all its delight. An amusing instance of
-this was told by a writer in the <cite>Guardian</cite> of November
-21, 1906: ‘On one occasion a very clever student, with
-an unruly temper, refused, because some one had annoyed
-her, to eat her breakfast on the day of an important
-examination. Her form mistress begged Miss Beale to
-persuade the girl to have at least some milk. She was
-sent to Miss Beale, and was greatly startled by—“I hear
-you are fasting to-day; for a temper like yours it is probably
-a wise discipline.” Nothing more was said, but
-the girl did not refuse her luncheon.’ Such homœopathic
-treatment was sometimes also applied to idleness, a rare
-fault in a schoolgirl. It was, in ancient days, occasionally
-known in the Third Division at Cheltenham. Quite
-rarely, in consequence, a little girl would be allowed to
-do nothing but sit still all the morning. No one had a
-chance of showing obstinacy. It was a relief to more
-than one young teacher to be told that ‘You must never
-let a child have the satisfaction of holding out against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-you.’ If such a thing did occur, there was no contest,
-no opposition of superior power on the part of a teacher;
-a few, very few words from the Lady Principal would
-make the child see the futility and silliness of her attitude.</p>
-
-<p>A moral delinquency was, however, met with the very
-greatest seriousness. Parents were sometimes surprised
-at the extraordinary pains Miss Beale would take to
-obtain the confession of such a fault as copying a lesson.
-The slightest suspicion of dishonesty was always followed
-up at once, but the act was never brought home to the
-offender until there was positive proof. Then the way
-would be made easy for her, the lie prevented by something
-like this: ‘My child, I am sure you have too good
-a conscience to rest with such a thing as this upon it.’
-Conviction and confession of a fault made it immediately
-possible to show how it came about, how it might be
-prevented in the future. Especially in the matter of untruthfulness
-Miss Beale would trace the outside fault to
-its source, showing it to be a symptom of some corrupting
-force within, cowardice, vanity, or idleness. In this
-connection it is well worth while to read her remarkable
-little paper on Truth.<a name="FNanchor_72" id="FNanchor_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a></p>
-
-<p>One tale of her discrimination may well be told. A
-class-teacher received some anonymous letters which she
-took to Miss Beale, naming the girl she took to be the
-writer. Some days passed. The teacher thought the
-matter forgotten, when one morning Miss Beale said to
-her, ‘Send —— to me. I can see by her face this
-morning that she will tell me all.’ Miss Beale was not
-disappointed either in the confession or its effects.</p>
-
-<p>No one could reprove like Miss Beale. Her grief,
-her admonition were expressed not only with so much
-sympathy, but with such an absolute impersonal sense of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-rightness and justice, that it was impossible to resent
-them. ‘Nothing is more touching,’ she wrote in 1898,
-‘than the penitence of children, when they find that we
-have seen the good which is hidden, and not only the
-evil that comes forth; that we know, not only what is
-done, but what is resisted.’<a name="FNanchor_73" id="FNanchor_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> Any who had so failed became
-a special care. ‘We try,’ she wrote once, ‘to make
-her feel there is no anger at all, but sympathy and an
-anxious watchfulness which will, we hope, make her more
-watchful over herself.’</p>
-
-<p>To break the rule of silence was always regarded as a
-great fault. A careless pupil, conscious of breaking it
-only once or twice, would be surprised to find in her
-term’s report, ‘Disobedient to rule.’</p>
-
-<p>A girl whose influence was seen to be a source of
-evil—a single act or conversation might be enough to
-prove it—was instantly removed. Careful as Miss Beale
-was to let no pupil go who might by any possibility be
-induced to stay, she never hesitated a moment in a case
-of this kind. The extreme seriousness with which she
-regarded this may be gathered from the following letter
-to a head-mistress:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘This is grievous. How is it that girls were allowed to go out
-by themselves? I wonder, too, that Miss —— did not <em>see</em> there
-was something wrong. No girls can act thus without some
-unnatural excitement. Then are there no prefects in the house?
-no elder girls to be relied on?—no confidential servant? I don’t
-see how you can keep <em>any</em> one of the three, but perhaps there
-are degrees of guilt. It was so different at ——. A girl began
-to <em>talk</em> as she ought not—the younger girls told the seniors,
-the seniors came to ——; she told me, and within two hours the
-girl had left the house. There ought to be such confidence
-between the seniors and the head of the house, and constant
-vigilance over the girls’ characters and <em>insight</em>. I always feel
-that a school is at the mercy of one naughty girl, and we must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-never relax our vigilance. It is sad to think that they have
-degraded women in the eyes of all that know it.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Such instances are stated, not because it was continually
-the part of the Principal and her staff to deal with
-iniquity. On the contrary, the order and conduct of the
-school were singularly good,—the sense of duty, fostered
-by a call to exercise it rather than by precept, was
-unusually high. One means by which this was maintained
-was the constant collaboration of the parents. In
-all matters Miss Beale tried to take them with her,
-encouraged them to come to her, to talk over the
-children, spoke to the children about them, wrote to
-them on special matters, tried to get them to understand
-her aims. Her letters, too, show what pains she took
-to bring about a real co-operation. On one occasion
-no less than ten letters passed between Principal, parent,
-and class-teacher on so simple a matter as a child returning
-in the afternoon, according to a school rule, to do
-a lesson over again. Miss Beale won the child to
-see and do what was right, but she also wrote to the
-mother:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I fear you have led your child to think there is a question
-to be settled now as to which is the supreme authority. Of
-course, if this is so, it is much to be deplored; it is something
-like a conflict between father and mother before their child.
-We so earnestly wish that the home and school should be one in
-spirit. If this cannot be, it is best, as I have already said, that
-the child should be placed in another school.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>One letter to a parent on a matter of the same kind
-ended with this postscript: ‘Sometimes we cannot, and
-sometimes we ought not, to keep a promise made under
-a wrong impression. Consider Herod’s case.’</p>
-
-<p>Parents who did not send their children back on the
-right day, or who kept them at home for insufficient<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-reason, always heard from her. She would write thus:</p>
-
-<p>‘Had I known how difficult it would be for —— to
-return, I should have advised her remaining here for her
-holiday’; or, ‘I know things are not considered so
-serious at a girls’ school as at a boys’ school, but no boy
-would be received back, I am sure, at one of our great
-public schools who had been absent without the leave of
-the Head-master.’</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, Miss Beale was always most
-anxious to support the authority and dignity of the
-parent. Once, when this seemed not to have been done
-by a teacher, she wrote: ‘She saw when I pointed it
-out how very wrong it was even to hint to a child that
-I thought her mother in the wrong.’ ‘She was never
-tired,’ ran a notice by an old pupil after her death, ‘of
-impressing upon the girls that home must come first in
-their affections. It was indeed pathetic to hear her
-speak, as she did almost weekly in her addresses to the
-assembled divisions, of the beauty of the relation of a
-child to its parents.’</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to do more than refer to the many
-letters which show the confidence and gratitude of the
-College parents, but, as an example, one from a father
-who held high official rank, on his daughter’s passing
-an examination in 1877, may be quoted, with its good
-wishes which were so entirely realised:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Excuse my sending you one line of sincere thanks for your
-valuable (and inestimable, I may call it) friendship towards my
-dear daughter.</p>
-
-<p>‘We were immensely pleased at her success, which we
-attribute entirely to the love of work instilled into her by your
-system at College generally, as well as by your personal influence.
-You not only obtain the respect and the devoted love
-and loyalty of your girls, but through them the admiration of
-their parents and all those who take an interest in their careers.
-I am sure few persons in the army of teachers are more highly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-esteemed than yourself, few for whom more hearty prayers are
-offered for a long, long life of usefulness.</p>
-
-<p>‘We feel so proud of our [girl’s] success. With every good
-wish for the health and prosperity both of yourself and your
-glorious College,’ etc.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Lastly and supremely, it was through Miss Beale’s
-own personal influence upon her teachers, her clearly
-defined example always before them, that the spirit of
-the College came to be what it was. She had the gift
-of inspiration in that rare degree which makes actual
-direction of less value. She did not neglect details;
-she would indicate minor matters deserving of attention
-which others would overlook; she often quoted at a
-teachers’ meeting the example of the great general who,
-on taking over a command, first paid attention to the
-boots of his men. But it was never necessary for her
-to harp upon little things, or to go personally to see if
-her wishes had been carried out. One, who had had
-some years’ experience in teaching before she arrived at
-Cheltenham as a student, spoke with something like
-rapture of the College organisation as it appeared to her
-coming fresh from other places of education.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘If I had a spare hour in the morning, it was useless to try
-and concentrate my thoughts on any study, I was simply
-fascinated by the superior attraction of watching Miss Beale’s
-government of her little kingdom. No monarch ever had more
-absolute sway over his subjects; all the threads responded to
-her lightest touch....</p>
-
-<p>‘The College, as Miss Beale made it, was an organism, the
-product of inner forces needing constant renewal of vitality,
-not a vast machine, working without friction for the production
-of clever women.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then, for the first time, my soul conceived the possibility of
-a beneficent Spirit watching over the general good, and yet
-caring for the needs of the humblest individual. Thus she,
-who so loved to point out that outward things are sacramental
-exponents of the invisible, became herself a channel through
-which I realised things unseen.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This influence was not gained through the more
-ordinary ways of intimacy. In one sense Miss Beale
-saw very little of her teachers, some, as the staff became
-very large, she hardly knew at all, though naturally with
-a few of the older ones she became more really intimate.
-There were also a few special instances of close friendship.
-Notably may be mentioned that of Miss Martha
-Brown, who came to Cheltenham about 1873, no longer
-young or strong. Her actual work in the College lasted
-but a short time, for her health soon failed altogether,
-though a keen mind, occupied and interested by a true
-love of knowledge and desire to impart it, kept her up
-for a year or so, until she was forced to resign herself
-to her last illness. For more than a year she remained
-in Miss Beale’s house, Miss Beale herself sometimes
-sharing with Miss Gore the task of nursing and caring
-for her in every way, holding it, indeed, a privilege to
-wait upon one whose spirit so soared above her circumstances,—she
-was poor as well as hopelessly ill,—one
-who, regarding the mysteries of science as a lesson-book
-given to man by God, did not weary in her study of
-them even when near the gates of death. Miss Brown
-is often mentioned in Miss Beale’s diary, and later her
-name occurs frequently among those who had passed
-beyond the veil, and whom Miss Beale specially loved
-to honour at a Guild meeting.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the greater number of the staff,
-though it is to be feared that her dislike of spending
-trifling sums of money stood in the way of even small
-hospitalities, this can have been but a secondary reason
-why she did not see more of them. It was a principle
-with her to spend time on recreation only so far as
-would help work; it was a principle to use the short
-interviews which alone were possible among large<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-numbers in the most economical way; finally, it was a
-principle that influence may be stronger and better for
-detachment from everyday occasions. To spend time
-on small talk would only fritter away good influence.
-Yet, in thinking of this, there must occur to the memory
-of some, at least, that she had a kind of dread of the
-word influence, as implying something personal, that
-she thought it dangerous to try to establish a sphere of
-influence, that she never consciously tried to acquire it.
-Once when a petition was put forward against the
-suffrage for women, Miss Beale, who declined to sign
-it, said that one reason urged upon her for doing so
-seemed so poor, namely, that the vote would impair the
-influence of women with men.</p>
-
-<p>One aim, a common self-devotion in all was what
-she desired. To further it meetings of the staff were
-constantly held, when she would speak serious words
-which would burn themselves into the soul of many
-a young teacher. Her intense earnestness impressed,
-her tremendous claim was irresistible. Nothing for self!
-all for those committed to your care,—your whole life
-arranged so as best to further your work! This was
-the claim she made, and to this she found response.
-Individually she helped much by a quiet word now and
-then, by a little unexpected note, sometimes by a long
-letter. One young teacher, who was apt to become
-excited in the enjoyment of her work, was surprised one
-morning to receive in the midst of it a little note, which,
-when deciphered, ran, ‘My dear child, try to work
-quietly. We must not let good feeling go off in steam.’
-Those who were long at Cheltenham could tell of many
-such instances of watchful kindness; letters to those
-who left to work elsewhere are full of it. She had a
-wonderfully keen perception for reality of intention and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-earnestness in work, and was quick to encourage any
-who showed these qualities. One who was long on the
-staff at Cheltenham has written thus of the help she
-received from the Principal when she first went:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I often think of the days when I first began to teach, just
-a beginner. How Miss Beale encouraged and inspired one. I
-remember when she came in to one of my early geography
-lessons, an atrociously bad one, she spoke so kindly to me
-afterwards about it, and suggested that I should give up the
-subject for a time and study it before I taught it again. Later,
-she showed me a book with new ideas on the teaching of
-geography, and asked if I would try again. I did, and it
-became my special subject whilst I was at College, all through
-her kindly encouragement and help. She was always so delightfully
-sympathetic about one’s family and friends too, and she
-never forgot one’s home circumstances.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>When it was necessary to find fault or alter an
-arrangement Miss Beale never shrank from doing what
-she believed to be for the good of the whole, even at
-the cost of personal convenience. But she was always
-careful not to reprove except in such a way as to leave
-an absolute sense of justice. There was no sting in her
-rebuke. And she could own herself wrong. She had
-no foolish fear about giving herself away. One member
-of the staff could tell of long and repeated application for
-an arrangement which she knew to be right, but which
-Miss Beale absolutely and bluntly refused. At last it
-was granted. Miss Beale herself came and stood patiently
-watching the removal of desks, etc., involved. It took at
-least an hour. When she had seen it finished, she said:
-‘I see you were right in insisting on this.’ ‘She has
-given in, and I could die for her!’ exclaimed the teacher,
-as she reported the incident to another concerned in it.</p>
-
-<p>It has often been said that the College teachers were
-overworked. It would be truer, perhaps, to state that
-too many chose to overwork, and that it was easy to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-do so. Miss Beale, who taught, read, wrote so much,
-interviewed people, conducted any amount of College
-business, and yet found time to write upon Browning or
-the Fourth Dimension, was unable rightly to estimate
-how little a young woman of average intelligence can
-do. She had to learn it by actual experience of cases,
-and she tried to learn it. She was always anxious to
-readjust a burden, took infinite trouble to do so, but
-did not always realise the weakness of many a willing
-horse, or the want of common-sense, which will make
-people heap up tasks or work without plan. She never
-wanted to play herself, could not understand that any
-one should seriously wish to do so; she therefore regarded
-such a thing as the teachers’ tennis-ground as quite
-superfluous.<a name="FNanchor_74" id="FNanchor_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> Nor could she understand why any should
-wish to live out of sight of the place of their work.
-Even in the summer holidays she frequently chose the
-Sanatorium for a residence. Her own house was gradually
-absorbed by the College buildings, until it became
-almost as shut from the outer world as the women’s
-apartments in an oriental establishment, with no proper
-air and light of its own, only such as was derived from
-the surrounding corridors of the beloved College. Miss
-Beale preferred it should be so. Yet this attitude was
-but the defect of the great qualities by which she was
-enabled to make a complete self-surrender, and to call
-upon others to do the same ‘for the work’s sake.’ The
-only teachers who really felt ill-used or misunderstood,
-and who perhaps had some genuine ground for their
-complaint, were those who were unwilling to take
-trouble over fresh methods and subjects, or who were
-unable to rise to the high standard put before them,
-innocently thinking that the profession of a school-mistress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-was just an interesting occupation, or a means
-of earning a livelihood. Yet the practical side had its
-place. It was to Miss Beale’s foresight and initiative
-that the Pension Fund was in the first instance due.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s letters to Miss Clara Arnold, with whom
-she had a close correspondence from the time Miss
-Arnold left the College to become a teacher until her
-death in March 1906, show at once her ideal, and her
-close individual care for her own child. Some of the
-most interesting are quoted here:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘May God bless you and prosper your work. You look
-to me too eager,—will you understand my word? Try to feel
-more what I was saying to-day, that work is not ours but God’s,
-and so we may look up peacefully, trustingly, committing our
-work to Him. If we try to serve Him in sincerity, He will
-perfect that which is lacking. Are not those chapters in
-Ezekiel comforting, when we feel our shortcomings, and that
-we sometimes lead children wrongly? Because the shepherds
-made them to err—“I myself will be their shepherd.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 1881.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I wish I could help you, my dear child. I have copied
-out for you parts of an address given to teachers some years
-ago by Mr. Body.<a name="FNanchor_75" id="FNanchor_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> I took notes of it and send some to you.
-You must not let your spiritual life die down, you must get
-oil to burn in the lamp of your being: that spirit of grace and
-life and light of the soul. Such times of dryness do seem to
-be sent at times to try our faith; whether we serve God for
-His gifts and the joys of religion, but often they are the result
-of disobedience to the Voice of the Spirit. “Because I called
-and ye refused,” etc. Some unfaithfulness to what we knew to
-be right, some self-indulgent ways, some sloth. Sometimes
-there is a sin unknown, and God would make us search it out;
-sometimes hidden like Achan’s piece of gold, it causes us to
-turn our backs on our enemies. We have to find out and
-acknowledge the sin.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t understand about your Sundays. I find I need so
-much that quiet day. I think you should <em>resist</em> making it a <em>social</em>
-day, as friends expect,—have a good portion alone for prayer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-and study—for the study of rather deep books. “Build yourselves
-up, beloved, in your most holy faith.” Take portions of
-the Bible and work them out with good commentaries, above
-all with prayerful study.</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you intercede enough? If our prayers become selfish
-they lose life. Remember the cruse of oil.</p>
-
-<p>‘I wonder if you could sometimes go to St. Peter’s, Eaton
-Square, to a Bible class, which Mr. Wilkinson holds generally
-once a fortnight on Fridays after afternoon service. I should
-like you to see him; but I care for his teaching on Sundays
-less than on week-days. It is a fashionable congregation and
-the church crowded, still I wish you would go, because he
-seems to feel the presence of a living God more than almost any
-one I have heard.</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you go to Church now or to the Brethren’s services? To
-me the Church services and seasons, and especially the silent
-half-hour while others are communicating, is full of teaching.
-“I will come to them and make them to sit down to meat and
-will serve them.” Do you know the “Imitation”? If not, let
-me send you a copy. Perhaps God speaks to <em>you</em> better in other
-ways.</p>
-
-<p>‘Have you let opportunities slip of helping others? Now see
-if there is some one to whom you might give a cup of cold
-water. Thank God for such an opportunity, and ask Him
-to refresh your own soul and He will, but you must be patient.
-Not at first does He answer. Partly this dryness is to teach
-you humility and sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>‘I would recommend you to be sympathetic in spite of it.
-Make some definite rule for devotion and <em>keep</em> to it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Be particular about <em>time</em>, one may waste so much in mere
-talk; have some rule and respect it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Take a little time at mid-day for prayer. Then if you
-don’t feel right, just go on quietly and untroubled, trying to <em>do</em>
-as well as you can.</p>
-
-<p>‘Read some daily portion on your knees and look up in faith.
-He “feedeth the young ravens that call upon Him.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To one who wrote that she found the character of the
-county in which her school was placed ‘detestable.’</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am most sorry about your finding the —— character “detestable.”
-If you have seemed called to work there, you must
-be intended to love them, to see what is good in them first, then
-what needs correction. I dare say their good qualities are just
-complementary to yours, just what you want.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘How does your Bishop feel about the flock over which the
-Great Shepherd has made him overseer? and how does the
-Great Shepherd Himself feel towards our detestable characters?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Many letters to young teachers dealt with the care
-of health, which was always impressed as a sacred duty
-upon girls and teachers alike. Body and mind should
-be kept fit for duty. Hence social engagements which
-would make it imperative to sit up late at night should
-be cut off as far as possible. Holidays should be spent
-in such a way as to gain complete freshness and rest
-and where there was no risk of infection, not even of
-taking cold.</p>
-
-<p>Here is one to Miss Arnold:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am so vexed to hear about this chronic headache. Remember
-it is one of your duties to God, Who has given you
-work, to keep yourself fit, so you must use every means. I
-dare say a tonic <em>would</em> do you good.</p>
-
-<p>‘Take warning too by —— and do not put too great a spiritual
-strain upon your soul; the body is to have rest and not too
-great excitement. There have been times of weakness when
-I have not dared to let myself feel,—not at church or I should
-have broken down. You are not as weak as that, I hope.
-I believe you ought to do less in the holidays.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Again, a month later she wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘But I often think that you drive your <em>poor</em> body too hard;
-if we do that, we have to carry “the ass” instead of the ass
-carrying us, and then we break down under the burden.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Here is a letter to another head-mistress:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I do wish you would take a real rest and holiday. I feel
-sure it would be more economical in the end. You have led
-two lives, and for awhile I want you to lead none, go to sleep....
-Those whom you have inspired will carry on your work,
-and then I hope you will come back with fresh energy to take
-up not all, but a part of the work you have done.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale could also enter into the feelings of
-exhaustion and depression which follow some special trial
-connected with work. But the sympathy she showed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-was ever bracing, as may be seen in the following extracts
-from letters:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I feel anxious about you, but don’t know what can be done,
-and think that the school must suffer if you let these private
-troubles occupy your field of vision.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am grieved that you are feeling so exhausted. If your
-post is clearly at Truro, if you have no call to leave it, then
-you must brace yourself again, and the work <em>will</em> be done all
-right, whether in joy or sorrow. If God has given it you,
-He will give the strength to do it. We are inclined to lie
-like the impotent man thinking “I can’t.” Directly we hear
-Christ’s voice—we can! but it may be this body which you
-starved and ill-treated and worked so hard—“the ass,” as St.
-Francis, I think, called it, has been overdriven.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There were many teachers who heard from Miss Beale
-just at the moment when they seemed to need help.
-A few words of encouragement would come at such
-times as the beginning of new work. To one she wrote
-always for the opening day of the term. Two such
-letters follow:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 18, 1897.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I am thinking of you on this your opening day, and this
-text seemed given me for you. “Be strong, and He shall
-comfort (strengthen, <i>i.e.</i>) thine heart, and put thou thy trust in
-the Lord.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Try, my child, to live more this year for your children, and
-to enter, as you are doing, more into the thought that to save
-our lives we must lose them.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>September 18, 1899.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I have been thinking about you, and supposed you would
-begin to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p>‘What a glorious Epistle for this week. May you be
-strengthened with might by the Spirit, and be filled with all
-the fulness of God. His power does work in it, above all that
-we ask or think.</p>
-
-<p>‘The prayer in “Great Souls” speaks specially of those worn
-down by sickness. I am sorry you feel weak, but the heat
-has tried every one, and I think you will revive when your
-children gather round you.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps this sort of class will be better for you, and I think
-you are suited for it, because you are sympathetic, and will
-encourage those who feel themselves backward or not clever,
-to use the powers they have, to do what they can. May our
-Lord bless and comfort and guide you, my dear child.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The College was not an easy place to leave. Miss
-Beale was proud of the number of head-mistresses she
-sent out, but she grudged parting with her best teachers.
-And there were many who, like Miss Belcher,<a name="FNanchor_76" id="FNanchor_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> sacrificed
-their own interests to that of the College.</p>
-
-<p>The following is a characteristic letter on the subject:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>February 1894.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Miss Wolseley Lewis, who has been here nineteen years
-as pupil and teacher, who is B.A., gold medallist, all round,
-a charming character, good churchwoman, excellent influence,
-has come to ask me for a testimonial! I wish I could write
-she is horrid!</p>
-
-<p>‘I am losing Miss Edmonds, another gold medallist, and so
-good all round, because she wants to be M.D. and missionary.
-I think it is cruel to take people at this time of year. Is there
-any chance of Canon Holland waiting?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But when Miss Wolseley Lewis went to Graham
-Street, she wrote to her:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘You have been much in my thoughts this last Sunday. The
-sorrow of this year<a name="FNanchor_77" id="FNanchor_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> seems to have drawn us nearer, and it is
-hard to part with you; but I feel you have been called to this
-work, and I am in the depths of my heart glad. May you
-in some degree realise the life of the ideal woman, through the
-indwelling of the Holy Ghost.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>‘I have known her,’ wrote a head-mistress after the
-death of Miss Beale, ‘for thirty-six years now, and she
-has been the truest and most valued of friends to me.
-How we who are head-mistresses of smaller schools will
-miss her advice and help it is difficult to express.’</p>
-
-<p>And Miss Beale could be most generous in parting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-with her best even in obedience to the claims of ordinary
-life, claims which she did not find it easy always to
-recognise. The following letter gives an example of
-this:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘There can be only one answer under the circumstances,—you
-feel you could not return, and I should feel as you do in
-your place. It is a great blow to me, for we have learned to
-feel such trust in one another, and one cannot trust these young
-teachers to every one.... I shall miss from my staff one
-whom I had learned to regard as a dear and faithful friend and
-fellow-worker.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Many more extracts might be made from Miss Beale’s
-letters to show her care for teachers and her supreme
-interest in all that concerned their welfare, but in many
-cases they suffer by separation from their context. Therefore,
-from the large mass of correspondence left, a certain
-number of letters dealing with various subjects have
-been selected to form a chapter by themselves.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">PARERGA</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<p>‘All the great mystics have been energetic and influential, and their
-business capacity is specially noted in a curiously large number of
-cases.’</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Inge</span>, <cite>Bampton Lectures</cite>, Preface vii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>One outcome of Miss Beale’s time of personal spiritual
-distress, one which bore directly on what she considered
-as St. Hilda’s work, was an arrangement made for the
-first time in 1884 for devotional meetings for teachers
-at the end of the summer term. After 1885, when a
-second gathering took place, they were held alternately
-with the biennial Guild meetings. Like much of Miss
-Beale’s work, these Quiet Days, as they were called,
-resulted rather from a definite idea than from a formal
-plan. Their arrangement and character appear to have
-been due to the occurrence of certain conditions and
-circumstances while Miss Beale was forming a decision
-to help others who might be suffering as she herself
-had done. Plans for this help began to pass through
-her mind as early as the summer of 1882, while she
-was herself, as she would have expressed it, ‘in the fire.’
-In July 1882 she wrote to a friend:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 25, 1882.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘What occurred to me was this—that something of a more
-definite Retreat might be held for teachers during the vacation.
-Mr. Wilkinson had at Christmas some Quiet Days which were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-very valuable and helpful. Still these were not quite like a
-regular Retreat:—because very few who went were able to be
-really quiet in London lodgings, and so could not get the
-absolute silence and repose which make a Retreat valuable....
-Most of the regular Retreats are too general to give teachers
-the <em>special</em> help, and many are so distinctly High Church, that
-one could not venture to recommend young teachers to go.... I
-<em>can’t</em> accept the decision “nothing can be done”; theories
-of distress which reach me as the old light seems to go out,
-and the dark waves close in, are too distressing. We cannot
-administer “a universal pill”; but we can to some extent
-support and comfort those who are passing through the darkness;
-one can out of one’s own experience tell them that
-the stars will shine out once more; one can teach some few
-simple lessons of faith and patience and hope; one can show
-that there are <i lang="la">a priori</i> and <i lang="la">a posteriori</i> grounds for the faith
-we hold,—though mysteries unfathomable remain in every department
-of thought; and in such a meeting, personal help and
-advice might be given to meet special individual difficulties.
-It is here that the Christian Evidence Society fails. Teachers
-have not time for <em>much</em> reading and there are masses of books,
-many of them containing very little matter and plenty of words
-and arguments, which are useless for our special difficulties.
-Of course Retreats are not simply for such intellectual treatment
-of doubts, and one would look for a quickening of faith
-by the special services and united prayers. So I thought it
-might seem good to hold some sort of Retreat in Oxford next
-year.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was not till the beginning of 1883 while attending a
-Retreat in Warrington Crescent—a time to which she
-often recurred as of much help and strengthening—that
-Miss Beale was able definitely to consider what might be
-done. There were friends to whom she could turn, who
-took trouble to help her by thinking over the matter
-from her point of view. Among these may specially be
-mentioned the late Archbishop of Canterbury and Mrs.
-Benson, the late Bishop of St. Andrews, and Canon
-Body. To Mrs. Benson she wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>Epiphany, 1883.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Whilst others were rejoicing at the recent appointment I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-have been conscious of a mixed feeling, for the Archbishop of
-Canterbury will not be able to do what the Bishop of Truro
-had half promised, in the way of helping by some kind of Retreat,
-teachers who have difficulties of belief. Mr. Wilkinson has also
-been unable to give us the Quiet Days for which we had hoped.
-So some Head Mistresses, who were in Retreat, and felt the
-great need, asked for special prayers for teachers in Colleges and
-High Schools, and that some way might be found to help them.
-Mr. Body responded very heartily to our request, and desired us
-to make it the subject of our special petition each week during
-the year. Afterwards in conversation, he spoke of the valuable
-help you had been able to give, and this has set me thinking
-whether we could not ask you to make your knowledge and
-experience more widely useful.</p>
-
-<p>‘Our main difficulty would be to meet the doubts of those
-who have them, without suggesting doubts to those who have
-not been called to encounter this trial.</p>
-
-<p>‘It has occurred to me, that perhaps there might be something
-on the model of the Guild for the Sick, combining the principle
-of the “Instruction by Correspondence” classes.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... Perhaps you may think me intruding—my acquaintance
-with you is so slight—and unpractical, but the need is great and
-immediate, and I think you will feel this too. I have gained
-such painful experience, both from within and without, of the
-misery of those who have once seen and then lost the sight of
-the invisible; those who have left, especially those who become
-teachers, often turn to me for help, which I feel so incompetent
-to give, and which I have not time to do properly. One is
-writing to me now, who is in a school in which there are sixteen
-teachers, ten of whom have given up all outward sign of the
-religious life. I long to be able to refer those who need guidance
-to some who are able to help them. Every other trial can be
-borne, but this is utter misery.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... It is not enough to preach sermons, and print books,
-as well might we furnish a treatise on Arithmetic to a child
-whose sum is wrong; we must find out and show why it is
-wrong. The Church did not make its way by such means at
-first, at least not without daily discussions “in the school of
-one Tyrannus.” Of course I do not overlook that some of the
-difficulties of belief are moral, but these could be met by the
-means I suggest.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think it is <em>very</em> important that members should be able to
-enquire anonymously; come “by night” as it were, and should
-be assured that no one would try to find out the name.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To Canon Body, who had sent her a letter full of
-sympathy and interest, she wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am so glad you wrote thus freely, for it has made me understand
-better how much you can feel for those in this deepest
-sorrow, and yet have a sure and certain hope that they will rise
-out of that Hades. It is, as you say, most cheering to find
-movements of the same kind in different places. If there is a
-spiritual tide, the waters can only be lifted by extra mundane
-force.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Gradually the plan shaped itself. For a time Miss
-Beale hoped to be able to arrange at Oxford a Retreat
-followed by a conference, with lectures and discussions on
-theological subjects. This proved to be impracticable.
-Then she sought to carry out the plan at Cheltenham.
-She was advised to limit herself to two or three days of
-quiet study and devotion with addresses. She would not,
-however, relinquish the idea of some kind of conference.
-The scheme stated in the following extract from a letter
-was very much what was actually carried out:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I hope the archbishop will be so good as to ask some one to
-give the addresses in the Quiet Days.... I should be there
-and a few of my friends, head mistresses, and we should make
-our subsequent lessons harmonise with the previous instruction,
-so that there should be unity. I do not mean to give lessons on
-<em>methods</em> of teaching in the ordinary mechanical sense; but on
-our vocation and the moral aspects of our work, and then I
-thought we could get some one to give Bible lessons on the
-books set by Oxford and Cambridge, some one who knows the
-difference between dead and living teaching. We must have
-enough to occupy those who come for the whole month, though
-I expect only a few of those who come will remain so long.
-There will, I find, be a large proportion of earnest teachers who
-will be able to help and strengthen the weak.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Rev. V. H. Stanton<a name="FNanchor_78" id="FNanchor_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> kindly acceded to Miss
-Beale’s request to give the addresses at the three Quiet
-Days which opened the conference in 1884. In the following<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-year Canon Mason did this. It is noticeable
-that on almost every occasion the conductor of this
-Retreat for teachers was drawn from the ranks of Cambridge.
-The reason for this Miss Beale often explained,
-as in the following letter written as late as April 1904:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have had nearly all the book you sent read to me; there
-are some beautiful thoughts, but I don’t feel quite at home in
-the general atmosphere. It is difficult to describe, but I remember
-when Archbishop Benson was choosing a Conductor for our
-Retreat, he said one day, he would rather choose from the Cambridge
-school of thought. I asked him what was the difference
-between Cambridge and Oxford, and he said, “The latter began
-with the thought of sin, the former with the thought of the
-Divine Life in man.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Some day when we meet I may be able to make clearer what
-I mean.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Stanton’s earnest sympathetic addresses were
-greatly valued by those who were present in 1884. Not
-less prized was the generous kindness of the Lady Principal
-in the weeks which followed the Retreat. Miss
-Beale not only gave frequent addresses on various subjects,
-continuing in some the line of thought begun on
-the Quiet Days, she was also constantly at the service
-of any member of the party for discussion or counsel.</p>
-
-<p>‘I expected certainly to see something of you,’ one
-who had been present wrote afterwards to her, ‘but that
-you would constitute yourself the mother of the party,
-be with us at meals, and do so very much for our
-improvement and entertainment was quite undreamt of.
-Indeed, we were all touched by it. I think those quiet
-days at the beginning gave a special tone of earnestness
-to the gathering.’</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Soulsby wrote of the ‘help and comfort you gave
-to me and so many others by arranging that Retreat. I
-have never been present at anything so calculated to do
-steady and lasting good.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And many spoke of the ‘sense of fellowship’ which
-had been gained by meeting so many with like aims and
-interests; they told how they were going back to work
-with ‘new hope for the future,’ or with ‘many new
-lights and helpful suggestions to aid’ them. Some said
-the work of teaching had been represented to them in a
-new light, some that the conference helped them to a
-new start. One told how she was ‘in danger of making
-shipwreck when your wise counsel saved me.’ Another
-said: ‘One thing struck me very much, the fellow-feeling
-and anxiety to help that teachers who have been
-at Cheltenham have for each other.’</p>
-
-<p>More than a hundred teachers, many of them belonging
-to Cheltenham, were present for the first days of
-the conference in 1884. Some twenty outside teachers
-remained for the whole month. The time was long
-enough to foster real intimacy. A great deal of time
-and thought had been devoted to arrangements beforehand,
-in order that all might get the utmost benefit from
-the time. In this Miss Beale received much willing
-co-operation from her own staff, and Miss Caines lent
-Fauconberg House and her servants. Miss Beale was
-specially anxious that during the Quiet Days all should
-have the opportunity of keeping well the silence which
-was observed. Those who had no rooms of their own
-had little sitting-rooms assigned them in the College, the
-music-rooms being available for this purpose. That part
-of the Cheltenham world which still regarded Miss Beale
-with suspicion and to whom a Retreat appeared, even as
-late as 1884, to be a dangerous High Church innovation,
-raised a cry of alarm. The music-rooms had been turned
-into cells! It is not known what the word implied to
-those who made the outcry, and it was soon silenced, but
-it caused a little annoyance at the time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The month passed in teaching and helping, though
-gladly given out of her own holidays, was an undoubted
-physical strain to Miss Beale. She wrote to Mrs.
-Benson:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I wish I had never said I would try to write a paper for
-Thursday at the Health Exhibition. I do not like to leave even
-for a day, as one ought to go on trying to help those who
-remain. We do feel so grateful for all the time and thought
-you and the Archbishop have been good enough to give us,
-especially in the selection of Mr. Stanton. For myself, I should
-never have had the courage to go on; (one gets nervous)....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And she was tired. The last entry in her diary for
-that month is this:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<i>August 27.</i>—End of month at Fauconberg. Last address
-not good, and result of neglect.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Yet Miss Beale probably felt such a strain far less than
-any other head-mistress would have done, so absorbingly
-interesting to her was this kind of work. She always
-looked back with great pleasure on that time. She
-treasured the letters she received afterwards from those
-who had been present, dated from it lasting friendships
-made with some who had come from other schools, and
-felt it had drawn her nearer to some of her own teachers.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s outside interests were concerned, as was
-natural, chiefly with education. With every educational
-movement made during the last fifty years in the direction
-of progress she became to some extent associated.
-She presided at the first meeting of head-mistresses held
-in 1874 at Myra Lodge, when the Association for Head-mistresses
-was founded with Miss Buss as president.
-‘I see,’ said Miss Beale of this meeting in 1906, ‘it is
-recorded that I presided. My recollections are only of
-lying in great pain on the sofa and taking only a feeble
-part in the discussion. I little thought that I should be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-allowed to address a conference which more than thirty
-years after numbers over two hundred and thirty members.... At
-our first meeting certain principles were
-asserted which tended to settle some difficult questions.’
-Miss Beale here doubtless refers to the very first resolution
-passed by this aristocratic body, which was to the
-effect that no school can work satisfactorily unless the
-head-mistress be entirely responsible for its internal
-management. Miss Ridley, in writing of Miss Buss,<a name="FNanchor_79" id="FNanchor_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> (to
-‘whose insight and foresight,’ said Miss Beale, ‘the
-founding of the Association was entirely due,’) has shown
-that the passing of this resolution was in itself almost a
-<i lang="fr">raison d’être</i> for the Association. For the rightful position
-of a head-mistress was not recognised without some
-difficulty and controversy. The governing bodies of
-girls’ schools could not at first be selected on the
-ground of interest and experience in educational matters.
-Another resolution passed on that occasion was to the
-effect that an examination to test the power of teachers
-is desirable.</p>
-
-<p>On the death of Miss Buss, in 1895, Miss Beale
-became president until 1897, when her term of office
-expired. She never sought re-election, her increasing
-deafness making it difficult for her to conduct meetings.
-She thought a great deal of the importance of the Association
-and of the discussions which took place at its meetings,
-and strove in every way to render them not only
-earnest but fair-minded. ‘I hope,’ she said on one
-occasion, ‘that our assemblies will not become such as
-the discussions in Parliament, merely formal, every one
-having taken a side before and being unmoved by anything
-said.’ Miss Beale several times read papers to the
-Association, and in later years the deferential welcome<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-she received from its members was very noticeable. Her
-last address, given on the request of the Association
-in June 1906, only a few months before her death, may
-be regarded as her farewell to the educational world.</p>
-
-<p>When the Association for Assistant Mistresses was
-formed, Miss Beale regarded it at first with some anxiety.
-She feared the clash of interests and promotion of suspicion
-between a head and her staff. Later, when she
-understood the work of the Association, she received it
-into favour, and on one occasion addressed a meeting of the
-western branch at St. Hilda’s. Members of the Association
-were welcomed, and sometimes spent the morning
-at College when they came over for branch meetings.
-Miss Beale, too, was always willing to let those of her
-staff who belonged to the A.A.M. Committee go up to
-London to attend meetings in term time, and was pleased
-when it fell to Miss Lumby, as President of the Association,
-to give evidence together with Mrs. Withiel, before
-the Bryce Commission in 1895.</p>
-
-<p>The Teachers’ Guild, founded by Miss Buss in 1883,
-met with warm support from the head-mistresses of the
-Association. A branch was started at Cheltenham in the
-following year, and a paper by Miss Beale read, she herself
-being indisposed at the time. She used her influence
-with her own teachers to join the Guild, and frequently
-addressed the branch meetings on such subjects as the
-Value of Examinations. In the Froebel Society she was
-also much interested and subscribed to it regularly.
-When the Church Schools’ Company was founded in
-1883, Miss Beale became at once a member of the
-Council. She was proud that the College supplied head-mistresses
-to both the Graham Street and Baker Street
-Schools.</p>
-
-<p>The hopefulness no increase of years or disappointment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-could abate, the open mind ever quick to receive
-what was good and original from those younger and less
-experienced than herself, were seen in the way Miss
-Beale greeted the work of the Child-Study Association.</p>
-
-<p>With her consent Miss Louch, then a member of the
-College staff, proceeded to America in 1894 to attend
-a course of lectures by Dr. Stanley Hall on child-study.
-On her return the Association was formed in Edinburgh,
-and in the same year a branch was started in Cheltenham,
-with Miss Beale as local president. Before her
-death she was president of the whole Association, and
-presided over the conference held in Cheltenham in
-1906, the year of her death. When the <cite>Paidologist</cite>, the
-organ of the Child-Study Association, was started, Miss
-Beale contributed largely to the guarantee fund, and for
-five years was a member of the Magazine Committee.
-She promoted the work of the Association by trying to
-get the College staff, boarding-house mistresses, and
-parents of pupils to join and assist in it.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale was among those consulted by Miss Mason
-when, in 1888, she definitely sought to give the Parents’
-Educational Union, which had had a successful year’s work
-in Bradford, a national name and character. The work
-of the society appealed greatly to Miss Beale, and the
-Cheltenham branch was one of the earliest founded.
-Her name appears among those of the vice-presidents
-in 1892.</p>
-
-<p>To pass beyond the limits of the work in which, from
-the fact of her position, the Lady Principal of Cheltenham
-was called upon to take a part, it may be noticed
-that she was always much interested in Sunday-school
-teaching, and wrote many articles upon it.
-Several of these have been printed. Her interest was
-caused largely by the numbers of old pupils who took<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-up this work, and who came to her for advice about it,
-as well as to the congenial nature of religious instruction.
-Dissatisfied with the methods or want of method
-prevailing in many Sunday-schools, she had a high ideal
-of the work for the sake both of teacher and children,
-and was always ready with sympathy and suggestion.
-To an old pupil engaged on a paper intended to point
-out some existing ills in Sunday-schools she wrote in
-1880:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I should say begin with all the good done—the necessity for
-them at the time, etc. Then speak of the evils, and with each
-sort suggest a remedy, and admit that the evils are not universal.
-Try to put it in rather a different shape, and I think it would do
-good in overthrowing some self-complacency. Especially is it
-an evil when quite raw girls—some ignorant girls such as we
-have at College—pretend to teach. Children accustomed to
-proper teaching of course fidget. I should have been a little
-rebel myself, if I had had to hear the wretched stuff that some
-children do at Sunday School. But it does, when done properly,
-draw classes together.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Institutions and societies designed to help the poor of
-Cheltenham came of course before Miss Beale’s notice.
-She never, however, allowed herself to be drawn from
-the pressing requirements of her own work, so as to
-become acquainted with the details of that which, to
-some extent, grows up round every church. She was,
-indeed, on principle, chary in her support of this, maintaining
-that in a town there was generally great waste of
-funds and labours, owing to the lack of combination.
-She wrote as early as 1881 in reference to Cheltenham:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am so anxious that we should all work in the direction
-pointed out by our Rural Dean, get all Church people to work
-together as one, for works which cannot or ought not to be
-merely parochial, and in all charitable work, wherever it is
-possible, to get all, whether Church or not, to join in opposing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-all forms of evil.... I think we should take works in order
-of importance. I may be wrong, but I have regretted the
-erection of Church steeples when there was other work that
-seemed to me of more importance [left unsupported]. I think
-the increase of offertories in churches, good as it is in many
-ways, has tended to hinder united work in the town. I do not
-know whether there ever could be a sort of Council for the
-administration of at least part of the funds so collected; but it
-does seem as if the present plan gave too much to some districts
-and too little to others, and left some institutions which have
-a claim upon all, with scarcely any support, because what is
-everybody’s business is nobody’s.... The laity have very little
-influence in the distribution of money collected in churches,
-which tends always to become a larger proportion of what is
-given away, so that much of the power to organise united work
-must rest with the clergy. And <em>living</em> forces, which are enormously
-more important than money, are wasted by “congregationalism.”
-Could there not be some larger association of
-Church workers from which some sort of administrative council
-might select persons suitable for any special work? Could not
-work sometimes be done collectively, instead of each clergyman
-doing it separately for his own congregation? I do hope that
-more and more, in one work after another, we may unite our
-forces, and if once people can be induced to look into the evils
-which exist at their very doors, they will be moved to work
-with one heart and mind to remove what is a disgrace to our
-town.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Among the institutions of Cheltenham, for which Miss
-Beale specially claimed the need of united action, was the
-Working Men’s College. She herself on one occasion
-read a paper there, her subject being ‘Self-support and
-Self-government from the point of view, not of the
-individual, but of the College.’ The paper, simple and
-direct, shows how Miss Beale could throw herself into
-the minds of those she addressed, appealing to all that
-was best in them, while at the same time putting her own
-thoughts into them. It embodies her favourite theories
-of the danger of helping people through gifts:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I do not think there are many belonging to this College
-who could not pay a few shillings annually. Self-denial adds
-value to energy.... Everybody does not agree with me.
-Some think you will misunderstand,—think we do not want help.
-I do not think you will, to judge by my own feelings. I like to
-be independent. You look at the Ladies’ College and say,
-“You have got all you want.” But time was when we were
-very poor, so poor that our Council said, ... we will have but
-another year’s trial and then shut up. We never said we would
-beg people to help us: we would make it self-supporting, or it
-should die.... I feel certain if you working-men were to say,
-We will take the management ourselves, and it shall be a
-success, that it would be, and I think that if other people
-manage and pay for it, that some of the strongest and most independent
-would stand aloof.... I am quite sure that our
-College would not have been what it is if we had had money to
-fall back upon. I might myself have left the helm and gone to
-sit quietly in the cabin while the vessel drifted on to the rocks.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Among Miss Beale’s papers there exists a very simple
-address entitled, ‘Is Death the End?’ She intended to
-read it at a little mission-room, maintained in a very poor
-street by her friends, Mr. and Mrs. James Owen. The
-subject was one which had taken strong hold of her fancy
-at the time. Some one had discovered a dragon-fly
-emerging from its chrysalis on a water-lily in the little
-pond which then existed in the Fauconberg House
-garden adjoining the College grounds. It was taken to
-Miss Beale, who saw enacted before her own eyes a
-living parable of resurrection-life. Her childlike delight
-in this came out in almost every Scripture lesson she
-gave that summer. The pond was watched for chrysalids;
-they were taken into the classrooms for the
-children to see the creatures creep out of their tombs,
-lie soft and sleepy for a little, then sail away on new-found
-wings. This true story of the dragon-fly and all
-it could teach of life, through death, Miss Beale longed
-to tell to Mrs. Owen’s poor friends. She wrote it carefully,
-and had little illustrations made; but the lecture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-was never given. ‘Mrs. Owen would not let me,’ she
-said sadly, ‘but I think I could have interested them in
-the dragon-fly.’ But Mrs. Owen was probably right,
-since the audience for whom the paper was intended was
-such as Miss Beale knew only in the pages of Browning’s
-<cite>Christmas Eve</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>In the work of the Church abroad, in the needs and
-claims of heathen peoples governed by England, in the
-various problems which arise out of these vast considerations,
-Miss Beale was interested only in a secondary way.
-That is to say, when they came before her in the work
-of her own pupils, when her girls turned to her for
-sympathy and help, then she would consider them
-enough to be able to form some definite opinion, and
-to give sound advice. The teachings of Hindoo religions
-and philosophy, and the progress of Christianity
-in India, came before her as matters of real interest in
-1883, when Pundita Ramabai was sent by the Wantage
-Sisters to study at the College. Miss Beale received her
-with the utmost warmth and friendship. She made
-every possible arrangement for her health and protection:
-she not only put at her disposal every advantage the
-College could offer, but gave up a large portion of
-her own valuable time in order to help her personally.
-She welcomed Ramabai’s long letters on religious questions
-and difficulties, answering them at equal length.
-She obtained introductions and arranged interviews for
-her with many whom she thought could help her.
-Ramabai’s ‘appetite for philosophy’ (to quote Miss
-Beale), her enthusiasm and unsparing devotion to the
-cause of her unhappy sisters in India, touched her deeply,
-and when the Home for Widows was established at
-Poona,<a name="FNanchor_80" id="FNanchor_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> Miss Beale became a large and regular subscriber<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-to it. Among her papers there is one which was perhaps
-sent to India, or was perhaps just one of those written
-expressions of some thought which had seized and filled
-her mind. It was evidently intended to be an appeal
-against the cruelty which made such homes for widows
-necessary:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘My heart,’ it runs, ‘is stirred by sorrow and pity for those
-suffering widows of India; but there are some whom I pity
-more,—those who inflict the sorrows on them, since it is far
-better to suffer than to do wrong.... But what grieves me,
-too, is the thought of the waste of all that wonderful amount
-of energy and life which God has given your country-women
-in order to bless others. If the men of India believe in
-God’s goodness and wisdom, as I think they must, even though
-they may not trust Him, they must think He has not made all
-those widows to be a burden and misery to themselves and
-others, but to do good work. What mistakes people make when
-they think that they are wiser than God.... I look forward to the
-future and rejoice and think that as India grows wiser with that
-wisdom which trusts the infinitely wise and good God, Whom
-we worship, she will send out her clever and good women, who
-are now crushed by sorrow and unkindness, into the rich harvest-fields
-of the world, will cheer them on in their work for others,
-and they will become a blessing; surely that is the only joy of
-a woman’s heart.... Not this only, there will be many who
-will gladly give up all thought of the happiness of wife or of
-mother, in its limited sense, and go forth to live for others....
-I can remember when Old Maid was a term of contempt in
-England, but it is not so now; you have seen me and sixty
-old maids working together happy and content, and if I could
-send out a hundred women where I can now send one, I should
-not have too many, so constant are the demands for “old maids,”
-as you would call them,—for teachers, nurses, missionaries, and
-all sorts of good work.... India will some time feel all that
-her wasted women’s life can do. God will put it into the
-hearts of men and of the happy women, who are sometimes
-hard on the unhappy, to set these women free to do all that is in
-their heart, and other good women will teach them to use their
-precious gift of liberty as in God’s sight.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Ramabai undoubtedly made Miss Beale realise the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-need for definite Christian teaching in India. Here is
-an interesting extract from a letter on this subject:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>1884.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Rama Bai is very learned and thoughtful, and says how
-powerless most missionaries are, for want of the knowledge
-of native philosophy and religion.... I thought that the native
-religions were feeding the higher life, but it seems not so now;
-but the state is much the same as in Greece and Rome just
-before the Christian era. She spoke much as Plato does in the
-<cite>Republic</cite> about the character of the gods in the Indian poetry,
-and felt the wonderful power of the perfect Example, and the
-inward Grace to follow it.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On hearing of Miss Beale’s death Ramabai wrote:
-‘It is over twenty-one years since I saw Miss Beale for
-the last time. But her sacred memory is quite fresh,
-and I seem to hear her pray and give Bible instruction.
-Her love and influence, her words of encouragement and
-her prayers on my behalf, have helped me much in my
-life and work.’</p>
-
-<p>In South Africa, a school at Bloemfontein, still more
-one at Grahamstown, became of interest at Cheltenham
-through the influence of Miss Strong, who prepared
-herself to work in them by some periods of time at
-the College. Many teachers at the Diocesan School,
-Grahamstown, were drawn from Cheltenham, and its
-association of old pupils was for a time affiliated with the
-Guild. Other old pupils went to India, China, Japan.
-As the number of Cheltenham missionaries increased, the
-importance and needs of their work became impressed
-more and more on some members of the Guild. In
-1878 Miss Beale, whose own interest in foreign missions
-grew steadily in later years, allowed the formation of a
-Missionary Study Circle within the Guild.<a name="FNanchor_81" id="FNanchor_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> This is the
-only special work other than that of the London Settlement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-she ever sanctioned, and this one was much safeguarded.
-When the <cite>Occasional Leaflet</cite>, the organ of
-this circle, was first published, she made it a condition
-that there should be no begging for money, nor even a
-definite urging of the claims of foreign mission work.
-She feared girls might be drawn by the attraction of
-distant and more heroic-seeming activities to neglect
-duty at home. And, as the present editor of the <cite>Leaflet</cite>
-has remarked, ‘She hardly realised how careful societies
-are in selecting and training would-be missionaries.’</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion Miss Beale, by the request of the
-late Bishop of Grahamstown,<a name="FNanchor_82" id="FNanchor_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> actually addressed a small
-missionary meeting. She began by saying:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have been asked to speak to you a few words to-day, and
-I have consented on condition that I should not advocate a
-cause. It is sometimes said, “Will you not collect money or
-bring forward such an institution?” and I say “No! my duty
-is to give principles, and to leave the definite application.”
-And if the carrying out of the principles deprives of helpers
-myself and the work that is nearest to my heart I am content,
-and so I am sure the Bishop is.’ She continued, ‘I admit
-there is sometimes a call to go abroad for those who want to
-serve Christ, and lack resolution to be cut off from home ties.
-We cannot so easily forget we are soldiers if we go out to
-an enemy’s country. We read in history of brave people who
-failed in war because when they had won a battle they could
-not be kept together; but disappeared into their own homes,
-and had to be got together again on the next emergency. So,
-I think some who feel themselves weak do well to join some
-army bound for foreign parts. They can’t run away on the
-first repulse, or give up when tired;—and the raw recruit comes
-back a veteran from his foreign campaign, able to lead the
-volunteers who have to be trained at home. Not only does a
-foreign campaign help us to break the bondage of self-indulgent
-habits, but it unites us too. There is nothing like going away
-from home and facing a common foe to unite us to those from
-whom we were severed. A neighbour whom we scarcely knew
-in Cheltenham is a friend at once in China or Africa. In the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-presence of unbelief Christians who are separated feel their
-differences in minor matters, matters of taste and feelings
-rather than of principle, to be insignificant;—and unite in the
-great battle against sin. Whilst, on the other hand, they feel
-the immense power, the great need of faith, living and real, to
-sustain them when the props of Society, of Church Services, of
-sympathetic friends are taken away;—they have to dig down
-to the rock.... In any case the battle must not begin without
-training and discipline. Useless women, because undisciplined
-in thought, in will, in action, what havoc they make! Having
-a name to live, yet dead;—these bring in confusion. Those
-who have not learned obedience, those who want credit for
-themselves, or excitement, never help to win victory.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There was one matter outside her own proper sphere
-of activity in which Miss Beale was never sparing of
-money or personal trouble. This was the work to which
-Mrs. Lancaster had first drawn her in her youth, the
-rescue and protection of women. It became, as life
-went on, specially linked with the memory of that other
-friend, of whom she loved to think as Britomart, rescuing
-her sister from the fire. When Mrs. Owen died, it
-was felt instinctively that her work for others must and
-should continue. There seemed no memorial so fit as
-a Home for Friendless Girls for one whose chosen task
-it had been to seek the lost piece of silver. Miss Beale
-translated, as it were, all her poetical thoughts, all her
-most tender memories into active co-operation, taking
-the chair at committees, addressing meetings, making
-known the needs of the Home, finding workers for it.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale herself had learned much since 1856.
-As time went on she felt less inclined to seek remedies
-for evil than to prevent its beginning; she looked more
-to causes than to resulting facts. When in 1885 Mrs.
-William Grey made an appeal for help in organising
-some definite movement among the mothers of England
-against the sins which create the necessity for rescue,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-Miss Beale responded warmly, urging her to come
-forward herself to lead it.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Ladies’ College, Cheltenham</span>, <i>August 5, 1885</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Mrs. Grey</span>,—Your beautiful letter was sent me by
-an old pupil, who with her husband, Mr. Mitchell, is one of
-the most earnest workers in the cause. The labours they have
-gone through patiently and quietly for years are immense.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well: it seems to me that we ought to have a Union, as
-large as the one you established, and which did such wonderful
-work before; but this time for—shall I say shepherding those
-who have no proper protectors, and my thoughts turn to you
-to lead in this also. (1) Because I am sure that the work you
-have done has alone made it possible to hope that we may roll
-back this flood of corruption instead of being submerged by it;
-the improvement in education has shown what women can do,
-and won for the time a respect from men, which they had not
-before. These large schools have taught them to work together
-organically, and the solid studies have strengthened them in
-every way. (2) Because you have such faith—I remember how
-strong it was when mine failed. (3) Because you would be
-able to unite people of various creeds and classes and ranks in
-this great national work—people would trust your delicacy and
-your judgment, and you would emphasise the patriotic grounds.
-I never forget your speech at Bristol, and your words about
-our “dear, dear country.” You can <em>both</em> stir the heart, and
-guide the judgment. I think that perhaps God has restored
-your health that you may lead once more.</p>
-
-<p>‘Dim visions float before my mind of an Union of Women
-which should embrace and work with the existing organisations,
-such as the Girls’ Friendly, the Metropolitan Association, and
-the Christian Young Women,—which should welcome help
-from all; for what are sectarian distinctions in the presence of
-such evils? “Let every one that nameth the name of Christ”
-join—and those too who, not naming His name, live according
-to His life....</p>
-
-<p>‘Women band themselves together to go out to nurse in
-the armies—once that was thought impossible.... <em>Perhaps</em> I
-am talking of what is impracticable. It is hard to keep calm
-enough to see clearly, when such visions hover before one. It
-is so important to keep calm, that one may neither be paralysed,
-nor make fantastic strokes instead of striking truly; and therefore
-I want you to think and guide.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘I am sure we teachers must not let ourselves be diverted
-from <em>our</em> proper work, of inspiring and setting others to work—indirectly,
-not directly, can we act. I often have to stop
-earnest teachers, who would break themselves down, and say—“If
-you want a thing done, don’t do it yourself.” But we do
-need more and more not to think of the mere giving of knowledge,
-but of lifting through education the girls’ characters;
-giving them proper ideas of marriage and what it ought to be:
-we should abolish all the frivolities of the marriage ceremonial.
-Would we had more weddings like that I attended yesterday
-of one of our teachers. I had never before been present at one
-which had really satisfied me, and there were crowds of poor
-people belonging to the “unwashed” amongst whom she had
-laboured, who behaved as fashionable congregations do not, and
-who must have gone away with a deeper sense of the meaning
-of a true marriage. We need, I think, a marriage reform
-association as much as a funeral reform. I am afraid my letter
-is a little incoherent. I am in bed with headache, after a somewhat
-exhausting week. We have had a teachers’ meeting again
-this year, beginning with some Quiet Days, and addresses to
-teachers by Canon Mason, whom the Archbishop of Canterbury
-kindly asked. I think we all thoroughly enjoyed these and
-our after meetings, and our country excursions and social
-gatherings.</p>
-
-<p>‘Miss Helen Gladstone was with us, and Ramabai, with
-teachers from all parts.</p>
-
-<p>‘Give my love to dear Miss Shireff. I don’t know what she
-will say to my urging work on you.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mrs. Grey did not decline the task thus sent back to
-her, so far as she was able to do it by writing. She was
-then living abroad in enfeebled health, but her passionate
-words touched many in England, and a movement which
-received the name of the Women’s League was set on
-foot in the usual routine way with committees and
-meetings. Miss Beale attended one or two of these,
-but does not appear to have been quite happy at them.
-She was necessarily hampered by the fact that the name
-of the College ought not to be associated with this
-special work. She felt also that she had not sufficiently
-studied the subject, nor knew enough about the organisation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-of societies other than educational, to be able to
-make suggestions before others of wide experience. On
-one occasion, when a difference of opinion arose about
-admission to the League, she felt she had not spoken as
-decisively as she should, and she wrote afterwards to
-Mrs. Grey: ‘I enclose the two circulars; but please
-do not question me. It seemed impertinent to speak
-when there were four or five Bishops’ wives present, and
-I doubt my judgment. I have given all my thought to
-other forms of organisation, and I live so much out of
-the world.’ And to the lady with whom she had
-specially differed she wrote thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have been trying to think how it was possible for you to
-misunderstand me, as I saw you did on Saturday. I thought
-you knew me too well to think I <em>could</em> wish any one to conceal
-their colours. I was <em>very</em> tired, and I see I did not make myself
-clear. May I try now?</p>
-
-<p>‘There are two parties who call themselves Agnostics: there
-are those who reject the Christian moral law, and teach a truly
-abominable doctrine; with such one could have absolutely
-<em>nothing</em> to do; no league <em>we</em> could ever join could include these,
-for they are our enemies.</p>
-
-<p>‘There are others, who hold <em>all</em> that Christ has taught us,
-who would fully accept the Christian moral law, as the one
-and only rule. I know some of these; their whole heart is
-with us; they do the work of Christ, for they go into the
-wilderness and find those wounded and stripped by thieves,
-and bring them to our inn, and bid us take care of them.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am sure our Lord will one day place such on His right
-hand, though they may question, “Lord, when saw we Thee?”
-I would not separate from them, lest I should be parted from
-Him Whose love is certainly working in them, tho’ their
-“eyes are holden” that they know Him not.</p>
-
-<p>‘I know still that we cannot join them, <em>so</em> as to do the <em>same</em>
-work, and they know it too. They gather in, they go into
-the highways and hedges; they leave the inner work to those
-who are actually disciples. One I know has just now got the
-care of two neglected portionless girls, and sent them to good
-Church schools....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘I shall be deeply grieved, if in a crisis of such danger, we
-show the enemy that we are so divided that we cannot welcome
-as allies those who are doing Christ’s work, and acknowledging
-the perfection of His teaching, because we cannot understand
-their difficulties in accepting the doctrines <em>we</em> hold sacred. We
-shall not “water down” our teaching, nor would they wish us
-to do so. We shall not give up prayer, because we do not
-impose special rules.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Another letter of this period (March 1886) to Mrs.
-Grey shows Miss Beale’s calm judgment as well as her
-sympathy in the difficult work of the League:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘ ... I am disappointed to find that some, even of mature
-age, seem to think it right to shut their eyes.... Of course
-one would be glad that such subjects as this should not be
-brought up without necessity, and I suppose that many of us
-have grown up without a notion that some of the crimes alluded
-to in your paper were possible. It does darken the whole world
-and sadden the lives of the young to know that such wickedness
-is possible; it may destroy their faith in God, to know it before
-their moral constitution has attained its full vigour, and plunge
-them into pessimism: one cannot help wishing to conceal these
-loathsome visions from those we love. I do not go with Miss
-Ellice Hopkins in her wish that the young should be very
-early warned. It seems to me that there is a parallel between
-that and our action in cases of bodily disease: one who looked
-on passively is sickened and made ill;—the nurse or surgeon
-bent on healing does not suffer.</p>
-
-<p>‘And I do feel that there is a great danger in bringing before
-the mind temptations which are connected with the bodily
-organisation. A nervous excitement seems to be produced,
-something of the nature of hysteria, and there is a sort of
-criminal fascination such as those feel who throw themselves
-from heights: the judgment seems utterly in abeyance. The
-same thought seems expressed in the story of Medusa.</p>
-
-<p>‘For this reason I do feel a little hesitation in giving countenance
-to the indefinite extension of Blue-ribbon armies, necessary
-and beneficent as they are in cases where there is strong
-temptation, or persons are moved to work actively against intemperance;
-and I would rather that the campaign should be
-one of missionaries, so to speak, of those who have bound themselves
-to some active work in the cause. I think that such great
-evils might arise from the terrible mistakes which might be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-committed by those who undertook the ostracism without
-having a fair chance of arriving at a correct judgment. It is
-so easy to stab to death the character of an innocent man; the
-devil may steal as well as buy a man’s shadow; he may sell as
-well as buy....</p>
-
-<p>‘So what seems to me best would be to have a small band of
-wise and calm leaders; and not to invite a general public to
-give any pledge, only trust to the working of such leaven as
-these would form.</p>
-
-<p>‘Some of the points to which they direct attention should be
-the abolition of the frivolities of the marriage ceremony....</p>
-
-<p>‘As regards material measures, I would still urge the formation
-of a body of women-policemen, who could safely do work
-which could not be done by men-policemen or clergymen.
-These should undertake to watch over registries for women,
-shops where women work, to establish labour registers themselves,
-and take care that women were not paid starvation
-wages; to enter (under protection) suspected houses; to watch
-railway stations and ships, etc. etc.</p>
-
-<p>‘So you see, dear Mrs. Grey, tho’ my heart is altogether with
-you, my judgment does not quite go with the recommendations.
-I do not fear your misunderstanding me, because we are so
-truly one, and can only differ about the best modes of work....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As time went on Miss Beale’s continued sympathy
-with this particular work was evidenced in larger subscriptions
-to the National Vigilance Association, to which
-she also left a legacy. The letters of the last years show
-her interest in it, and that her horror of a worldly
-marriage was as great as ever. She wrote to Miss Ellice
-Hopkins in 1903:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I meant that marriage without the spiritual ideal was intolerable,
-but the body is transfigured; there is a “metamorphosis,”
-as the New Testament insists so often; but the
-Scripture teaching is so different from the mere sentimental.
-I don’t like the tendency of <cite>Lady Rose’s Daughter</cite>. I dislike, of
-course, much of Sarah Grand, but the end of the <cite>Heavenly
-Twins</cite> does bring before people the horrors of such a marriage
-as the Bishop’s wife promotes. It is a long and ever-renewed
-struggle with these wicked laws.... It is sad to see that this
-new Education Act is shutting out women, and making the
-hope of the suffrage less. Here the Town Council and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-County Council both asked me to nominate a woman—and
-four of our staff here have been asked to be managers of
-schools—but of course two or three women will be able to do
-very little.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Cheltenham pupils who in course of time took up
-the cause of the poor and degraded, found the greatest
-sympathy and help from Miss Beale. She was always
-specially ready with sympathy for those who were
-engaged in an unpopular struggle for good. Among
-them may be specially mentioned Miss Annette Bear,
-whose labours in 1894 were instrumental in getting a
-clause dealing with children employed on the stage added
-to the Act, afterwards known as the Children’s Charter,
-and who after her marriage worked successfully for the
-women’s vote in Australia. A short account of Annette
-Bear Crawford appeared in the College Magazines for
-1899 and 1900.</p>
-
-<p>To an old pupil trying to help her unhappy sisters in
-Africa she wrote: ‘I must tell you how glad I was to
-see your name on the Ladies’ National List, and to hear
-from yourself on the subject. I am so rejoiced when
-my old girls take up this trying question. Only refined
-and educated women can handle it successfully.’ She
-also begged her not to be discouraged by failure, ‘but
-remember the real thing to aim at is the Suffrage.
-Without the vote you may cut off one evil to find it
-coming up again in a worse form, and often, but for the
-personal discipline, might as well be knocking your head
-against a stone wall.’</p>
-
-<p>As time went on this question of the vote for women
-seemed more and more important to Miss Beale. She
-became a Vice-President of the Central Society for
-Women’s Suffrage, besides being a regular subscriber.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally, Miss Beale hoped for reform by means of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-the cultivation of the mind. Much evil she considered
-came from want of proper interests and from deficient
-knowledge of life, such as even good reading could to
-some extent supply. ‘Give them literature lessons,’ she
-said to an old pupil who had a large class of intelligent
-Yorkshire factory girls. A letter to another worker
-shows in what way she hoped women school managers
-might help to hinder the spread of corruption. It has
-the additional interest of suggesting a measure akin to
-one lately adopted by the educational authorities in some
-counties:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>(circa) 1889.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps I ought not to say much; my own vineyard I must
-keep. It does seem to me that both men and women who are
-wanting to mend things ought to take municipal offices and all
-sorts of legal and government work.</p>
-
-<p>‘Schools ought to be able to keep children longer and gradually
-reduce school time, and could not one get a law that
-children without employment should be at school? They must
-have in clerical language a “title” to leave school control by
-showing their parents are able to look after them or that they
-have an employer. This wholesale feeding does seem a serious
-matter, as weakening the sense of parental responsibility. I do
-hope we shall not go in for pauperising in Bethnal Green. I
-feel sure we shall not under Miss Newman....</p>
-
-<p>‘The monstrous evil is, however, hydra-headed, and one’s
-courage sometimes sinks; but there is, no doubt, a much higher
-public opinion than there was.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s pity for the helpless was not confined
-to women. She felt deeply the needs of discharged
-prisoners, and more than once sent donations of money
-to one of her old girls who was in a position to help
-them. She also supported Miss Agnes Weston’s work
-for sailors.</p>
-
-<p>Another class whose needs she fully recognised was
-that of poor gentle people. Impoverished Irish ladies,
-governesses, and others, she was always anxious to help,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-and frequently maintained the duty which richer members
-of their own class owed to them. Those who
-asked her aid for these often found her unexpectedly
-generous. It has been shown how much she undertook,
-both in money payment and trouble, for girls
-who could not afford an education befitting their position.
-Outside this, indeed, her interests may have been
-held to have been comparatively few; but when she
-did permit herself to study the problems of her day,
-she made it evident that the force of mind and will
-which she concentrated on her own work could also
-have effected great results in other fields of labour.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-<span class="smaller">HONOURS</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<p class="center">‘He deserved well of his country.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>‘Shall we try to deserve more rather than to win more?’
-said Miss Beale when she quoted the phrase of the
-Roman senate, which heads this chapter, to some children—not
-of Cheltenham—who were to receive prizes.
-It well expresses her feeling about rewards. They
-should grow out of the work; should be some fresh
-privilege of service. Hence her indifference to prizes
-in the College. They were given on a percentage of
-marks obtained in the midsummer examinations. They
-were announced when the marks of the classes were read
-to them on the first morning of the next term, but they
-were never presented: they had to be fetched by the
-individuals who earned them from the secretary’s room.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I was opposed,’ she wrote on one occasion, ‘to this custom.
-I did not think it necessary to make pupils work, they seemed
-as earnest and painstaking before prizes were given as since.
-I felt it was better they should work from a love of knowledge
-or a simple sense of duty, but the Council took another view,
-and as there is much to be said on their side of the question,
-I yielded.</p>
-
-<p>‘In life, prizes must be to a great extent the reward of
-thoughtful industry, and it seems to me that on the one hand
-we may thereby teach the children to put success at its true
-value, and point out to them that it is at the bar of our own
-conscience alone that we must stand approved or condemned;
-that on the other hand they may learn to bear disappointment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
-patiently. I do not find that prizes create any feelings of
-jealousy or ill-will, nor can I blame a child who looks forward
-with pleasure to carrying home to her parents this proof that
-she has tried to do as they would have her. It appears to me a
-matter of less importance than is usually supposed, and in any
-case can affect only a few pupils at the head of a class. Stimulants
-to exertion, however, are rarely needed. There are very
-few who are not interested and earnest in their work, and our
-difficulty is more frequently to check too great zeal, and to
-insist on the observation of those limits we place to the time
-devoted to study than to demand more.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The high ideal of <em>deserving</em> rather than <em>gaining</em> was
-what Miss Beale set before herself as true wealth to
-be desired. So she was careful, when the management
-of large public funds and a much increased personal
-income came to her, to remain as frugal, as poor as
-ever. It was not merely that she liked simplicity. Her
-simplicity of life was a deliberate intention. There was
-a personal note in the fervour with which she would
-read the words of Abraham to the king of Sodom:
-‘I will not take from a thread even to a shoe-latchet,
-... lest thou shouldest say, I have made Abram rich.’
-No monk was ever more faithful to his chosen bride
-of Poverty than Miss Beale remained with her large
-income and successful investments. She was consistent
-also in preferring for those she loved a simple personal
-life, which would leave mind and time free for thought
-and the needs of others.</p>
-
-<p>When first Miss Beale went to Cheltenham she
-adopted a very simple mode of living, such as she
-thought would sufficiently meet her needs, and she never
-changed it. At the age of seventy she would even help
-to lay her own table for the frugal midday meal, if the
-general servant had been delayed by household work in
-the morning. She would walk to the station to save a
-cab fare, and invariably chose the simplest means of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-conveyance unless on a matter of urgency. It is true she
-became rather grander in dress as years went on. ‘What
-did I wear,’ she wrote to Miss Brown about 1876, after
-some function she had attended, ‘“velvet and ostrich
-feathers?” Well, what could I wear but my felt bonnet
-and old velvet cloak and old black serge? I looked
-quite smart enough.’ Kind friends there were who liked
-to see the Lady Principal beautifully dressed, and who
-were allowed in later life to guide her into velvet and
-ostrich feathers. She submitted for the sake of the
-College, for whose good she would cheerfully have worn
-either sackcloth or cloth of gold!</p>
-
-<p>For the sake of the College, still more for the
-sake of that work for women and the race which the
-College represented, Miss Beale gladly greeted honours.
-That they had anything to do with herself personally,
-she was not even aware. Her work did indeed receive
-recognition far and wide from those who prized education,
-and who regarded it from various points of view.</p>
-
-<p>Among the first to honour it with special notice and
-a substantial, even magnificent gift, was John Ruskin,
-when in 1885 he presented to the College two beautiful
-and valuable manuscripts—one, of the four Gospels, in
-Greek, written in the eleventh century; another (<cite>Antiphonarium
-Romanum</cite>) of the thirteenth century. He
-gave also a collection of printed books. These were
-the occasion of an interesting series of letters from Mr.
-Ruskin to Miss Beale. Some of them are printed here.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Brantwood, Coniston, Lancashire</span>, <i>February 10, 1882</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—I have to ask your pardon for never
-having replied to your former letter; but it came when I was
-already over-wrought and threatened with illness, and it gave
-me more to think of than it was possible then to review.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am now, however, most seriously bent on understanding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-the principles and knowing some of the results of modern girl
-education....</p>
-
-<p>‘A very few lines would enable me to become of some use to
-you—in my own fields of work—and without moving from my
-fields of rest.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have the deepest respect for Mr. Shields’ work, nevertheless
-it is out of my <em>way</em>; and such drawing models as I may send
-you would be altogether different in feeling.</p>
-
-<p>‘But the first thing I want to know is what kind of library
-or schoolroom you have, for quiet separate reading, and what
-standard books the College possesses in Lexicons, works on
-natural history, and classic literature, and what place Latin and
-Italian have in your code of studies.—Ever faithfully yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. Ruskin</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Brantwood, Coniston, Lancashire</span>, <i>February 18, 1887</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—I can only thank you to-day for the
-most interesting parcel, which gives me an idea of the College
-and its branches, admitting every degree of enthusiasm in its
-Principal.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... but for the moment, entirely puzzling to me, as
-I neither want to confuse the strict College work with that
-of Ruskin societies, nor the elementary and general teaching
-with that of artists’ studios, or of general papers in your
-Magazine.</p>
-
-<p>‘And when I give you books I should like them to be accessible
-to the classes in general. I can’t scatter them among the
-boarding-houses or give them only to the senior students at
-St. Hilda’s. You can surely put up some shelves for me in a
-corner of some generally inhabited room, and put them under
-the care of an official librarian. It seems to me the office might
-be given for a term at a time to any girl who cared to take it,
-involving also the curatorship of any drawings, casts of coins, or
-the like, which I could at times lend or present to you.</p>
-
-<p>‘In the meantime, will you let me have a list of the classes,
-with the books used in them, and times of required attendance.</p>
-
-<p>‘Dr. Watson has trusted me for the present to arrange the
-work for his daughter, without reference to any competitive
-honours or testing examinations. I wish to keep her well at
-her music, French, and if she cares for it, elementary drawing,
-with beginning of Latin and the first making out of classic
-history. What I chiefly need to know is the method of instruction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-in the music and drawing classes. (Do your seniors touch
-Greek at all?)</p>
-
-<p>‘I have just been reading an excellent paper by Miss <em>Sophia</em>
-Beale on Art instruction, in which, however, the general sense
-and truth of the author’s views are prevented from taking a
-practical form by her falling into the scarcely in our time
-avoidable error of supposing that accuracy of drawing can only
-be taught by the figure.</p>
-
-<p>‘The figure can never be drawn accurately unless life is
-given to the task. But a triangle, an arch, a cinquefoil, and a
-wild rose are within the reach of ordinary girlhood’s observation
-and delineation, to ordinary girlhood’s extreme profit.—Believe
-me, dear Madam, your faithful servant,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">John Ruskin</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Brantwood, Coniston, Lancashire</span>, <i>March 3, 1887</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—I shall be most thankful if you can
-find anything in my books that the girls will like to have in the
-Magazine: the ivied trunks were sent in no high spiritual but
-lowly practical intent, simply as the sort of models which you
-can’t cut and bring in for yourselves, and which, once drawn real
-size, will teach more than all my talking.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think her librarian cares will be ever so good for my wild
-flower, and am looking out more fine books for her to-day,
-chiefly a perfect edit, of Scott’s poetry and Heyne’s beautiful
-<cite>Virgil</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am wholly with you in liking Greek better than Latin,
-but only as added to Latin by clever girls. The entire history
-of the Catholic Church being in Latin, and half the language of
-Europe derived from it, I would make every girl who passed
-through any course of literature begin with understanding her
-Pater Noster and Te Deum.</p>
-
-<p>‘But I have put a lovely edition of <cite>Hesiod</cite> aside for next dispatch
-to the wild librarian.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t quite know what the “Kyrle” Society means, but
-imagine I have stores of things they could put to use.—Ever
-faithfully yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. Ruskin</span>.</p>
-
-<p>‘Enclosed may be a pretty little gift to any of your good
-girls.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Brantwood, Coniston, Lancashire</span>, <i>March 7, 1887</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—I have put the little volume of poems
-into my near bookcase at the back of my arm-chair. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-look really very nice, and show an extremely high tone in the
-school.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am going to send you with the Pindar, a beautiful 13th
-cent. MS., with the Gregorian notes all written to the old
-Latin songs. I think the College will be proud of it, and your
-organist interested by it.</p>
-
-<p>‘I shall be delighted to see whatever the teachers care to send
-me. I have been languid and stupid this spring, or should have
-written something for the drawing classes before now.—Ever
-faithfully and respectfully yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. Ruskin</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Brantwood, Coniston, Lancashire</span>, <i>March 11, 1887</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—There is no way of enlarging those
-Kate sketches: they were calculated for the little confusion
-caused by their smallness, and are not well drawn enough for
-magnifying.</p>
-
-<p>‘I will send you some prettier ones for framing. I am very
-glad the books have come safe. The grace and dignity of the
-engravings in Heyne are of great educational value, and the two
-MSS. are extremely good of the kind. They cost, curiously,
-the same price each, £100 or £105,—I forget which.</p>
-
-<p>‘The wild librarian sends me an extremely bad account of
-herself to-day. I have sent her a beautifully impressive and
-didactic answer, which she ought to show you.—Ever faithfully
-yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. Ruskin</span>.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have sent your organist a Magister for himself. I am so
-glad he likes it. I couldn’t make out his initials, or would have
-put his name in it; people ought always to sign in print.</p>
-
-<p class="right">A.B.C. So and So.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Brantwood, Coniston, Lancashire</span>, <i>March 12, 1887</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—I send you two books to-day with real
-pleasure. The old book of towns containing images of the
-things that once were, in spite of their stiffness, liker the
-realities now lost than any wooden efforts at restoration, while
-the Arabian book is a type of all the subtle and faithful skill of
-France can do at its present best.</p>
-
-<p>‘I call it the <em>faithful</em> skill of France. There is no nation has
-ever produced such honest work in love of its subjects, not in
-vanity, as the <cite>Desc. de l’Egypte</cite> and the illustrated beautiful
-books of modern times. The great Cuvier series is degraded by
-its filthy anatomies, but in mere engraving and colours stands<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-alone. But I am going to send you some birds, also matchless,
-as I can’t send you the Cuvier for its horror.</p>
-
-<p>‘The English book on the Dee, with its rotten paper and
-vulgar woodcuts, illustrates our English meanness in comparison,
-but has its poor use too....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Brantwood, Coniston, Lancashire</span>, <i>March 14, 1887</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—There is not the least need of this
-flame of gratitude. I am only too glad to find a place where
-I can send books likely to be permanently useful to English
-girls. I am sending three more to-day, which I think likely
-to be far more serviceable than those finer ones, containing
-as they do, quantities of sound historical information given in
-a simple and graceful way on subjects which every Christian
-girl should have knowledge of, while I suppose not one in fifty
-ever hears any truth about them. They are nice collegiate
-books too, to look at.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am mightily pleased too at your having a girl-organist, and
-hope to work out some old plans with her.—Ever most truly
-yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. Ruskin</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Brantwood, Coniston, Lancashire</span>, <i>March 24</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—These candlesticks are lovely, but a
-little too loose and catchy to be quite good design. The fillets
-of the bases should be bars, and branch into the foliage, not be
-entangled in it. But I am heartily glad to see such work.</p>
-
-<p>‘The glass for the MSS. will be excellent,—but only the
-lazuli and gold will stand sunlight—all colours of time fade in
-full light. But there’s no harm in a little fading of the Greek
-Evangelists, or the musical notes on a single page.</p>
-
-<p>‘That Norway Bishops’ book will be a lovely companion to
-the Old Geography.</p>
-
-<p>‘You needn’t mind who is or isn’t in association with
-you.</p>
-
-<p>‘You have plenty of power alone—and inventiveness enough
-to boot.—Ever affectly. yrs.,</p>
-
-<p class="right">J. R.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Ruskin’s munificent gifts did not stand alone.
-Almost every number of the Magazine chronicled some
-present to the College, some book or picture, scientific
-apparatus or specimen. Special mention should be made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-of Dr. Wright’s collection of fossils which formed the
-foundation for a museum, and of the grant of flint
-instruments and many animals obtained through Sir
-William Flower from the British Museum.</p>
-
-<p>The distinctions which came to both Principal and
-College in the later years of Miss Beale’s headship were
-very numerous and came from widely differing sources.
-The College gained gold medals for educational exhibits
-at the Paris Exhibitions of 1889 and 1900.</p>
-
-<p>The name of Dorothea Beale became known abroad
-as that of one who had a real interest in education for
-its own sake and who had no exclusive or insular views.
-The warm welcome she would extend to educationists
-of every kind and tongue, the care with which she would
-personally answer letters of inquiry, the high tone of
-her addresses at public gatherings, her pamphlets and
-articles made the name of Cheltenham respected afar.
-To this may be added the freshness and openness of
-mind with which she would lend attention to new
-methods. She always took them seriously, however
-empirical they might appear,—considered them, tried
-them if they seemed hopeful, persevered in them if they
-were proved to be effective, abandoned them if they
-were inferior to methods already in use. There were
-many examples of this. Once, for instance, in the
-eighties, she heard of a method of teaching reading and
-of preserving discipline which had been evolved by
-Mrs. Fielden, a clever lady who had established a good
-elementary school in a Yorkshire manufacturing village.
-Miss Beale sent an old pupil who lived in the neighbourhood
-to visit the school, watch its working, and
-send her full details of the management. After receiving
-her report, she obtained the loan of one of Mrs.
-Fielden’s teachers for a week, and had the system<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-introduced by her into the schoolroom of the Third
-(Junior) Division. It lived but a short time. Miss
-Nixon, head-mistress of the division, found it mechanical,
-and it was abandoned.</p>
-
-<p>In Miss Beale’s last term, in September 1906, Mrs.
-Arthur Somervell’s <cite>Rhythmical Mathematics</cite> came to her
-notice. She not only wrote to the author ‘The book
-is beautiful and the method very suggestive,’ but within
-a few days introduced it to the teachers whom it concerned
-and had its principles explained to a class of
-little children.</p>
-
-<p>Foreign pupils were always welcomed at the College,
-and made to feel at home. When first it was suggested
-that some Siamese girls should be received there, Miss
-Beale wrote eagerly to secure them, and always took the
-greatest interest in their work. The foreign teachers
-found her sympathetic and interested, able to understand
-and allow for their different training and points of
-view. With some it was not merely a case of mutual
-esteem. There were those who found she welcomed
-their friendship and returned it with kindred affection
-and confidence.</p>
-
-<p>In the summer term of 1889 several foreign educationists
-came to Cheltenham. Mrs. E. H. Monroe
-was sent by the Government of the United States, and
-Signora Zampini Salazaro by the Italian Government, to
-study English schools and methods. Madame Garnier-Gentilhomme,
-Officier de l’Instruction Publique, spent
-a week with Miss Beale. These visits were perhaps
-not unconnected with the International Congresses of
-Education which met in Paris in August. These Miss
-Beale attended, and herself wrote an account of them
-in the Magazine of autumn 1889, from which some brief
-extracts are made.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I cannot sufficiently regret that so few English took part
-in the most interesting International Congress of Secondary and
-Superior Instruction which has just concluded in Paris. It was
-an assembly such as one can scarcely hope to see in a life-time.
-One had an opportunity of hearing not only the leading educational
-authorities of France, who are doing a great work for their
-country, but distinguished men from all parts of the world.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After enumerating the representatives present from
-different countries, she continues:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘From England, the near neighbour of France, came the
-Honourable Lyulph Stanley, member of the School Board, but
-not one person having official rank as a member of the Education
-Department, not one representative of a university. There was
-one Professor from Edinburgh, the Secretary of the College of
-Science from Dublin, Mr. Widgery, of University College School,
-the Editor of the <cite>Schoolmaster</cite>, Miss Buss with one of her staff,
-Miss Beale of Cheltenham with four, and two private governesses.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... The first step was to add to the Committee a number
-of foreign members; eighteen were chosen, amongst whom
-were Mr. Stanley and myself. Then, after arranging the order
-of the day, we separated and formed ourselves into sections, each
-person selecting the question which interested him most. In
-each section a President and Vice-Presidents and a reporter were
-elected. I was chosen a Vice-President of Section IV.<a name="FNanchor_83" id="FNanchor_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> ...</p>
-
-<p>‘I was told that we were to speak our own language, as was
-the case at the Congress held at the Health Exhibition in
-London. However, the general wish was at last complied with,
-that we should all produce our thoughts in more or less foreign
-French, and it was nearly always intelligible.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... One question (“The methods best adapted for the
-Secondary Instruction of girls, specially as regards Modern
-Languages and Science”) gave rise to a good deal of warm
-discussion. We were surprised to find that less than two
-hours in a week were given to a modern language in French
-schools for girls. The importance of beginning very early was
-not generally recognised. The English, specially Mr. Widgery
-and Miss Beale, contributed a great deal to this part of the discussion,
-insisting much on a truly scientific gymnastic of sound
-as opposed to the haphazard mode of teaching pronunciation.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Misses Andrews who accompanied Miss Beale on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-this occasion were impressed by the way she was received
-and heard. Her deafness did not prevent her taking
-a part in the discussion, and speaking as she did in a
-foreign tongue, she yet dominated her large international
-audience. She showed extraordinary indifference to her
-own comfort. Miss Alice Andrews remembers, for
-instance, a luncheon in the neighbourhood of the Sorbonne,
-at a little restaurant to which they had been
-guided by some acquaintance. Miss Beale and Miss
-Buss found themselves in the midst of artists and
-students, some of whom carried on pronounced flirtations
-with the waitress girls. Miss Beale sat calmly writing
-her speech for the next meeting, indifferent to her
-déjeûner and unconscious of her surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>The Congress of Secondary and Superior Instruction
-was followed by a Congress of Primary Teachers, for
-which Miss Beale was induced to stay. One day she
-addressed it:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I said a few words on the work of teachers in enlarging the
-sympathies and diminishing prejudice and enabling us therefore
-to understand one another better.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is the seen, the material, about which nations quarrel;
-it is the unseen, that which belongs to the intellect, the spirit,
-which unites us in a generous emulation, in which all are
-gainers, for in such contests all may obtain the prize.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Greatly pleased as Miss Beale was with much she saw,
-she quickly perceived that she could not work herself
-with such a system as prevailed in France. ‘I do not
-wish to see secondary education in England subject in
-any way to a Government department, or secondary
-schools in England assimilated to primary.’</p>
-
-<p>All the intervals of the Congress were filled with
-visits to various educational institutions and interviews
-with leading educationists. There was a visit to
-Fontenay-aux-Roses, to a deaf school, to a primary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-school and kindergarten, to the Musée Pédagogique.
-There were also some visits less of the nature of
-business. Once, at least, they went by invitation to
-the Théâtre Français, where they witnessed a representation
-of the <cite>Femmes Savantes</cite>. There were also many
-receptions. Miss Alice Andrews wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘We had two evenings at the Ministère de l’Instruction
-Publique, just for the members of the Congresses. These were
-more like our Guild meetings; no amusement was provided,
-but the members found it for themselves in walking about and
-conversing; and so did we, for by the end we had made many
-acquaintances and a few friends, and there we met some of
-those who, in the day, had been seated on platforms and had
-interested us by their eloquence. On the last evening there
-was a dinner-party of about fifty persons, at which the principal
-foreign members of the Congress were entertained. To this
-Miss Beale was invited, and placed at table on the right hand of
-the minister.’<a name="FNanchor_84" id="FNanchor_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was a great happiness to Miss Beale to see so much
-good work going on, and to meet so many who really
-cared for the cause for which she lived.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Many were the promises of visits; we left Paris with a
-higher idea of the great work that France is accomplishing,
-and grateful for the generous hospitality with which we were
-welcomed, and allowed to see all that is being done by those
-who are directing education in France.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The immediate result to the College of this Congress
-of 1889 was an honour for its Principal when Miss
-Beale was made Officier d’Académie. In the following
-year a meeting of the ‘Société des Professeurs de
-Langues Vivantes’ met at Cheltenham. Miss Beale
-was elected a member of this Society, by means of which
-many French students came to Cheltenham. After her
-death a little article upon Miss Beale appeared in <cite>Les
-Langues Modernes</cite>, the monthly organ of this Society.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-It rightly acknowledged the welcome and the constant
-kindness that foreign students always received from her.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Il faudrait un volume pour analyser sa vie et son œuvre.
-Les Anglais l’avaient bien comprise, parce qu’elle résumait au
-plus haut point les qualités de leur race. Les étrangères ont pu
-admirer son esprit d’initiative, son énergie et son enthousiasme
-communicatif. Les jeunes filles françaises qui ont eu la bonne
-fortune d’étudier à Cheltenham, lui étaient particulièrement
-reconnaissantes de la sympathie large qu’elle leur témoignait.
-La vivacité et la spontanéité françaises, que les Anglais confondent
-volontiers avec la légèreté et l’insouciance, étaient des
-qualités qu’elle prisait beaucoup. La bienveillance pour nous se
-traduisait en actes. Dans ce collège aristocratique où les frais
-d’études étaient assez considérables, où l’on n’admettait que les
-jeunes filles appartenant à un milieu social élevé, Miss Beale
-réduisait volontiers les frais d’études des Françaises, et facilitait
-leurs relations avec des familles anglaises distinguées.</p>
-
-<p>‘Elle eut pour plusieurs de mes compatriotes et moi des
-attentions qui nous allèrent au cœur. Quand nous la rencontrions
-dans les couloirs avec son petit bonnet blanc de
-douairière, ou quand elle nous invitait au thé dans son home,
-elles s’informait de nos études, corrigeant elle-même dans la
-conversation nos phrases défectueuses, nous parlant avec sympathie
-de notre pays, et nous rappelant le souvenir agréable
-qu’elle avait gardé de Paris, où elle était venue passer quelques
-mois dans sa jeunesse, en vue de compléter son instruction.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A further result was the permission granted by the
-French Government for the admission of students from
-the College to Fontenay-aux-Roses. This permission
-was much prized by Miss Beale, who was comforted
-by it for delays which had occurred in the opening of
-St. Hilda’s, Oxford.</p>
-
-<p>Another recognition of her work for education came
-to Miss Beale in 1896, when Durham University
-conferred upon her the distinction of Tutor in Letters.
-The widespread influence of that work was emphasised
-by her election in 1898 as a Corresponding Member
-of the National Education Association, U.S.A. In her
-letter acknowledging this honour Miss Beale said: ‘We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
-receive much inspiration from the States, and possess
-in our Library a large number of valuable works from
-Americans on Philosophy and Education.’ She was
-specially attached to the writings of Dr. Harris.</p>
-
-<p>The contrasts existing between girls’ education as it
-was in 1865 and thirty years later must have been
-brought very forcibly before Miss Beale when, in 1894,
-she was again asked to give evidence before a Royal
-Commission. The chairman of this was Mr. Bryce,
-who had himself inspected and reported for the Taunton
-Commission of 1864-7. The composition of this
-later body marked the advance that had been made.
-Of its seventeen members three were women. Well
-might Miss Beale say that the changes she had witnessed
-were ‘inconceivably great.’ Her own position was
-changed. On the first occasion she had merely been
-the able representative of a little known and rather
-despised class of workers. On the second she came
-as one of the recognised leaders of a band whose
-work was becoming yearly more valuable and more
-important.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale was first questioned on the co-operation
-and co-relation of different schools in one neighbourhood.
-She expressed herself in favour of the co-operation of
-teachers, not of unity in governing bodies, ‘because one
-governing body is rather apt to generalise and say that
-everything that is suitable for boys should be done for
-girls.’ She was also careful to say that there must be a
-supreme authority in each school. One point of special
-interest to-day is the discussion which took place on the
-teaching of the classics to girls. Miss Beale, as has been
-shown, was never in favour of teaching either Latin or
-Greek to young girls, and she maintained her objections
-on this occasion. She thought it a mistake to begin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-Greek at the age of eleven or twelve, though she admitted
-that it was easier to learn than Latin. ‘But children,’
-she said, ‘do not enter into the delicacies and refinements
-of the Greek language, ... and they get tired of it....
-I do not think the most intelligent teacher could
-make a child like the intricacies of grammar early.’<a name="FNanchor_85" id="FNanchor_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a></p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale does not seem to have mentioned one
-reason why she would not teach Latin early until, in
-1898, she wrote in <cite>Work and Play</cite>: ‘I feel strongly
-that Latin should, however, properly come after German,
-specially for girls. There is a pestilential atmosphere in
-the Campania, and one needs to have one’s moral fibre
-braced by the poetry of the Hebrews and of England
-and Germany, if one would remain unaffected by writings
-saturated with heathen thought.’</p>
-
-<p>Other points discussed were the training of teachers,
-a subject on which Miss Beale had much to say. She
-insisted on the advantages of associating training colleges
-with large schools: ‘If students get simply lectures,
-and ideas which they have not an opportunity of carrying
-into practice, they become unpractical, and they have to
-learn the practical parts of their profession when they
-become teachers.’ The question of scholarships was
-introduced; Miss Beale enunciated her theory that they
-should be given irrespective of place. It ought not to
-be possible for one institution to buy up scholars from
-another. She admitted that she would like to make
-necessity a condition of holding a scholarship. ‘Would
-not that,’ asked Dr. Fairbairn, I carry with it to a large
-extent what one may term a social distinction,—even a
-stigma in certain cases?’ ‘I think,’ was the reply, ‘if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-people are ashamed of being poor, they ought to be
-ashamed of being ashamed of it.’</p>
-
-<p>Some points there were on which the Commissioners
-desired enlightenment from Miss Beale’s experience, but
-got little help. One of these was by what means a
-passage might be effected from primary to secondary
-schools and the universities. Miss Beale, who disliked
-free education, had in 1895 even less sympathy with
-elementary teaching than she had a few years later, when
-she undertook to train students for it. The indication
-she gave the Commission was a suggestion that to meet
-the needs of the prize pupils of the elementary schools,
-it would be best to found higher schools of the same
-class, as she maintained that, owing largely to the
-influences of their homes, children coming from primary
-schools could not profit by the kind of education existing
-in secondary schools as they are.</p>
-
-<p>Three or four times the chairman also sought to obtain
-an opinion from her on the difference between boys and
-girls, but was always met by some such answer as, ‘I do
-not profess to say much about boys.’</p>
-
-<p>It was an excellent thing that Miss Beale was asked
-by Messrs. Longmans, Green and Co. to put forth her
-own original ideas, and state something of her long
-experience concerning education, in the volume which
-appeared in 1898 under the title <cite>Work and Play in Girls’
-Schools</cite>. Designed primarily for the enlightenment of
-the generation which first received it, the book will
-remain as an historical record of methods actually in use
-at the Ladies’ College.</p>
-
-<p>With the two last sections of this work Miss Beale
-had nothing to do: that on the ‘Moral Side of Education’
-was written by Miss Soulsby, the concluding chapter
-on the ‘Cultivation of the Body’ was from the pen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-of Miss Dove. Yet it is worthy of notice that both these
-able and original-minded head-mistresses were for a time
-teachers at Cheltenham. Miss Beale felt that Miss
-Soulsby’s chapter should have been first in the book;
-but as her own section is so very much the longest, and
-as it would have been impossible to her to treat of education
-from the intellectual side only and apart from its
-bearing on character, there is nothing to be regretted in
-the arrangement. One of Miss Beale’s chapters is, moreover,
-devoted to the question of Philosophy and Religion.</p>
-
-<p>A letter she wrote to Miss Strong on this subject is
-interesting:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 1897.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I have ventured to accept Mr. Longmans’ proposal. I am
-afraid it is rather rash, and I hope I shall find that he gives me
-the Midsummer holidays. This is what he puts in his programme.
-“Order of importance. Cultivation of the body,
-cultivation of the moral character, cultivation of the mind,” and
-so he arranges the subjects in that order. You see what I have
-said, it makes me so vexed to hear people say, “Of course health
-is the first thing,” when I know they mean to put pleasure before
-duty. In order of <em>importance</em>, of course, Miss Soulsby is first.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This book, the most important of Miss Beale’s
-mature age—she was verging on sixty when it was
-published—was written with all the enthusiasm of
-youth. The hopefulness and freshness of a young
-teacher, heightened rather than restrained by the experience
-of years, glow on every page. Nor is the idealism
-of the student missing. Notice specially for this the
-passage on astronomy on page 254:<a name="FNanchor_86" id="FNanchor_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> ‘Thus [is] the
-mathematical passion awakened; surely most of us can
-remember the first time that our soul really ascended into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
-the seventh heaven.’ The chapter entitled Psychological
-Order of Study,’ in which this passage occurs, is perhaps
-the most suggestive in the book, which abounds in
-the results of ripened thought and knowledge. But that
-on the ‘Relation of School to Home’ was most impressive
-to those who did not already know the writer’s views
-on the subject. In ‘A Few Practical Precepts’ occur
-one or two phrases which might well pass into scholastic
-proverbs, as for instance this: ‘It is a worse fault to
-teach below than above the powers of a child.’</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale did not write the whole of that part of the
-book for which she made herself responsible. Some parts
-were given to specialists upon the College staff, in order that
-all the subjects might be treated with expert knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s own life during this later period naturally
-became more social than ever before. She attended many
-public functions, and was brought constantly into touch
-with those who shared her high intellectual aims or literary
-work. Among these was Dr. Jowett, to whom she felt
-she owed a special debt for his translation of the <cite>Republic</cite>.
-A day came at last, in 1893, when, as a witty friend said,
-she and the Master lunched together, ‘with Plato as an
-unobtrusive third.’</p>
-
-<p>In 1894, accompanied by Miss Draper, she made another
-visit to Paris, to be present at the wedding of Lady Victoria
-Blackwood and Mr. W. L. Plunket. She greatly enjoyed
-the experience, especially Lord Dufferin’s friendliness.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Lord Dufferin proposed to send a young man to take us out
-in the morning, and show us something of Paris. I rather
-wondered that we grey-haired ladies should require an escort,
-but of course accepted, and we were awaiting our young man in
-the salon of the Hôtel Normandie when, to our surprise and
-pleasure, we heard Lord Dufferin’s own voice in the hall.
-Though he had to be present at the civil wedding at twelve
-o’clock, he most kindly found time to take us up the Heights of
-Montmartre. We had much interesting conversation on the way.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The diary which Miss Beale still kept carefully, though
-briefly, gives a glimpse of this fuller outside life, but
-remains faithful to its early character as a record of
-thought and aspiration. A few extracts from the last
-years are given.</p>
-
-<table summary="Diary entries">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">1893.</td>
- <td></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>‘<i>Jan.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">15.</td>
- <td>Retreat at Brondesbury. Canon Body 9th to 13th.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">22.</td>
- <td>Last Sunday of Epiphany.... Perfect revelation of God’s character only
- possible to man in Christ. Arise, shine! Magi faithful to what was given....</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">24.</td>
- <td>More earnestness in work needed. Unnecessary speaking of others’ faults.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">31.</td>
- <td>Again a quarter of an hour wasted....</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Feb.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">2.</td>
- <td>Edward died.<a name="FNanchor_87" id="FNanchor_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a>
- Presentation in the Temple.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">14.</td>
- <td>Friendless Girls’ meeting.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Mar.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">31.</td>
- <td>All Saints. Mr. Illingworth.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>May</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">10.</td>
- <td>In London. Degree Day. Radley.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">11.</td>
- <td>Ascension Day. H. C. Radley. At Cowley House. Froude’s Lecture. Lunch at Balliol.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">12.</td>
- <td>Text. “In Him was Life and the Life was the Light.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">14.</td>
- <td>Mrs. Russell Gurney lunched.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>June</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">7-10.</td>
- <td>Royal Society. Staying with the Samuelsons.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">19.</td>
- <td>Grandchildren’s party. Twenty-three present. Five absent.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">24.</td>
- <td>Council. Baker Street. Queen’s College. Greek Play.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">25.</td>
- <td>At Miss Clarke’s.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">26.</td>
- <td>Oxford. Home.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Dec.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">(31?).</td>
- <td>Was at Sudeley for Christmas.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">1896.</td>
- <td></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>April</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">21.</td>
- <td>Cambridge Conference.<a name="FNanchor_88" id="FNanchor_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a>
- Stayed at the [Vice-] Chancellor’s.<a name="FNanchor_89" id="FNanchor_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>May</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">3.</td>
- <td>Pressed in spirit. “I stand at the door and knock.” Read Bishop
- French’s Life.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">6.</td>
- <td>Girls came back.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">7.</td>
- <td>First day. Full of self.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">13.</td>
- <td>Slept at Bethnal Green.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">1897.</td>
- <td></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Feb</i>.</td>
- <td class="tdr">9.</td>
- <td>Bishop came.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">10.</td>
- <td>Miss Clarke died.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">15.</td>
- <td>Went to funeral. “He giveth grace for grace.” As we spend, more
- pours in, the water level is kept up. “He that watereth shall
- be watered also himself.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">25.</td>
- <td>Telegram to say £3000 subscribed by the Guild [for St. Hilda’s East].</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">1898.</td>
- <td></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Jan.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">8.</td>
- <td>Council.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">14.</td>
- <td>After reading to-day [I thought] ... the smallest living thing
- can stir tides of the boundless ocean, the atom move the infinite.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">23.</td>
- <td>H. C., St. Philip’s. Woman touched garment. Sermon and lesson, to be
- healed of that weakness which is undermining spiritual strength, not
- by thinking, but by touching Jesus Christ.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Sept.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">13.</td>
- <td>Had a very refreshing holiday. (1) Lord Farrer’s; (2) Lodgings;
- (3) Miss Bidder’s; (4) Bonchurch; (5) Forest; (6) Woodchester.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">9.</td>
- <td>Studio looks well and all rooms.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">23.</td>
- <td>Opened.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">25.</td>
- <td>H. C. Fresh resolutions against spirit of indolence.’</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The year 1895, which opened sadly with the death
-of Miss Buss, was marked by wide extensions of the
-Cheltenham College work. The playground was now in
-daily use. A triumph of the athletic tendency of the
-age, it was also an emphatic mark of Miss Beale’s
-acceptance of new ideas. To the end she could not quite
-understand why it was wanted, but she saw it had to be,
-and even grew proud of it in its way.</p>
-
-<p>In 1895 the old Cheltenham theatre, which the College
-had purchased a few years before, was razed to the
-ground, and the erection of a new, fine building in its
-place, as an integral part of the College buildings, was
-begun. This was an immense hall,<a name="FNanchor_90" id="FNanchor_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> capable of holding
-nearly two thousand people, and possessed of remarkable
-acoustic qualities. It was fitted up with a large stage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-and everything necessary for the acting which had already
-become a feature of the Guild meetings. The Guild
-plays grew to be Miss Beale’s recreation in her old age.
-It was an immense pleasure to see the stories and poems
-she had prized all her life made living on the stage. She
-had a keen dramatic sense, and delighted in watching
-rehearsals and personally coaching some of the individual
-actors. She was interested even in getting details of
-dress as correct as possible, and in the schemes of colour,
-objecting to a predominance of red, a colour she always
-disliked. The Guild plays were of course chosen, like the
-subjects of her literature lessons, with a view to elevate
-rather than to entertain. Three performances specially
-stand out in the memory: <cite>Comus</cite>, in 1896, with its
-exquisite dancing and dressing; that of <cite>Griselda</cite>, in 1904;
-and the last of all, with its prophetic note of farewell,
-<cite>Hatshepset</cite>, in 1906. Probably <cite>Griselda</cite> most of all
-appealed to Miss Beale, who gave an interpretation all
-her own to Chaucer’s tale. She saw in it a spiritual
-allegory of God’s dealings with the soul, and she set it
-forth in a beautiful little introduction to the story. Years
-before it had been proposed that Sir Edwin Arnold’s
-<cite>Griselda</cite> should be taken for the College play. She wrote
-very strongly against it to Miss Wolseley Lewis:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am sure none of you would be able to bear the modernised
-dramatised Griselda if you learned it. It is like painting the
-face of an unearthly mediæval saint and clothing her with garments
-which show the human form. In the Griselda of Chaucer
-there is nothing of the vulgar love-making of the “merchant.”
-The love of the “markis” comes as a gift from heaven.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then that scene in which she ministers to his pleasure by
-music; it is all such a low kind of ministry. Whereas in the
-original, hers is just the worship of perfect <em>faith</em>,—obedience to
-his <em>will</em>, because she will not question it.... The whole thing
-jars on me.... The quiet, grave “markis” (of Chaucer) may
-be a type of Him who tries us to confirm our faith, but this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
-human “marquis” is of the earth earthy, and cannot stand for
-a spiritual type. It reminds me of the passage in which Ruskin
-comments on the attitude of the Prophets in “The Transfiguration.”<a name="FNanchor_91" id="FNanchor_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a>
-Do you remember it in <cite>Modern Painters</cite>?</p>
-
-<p>‘There! enough! I wish it might be <cite>Comus</cite>, or <cite>The Princess</cite>
-or <cite>Alcestis</cite> would not cost so much trouble as something
-new,—but better nothing than something not really high.</p>
-
-<p>‘There, I don’t want to dictate or to say you shall not do
-what you wish, but I hope you won’t wish this <cite>Griselda</cite>.... I do
-think we should like <cite>Comus</cite>, and we might have such good music.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the early part of 1895 Miss Beale was more than
-usually active and well. In the Easter holidays she paid
-a long-promised visit to Miss Mason’s House of Education
-at Ambleside. Here she gave a lecture to the
-students on Geometry. The visit was a great pleasure,
-she was in full sympathy with Miss Mason’s work, and
-she enjoyed meeting Miss Arnold at Fox Howe, and
-many friends and pupils. In June she was present at a
-performance of the <cite>Alcestis</cite> at Bradfield College; she also
-went again to the Royal Society conversazione.</p>
-
-<p>The active enjoyment of this summer received a check
-at the term-holiday, when, while walking on Leckhampton
-Hill, Miss Beale slipped and broke her leg. The period
-of forced inaction which followed was generally held to be
-good for her, and she was well enough to be carried into
-the College for the addresses of the Quiet Days at the
-end of the term. She was unable, however, to be present
-at the Oxford summer meeting in August. The paper
-she had written for this on the Professional Education of
-Teachers was read by Mr. Worsley.</p>
-
-<p>A school which has neither prize-giving nor speech-day
-does not easily obtain very highly distinguished
-visitors. It was not till 1897 that the College was
-honoured by the presence of Royalty. In that year the
-Empress Frederick of Germany proposed a visit. Her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-interest in education led her to wish to see the classes at
-work in their usual conditions. She therefore went with
-Miss Beale from one room to another while the actual
-teaching was going on. A few days after her visit Miss
-Beale received the following letter from Major-General
-Russell, who was at that time member for Cheltenham:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Frankfort, Germany</span>, <i>August 13, 1897</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—Yesterday I had the honour of lunching
-with the Empress Frederick at Cronberg. As soon as I
-arrived there she called me on one side, and begged that I would
-convey to you the pleasure and satisfaction that she had derived
-from her visit to the Ladies’ College at Cheltenham. She begged
-me to tell you that she was much gratified by what she saw of
-the arrangements, and what she learned of the system of education
-pursued there. She was much impressed by the happiness
-and contentment which appeared to be universal among the
-pupils, and also with the strict and excellent discipline which she
-hears and remarked you maintain both among the instructors
-and the students themselves.</p>
-
-<p>‘She added that she fully appreciates the great work that you
-have accomplished in the interest of education, as well as the
-personal sacrifice and self-devotion which you have consecrated
-to the task.</p>
-
-<p>‘I need not say how much pleasure it has afforded me to
-be the medium of conveying to you Her Imperial Majesty’s
-gracious message, and, I remain, yours sincerely,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Frank S. Russell</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Two years later the Princess Henry of Battenberg
-came to unveil a marble bust of Queen Victoria, the
-work of Countess Feodora Gleichen, which had been
-presented to the College.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 650px;" id="illus9">
-<img src="images/illus9.jpg" width="650" height="540" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Empress Frederick at Cheltenham</i><br />
-<i>from a photograph by Mr. Domenico Barnett</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Among Miss Beale’s triumphs of this period should
-surely be mentioned her mastery of the tricycle at the
-age of sixty-seven. It became a great delight to her.
-She used it chiefly in the early morning—often very
-early—when the streets were empty. ‘The men in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-milk-carts know me and keep out of my way,’ she would
-say. She greatly enjoyed the fresh air and complete
-solitude gained with so little effort.</p>
-
-<p>In 1898 England received a severe visitation of small-pox.
-No town in the country suffered more than Gloucester,
-where for long it raged among the unvaccinated,
-and even devoted nurses and doctors fell victims. It
-was five times introduced into Cheltenham, but owing,
-Miss Beale was pleased to hint in the Magazine, to the
-healthiness of the climate and the good sanitation of the
-town, it never got a hold there. Cheltenham largely
-owed its immunity to the exertions of the Lady Principal,
-who insisted on revaccination where it was necessary
-for every one connected with the College. This
-meant not only teachers, pupils, servants, but all who had
-to do with any College girl in any capacity—all in the
-homes of the day-pupils—all in the shops which served
-the boarding-houses—the whole railway staff at the
-different stations. The College custom was too good to
-lose, and she carried her point. Such a drastic measure
-had its comic side, as was perceived by the saucy butcher-boy
-who shouted to a boarding-house cook, ‘I must
-know if you are vaccinated before I deliver this meat.’</p>
-
-<p>Among the College victims was a girl within a few
-weeks of an important examination. The daughter of
-an anti-vaccinator, she had of course never been ‘done,’
-and the father telegraphed that he would not permit it.
-A married sister staying in the town urged the College
-authorities to act on their own responsibility; but that
-Miss Beale would not do. The girl made another appeal
-to her father; but a cab was actually at the door to take
-her to the station, when his answer arrived in the second
-telegram—‘May do as she pleases.’ This modified
-permission saved the situation.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s determined and successful action in this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-matter was doubtless remembered when, in 1901, the
-Mayor and Corporation resolved to bestow upon her
-the freedom of the borough. This was ceremonially
-done on October 28, the Town Council, Governing Body
-of the College, and a large number of Miss Beale’s friends
-being present.</p>
-
-<p>‘The honour,’ said the Mayor (Mr. Norman) in his
-preliminary address to the Council, ‘is given with discrimination,
-and somewhat rarely. We in Cheltenham,
-during the thirty years of our corporate life, have only
-conferred it in two instances.... I am charged to-day
-with the proposing of a resolution which will add a third
-to that number. The resolution is in these terms:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“That, in recognition of the great work she has done for the
-education of women in England, and especially of the unique
-position to which under her direction the Cheltenham Ladies’
-College has attained among the educational institutions of the
-country, Miss Dorothea Beale be, in pursuance and exercise of
-the provisions of the Honorary Freedom of Boroughs’ Act, 1885,
-admitted to the honorary freedom of this borough.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>‘When I first approached Miss Beale on this subject, I
-did not know whether any lady had before been admitted
-a freeman of the borough. But from the wording of
-the Act of Parliament I was quite sure that the term
-“freeman” in the section quoted was used in a generic
-sense, and that ladies were as eligible as men to the
-honour which we propose to confer upon Miss Beale. I
-was therefore prepared to create a precedent, if necessary.
-But since then I have learned that at least in one case,
-that of Baroness Burdett Coutts, this honour has been
-conferred upon a lady.’</p>
-
-<p>In her reply Miss Beale said:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘ ... In some places those who should work together stand
-opposed; elsewhere we have heard of fights between town and
-gown; at some seats of learning women have been denied titles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-that they have earned. In Cheltenham we have a happy conciliation
-of opposites.... You Municipal authorities recognise
-that; you care not only for pure water and open spaces
-and cleanliness, but for the Free Library and Science Schools
-and Art Galleries and healthy recreations; and we school authorities
-cannot but make the body healthier by mental discipline,
-by the sunshine of truth, by inspiring the young with high
-aspirations, and so lifting them out of the rudeness which is the
-outward sign of selfishness. I look upon to-day’s ceremony as
-a sign of our faith for the individual and for the community,
-health in its largest sense, <i lang="la">mens sana in corpore sano</i>, is to be
-realised only by the harmonious working of the inward and outward
-law. To invite a woman to be a Freeman of a Town is,
-I venture to believe, an expression of the thought that not the
-individual but the family, with its twofold life, is the true unit
-and type of the state, that social and civil and national prosperity
-depend on the communion of labour, and that the ideal
-commonwealth is realised only in proportion as the dream of
-one of our poets is fulfilled, and men and women</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent8">“Walk this world</div>
-<div class="verse">Yoked in all exercise of noble ends.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>‘ ... Formerly we had no women Guardians, but one who
-is called in her own town “the Guardian Angel”<a name="FNanchor_92" id="FNanchor_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> visited us and
-won all hearts, and then there were elected two ladies, who have
-been re-elected ever since, who by their insight and gentleness
-and wisdom have destroyed the last vestige of prejudice.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... Mrs. Owen was also a link between the Ladies’ College
-and the Cheltenham College, that elder brother, under
-whose protection alone our College could have grown up. It is
-a strange thing that women are threatened with exclusion from
-the projected Educational Authority; women, who are born to
-the care of children, who are so much needed to hold the outposts
-in our educational army, which are being deserted by men.
-Visions I have of a closer union between all the schools of our
-town.... Cheltenham, too, has made progress intellectually.
-A Literary Institution died a natural death shortly after I came;
-it was, I hope, only a case of <i lang="la">post hoc</i>. In my early days the
-provision of books was scanty indeed. I tried to get Tennyson’s
-last poem in one of the principal shops of the Promenade. I
-was told, “We never have had any poetic effusions in our
-library, and I do not think we shall begin now.” There was no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
-Permanent Library, and a Free Library was impossible and unthought
-of, and in our own College I was fain to be content with
-a grant of £5 for books. But more than all the material and
-intellectual progress has been the raising of public opinion regarding
-the moral law. Much there is still to deplore, much to
-amend, and we long to see more efforts made to promote temperance,
-but I am sure that the higher education of women, the
-opening to them of larger opportunities of usefulness, has
-helped to lift many above the unsatisfying pleasures of a frivolous
-life, and won for them the respect which is always a blessing
-both to “him that gives and him that takes.” We have, indeed,
-reason to thank God and take courage.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the same year Miss Beale was co-opted a member
-of the Advisory Board of the University of London.</p>
-
-<p>The recognition by the town was from every point of
-view a triumph and an honour. The year in which it took
-place and the preceding one were marked by large extension
-of boarding-house property and many other signs
-of wealth. But for Miss Beale herself it can have been
-no time of great gladness. Though her vitality was as
-great as ever, her health was less good, her deafness
-much increasing, her sight impaired. Constantly she
-was called upon to part by death from some old and
-valued friend or fellow-worker. In January she shared
-the general mourning for Queen Victoria. In March
-1901 Miss Caines died; a month later the beloved
-sister Eliza and Canon Hutchinson, of whom Miss Beale
-spoke as a friend and pastor of many years, were buried
-on the same day. Miss Beale turned from her sister’s
-grave to write last words to be read after her own death
-should she be called away while still head of the College.
-She also revised her will and wrote directions concerning
-her personal belongings and her funeral.</p>
-
-<p>But if the road to the Dark Tower grew lonely,<a name="FNanchor_93" id="FNanchor_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> it was
-greatly brightened by the love of those she had taught,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-inspired, and helped. No parent was ever more closely
-encompassed by the love of children. There were those
-at Cheltenham who thought for her, waited on her, read
-to her—no light task—those who, should she desire it,
-were ever at her beck and call. Some of these were on
-the College Council. One, in particular, Miss Flora Ker,
-who lived at Cheltenham, was always at hand, making
-the interests of the College and little attentions to Miss
-Beale the first duty of her day. Another, who had become
-head of a boarding-house, thought of her daily needs
-to the smallest details. A third habitually accompanied
-her on the visits which became so great an enjoyment in
-these later years, and on the frequent business journeys
-to London, making them easy by many little thoughtful
-arrangements. Miss Beale would seem unconscious of
-these at the moment, but she deeply valued the thought
-and the loving service of which she availed herself to the
-full. The Chairman and different members of the Council
-showed also much personal consideration for the Principal.
-Nor could she travel anywhere without finding
-‘old girls’ ready to welcome and make much of her in
-every way. In these things she had indeed ‘all that
-should accompany old age.’</p>
-
-<p>In 1902 came a crowning honour for the Ladies’
-College when its Principal was offered the LL.D. by the
-Edinburgh University, in recognition of her services to
-education. Miss Beale was simply and unfeignedly
-delighted with this acknowledgment of the worth of
-women’s work. Her loyal staff seized the occasion to
-give her a personal sense of satisfaction also. They
-presented her with her robes, which were made as costly
-and beautiful as possible. A journey to Scotland was a
-great adventure to Miss Beale, but the occasion warranted
-the effort. As usual, all the arrangements were left in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-the hands of Miss Alice Andrews, who with others of
-the College staff accompanied the Principal. It was
-examination week at Cheltenham, or such a flight of
-teachers would not have been possible. The degree was
-conferred on April 11 in the M’Ewan Hall of Edinburgh
-University. Others who received it on the same
-occasion were Lord Alverstone, Mr. Asquith, Mr.
-Austin Dobson, Sir John Batty Tuke, and Dr. Rücker.<a name="FNanchor_94" id="FNanchor_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a>
-Only once before had the University conferred this
-degree on a woman, viz. on Miss Ormerod, in recognition
-of her great services to agriculture.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 420px;" id="illus10">
-<img src="images/illus10.jpg" width="420" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption-r"><i>Photo. G. H. Martyn &amp; Sons</i></p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Dorothea Beale, LL.D.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sir Ludovic Grant, Dean of the Faculty of Law, thus
-summed up Miss Beale’s claim to a national recognition:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘No feature of the national progress during the last fifty years
-is more remarkable than the revolution which has transformed
-our girls’ schools from occidental zenanas into centres of healthy
-activity. In the great crusade which has been crowned with
-this most desirable consummation, the foremost champion was
-the cultured and intrepid lady who guides the destinies of the
-Ladies’ College, Cheltenham. It was largely due to Miss
-Beale’s indomitable advocacy, on platform and on paper, that the
-barriers of parental prejudice were broken down, that the ancient
-idols venerated by a former generation—Mangnall, Pinnock, and
-Lindley Murray—were shattered, and that barren catechism
-and lifeless epitome were compelled to give place to fructifying
-studies, and the futile promenade to invigorating recreations. I
-need not remind you that Miss Beale’s apostolic ardour is
-equalled by her administrative abilities. When she went to
-Cheltenham her pupils were counted by tens; to-day they are
-to be counted by hundreds, and the institution in respect of
-organisation and educational efficiency will bear comparison
-with the best of the great English public schools. Among the
-collateral benefits resulting from the great movement for the
-higher education of women, in which Miss Beale has played so
-conspicuous a part, not the least important is the power which
-the Scotch Universities have obtained of conferring their honorary
-degrees upon women, and therefore it is with no ordinary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-satisfaction that the University of Edinburgh now exercises this
-power by begging Miss Beale’s acceptance of an honour which
-has been brought within the reach of her sex largely through her
-own endeavours.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Her account of the ceremony is best read in her own
-letter to the Vice-Principal:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>April 12, 1902.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Just a few lines while waiting for breakfast. We start at
-eleven for Glasgow, and I am in the midst of the agonies of
-packing.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yesterday was a long day. We started at 9.20, as it is
-a long drive to the M’Ewan Hall. In the voting-room we met
-our Chairman and various distinguished professors—Laurie,
-Saintsbury, Professor Rücker—of the people I knew; but the
-most important of all was the beadle. In a little while our
-names were called, and one had to step into place. First came
-the Doctors of Divinity. There were six LL.D.’s, headed by
-the Lord Chief-Justice, who was followed by Mr. Asquith,
-whom I followed in every subsequent procession.... Arrived
-at the hall, we sat as it were in the front row below the
-stage in our hall. There were central steps, opposite which
-sat the Vice-Chancellor or Vice-Principal. Each went up
-and stood with his back to the audience whilst the leader of
-his faculty expatiated on his claims to the honours; he looked
-like a person being reprimanded. Then the beadle invested
-him with the hood, the V.-P. put the cap over his head, he
-wrote his name in a book, and then seated himself with other
-exalted persons on the platform. Various speeches followed, but
-none were made to ordinary graduates. Music played, no sticks
-or umbrellas were allowed, and no cries such as the savages utter
-at English Universities; the only amusement was to fly paper
-from the galleries; some seems to have been made into windmills,
-they flew rather well. Then procession again to the
-voting-room, where I was first to claim my box; there was
-nothing to compare with my shabby things—cardboard most of
-them, but I am persuaded that my robes were far superior to any
-other. Ask those who saw them from a distance.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, we next proceeded to church, and St. Giles’ looked
-most beautiful. The sermon I did not hear, but am assured
-that was because the preacher had an Aberdeen accent. One
-thing I omitted. Just after I had taken the degree, as I was
-seated on the platform, came a porter with a telegram for me.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-I opened it and found congratulations from the Kindergarten.
-Please tell them how smartly it arrived at the right moment.
-The others kindly sent arrived at the hotel, and I found them on
-my return; please thank the senders.</p>
-
-<p>‘After church some nice Miss Stevensons carried us off.
-They have a beautiful house and a splendid view of the heights,—one
-is Chairman of the School Board. They are always
-at work. Then we came back and were visited by various old
-girls.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>At Glasgow Miss Beale stayed with a married pupil,
-and found herself in the midst of ‘old girls,’ who made
-much of her. From Glasgow she wrote a second letter,
-to be read to the assembled College before the dispersion
-for the holidays:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>April 16, 1902.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘We are often in spirit in Cheltenham, and I must send a
-few last words, to wish you all very happy holidays.</p>
-
-<p>‘We are very busy. The first thing we visited was the
-Queen Margaret Settlement, which is something like our
-St. Hilda’s. It is a very large place, and a school for invalid
-children was being held. Miss Bruce came down to the opening.
-On Monday a large number of distinguished people were
-invited to meet us, and yesterday afternoon we had a party
-of about thirty Cheltonians. In the evening we dined with
-Professor and Mrs. George Adam Smith. I sat next to Professor
-Henry Jones, who has written a book on Browning, and
-on the other side was the Rector, Dr. Story. He has kindly
-promised to take us over the University this morning. There
-are about three hundred girls studying here,<a name="FNanchor_95" id="FNanchor_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> and they have a
-charming Miss Galloway; she is as fond of Glasgow University
-as I am of our College. To-morrow we are to go over the
-Cathedral.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think we shall come back refreshed and with some new ideas.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am glad to hear all is going on well.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>From Mrs. Osborne in Glasgow Miss Beale went on
-to stay with other old pupils in Scotland, coming afterwards
-to Newcastle, where she was asked to launch a
-ship. Her ignorance of use and wont under conditions
-fairly well known to most people came out when she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
-attired herself for this event in well-looped-up dress and
-indiarubber shoes. Much as she disliked adventure,
-she was prepared to march into the Tyne if the glory of
-the Ladies’ College demanded it. However, she much
-enjoyed the ceremony that actually took place,—the
-drive to the docks, the description she received of the
-vessel, the bouquet of roses presented to her in
-honour of St. George’s Day. Her diary at this point
-becomes crowded with facts concerning steamers and
-dock labourers. From Newcastle Miss Beale went to
-Durham, where she stayed with the Dean; then to York.
-Wherever she went there were schools to visit, and
-perhaps address, ‘old girls’ to see. A night in London
-ended the wanderings, and she came home well and happy
-to enter in her diary: ‘Arrived to the hour, exactly three
-weeks after starting, having spent the night in nine
-different places, and feeling quite refreshed by meeting
-with so much kindness, and so many charming old
-girls.’</p>
-
-<p>The year which had so bright a spring brought but a
-sorry autumn for Miss Beale. In October 1902 she
-was—an unheard-of thing—obliged to leave Cheltenham
-for her health, and went to Bath, accompanied by Miss
-Berridge, for several weeks. Her sight was a special
-anxiety, and during this time she was not allowed to
-write or read. A letter from Miss Berridge to Miss
-Sturge gives a glimpse of the life at Bath:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>October 1902.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘We brought with us Adam Smith’s work on the <cite>Minor
-Prophets</cite>, and also Jane Austen’s <cite>Persuasion</cite>. At first we stuck
-to the <cite>Prophets</cite>, but at last Jane got a hearing, and since then
-she has utterly ousted the <cite>Prophets</cite>. It has been rather amusing
-to note how many excellent reasons there were for giving Jane
-the preference. Miss Beale was—tired—or sleepy—or not very
-well, and could not attend to anything that required thought—or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-it was near lunch—or tea—or supper-time, and therefore it
-was not worth while, etc. etc., and I think she has really liked
-the story very much. Please tell Miss Alice Andrews,—it is her
-book, and Miss Beale at first refused to bring it, but thought <em>I</em>
-might do so, as it might amuse me. The result of the experiment
-is that we are now going to read some of Scott’s, beginning
-with <cite>The Antiquary</cite>. Miss Beale is very much better, though
-of course far from being her former energetic self. But we
-have still more than a fortnight before us, and if she makes as
-much progress in that time as she has done in the fortnight just
-gone, we may be very well satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bath is a very pretty place, but, of course, I have not seen
-much of it. Miss Beale is now able to take short walks; to-day
-she went to Milsom Street.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have written such multitudes of letters that I really do not
-know to whom they have all been.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale was able to return to work before the end
-of the term. She seemed in most ways as vigorous as
-ever. A doctor, whom she consulted about her deafness
-in 1903, told her she had the pulse of a woman of
-forty. But she became more and more careful about her
-health. Her summer holidays were spent at Oeynhausen,
-where she followed a ‘Kur.’ There she took with her
-always some friend who devoted herself to the care of
-Miss Beale, and at the same time was a congenial companion,
-reading aloud to her, or listening while Miss
-Beale read. On one occasion Miss Amy Giles went, on
-another Fräulein Grzywacz. The life at the baths was
-carefully planned even to minutes. Miss Beale liked to
-have her morning letters before the early walk, which the
-daily régime demanded. While waiting for the postman,
-even watching his appearance along the street, she would
-have some deep book read aloud to her, able to give her
-whole attention. ‘The postman is just here, Miss
-Beale,’ Fräulein Grzywacz would say, as she finished a
-chapter. ‘He is still ten doors off, you can read another
-paragraph,’ would be the reply.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In 1902 a determined and successful effort was made
-to get a worthy portrait of Miss Beale. Early in the
-College history a picture, which bore but a faint resemblance
-to the original and was wholly unworthy of her,
-had been painted, and at a Council meeting in 1873 it
-was ‘resolved that it be placed (veiled) over the door of
-the Council room, as most in accordance with the wishes
-of the donors.’ In 1889 the Council itself approached
-Miss Beale on the subject of a portrait, Sir Samuel
-Johnson, then chairman, writing to her:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>February 25, 1889.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘You cannot, you must not leave the College without something
-that will identify it with the Founder. Fancy what
-unavailing attempts will be made some day to supply the want!
-and the blame which will attach to us for not having left something
-behind worthy of such a woman! Think again, and do
-not let your feelings stand in the way of a plain duty.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On the envelope containing this letter Miss Beale wrote
-in pencil the characteristic note: ‘Miss Stirling might
-make a clay or terra-cotta.’ A modelling class had
-recently been opened in the College under Miss Stirling;
-Miss Beale was much interested in it and anxious to
-encourage it.</p>
-
-<p>The wish of the Council took the form of a resolution
-to which Miss Beale replied:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 1889.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I certainly have a very great objection to the thought of
-my portrait being placed in the Ladies’ College during my life.
-When our Guild asked me to allow this last year I refused.</p>
-
-<p>‘Secondly, I should <em>much</em> regret the diversion of funds which
-are so much needed for improvements in the College, and for
-the extension of work in many directions; whether that money
-is contributed from public or private sources.</p>
-
-<p>‘Lastly, I believe that putting myself forward in this way
-would be a real hindrance to my work, as it would give a false
-impression regarding the share I have been allowed to take
-in helping on the growth of this College.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘I thought of getting Miss Stirling, who models portraits, to
-take one in clay, this would be executed in stone by Mr. Martyn
-at small cost, and would answer all historical purposes. I have
-a variety of photos, too.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Later, she consented to give a few sittings to Mrs. Lea
-Merritt, for whose work she had a great admiration.
-The approach of the College Jubilee made a new moment
-for appealing to her again on this subject, and at the
-Guild meeting of 1902 she was presented with the
-following address, composed by Miss Amy Lumby and
-signed by a large number of old pupils:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Beale</span>,—We, the undersigned, your “children,”
-once in learning and always in affection, approach you with a
-very earnest wish. There is not one amongst us who does not
-look back with loving delight to the time when she saw your
-face daily, and learnt from your lips what things were best worth
-learning.</p>
-
-<p>‘The face we can never forget, but we should like to be able
-to have it constantly before us in such a form as shall call up
-again the spirit of those happy bygone days. There exists as
-yet no counterfeit presentment of our “School-mother” which
-does this; only a great artist can accomplish the task worthily;
-and so we beg, and beg most earnestly that, for our sake and
-for the sake of those who come after us, you will consent to
-let a portrait of yourself be painted by such an one, and will
-accept it for the College in commemoration of the Jubilee.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale was much touched by this appeal. She
-received it in eloquent silence, but at the last gathering
-before the Guild members separated her reply was read
-aloud by Miss Ker:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am touched by the kind wish of the Guild conveyed to
-me in the resolution of yesterday. I am afraid a third attempt
-would be no more successful than the preceding. The unbiassed
-artist represents his subject as she is, not as she seems
-to be to those who are good enough to overlook her defects,
-and love her in spite of them. Still, if it is really wished
-that another attempt should be made, I will willingly sit once
-more.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The work was entrusted to Mr. J. J. Shannon, R.A.,
-who had proved his ability for the task by the portraits
-of Miss Clough and Miss Wordsworth. No effort was
-spared by the painter to realise Miss Beale at her best,<a name="FNanchor_96" id="FNanchor_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a>
-and she gave a good deal of time to sittings, which were
-employed also in listening to reading aloud. Dr. Illingworth’s
-<cite>Personality Human and Divine</cite>, a very favourite
-work of hers, was often chosen. Sometimes this work
-was displaced by <cite>Lorna Doone</cite>, which Miss Beale said
-‘amused the painter.’ The Lady Principal was painted
-in her LL.D. robes, but also in her familiar head-dress,
-<i lang="fr">son petit bonnet de douairière</i>. She is represented as
-looking up with the glance well known to those who had
-watched her when she lectured. The attitude, which is
-as much that of disciple as teacher, was fitly chosen.</p>
-
-<p>The portrait was formally presented by the Duchess
-of Bedford on November 8, 1904, and with it an
-illuminated book containing the names of the donors.
-Miss Beale in her reply said:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘You have all come here moved by loyalty to your College.
-Loyalty is not a personal matter.... Tribute was due not to
-Tiberius but to Caesar; so you wanted a portrait of a Lady
-Principal—not of the person but of the representative,—and the
-Principal has a great advantage over the person in that the
-former lasts on when the latter passes away; loyalty outlasts
-life:—so I look on your gift as a page of College history. But
-not only have you brought a present for the College. I find
-also a beautiful book for my own personal self, not my official
-self, a record of affection from my children, which warms my
-heart, and makes me long to be more worthy of it.</p>
-
-<p>‘But if the affection of those we love is an energising power,
-it produces a moral tension, not unmingled with fear.... He
-who recorded the names in the ancient church wrote: “Let us
-fear lest we also come short.” But as I have said, the Principal
-does not die. Like the Lama she is re-incarnated. In her, if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-the body dies, the <i lang="fr">esprit de corps</i> survives, and I look forward to
-the time when another shall reign in my stead, ... and a
-procession of rulers greater than their ancestors ... shall see
-developments which we cannot foresee.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>For various reasons it was necessary to postpone the
-College Jubilee celebrations until May 1905. On this
-occasion a bust of Miss Beale was presented to the
-College by some admirers of her work who were not
-connected with it. A large new wing built for science
-teaching was opened by Lord Londonderry, then President
-of the Board of Education; and there were many
-distinguished guests. Two memorable speeches were
-made on this great occasion. One by the Chairman of
-the Council, Dr. Magrath, Provost of Queen’s College,
-Oxford, who made a brief but very sympathetic retrospect
-of the past history of the Ladies’ College. The
-other was from Mrs. Bryant, Head-mistress of the North
-London Collegiate School. She, as was fitting, looked
-forward to the future, and foreshadowed a large development
-of the work so well begun and established at
-Cheltenham. This Jubilee Day was the only public
-commemoration the Ladies’ College ever had. It was
-fitting that there should be one great public acknowledgment
-of Miss Beale’s work before the day came
-when she must leave it to the guidance of another.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE LAST TERM</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘And, when the day was done, relieved at once.’</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="attr"><span class="smcap">Browning</span>, <cite>How it strikes a Contemporary</cite>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the year 1905 Miss Beale sought to
-induce Bishop Ellicott, who had then resigned his see
-of Gloucester, to continue to visit the Ladies’ College,
-Cheltenham, as he had done for upwards of thirty years.
-He declined on the ground of ill-health, saying, ‘Among
-the many things that I regret being unable to attend to,
-I regret none more than the addresses to the bright-eyed
-attentive hearers I always secured at the College. But
-all things must have an end.’ This was written but a
-few months before the Bishop’s death.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Beale, happily for her active spirit, was not thus
-summoned to retire from work owing to age or feeble
-health. She had expressed more than once the wish
-that she might die in harness, and her letters since 1900
-had frequently breathed the wonder that she should still
-last on, and up to the summer of 1906 there was
-nothing to suggest that the end was really drawing
-near.</p>
-
-<p>The last Christmas holidays were happy. Miss Beale
-made a round of visits. At Lindfield she stayed with
-Miss Keyl, an old Gloucestershire friend, in London with
-Mrs. Tallents, an old pupil. Lastly, having been joined
-by Miss Alice Andrews, she went for a few days to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-Miss Wedgwood, whose sister, Lady Farrer, was also
-staying with her. Miss Beale greatly enjoyed her time
-with these old friends whom she had first known as
-pupils at Queen’s College. She was singularly active. ‘I
-dare say you would like to do just one thing each day,’
-said one hostess to her, little realising the vitality which
-would carry her on through a long series of events such
-as would tire out most younger people.</p>
-
-<p>The spring passed with little special incident, but for
-Miss Beale it was saddened by the death of Mrs.
-Charles Robinson in March.</p>
-
-<p>In the Easter holidays Miss Beale much enjoyed a
-visit to Miss Mellish, Head-mistress of the Ladies’
-College, Guernsey. Here she made many new acquaintances,
-took drives, saw places of interest, and kept an
-account of all in her diary. But the draft of a letter
-to some friend during this visit shows, that in spite
-of her courageous spirit, she felt her own term of work
-in this world to be practically over.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Guernsey</span>, <i>April 1906</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘I arrived here yesterday. I am staying with a very nice
-old girl who is Head-mistress of the College here. I have long
-wished to see this beautiful island where I have many friends.
-I have one of our staff with me who is a geologist, and is enjoying
-rambles. I don’t go about now without some one, a “lady-in-waiting,”
-to take care of me.</p>
-
-<p>‘The revolutionary changes make one anxious, the Bill to
-legalise “peaceful persuasion” especially. Perhaps the German
-conquest may change all. That a contest must come there
-seems no doubt, but it is better not to prophesy till after the
-event....</p>
-
-<p>‘There are problems enough for our successors on this
-planet. I wonder what we shall find to do,—what battles to
-fight when we pass out of sight.... I don’t think we shall
-want only <em>rest</em>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the summer, having at first declined the invitation,
-Miss Beale was persuaded to address the Head-mistresses’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
-Conference, which met on June 8 and 9 at the Clapham
-High School. In spite of the deafness, which made her
-dread committee meetings, she took her share in the
-discussions. Speaking on a resolution concerning the
-suffrage she said: ‘The underpayment of women went
-to the heart of all as a crying evil, and made every one
-earnest about the extension of the suffrage.’ She also in
-a later discussion expressed her emphatic disapproval of
-afternoon compulsory school, and related the history of
-the change made at Cheltenham in 1864.</p>
-
-<p>The address to the assembled head-mistresses on the
-following morning, Miss Beale’s last public utterance,
-may well find a place here. Full of the tenderest regard
-for the past, appreciating as no younger worker could
-the ideals and conflicts of her own generation, that
-utterance showed a front of marvellous courage and
-hope to the anxieties of the present and future.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I feel a sorrowful pride as I remember some of the Heads
-of the great Schools, who have passed out of sight, but whose
-works follow them. We were happy in our founder:<a name="FNanchor_97" id="FNanchor_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> with
-such a leader one felt ashamed of any evil spirit of competition:
-she always wanted to impart any good gift and introduce
-improved methods of teaching: to recommend new books, and
-to propose arrangements for the better organisation of schools,
-for the training of teachers, for extending the sphere of women’s
-work, for relieving them of the pressure of anxiety about old
-age: these things occupied her thoughts while she was still
-herself bearing the burden of financial responsibility, and generously
-caring for those bound to her by strong ties of family
-affection.... It was the celestial light which shone inwardly
-that irradiated her outward life. Of external work she undertook
-perhaps more than she ought to have done. She was on
-the Governing Body of the Church Schools Company, a member
-of our Governing Body, and of that of several other schools.
-She spared no pains in labouring for others, always sympathising
-and sustaining, fighting for the best good. Above all, actuating
-her, and enabling her to go on bravely, was that optimism<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-which came from the belief that God had given her this work
-to do, and that His Spirit would sustain her. Most gracefully
-did she descend from her throne when the end came. I shall not
-forget our last interview, when she playfully alluded to the fact
-that she had now to become again as a little child, to obey where
-she had ruled, and she was content to pass on the work into the
-hands of one so able, so beloved, so trusted as Mrs. Bryant.</p>
-
-<p>‘Another early member was Miss Benson, the first Head-mistress
-of the Girls’ Public Day Schools Company’s School at
-Oxford, and afterwards, for a few months, at Bedford; she was
-a burning and a shining light, unsparing in her demands upon
-herself and others;—she might have been called Zelotes.</p>
-
-<p>‘Of her successor, our own beloved Miss Belcher, it is hard
-for me to speak. She was the soul of honour. I remember one
-day she and her friend<a name="FNanchor_98" id="FNanchor_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> came to me and said one of them would
-like to apply for a good post, at a time when head-mistress-ships
-did not abound. I said, “I think I ought to tell you that
-events are impending which may shake our College to its
-foundations.” Some would have said, “Let us seek another
-shelter.” Their answer was, “We shall not apply.” Sometimes
-one thinks that if she could have had a less onerous work
-than the rule over the great school at Bedford, which left but
-little leisure for exercise, she might be at work now. But we
-will put aside “Might-have-beens,” as we see how her spirit
-lives in her school. One of the Bedford Council thought when
-a salary of over £1000 was offered, there would be many
-applications—thought we might send a second Head as her
-successor, but not one of our staff would apply, for Miss Belcher
-had chosen.</p>
-
-<p>‘This year has taken from us one of my best-beloved pupils,
-the late Head-mistress of Truro High School, afterwards the
-wife of Canon Charles Robinson; all who knew her regarded
-her as indeed a saint.</p>
-
-<p>‘I may not speak of the living—none are happy till their
-death—but it is a joy to me (now the most ancient grandmother
-of all) to see with intimate knowledge the good work being done
-by those whom I have learned to know as friends and fellow-workers.
-Specially close ties bind me to those Head-mistresses
-whom we ourselves have sent forth. Of these in the Association
-there are now twenty presiding over important schools, and
-ten who are no longer Heads, not to name many who for various
-reasons do not belong to our Association.</p>
-
-<p>‘To turn to less personal matters, we who belong to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-Secondary Schools have been happy in escaping the troubles
-which beset those schools which receive Government grants.
-So far, Secondary Schools have been allowed some individuality.
-I think we may give thanks for the liberty of “prophesying,”
-that we have hitherto enjoyed. I rather dread the result of the
-absorption into Trusts of the great School Companies. “Wha
-dare meddle wi’ me?” has been the cry of some of us, and the
-prickles have protected the flower.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then we have escaped payment by results, and interference
-from inspectors, some of whom are able to see the body but not
-the soul which moves it.</p>
-
-<p>‘The present troubles bring us into closer sympathy with
-those who have been enduring what seemed to us an Egyptian
-bondage, but who were doing grand work in disciplining and
-drilling the masses. Many of those who are now to take up
-the management of Council schools are now brought into closer
-relation with ours.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... And now what is the main issue before us? When
-the Secondary Schools are absorbed into the national system, and
-orders are issued to us from the Education Department, shall
-we be told that we also are to give only secular instruction, and
-forbidden to give definite teaching regarding the creeds and
-ritual which express the truths by which we live;—shall we be
-forbidden to ask any questions about the fitness of the teachers
-whom we wish to appoint? These are matters which seem to
-press for answers.</p>
-
-<p>‘Only a few thoughts can I throw out to-day on this subject.
-First, it seems inconceivable that there should be any such
-limitations of the realms of knowledge as is implied in the word
-“secular.” Man’s thoughts cannot be shut in by space or time,
-he must seek the real beneath the phenomenal, he must search
-for the ultimate; more than any earthly or secular good he
-desires to know and live for the things which belong to an
-eternal world,—the true, the beautiful, the good. All literature,
-all history, attests this. Whence then the discordant cries, some
-demanding secular teaching only, others fearing it?</p>
-
-<p>‘I think we are confused sometimes, because we do not
-remember or recognise sufficiently that there are two ways of
-approaching the subject of religious teaching and of all subjects
-of thought. Take for an illustration the subject now occupying
-the scientific world. Can we retain the conception of the
-atom as formulated in the last century? Is matter an aggregate
-of impenetrable, indivisible nodules, or is an atom merely
-a centre of force? Have we nothing that we should call solid,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
-only vortices? Is solidity a flux of ions? These are all matters
-on which the wisest may differ, but there are certain fundamental
-facts on which all are agreed—the fact that there must
-be one all-embracing medium through which relations are
-realised. So in the world of spirit, the fact is indisputable that
-we are conscious of forces affecting us and on which we individually
-react, indisputable that we can interpret facts of sensation,
-and this necessitates a belief in the correspondence of our
-mind with one all-embracing spirit; it seems impossible to
-doubt that in interpreting the universe we are corresponding
-with and holding communion with an infinite mind revealed in
-Nature, and we repeat with inner conviction the first article
-of our Creed—“God created,”—we pass on to the second half—“God
-created man in His own image,” and so we go on to
-speak of other articles of faith. Philosophy, which has so large
-a place in the Bible teaching and which is always based on the
-facts of our inner consciousness and our moral sense, ought, I
-believe, to have a larger space in our teaching, but we should
-endeavour more to build on foundations which cannot be shaken.
-The mystery of our own being, the distinction of the “I” and
-the “Me,” the facts of conscience, the συνείδησις which lifts us
-out of the mere individual or animal, and speaks of the relation
-of the true self to the eternal, the kingdom of righteousness,—the
-evolution of human thought through the ages,—leads on
-to the faith that man is indeed the child of God, that His Spirit
-is inspiring us.</p>
-
-<p>‘What seem to us present troubles are perhaps intended to
-make us dig deeper in the field wherein the great treasure of
-spiritual truth is hidden, so that we may say with fuller conscious
-conviction, “The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand”—“is
-within you.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On her way to Paddington after the Head-mistresses’
-Conference, the cab which contained Miss Beale and
-Miss Andrews was run into by another, a shaft shattering
-the window beside Miss Beale.</p>
-
-<p>She did not realise her danger or that her shawl was
-full of bits of broken glass. The accident is alluded to
-in the letter she afterwards wrote to Mrs. Woodhouse,
-whose guest she had been at Clapham.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I am so glad I was able to be present. It was a most
-interesting meeting; and very glad to see your beautiful
-school....</p>
-
-<p>‘Lord Aberdeen [once] complimented me on not suffering
-from “train fever”; I am afraid I seemed to do so at lunch.
-It was well that we allowed a little spare time to be run into.
-One needs to allow for motors!’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was the year of the Guild meetings. A very large
-number of old pupils, larger than ever before, came to
-Cheltenham in June, for every year saw additions to the
-roll of members and no falling off among the elder ones,
-who felt each time might be the last occasion on which
-the beloved Principal would preside. The subject chosen
-for the play was the very unusual one of a story from
-Egyptian history. No pains were spared to render it
-truthfully; Dr. Budge was consulted, the Book of the
-Dead studied; Miss Beale herself gave a lecture on the
-history of Egypt, a subject she had never worked up
-before. The story of the great queen whose life was
-given up to her country, ordered wholly for their good,
-with no private interests; whose marriage was an act of
-sacrifice; who ruled her people with large-minded beneficence,
-and under whom they prospered; who finally,
-as age came upon her, resigned for their sake, seemed
-strangely appropriate for the close of Miss Beale’s long
-work for Cheltenham. The very remoteness of the
-story, its gravity, the absence from it of such didacticism
-as abounded in Miss Beale’s interpretation of Britomart
-and Griselda, made it all the more forcible. It was in
-no way premeditated. Miss Beale herself said she did
-not much care for it, as it contained so little spiritual
-teaching. But as the curtain fell upon Hatshepset’s
-resignation and death, the crowded audiences of past
-and present pupils palpably realised that for them the
-inevitable change awaiting the College had been, if unconsciously,
-foreshadowed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Guild arrangements, which generally included an
-address from Miss Beale on Saturday morning and a
-closing one on Monday from some speaker invited for
-the purpose, were altered in 1906 to suit the convenience
-of the Bishop of Stepney. The earlier address was
-given by the Bishop after the College prayers, which
-Miss Beale herself read as usual. His subject was the
-work of St. Hilda’s East and the needs of East London.
-He held his hearers enthralled as he spoke to them of
-those other girls and women whom they were meant to
-help. But even more striking than the strong words
-of the young Bishop was the sight of the frail and aged
-form of her, so long their teacher and inspirer, to whom
-most of those present were consciously and deeply indebted
-for much that was best in their lives. Miss
-Beale, with the familiar smile which marked her enthusiastic
-approval, stood the whole time close to the
-Bishop, straining to hear every word, her eye alert to
-trace the effect of what he was saying on his audience.
-Many who saw her thus saw her for the last time, as
-they had to leave Cheltenham when the morning Guild
-meetings were over. Miss Beale herself left before the
-end, unequal to the long strain they involved.</p>
-
-<p>On Sunday the usual admission of new members took
-place. On Monday Miss Beale addressed the Guild for
-the last time. It was not unnatural that she should
-speak on this occasion as one who looked back on the
-changes and progress of fifty years. Miss Beale conveyed
-to her hearers the suggestion that it was not with
-unmixed satisfaction that she surveyed matters from this
-standpoint. In the midst of advantages, such as the last
-generation could not know, their eyes opened to the
-needs of others, needs they could supply, many women
-remained not serious, not devoted. She appealed for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-more earnestness in all, that there might be none wearing
-the Guild badge who should not be able to use the
-motto of St. Hilda’s, Oxford: <i lang="la">Non frustra vixi</i>.</p>
-
-<p>So passed this great gathering of friends. It was only
-afterwards that it came to be known that below her
-joyous affectionate welcome, her ready sympathy and
-quick memory for her children and their concerns, lay
-a deep reason for personal anxiety, that she was beginning
-to suspect herself to be the victim of a serious
-malady. Only once was there a sign of uneasiness,
-when she seemed much distressed not to have seen again
-an old pupil and Guild member, Dr. Aldrich-Blake, who
-had been obliged to leave Cheltenham without saying
-good-bye to her.</p>
-
-<p>The summer holidays were again spent at Oeynhausen.
-She wrote in the course of them that she was deriving
-benefit from the treatment, but certainly it was far less
-effective than before. Nor did she give herself a chance
-of throwing off the cares of work. In the ordinary
-sense of the word, indeed, Miss Beale could never rest,
-and though physically less strong her brain seemed inexhaustibly
-active. She corrected the Magazine proofs,
-engaged new teachers, and wrote many letters to the
-College secretary, going as usual into all kinds of details
-about arrangements for new pupils. Nor did she even
-rest from study. She wrote to Cheltenham for a table
-of German genders; while from Mr. Worsley she asked
-the Scripture examination papers, which he had as usual
-undertaken. Her letter shows this continued activity
-of mind:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>September 12, 1906.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Thanks for your note. I think I should like to have all the
-papers; we can better show the girls where they have failed
-to enter into the full meaning. I looked at mine, and thought
-they had kept to very outside things.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Have you seen Montague Owen’s record of the Sewell
-family? It is privately printed, but I can lend you my copy.
-They certainly were a wonderful and original people. Now
-Elizabeth is gone at the age of ninety-one. You were, I think,
-at Radley.</p>
-
-<p>‘We re-open next week with one hundred and fifty new
-pupils to fill our vacancies.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>She was glad to get back to Cheltenham, but those
-who knew her best saw that it was only by a stern
-effort of will that she nerved herself to begin her work
-in the ordinary way. They began to hope that she
-might not much longer be called upon to make what
-was visibly a tremendous effort. Nothing was left
-undone.</p>
-
-<p>School began on September 22. Miss Beale, as usual
-on the first day of term, gave a short address after
-prayers to the assembled teachers and children. She
-spoke, as often before, of the parable of the Talents,
-but mainly of the joy of the Lord—the joy and reward
-of being fellow-workers with God. Strangely fitting did
-her words afterwards seem for the last time she addressed
-the College as a body.</p>
-
-<p>In the month which followed only a few saw signs of
-the weakness and illness which had really begun. She
-had undertaken the usual courses of lectures, and missed
-none. The College numbers were very large, the life as
-full and vigorous as ever. There was even a new
-department started for the first time that term, in the
-arrangement—the revolution of Time’s wheel having
-been made—of courses of lessons in cookery.</p>
-
-<p>On October 16 the annual Council meeting was held
-in London. In order to spare herself fatigue, Miss
-Beale did not as usual accompany Miss Alice Andrews
-to the Oxford meeting on the previous evening, but
-went up alone from Cheltenham the next morning. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
-meant a long day and an early start, earlier than ever
-before, as the time of departure had been altered. This
-Miss Beale only learned the same morning, but with her
-habit of being ready long beforehand she was able to
-catch the train. This, by the new arrangement, did not
-wait for the Oxford train by which Miss Andrews went
-up. Consequently, when Miss Andrews arrived at the
-Paddington Hotel, Miss Beale had already gone to see
-her doctor, Miss Aldrich-Blake. Probably she preferred
-to make this visit alone.</p>
-
-<p>To Miss Aldrich-Blake she owned that she was tired,
-that she felt her much impaired hearing and sight to
-be a hindrance to work; but she made light of the
-malady which was her real and undefined dread. Miss
-Aldrich-Blake, however, advised an immediate operation,
-in spite of the annual general meeting fixed for
-November 16,<a name="FNanchor_99" id="FNanchor_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> on account of which Miss Beale wished
-to put it off for the present. On leaving the doctor’s
-house Miss Beale went on alone to keep one or two
-appointments. At the Council meeting in the afternoon
-she showed no fatigue, but read her report with animation.
-Miss Andrews then joined her for St. Hilda’s committee
-meeting. They left this meeting in time to catch
-the afternoon train back to Cheltenham. Miss Beale
-generally slept for part of this journey; that day she
-was wakeful and tired, but she said nothing then to Miss
-Andrews of what the doctor had told her. She did,
-however, shortly tell Miss Rowand, who persuaded her
-to see Dr. Cardew. He confirmed Dr. Aldrich-Blake’s
-opinion, and Miss Beale then made up her mind to
-enter a nursing home, hard by the College, on Monday,
-October 22. During these intervening days she went
-on with her usual work, and silently made preparation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-for what might be a final parting from it. On Sunday,
-which she spent alone but for a visit from Fräulein
-Grzywacz, she wrote a large number of letters. One
-was to the Vice-Principal, Miss Sturge:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have been feeling very unwell since my return from
-Germany, and two doctors whom I have consulted say I must
-have a few weeks away. I am sorry to throw any of my
-work on others, but I thought the week in which our half-term
-holiday comes my absence would be less felt. Also, as
-the Bishop gives five lectures, these would take the place of
-mine on Saturdays.... I thought some one who has taught
-the Fairy Queen could take [my literature lesson]. The
-doctor who knows me best fixed three weeks as the date of
-my return.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>One to Miss Gore:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have not told any one but Miss Rowand the reason why
-I shall have to be absent, perhaps for a few weeks—perhaps for
-ever—from my beloved College. I want you to come and stay
-in the house till we see which way things will go. I hope you
-will manage to come, and that you will put on a cheerful
-countenance and not let any one suspect that there is so serious a
-cause for my absence. I am very grateful for having been allowed
-to do so many years of work, very grateful for the loyal and
-affectionate support of my colleagues and our Council, specially
-the Chairman. I think I feel content whichever way things may
-be ordered for me by Him who doth not willingly afflict, but
-chastens for our profit.—Yours affectionately,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">D. Beale</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On Monday, October 22, Miss Beale read prayers as
-usual, choosing a hymn by Miss Fermi from the collection
-of school hymns she herself had made:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘All the way our Father leadeth,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Whether dark or bright.’</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>After prayers she gave her last Scripture lesson—the
-usual Monday lesson to the assembled First Division.
-The subject was the Healing of the Body, in connection
-with thoughts suggested by St. Luke’s Day, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
-Gospel for the Nineteenth Sunday after Trinity. It was
-a remarkable lesson. One who had not been present
-said that, when she entered the Hall after it was over,
-people were talking of Miss Beale’s wonderful Scripture
-lesson. In it she dwelt, as often before, on the duty of
-the care of health; and yet it was not to be the first consideration.
-She showed why sickness of the body is often
-for our profit. Then, having touched on wrong teachings
-about the body, as, for instance, those of Buddhism, she
-showed that the Incarnation brought unity of the whole
-being, at-one-ment of body, soul, and spirit. She concluded
-with the words: ‘The Body of our Lord Jesus
-Christ preserve thy body and soul unto everlasting life.’</p>
-
-<p>After the lesson Miss Beale read the weekly class
-marks, as usual on Mondays. In the course of the
-morning she discussed a paper she had written, for the
-American National Educational Association, with Miss
-Alice Andrews. Miss Andrews told her that a member
-of the staff had lost her mother, and during the day
-Miss Beale wrote a note of sympathy. In a second
-interview that morning Miss Beale told Miss Andrews
-that the doctor had told her she must lie up for some
-weeks. ‘But I am not going away, I shall be amongst
-you all.’</p>
-
-<p>Miss Sturge noticed that Miss Beale lingered in the
-Hall when school was over, as if unwilling to leave. She
-seemed pathetically anxious to leave nothing undone.
-Finally, after discussing several small matters, she said,
-‘Good-bye; I hope to come back in three weeks, and
-you can just say I am resting. I will not tell you where,
-and then if you are asked you will not know.’ Then she
-added wistfully, ‘Perhaps I may never come back.’ On
-that afternoon, accompanied by Miss Rowand, she went
-to the nursing home.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The operation took place next day. Miss Beale found
-it hard just at first to reconcile herself to the position of
-patient, and the absolute obedience and dependence it
-involved. But in the charge of Miss Lane and her staff
-she was surrounded with loving care, to which she was
-most responsive, once pointing out to a friend the nurse
-who was standing by as ‘the one who spoils me so.’
-Miss Gore and Miss Rowand saw her from time to time.
-The mid-term holiday was approaching, and she spoke
-of arrangements for it, and begged Miss Rowand to
-send her party for their usual expedition in charge of the
-house-governesses, and to remain at home herself.</p>
-
-<p>Up to the morning of Sunday the 28th all seemed
-to go well. Very early that day she seemed ill, and
-wandering in mind, getting up and saying she must go
-to early service. In the afternoon she was quiet and calm,
-and saw one or two friends. To Miss Gore she spoke
-of the coming All Saints’ Day, saying how much the
-Communion of Saints meant to her.</p>
-
-<p>On this day also, by the hand of Miss Lane—but she
-signed it herself—she wrote a last letter to Miss Amy
-Giles<a name="FNanchor_100" id="FNanchor_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a>:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I went up to a Council Meeting, and afterwards consulted
-Dr. Aldrich-Blake. I had had my suspicions for some time,
-and she at once confirmed them. I went on to Paddington,
-as we had a meeting of our Council, and returned at three
-o’clock. Then after a few days we decided to enter a Home,
-and here I am.... They say I am going on very well,
-but I had to leave my work. My doctor says I can come
-back probably at the end of three weeks, which I am anxious
-to do, as I have a General Meeting (annual) on the 16th
-November. I am very contented, and the Head of the Home
-takes great care of me. The only people I allow to know
-are Miss Rowand and Miss Gore, who are coming to see me
-to-day. I have had a not very cheerful Sunday, and I wonder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
-whether I shall get right, sometimes I hope not. I wonder if
-we shall meet again. I hope some day. I need not say how
-dear you are to me. We have lost many friends this last year.
-At least, I ought not to say that, they have passed out of sight.
-I think you have not heard that both Mr. and Mrs. Rix, who
-came to our first Retreat, have passed away within the month,
-so those three friends have met once more.<a name="FNanchor_101" id="FNanchor_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> ... I have been
-talking to the Head of this Home, who is very anxious to have
-a Home for six ladies, I have promised her £100. What do you
-think of a site? I know your father built one in the Isle of
-Wight, but it is an expensive place. There, I don’t think
-I have any more to say.—Yours very affectionately,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Dorothea Beale</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On Monday came the change for the worse; nervous
-prostration, from which she never rallied, although one
-day there seemed a gleam of hope, and during the brief
-improvement she dictated to Miss Lane, at the doctor’s
-request, some details of the days before the operation:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘On Tuesday (the 16th October) I went up to London
-hurriedly at 6.37, full of the thought of what was before me.
-I went straight to Dr. Aldrich-Blake, an old pupil. She condemned
-me. Then I saw, as I had arranged, a new attendant.
-I looked into shops and felt giddy, and went on to the place
-of meeting, where I saw two others, and lastly several friends,
-and those who were to dine together to attend the meeting of
-our Council, and next a meeting of our St. Hilda’s Council, and
-then came down to Cheltenham, thinking of course of what
-I should do. The following Tuesday you know I decided and
-you arranged for the operator to come from Birmingham, and
-you can report further. I gave all my lessons as usual, and
-corrected all my exercises until the evening of Monday. Whatever
-my work was I did it. My last lesson was on Monday
-morning. I had planned to give a Confirmation lesson on
-Tuesday, but this the doctor forbade.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Once after this she recognised the doctor. Once she
-asked for her Prayer-book and spectacles, but before
-they could be brought she had lapsed again into unconsciousness.
-When her sister addressed her by name, she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
-turned her head, but did not open her eyes. Then on
-November 8 appeared more alarming bulletins, and on
-the 9th the fatal notice, ‘Miss Beale is sinking.’ ‘We
-went through the morning,’ says Miss Sturge, ‘feeling
-like Elisha. “Knowest thou that the Lord will take
-away thy master from thy head to-day? Yea, I know it,
-hold ye your peace.”’</p>
-
-<p>Not in Cheltenham only, but far and wide her children
-were praying for her; watching for news, remembering
-and repeating to each other things she had said. It was
-stormy weather, and more than one thought of Wordsworth’s
-lines—lines which she had often read to her class—written
-when he was expecting to hear of the death of
-Charles James Fox:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘A power is passing from the earth</div>
-<div class="verse">To breathless Nature’s dark abyss.’</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale died on Friday, November 9, at 12.15,
-during College hours. It was thought best that the girls
-should hear of her death before leaving. When all were
-assembled in the Princess Hall the Vice-Principal said:</p>
-
-<p>‘It has pleased God to take from us our beloved
-Principal.’ In a few words she told the history of the
-last few days, and then said: ‘We feel that it is what she
-would have desired,—no long waiting in suffering or
-helplessness, but to go home straight from her work
-with her splendid powers scarcely impaired.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail</div>
-<div class="verse">Or knock the breast; no weakness, no contempt,</div>
-<div class="verse">Dispraise, or blame; nothing but well and fair,</div>
-<div class="verse">And what may quiet us in a death so noble.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>‘“The readiness is all.” Let us bear our grief with
-calmness and dignity. We know that it would be her
-wish that work should go on as usual.... We believe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
-that love lasts on, and that the noble work she did for
-fifty years has done much for England and for womanhood,
-and that not only we who have been blessed by
-her gracious presence, but generations also to come shall
-reap the fruit of her toil, and rise up and call her
-blessed. Let us pray.’ Then followed a thanksgiving,
-adapted from the form of memorial service issued by
-authority in January 1901 after the death of Queen
-Victoria.</p>
-
-<p>Of the days immediately following Miss Beale’s death,
-Miss Sturge wrote: ‘Many of the staff and elder pupils
-were privileged to see the beloved form as it lay in the
-peace and majesty of death. Though not one of the
-thousand workers at College can have been unconscious
-of the mighty change that had come for all, the work
-went on as usual, and the College was closed only on
-November 16, the day of the funeral.’</p>
-
-<p>The paper which Miss Beale intended should be read at
-College prayers on her death was not found at the time.
-This was well. She certainly had not weighed what
-the effect of her words, written with calm deliberate
-detail years before, would be if read to assembled
-numbers at the very moment of shock and loss.</p>
-
-<p>In this paper she first explained the directions she had
-left in her will about the funeral:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘First let me say I have put in my will two things, which
-have to do with the disposal of this perishable body.</p>
-
-<p>‘(1) I desire that it should be cremated. It seems so wrong
-to place in the ground the disease germs which may injure others,
-when they could be destroyed. No feeling of sentiment should
-hinder our doing what is reasonable or right.</p>
-
-<p>‘(2) I have asked, and I hope my wish may be respected by
-all, that no flowers should be bought for my funeral. They are
-beautiful emblems, and if any could gather a few wild flowers or
-bring a few from their own gardens, it would be good, but
-I should not like any wholesale destruction, any waste of life,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
-even with wild flowers, and it seems to me quite wrong to spend
-large sums in decking a grave, when there is so much to be
-done for the living. If the present pupils and teachers were to
-give only sixpence each it would come to about £30, and if we
-take in old pupils and friends, and those who give much more, I
-fear a large sum would be wasted, which, wisely spent, would
-not perish like cut flowers, but bear real fruit. Still, flowers are
-all beautiful things, and gifts of our Father to teach and cheer
-us: they are patterns of things in the heavens, and flowers speak
-to us of ἀνάστασις, rising. I often said to you I do not like the
-word resurrection because it means rising again, and gives the
-impression that the body that rises is the same that was buried;
-whereas St. Paul has taught that we sow not that body that
-shall be.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But this was only a preface. She spoke chiefly of
-rising through death to fuller and higher life,—of the
-purification which all who would see God must desire.
-Finally she asked:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Shall I pray for my children who are now on earth, for
-this College which I have loved, and which has, I dare hope,
-been a means of blessing to some? Has it through my fault
-hidden the spiritual instead of revealing it, like the trees of
-Paradise? Will you see that the sunshine of Heaven, the love
-and holiness which can dwell only in souls, may light up the
-school-rooms and boarding-houses, and kindle hearts and send
-forth many light-bearers? And will you ask sometimes for me
-that I may be purified of the evil that obscured the heavenly
-light that yet burned feebly within the earthly pitcher? May
-He send you a worthier teacher! May you, above all things,
-hear the Voice of Him who stands at the door and knocks,
-may you open your eyes to the Blessed Spirit, the Paraclete!’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On Monday, November 12, the body was cremated
-at Perry Barr, the Reverend Dr. Magrath reading the
-committal service. Next day came the offer from
-the Dean and Chapter of Gloucester of ‘a tomb in
-the Cathedral to Dorothea Beale,’ and on the 16th the
-funeral took place. Everything that could lend dignity
-and honour to the occasion was done. Those who were
-present can never forget the impression of that day.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
-The sombre beauty of the Cathedral in the November
-rain, the music, the well-ordered procession, the crowds,
-produced a sense of fitness for an occasion which was
-not merely one of grief. Rather was it an act of solemn
-thanksgiving for the long, faithful labours ended, an act
-of resignation through the heart and will of thousands
-of the life which had blessed them, to the continuous love
-of a merciful Creator. Many were there who held high
-position, in educational or municipal life, many friends
-and parents of pupils, many former teachers, and of
-course the whole staff. But the crowd which filled the
-great nave from end to end was made up for the most
-part of pupils past and present. Eight hundred girls
-still at the College came voluntarily, walking in grave
-silence in pairs from the station to the Cathedral. Only
-a small proportion of this crowd could be present in
-the Lady Chapel for the latter part of the service, but
-all when it was over filed quietly past the open grave
-surrounded by its home-made wreaths of flowers and
-laurel.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, in Cheltenham, those who were unable to
-come to Gloucester filled St. Matthew’s Church, where
-a service was held simultaneously with that in the
-Cathedral. At St. Paul’s Cathedral at the same time
-the dome was filled for a memorial service, which included
-a short address from the Bishop of Stepney. An
-old pupil present wrote of this:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘A memorial service in St. Paul’s Cathedral is an honour
-accorded to very few women, and befitting but very few. But
-to the great throng assembled in the wide spaces of the dome on
-November 16, there was a profound sense of congruity in this
-mourning for a woman whose real distinction was described on
-that occasion by the Bishop of Stepney when he called Miss
-Beale “great.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Miss Beale’s greatness—that indefinable, unmistakable, inestimable
-quality so rare in her sex—gave her a right to be commemorated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
-there, at the very heart of the world of the living,
-in presence of the memorials of the nation’s mighty dead.
-Listening to the mysterious, hope-inspiring sentences, and to the
-lesson from 1 Corinthians xv., so often chosen by her at College
-prayers, it seemed that but a very slight veil divided us from
-that eager, unquenchable, quickening spirit, then exploring the
-“vasty halls of Death.” And the reverberating thunders of
-the “Dead March in Saul” have an appropriateness for every
-strenuous life. Effort in growth and development, conflict with
-difficulties, the surmounting of obstacles, were certainly of the
-very essence of Miss Beale’s nature.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Services were also held at Bowdon Parish Church and
-at Sunderland. At Bakewell, on the Sunday after she
-died, thanks were offered for the life and work of
-Dorothea Beale.</p>
-
-<p>There was widespread appreciation both spoken and
-written of Miss Beale’s life and work, with barely a discordant
-note. Many of the notices<a name="FNanchor_102" id="FNanchor_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> gave a really striking
-impression both of herself and of what she had done for
-the cause of education. Apart from that work she did
-not care to be known; it is but an obvious truth that its
-greatness was dependent on the greatness of her character.</p>
-
-<p>A number of old Cheltenham pupils were once asked
-what they considered the special result of the teaching
-they had received at the College. Their replies were to
-the most part to the effect that they had learned the
-worth of the strenuous life. They would perhaps have
-been nearer a complete statement of the truth had they
-said ‘an idea of Duty.’ For it was surely this—a consciousness
-of responsibility, a sense of stewardship,
-some perception of the ‘thanks and use’<a name="FNanchor_103" id="FNanchor_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> owing for each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
-excellence that had been lent out to them—which was
-brought home by the teaching, both of word and life, of
-Dorothea Beale to all, even the youngest and least clever,
-who came within the circle of her influence. Through
-such knowledge of duty Miss Beale’s own idea of the
-‘strenuous life’ might be perceived. Among the words
-most often on her lips, especially when speaking to
-teachers, were such as vivifying, energising, quickening,
-inspiration. She did not hesitate to say that to her all
-forms of life were a manifestation of God. Work was
-to her mind a privilege,—the active will, a Divine gift,—slothfulness
-was death. It was the defect of a great
-quality that she sometimes hasted overmuch, that she
-found it hard to wait in trifling matters, that she seemed
-even to exaggerate the importance of the College. She
-was not spared—she would not have asked to be spared—the
-inevitable sacrifice demanded of all genius, of all
-lives devoted to a cause. It was the sign of her self-consecration
-that in any great emergency, before any
-important decision, she was calm and full of patience. It
-should be remembered also that each generation has its
-own mission. To that of Dorothea Beale belonged
-especially the duty of crying to the careless daughters
-of England, ‘Rise up ye women that are at ease.’ To
-another it may be given to serve by waiting.</p>
-
-<p>What, it is often asked, was the secret of her really
-marvellous influence? Personal magnetism she undoubtedly
-possessed, and that of a rare and abiding
-quality, a quick eye to perceive, and a touch which
-could evoke the best even in the most unlikely. But
-her influence and power for good came surely as much
-from what she would not do as from what she actually
-did for her children. Her strength lay in what she
-would herself call ‘passive activity.’ It was her claim<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span>
-not to teach them so much as to lead them to the One
-Teacher, to bring them into such relationship with Him
-that they could hear His Voice. For that inner Voice
-which must at all costs be obeyed she bade them listen,
-with pure and undefiled conscience,—the ear of the soul.
-Thus each who tried to follow her teaching left the
-College not merely as a devoted pupil of Miss Beale,
-possibly even indifferent to her, but with a clearer consciousness
-of the ‘Light that lighteth every man,’ and
-the paramount necessity of walking in it.</p>
-
-<p>Was the strenuous life all they learned at Cheltenham?
-It was doubtless not easy to tell the whole. The strength
-and greatness of their Head lay not alone in devising
-and carrying out important and detailed work. It lay
-also—though this was less readily seen—in an unwearied
-watchfulness of affection, in a sympathy never
-estranged, in active thoughtfulness, in a memory for all
-that was hopeful and fair in the lives and characters
-which came under her care. Remembering these, there
-comes ultimately to the mind the thought of how little
-she really cared for human judgment, just or unjust; how
-she would say that there was but one Voice to listen
-for, one word of approval worth earning, since the Lord
-Himself had said about a woman’s work, ‘She hath done
-what she could.’</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-<span class="smaller">LETTERS</span></h2>
-
-<div class="chapter-intro">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘The living record of your memory.’</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="attr"><span class="smcap">Shakspere</span>, <cite>Sonnet</cite> lv.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale enjoyed both receiving and writing letters.
-She kept a very large number, especially of those from
-old pupils. A letter which told of help or inspiration
-gained through the life at College would be put away,
-labelled in her own peculiar and favourite abbreviated
-way: ‘Sent 2 chēr me.’ She was a very ready and at
-times a very voluminous correspondent. She attended
-to all her letters herself, and answered all to which she
-intended to reply, not merely by return of post, but
-often the moment she received them. If her answer
-was of some importance she would keep it by her for
-a time, and often rewrite it before finally sending it.
-Her papers include a very large number of drafts and
-copies of letters which she sent. The chief part of her
-correspondence was done before the school hours began
-each morning, and she generally came to her place at
-9 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span> with her morning letters already answered.
-Where she found she could help by means of letters
-she would spare no pains nor time over them.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps Mrs. Charles Robinson received more than
-any one else. In 1878 Mrs. Robinson, then Miss
-Arnold, left Cheltenham to become a teacher at the
-Dulwich High School. She was at that time in a state<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
-of great religious perplexity; dissatisfied with the teaching
-of the Plymouth Brethren, among whom she had been
-brought up, unable to accept that of the Church, she
-would not attend the services of either. During this
-time of gloom Miss Beale wrote every week to Miss
-Arnold a letter she might receive on Sunday morning,
-and all her life remained a constant correspondent. It
-is fitting that this chapter of letters should begin with
-some of those written to the ‘best-beloved child.’<a name="FNanchor_104" id="FNanchor_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a></p>
-
-<p>To Miss Arnold:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1880.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘It seems to me you have failed in trying to keep the
-first commandment, and so of course in the others. “Thou
-shalt worship the Lord Thy God and Him <em>only</em> shalt Thou
-serve.” You see it is not <em>when</em> we feel inclined; <em>when</em> we can
-realise His presence, <em>when</em> we have plenty of spare time.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then in your life and work has it not been that you have
-thought more of pleasing others, of doing work, of being so
-laborious, so useful, etc. etc., instead of serving Him, too
-much of being well thought of yourself. This often leads to
-greed of work: we do not say: “Lord, what wouldst Thou
-have me to do?” but, “I want to do this or that.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Then as regards your public worship. Do not you think, if
-you told your father that you felt Church services more helpful,
-he would be less grieved that you should go to Church than
-go in deadness. He chose the Brethren because he felt his
-religious life quickened with them; would he not wish you
-to act in the same spirit? Could you not frankly talk it over
-with him?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In 1881 Miss Beale wrote to urge Miss Arnold to
-attend some addresses Mr. Wilkinson was about to
-give:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘You will make some effort and some sacrifices, if necessary,
-to come, will you not, my dear child? Even the love of
-Miss —— for which you should give thanks, is a danger too,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
-lest you should learn to look at yourself with the indulgence
-that we give to those we love, and do not see clearly the faults
-and failings. Mr. Wilkinson does help to show how much
-ground there is for humility.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>1882.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Your letter grieves me very much, just as the painful illness
-of one I love would; because you have to go through it;
-but it is right, if you go through it rightly, seeking the
-truth. Only one cannot in a letter, nor in a little while, nor
-off-hand deal with these difficulties. As in every science,
-thought, and earnest labour, and aspiration, and desire are
-necessary if we would find truth; so in religion, the knowledge
-of absolute wisdom and goodness, which transcends all we can
-know, there must be a deep devotion to truth, which spares
-no pains in the search.</p>
-
-<p>‘Will you begin with a simple and clear book first,—I noticed
-it in the last Magazine,—by Godet. It is translated by Canon
-Lyttelton. I think it shows conclusively the fact of our Lord’s
-resurrection, and with that goes the testimony of miracles, not
-as wonders but as signs. When you have got thus far, you
-will find, I trust, the repulsion to the supernatural element
-diminished, if it exists in you. Don’t <em>ever</em> let yourself say,
-“We can’t know.” We can know enough to believe and trust
-in God’s goodness, and one must go on seeking by <em>prayer</em>,
-<em>thought</em>, <em>obedience</em>, very, very patiently, and then through eternity
-one will draw nearer and nearer.</p>
-
-<p>‘As regards your conception of inspiration, I think it requires
-correction; claims have been made for the Bible which it never
-made for itself. Holy men spake as they were moved by the
-Holy Spirit; but the <em>literal dictation</em> of every word we are not
-taught.</p>
-
-<p>‘But I cannot attempt to answer piecemeal. I have gone
-through all these questionings, but I think my faith strengthens
-from year to year,—if I dare say so. So that it seems to me
-marvellous that any one can fail to <em>feel</em> the divine, underlying
-all the superficial, the phenomenal which men verily call
-realities. Do you remember how Browning makes Lazarus
-feel “marvel that they too see not with his opened eyes!”
-That objection to the Israelites destroying the Canaanites seems
-to me so frightfully superficial. Are there not evils far worse
-than death? Would it not be enormously preferable to die
-than to live as many do? What should we say if we could see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
-beyond the grave? We judge knowing only one side of the
-grave. And if God saw well that these people should die at
-once, would it not be part perhaps of the education of a nation
-chosen to do a particular work, that God should make them
-burn with indignation against the detestable, unspeakable, moral
-evils, and make them the executioners of His justice? It would
-not degrade them to do this, if they did it as a judge condemns
-the guilty, with no personal hatred. We cannot sit in judgment
-thus. In the world’s history we see God ever employing
-men to do the work He has to do. There may be necessities
-for this, of which we know nothing; I mean in the nature of
-things: certainly there is good as regards the moral training
-of men.</p>
-
-<p>‘Go on wishing and praying and seeking all your life, never
-saying anything which you do not believe, and then the God
-of truth will hear you as you say, “Open Thou mine eyes, that
-I may see the wondrous things of Thy law.” “Lighten our
-darkness, we beseech Thee!” <em>Feeling</em> must come in, as the
-Brethren rightly say. We must love, and desire, and know
-Him to be our Father; we must trust Him. We can’t understand
-even an earthly friend without trust, but we must use the
-powers He has given us, we dare not bury them. We shall
-have to wait for the solution of much hereafter; but we shall
-grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour.</p>
-
-<p>‘My poor child, would I could help you more, but God
-will help you. “Though He tarry, wait.” Use the means
-natural and supernatural. Tell me from time to time how you
-are getting on, and I will try to put you on a <em>course</em> of reading.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>1882.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘My poor child, I do indeed feel for you in your loneliness,
-but remember him whose eyes were opened spiritually and he
-was <em>therefore</em> cast out of the synagogue,—but Jesus found him.
-Do not fear that because the disciples call down fire that the
-Lord will [send it]. “Come unto Me all that are heavy-laden,”
-He says to us now as then. To those who are “without guile,”
-<i>i.e.</i> sincerely seeking truth, He still promises that they shall see
-greater things than they have ever done.... No; we cannot
-and we would not believe that He who is infinitely wiser than
-man can be less good. He is not a Pharaoh to bid us make
-bricks without straw. He does not tell us to do what we
-cannot and then punish us for not doing it. “She hath done<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-what she could” was the sentence of the Lord when others
-found fault. God is love, and if <em>we</em> pity and long to draw to
-our hands any suffering child of earth, must not He? If we
-pity those who suffer in a <em>less</em> degree, must not He those who
-are suffering the sorrow greatest of all, the loss in any degree
-of His presence, of that faith which makes all things possible?
-Go on, my poor child, looking up to Him, and trusting in His
-utter love who will not leave us, not when we cry, “Depart
-from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord.” It is hard sometimes
-to believe we are not wrong, when we see the disciples, those
-who really want to do right, acting so differently from the way
-in which He acted. But we know that in all ages some of the
-most unchristian things have been done by those who thought
-they were doing God’s will.</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not think from what you tell me that you can go
-on at the Meeting. If your father wishes it you might for
-a while abstain from going to church; but if so, let the time
-you would have spent in public worship be passed in private
-prayer and studying; just looking up with childlike spirit to
-the Father, feeling His presence, His love.</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not think you should, however, absent yourself long
-from communion with some body of believers. All Scripture
-and our spiritual experience is against this. If you decide for
-St. Peter’s, I think I can tell you of a friend’s house where you
-would be welcome most Sundays; and we must have you among
-us for the Quiet Days at Christmas.</p>
-
-<p>‘You know I do not want to proselytise; if with the
-Brethren you had found spiritual nourishment, I would have
-had you rest there; but now you are starving it is different,
-like that poor dove who found no rest for the sole of her feet,
-you need to be taken into an ark.</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not want you to be dependent on man, but it is the
-order of God’s providence that He sends disciples to lead others
-to Him, and so we are to help one another. And you have
-a period of trouble before you, outward and inward, until you
-are able to stand upon the rock once more. Trust God if you
-should have to walk through that dark valley where you cannot
-see Him. Each trial will one day result in joy,—the joy of
-being able to help other troubled souls especially. He descended
-into Hades, He rose again! I shall remember you in prayer,
-and I shall ask prayers for you at St. Peter’s, of course without
-their knowing the least who you are, but that you are suffering
-and in darkness. Be patient and I think your father’s heart
-will come back.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>1882.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Now, my dear child, do not fret about this trial. Just
-try to look up and wait. I believe your father’s heart will
-come back. You see he has obeyed his opinions before, and
-truth is like the sun which ever rises higher upon our earthly
-day, and does not sink as the natural sun. We need sometimes
-to remember the words, “Call no man your father upon earth.”
-I mean that there is the all-embracing Fatherhood, in which we
-see all earthly relations: we do not, must not, cast those off,
-but they must be swallowed up in the greater. Write to me
-whenever you feel it would comfort you, I will try to help you,
-until you feel again that you need not outward help.... One
-feels more and more how slowly one learns and how infinite
-is God’s truth; how one need’s patience and deep humility, and
-utter faith in Him who is the Light.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 1883.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘My poor child, you must not grieve thus. Since God loves
-your father, He is giving to him only that discipline, whatever
-it be that is necessary. Yes, believe this, even though the
-suffering has come through you, for we must believe it <em>universally</em>.
-I do not say you will not suffer for it, or that there may
-not have been some wrong in it on your part. But if, as you
-know, he does wish you to know and serve God more perfectly,
-then through this God is leading him on to know and serve
-Him better, and you must trust God to know <em>what</em> He is about.
-You <em>must</em> go on for your own sake (and for the sake of the
-children God has given you), seeking for light.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 1883.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I always feel as if I must write by return. Your letters
-draw out my heart to you so. I am glad you went and felt
-the love shining in on you.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, as regards the <i lang="la">a priori</i> argument; it is just the
-fundamental thing. Did you read my Browning paper? See,
-it is just <em>the</em> thought that comes out in “Saul.” We, if we love
-ourselves, we <em>must</em> believe in God’s love. He must be better
-if He is greater in every other way; it cannot be that we excel
-Him in the power of love, which is the highest gift of all. We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
-can’t think that He does not care for His children, that He
-has left them orphans.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think one can see too that He in whom dwelt the Divine
-Spirit without measure, yet who was truly man, and who
-therefore grew as man in insight as we do, felt that utter faith
-grow, tower up, as that intense love, that utter self-devotion
-which He felt within, <em>told</em> Him of His oneness with God; as
-He prayed that we might be one, even as He was one with the
-Father.</p>
-
-<p>‘And He, trusting the Father, knew He could <em>not</em> be deceived
-by that Father; and we knowing Him, know He could
-not deceive us.... So I come <i lang="la">a priori</i> to belief in the story of
-that Life, and when I get to it by inward reasons, I am able first
-to look at the outward [reasons], which to many are enough
-without the inward, but are not to me. It was in this way too
-Kant got back to belief in Christianity. I read it was the
-moral law within which taught him, and all St. John’s teaching
-seems to me to be that we must feel the Spirit within ere we
-can recognise the Christ without. But then He does give
-freely of His Spirit,—if we seek, we shall find. He knocks
-at the door of man’s heart, “If <em>any one</em> will hear He will
-come in.”</p>
-
-<p>‘My child, do remember those comforting words, “If ye
-were blind ye should have <em>no sin</em>, but now ye say, we see;
-therefore your sin remaineth.” So blindness is no sin in itself,
-if is lazy, conceited ignorance that is sin.</p>
-
-<p>‘I wish you could be in the House of Rest from Friday to
-Monday, and have all Saturday of the Quiet Days. I wish you
-could have one talk with Mr. Wilkinson before he leaves.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 1883.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘It does seem to me such a strange idea that our service
-should be acceptable to God in proportion to its difficulty. It
-is really at bottom the same thing that makes people torture
-themselves. It lies at the root of that idea regarding the
-Sabbath, which our Lord condemned so strongly. He came
-to make us know better the Father’s heart. Surely He loves
-to make it easy to His children to draw near. “I will allure
-her into the wilderness and will speak comfortably unto her.”
-Under the old dispensation He appointed a solemn ritual, and
-why did St. Paul exhort us to use psalms and hymns but that
-by the joy of music our hearts may be loosened from their
-deadness, and then we can trust them whither we will. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
-seems to me of course that our service is much more in conformity
-with the apostolic model handed down, and with
-allusions in the Bible. But I do not want to dispute about
-that. God has left us free. If your father says, “I wish you
-to go to the meeting,” you should, supposing you think it not
-wrong, obey. But I don’t believe he would, if you told him
-you went merely in obedience to his wishes; that you felt it
-did not help your spiritual life.</p>
-
-<p>‘If it is finally decided that you go to St. Peter’s, I should
-like to ask Mr. Wilkinson to see you, and I would tell him
-some of your difficulties; he is so wise.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have been thinking much these holidays about the many
-who like yourself are full of difficulties and questions. One
-thing some of us are going to do, and I want you to join: make
-each week special prayers for the teachers in Colleges and High
-Schools,—(you will specially remember me), and ask that some
-means may be found of helping them....</p>
-
-<p>‘Need you dwell upon that question of eternal death? Could
-you not say, “Father, I see not yet what Thou doest, but I
-trust Thee?” If the death of any of His creatures whom He
-loves is <em>inevitable</em>, then it does not make us believe Him unloving,
-we know how He yearns to serve us.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>March 1883.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I do not mean either to say that the carelessness of a time in
-which you did see and were able to realise divine things was
-<em>nothing</em> to do with the present trial. Who can judge another?
-I begged him not to be unhappy if your religious life took
-another form....</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, I was so glad to see your father. I feel I know him
-much better, and perhaps he knows me better.</p>
-
-<p>‘I quite understand his strong language about the Church,
-only those evils are not inherent in it, but in our sinful nature,
-and similar ones appear even among the Brethren. The
-unreality does not depend upon the amount of ritual....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>April 1883.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I have very much enjoyed Professor Edward Caird’s <cite>Hegel</cite>.
-It is 3s. 6d., published by Blackwood. I am not quite sure it
-would help you, but think it would. I want you to get deeper,
-and to be very patient until God shows you more light.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-He is showing it to you, only until you and I are able to
-see more clearly He must wait. You have not suffered so
-much for nothing, but I trust you may one day help others.
-If you get Westcott on the Resurrection, read the end first on
-Positivism, there is much in it that is so Christian, and much in
-what is called Christianity which St. Paul would have called
-carnal. All that about the Lord’s glorified Body in St. John
-and St. Paul speak to us of a spirit glorified and no longer bound
-in any space, but a life-giving power, real, substantial....</p>
-
-<p>‘Poor George Eliot. She had a passionate nature, and she
-came into circumstances so sad. Her life is a great sorrow to
-those who feel that her teaching was in some way noble, though
-in others it was really weakening. He who knows all will
-judge her: “Whose mercy endureth for ever.” She was a long
-way above Lewes. If you come across Hutton’s Essays you
-ought to read them. I always get a good bit of reading in the
-holidays that demands thought....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>May 1883.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I am glad you find the work comforting again, and that
-God has sent you help through some one else. Don’t fret and
-look forward to next holidays, you don’t know yet how full of
-blessing they may be. Just remember it is a command, “Be
-not anxious for to-morrow,” and so we can obey. I remember
-once that thought that I must stay seemed the only thing to
-save me from breaking down, and so failing to do as I ought the
-work God had given me. See that it is a sin to fret and be
-anxious about your father’s health, or your future relations to
-home, or anything. We have to do our best, and then trust to
-Him “who ordereth all things according to the counsel of His
-Will.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Then as regards past sins. It seems to me that it enervates
-you to dwell upon them as you are doing. I may be wrong,
-but it seems to me that the sense of guiltiness in the past makes
-you afraid of God, as you ought not to be. If a child were ever
-so naughty to you, did ever so many wrong things to you, would
-it shut her out from your love? You know it would not; you
-would sorrow over her, and seek to do her good. Only her
-continuing naughty, continuing to hate and distrust you, could
-<em>prevent</em> your doing her good. “Ye are not straitened in God,
-but in your own heart.” “If we confess our sins, He is faithful
-and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us.” We can’t
-think of Him not forgiving us, without thinking of Him as less<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
-good than He is, and He is infinitely good. Of course this does
-not mean that He will not give us due discipline for our past
-failures, in order that we may be healed of the sins which caused
-them; but then we are glad of this, it is only a sign of His love
-for us.</p>
-
-<p>‘We should confess to Him because He is judge, <i>i.e.</i> He
-separates and enables us to discern, distinguish the good from
-the evil in us, and separate. One whom I have often quoted to
-you said, “I forbid you to look at your sins except at the foot
-of the Cross.” Do you do this sometimes? The consciousness
-of guilt would be hardening without the consciousness of the
-abounding love. This purifies. I wonder if I have met your
-thought....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>May 1883.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘You say you don’t know what to pray for. I think, perhaps,
-you are praying too exclusively for yourself. Ask for God’s
-grace, and power to respond. Intercede much for your children,
-your relations, your father, teachers and friends, and any one
-whom God gives you the means of helping. Especially at Holy
-Communion pray for the Church and all who are separated by
-darkness from one another, and put yourself quietly in God’s
-Hands. Some of our collects help me; one Mr. Wilkinson was
-so fond of: “Who knowest our necessities before we ask,” etc.
-etc.: do you know it? I think of Him then as coming to us all
-in Holy Communion, and from His own Hands giving us the
-pledges of His love, to make us know He is giving us His own
-glorified Life; the Life of God in such a way that we can
-receive it,—emptying Himself in Christ of that glory which we
-can’t know: the Absolute Being, the Infinite we cannot
-conceive. We must trust His word ... and this faith makes
-us strong, saves us from sickness, delivers us from the power of
-sin; yes, though we fall again and again, enables us to arise.</p>
-
-<p>‘I so want you not to have that crushing fear, which, I may
-be wrong, but I think, you sometimes feel of God. He must be
-so sorry, if we don’t understand Him and feel like that....
-“I fell at His feet as dead, and He laid His hand on me, saying,
-<em>Fear</em> not.” Think of this and of the parting words, “Peace be
-unto you.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1883.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘ ... You will have heard of our great loss, and yet I ought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
-not to call it so,—in dear Mrs. Owen. It is good to have
-known her, and one feels what it is to live and work in the
-hearts of others, seeing such a life and death. I will tell you
-more of what she has taught [me] when you come.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1883.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘My dear child, I will certainly ask for both of you to come.
-Yes, it is a naughty letter. You must love not only with pity,
-but with a stretching forth to sympathise. What if we feel
-ourselves better than another, because the Spirit has stirred the
-once cold depths of our soul, and so there is some light. Is it
-not because there has been so little that souls near us have
-remained cold? Can we ever glance at their faults without
-shame in thinking we are responsible for so much? How we
-shall long to make them some amends, how gladly we shall bear
-any punishment, or even harshness, if we can through this show
-our yearning love, alleviate our self-reproval! We cannot feel
-we are better. Our Church service does at least try to keep us
-humble by our repeated confessions, especially at Holy Communion.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘So very glad you have had a happy time. God is good in
-giving us playgrounds as well as workrooms; we want both,
-and in both He shines on us, and is glad in our gladness as well
-as afflicted in our afflictions....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>October 1885.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I object to your sentence, that you would rather your father
-thought what was not true, than that he should think what is
-certainly the truth, viz. that he has been in some way to blame.
-Also to that “I cannot bear this sorrow to fall on him.” We
-have simply to do the right, and believe that God knows what
-He is about, when He lets pain come upon us for our mistakes;
-pains us, yes, “shatters us,” that we may know the truth better.
-How many a parent or teacher tries to spare a child <em>pain</em>, and
-wrongly. You will not, of course, <em>willingly</em> pain any, much less
-the father whom you love so much, but you have both of you
-simply to speak the truth and do what conscience bids you....
-Say frankly and firmly what you <em>feel</em> you <em>must</em> do, and then drop
-the subject.... You remind me of those good Christians who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
-beg us not to hang a man, “<em>lest</em> he should fall into the hands of
-God.” God can care for people whether alive or dead, but I
-believe your father would really suffer less, and be worried less,
-by a simple straightforward course of conduct. You are thinking
-of self too much, thinking <em>yourself</em> of <em>too</em> much importance
-when you say, “I am only thinking of the sorrow that threatens
-him and how I can bear it.” Perhaps God is leading him to
-truer views of the Father.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The following letter, written in August 1888, refers
-to Miss Arnold’s appointment as Head-mistress of the
-Truro High School:—</p>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 1888.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Do not trouble yourself about whatever you <em>ought</em> to have
-done <em>now</em>. It is done, and you thought it right, so it was right.
-I think of your Bishop saying in his quiet way, “I do the best I
-can, and then I just leave it.” I dare say the Lakes will refresh you.
-It is “heart-rending,” I doubt not. I wept all the day that I
-left Queen’s, but it was well. We are having a delightful time....</p>
-
-<p>‘Now I must stop my 15th letter. I had to get up at 5 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span>,
-the days are so full.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>September 1888.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I think you are beginning to-day, at least you are a good deal
-in my thoughts, and you will want a lot of wisdom. It is a comfort
-to remember, “If any man lack wisdom let him ask of God,
-who giveth to all men liberally.” I am so glad you have Miss ——.
-It is a great thing to have a few who work for love only....</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t be hasty in making changes, and don’t take to caps!’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Be sure the rooms will brighten when you have prayed some
-sunshine into them. It is terrible to have such a lot of servants!</p>
-
-<p>‘Miss Buss gets her girls to help adorn.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am glad we open on St. Matthew’s Day.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 1888.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Miss H. and Miss E. wanted me to advise your going out
-socially a little. I said I thought there were as yet difficulties,
-as a Head-mistress cannot choose; that I thought for the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
-term it might be best to abstain; then you can look round you
-and judge better. They did not think there were many who
-would ask you, that those who would were nice, and it would be
-better for you not to be quite shut up. What do you think of
-saying you will go out not more than once a week? You have
-had so active a life; and intercourse with other people, and
-varied interests are good for school teachers. Also they think
-for the school it is good. I merely tell you this, I said I could
-not judge for you.</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope you will not be led by anything I said to speak, if
-you do not think it is quite best, or indeed to do anything. I
-cannot judge, and if I could, the responsibility is yours, and I
-should grieve if I misled you.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am so glad you feel refreshed. It is our general meeting;
-I shall be glad when it is over.</p>
-
-<p>‘All best wishes, dear child, for you and yours, the children
-whom God has given you.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>October 1888.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘“Be wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.” I should not
-answer people who lay snares, we have a good example of this to
-guide us.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is so absurd of people to expect one to make up one’s
-mind on all subjects. We can no more judge of many questions
-of foreign or domestic policy than we can about the steering of
-a ship. But we can of questions of morality and cruelty.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mrs. Grey’s new book, <cite>Last Words to Girls</cite>, is so grand. I
-hope it will be useful.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>October 1888.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘We must put things in the ideal way. Religiosity is the
-death of religion, the grave-clothes which keep the living soul
-bound in the sepulchre; which you have to help to loosen that
-it may come forth at Christ’s word.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, I don’t know the Bishop at all personally. I think if
-he will let you consult him, you will find his judgment a great
-help, but after all the responsibility rests on you, you can’t put
-it on any one.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1889.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘We have, I should think, quite full numbers now. I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span>
-not got the lists, but we have at least seventy new pupils; it is
-strange.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am better, have managed to be in College every day, by
-means of spending the end in bed. I hope I shall pick up, for
-work is a tonic.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>February 1889.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I am so thankful God gives me any words to help you, my
-dear child. I think, however, it was that passage I sent you
-from Canon Body’s notes, was it not, that really helped you, not
-what I said myself?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 1890.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘It was nice to see you. Be sure that nothing would be
-worse for you than to have no worries, to have all speak well of
-you. Besides the more you need wisdom the more you will ask
-and seek it, and the more it will come for your needs.</p>
-
-<p>‘And it is only by patience under our trials that you can bear
-witness to her and others of the spirit that is in you.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 1890.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I shall not, I expect, see you. I do not go to Oxford till
-Saturday, and leave on Monday. I hope you will not be made
-ill at Ammergau; I mean to keep as quiet as I can. I have already
-begun a good read; all Lotze’s book on Religion, <cite>The Children
-of Gibeon</cite>, part of Stanley, a good deal of Green’s philosophical
-works, and <cite>Lux Mundi</cite>, and endless magazines.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 1890.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Thanks for your very interesting letter. I think I should
-have felt as you did. I once went to something of the kind in
-Switzerland, and liked some of the early scenes, but after the
-Agony in the Garden I felt I could see no more, and came
-out....</p>
-
-<p>‘I have had such cheering letters lately. One from a girl
-whom I thought the most tiresome I ever knew, about thirty-four
-years ago. She has been writing and saying how sorry she
-is, and wants to send her niece to be under me: “after many
-days thou shalt find it.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>November 1890.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘All good wishes for “more life and fuller.” Don’t trouble
-about not <em>feeling</em>. Remember the Lord’s words to those unfeeling
-disciples who went to sleep during His agony: “The
-spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” There is winter as
-well as spring or summer in our spiritual life. “Die Blume
-verblüht, die Frucht muss treiben.” You complain of the outward
-excitement of others, yet you want inward excitement.
-See how in the <cite>Imitatio</cite> one finds the same sort of feeling. I
-foresaw some reaction; there have been times during the last
-few years, during which you have been overstrained, and now
-you want a period of hybernation, I believe. You will, of
-course, go on doing just the same, as if you felt and saw, and
-you will believe in the Presence, and do your best.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 1891.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t fret about what “they say,” not even listen, except
-to learn. I dare say they are right, and have sides of truth
-that we have not. In Tara there are beggars who go about
-saying: “What God gives, I will take”; each of us can only
-do that.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am glad you have got advice; you have been too careless
-with this marvellous body, so complicated and needing to be
-well-treated. You have driven it on, like some poor ass, with
-sticks! Now you must be a little kind to it or it will stand
-still and kick.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>February 1892.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Your Bishop came last Wednesday, and I spoke to him for
-the first time in my life, after having known him for so many
-years. He seemed so bright, and I hope the removal of the
-load of responsibility will restore him, and he will be able to
-take up some less heavy work. He cannot but do good where-ever
-he is: it is wonderful what a spiritual power he is felt to
-be. He did just manage to see us before we broke up, but only
-in a hurried way; then he lunched with me, and when all were
-gone he gave me his blessing, which made me feel worse and
-better. Do you understand?</p>
-
-<p>‘I am so glad you are feeling cheered about the school.
-Don’t you think it is right to be content with prosperity as
-well as with adversity?...</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, I read <cite>The Wages of Sin</cite> when it was coming out, a
-thing I seldom do, but I was much struck with its power.
-The author is a daughter of Kingsley. I don’t feel inclined to
-read Mrs. Ward’s new book.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 1892.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘ ... I am enjoying my work. I was on the top of Battledown
-before 7 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span> to-day. It is the best time for a walk....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1892.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Our new building is to begin, and I am miserable at having
-to turn out of my house, which is to be pulled down.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 1892.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I think this state is partly reaction; do not bustle about it,
-but take rest. The excitement of last year is, I fancy, likely to
-lead to this; our spiritual faculties need rest after overfatigue,
-so seek repose, “O rest in the Lord.” Read, too, some lighter
-literature. Farrer’s story of Nero’s time I should like you to
-read. It shows what Christianity has done. I had a restful
-time at our Sanatorium after I had got out of my house, and now
-I have had a very pleasant week with my sisters at Woodchester.
-I really think it would be good for you one day to make your
-headquarters at Leckhampton. The country is so lovely, the
-air bracing, and there are all sorts of nice excursions by train
-and omnibus, to most lovely places, and there is such variety....</p>
-
-<p>‘Be not anxious. Let me recommend you, as a diversion, to
-learn shorthand. I find it very good. Script phonography,
-it is an easy system, you could teach yourself. I am taking
-lessons; it is much liked.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 1893.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘ ... We began to-day. I dare say I shall feel better when
-we are once more immersed. We are about the same in
-numbers, but there is a great deal of illness about, and we are
-half thinking of having a whooping-cough class, under a separate
-teacher, for Division III.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 1893.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I have had a great pleasure lately. Mrs. Russell Gurney<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
-has been spending six weeks here. You must get her <cite>Dante’s
-Pilgrim’s Progress</cite>, just brought out, you will enjoy it; I have
-given a copy to Mrs. Rix. Mr. Alfred Gurney came to stay
-with her, and he has sent me his <cite>Parsifal</cite>, a little book of about
-eighty pages; it is beautiful too.</p>
-
-<p>‘I should like you to read (in part) Mrs. Booth’s <cite>Life</cite>. It is
-very interesting, and I am quite surprised at the clearness and
-truth of her teaching. She seems never to have joined a party,
-but always looked for truth, and hates the God of Calvin and
-the doctrine “of assurance,” and the idea that Christ could be
-good <em>for us</em> and we need not be good. Her utter devotion is
-beautiful. I have not finished it, and I can’t see how the work
-was carried on after the person “was saved.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 1894.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I am so glad you are feeling somewhat refreshed. You
-really <em>must</em> forget “the things that are behind”—the bad things
-as well as the good, or the heart “would fail in looking back.”
-And if no other way opens, and you are both called to go back
-to Truro, you will be able. “I can do all things,” and the
-sorrows for both of you will be like the mist which, though it
-came up from the face of the ground, yet watered Paradise and
-made it fruitful. Does not all consciousness of sin and failure
-bring us nearer not only to Him in Whom alone is strength,
-but to our brothers and sisters in sympathy and compassion.
-We are touched with the feeling of their infirmities.</p>
-
-<p>‘So, my dear child (I feel inclined to say children, for this has
-made me feel nearer to your friend), “lift up the hands that
-hang down and the feeble knees, lest that which is weak be
-turned out of the way, but let it rather be healed” by your
-sorrows—your wounds too.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have had a very pleasant but exhausting time since we
-met. I spent a fortnight at Oxford, attending both Oxford
-Extension and British Association. We heard a good deal
-about social and economic problems. Mr. Sydney Webb and
-Dr. Rein of Jena, who trains men as teachers, gave some nice
-lectures. Miss Louch is come back, having had a delightful
-time at the Educational Congress at the Clarke University,
-under the Presidency of Dr. Stanley Hall. She says she has
-learned a great deal.... I think our Training Department has
-as many if not more than any College there is, in spite of not
-having received any of the thousands that have been given to
-them—or, shall I say, because of it? I am sure it is good to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
-have to pay one’s way. I believe our Universities would do
-better work if they had nothing. “Then welcome each rebuff.”</p>
-
-<p>‘We had many parties at St. Hilda’s, and everybody admired
-the house. The girls enjoy the boat very much; I hope there
-will be no accidents. It is a very safe one, but one is always
-nervous about the water....</p>
-
-<p>‘I am pleased with the Higher Cambridge List ... and I am
-glad that we manage to keep up our lists, <em>because</em> we do not buy
-up our neighbours’ girls, and try not to make examinations the
-end. Glad your girl has done so well.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am working hard at the Magazine and my Reports to the
-Council, and trying to rest a little after my Oxford labours.
-On Tuesday I hope to go to the hills near Stroud.</p>
-
-<p>‘I must lend you some day <cite>Streets and Lanes</cite>, by the late Miss
-Benson. The Archbishop has sent me a copy.</p>
-
-<p>‘May God bless and comfort your hearts, my dear children, and
-make this light affliction, which is but for a moment, work out
-an eternal good.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">Ambleside</span>, <i>May 1895</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... The lakes are more beautiful and lovable than I had
-imagined. There is a singular charm in the hills round Ambleside,
-they ripple like the sea.</p>
-
-<p>‘You must not “feel” while you are so weak, just lie, as it
-were, in the sepulchre, and then come out as Browning’s
-Lazarus.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1897.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I got home from London late last night, and it troubled me,
-and you were much in my mind when I went to church; and
-in the service it seemed to me that it must be your energies
-were to be used to the full, and yet your married life, to which
-you have now been called, does in some degree restrain you.
-Hitherto I have thought you wanted, like an electric eel, to
-recuperate; you have gone through too much lately. To-day,
-it seemed to me as if you should still speak, but in writing; you
-have the power of writing well. I think I speak better than
-I write; I don’t know how you speak, but you can write.
-Now see if speaking is not to be your work whether writing is.
-How I feel I need solitude, and can’t write for want of it;
-but you have solitude enough to enable you to write. A
-little later, as I waited for a message, which sometimes comes at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span>
-the quiet times, the words came: “I became dumb, and opened
-not my mouth, for it was Thy doing.” I thought it was to be
-sent on to you, so there it is; not with your mouth, but with
-your hand, and perhaps to a larger audience. I think the
-solitude of the cycle will help you too....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There was one friend and old pupil, a writer for
-whose philosophical and poetical work in particular
-Miss Beale had a great admiration, who received many
-letters from her. A few extracts from these are given.
-To Miss ——:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>December 1886.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t think you will get any food in Spinoza. You say,
-may we not adopt Agnosticism and say of these problems
-honestly, “I will give it up”? But you <em>cannot</em>. We may try
-to, but it is not <em>human</em> to be content to be caged in by this little
-world of time and space. That restless discontent reaching out
-to wider knowledge, to the infinite, is surely its own witness.
-If not, Man, the crown of all things on earth, is the only
-irrational creature upon it. You will not be able to give up
-philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>‘I quite agree that we are not to be allowed here so to
-“make up our minds.” That spirit ever open to receive more
-light, is what our Master spoke of as the childlike spirit.</p>
-
-<p>‘Have you seen a little sixpenny book by Armstrong of
-Leeds? He is a Unitarian, so I do not agree with the end;
-but all the early chapters on the Belief in God are very good,
-and I think you would like it. There are also some very
-satisfactory sermons by Professor Momerie on the existence of
-the soul. I read a great deal of philosophy when I get time.
-Have you read Martineau’s <cite>Types of Ethical History</cite>? If not,
-do. Also Green’s <cite>Prolegomena to Ethics</cite>. Last summer I read
-Lotze’s <cite>Microcosmus</cite>, but I should recommend the two others
-rather.</p>
-
-<p>‘I wish you entered more than I think you do into Browning’s
-thoughts. He has, it seems to me, so clearly set forth the
-main basis of Faith, not systematically, but recurrently.</p>
-
-<p>‘We must work out these matters for ourselves; but rest we
-cannot. You cannot in the presence of your brother’s suffering—you
-cannot in the presence of death say: “I care not to lift
-the veil, or ever to know whether there is a curtain behind
-which we pass or a dark abyss.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed, dear child, I do feel for you. When you are freer,
-you must come and see me, and we will talk over things.
-I shall not think you wicked, but believe that you do want
-to know God, and that He is sorry for you, because you do
-care, but cannot see.... It is only the contemptuous, what I
-may call the omniscient Agnostic, that I do not want to have
-anything to do with; those who <em>sneer</em> at the most pathetic
-aspirations and hopes. The reverent and yet sorrowful doubt
-which yet longs for dawn, shall one day be blest by the sunrise,
-here or hereafter.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 5, 1887.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My dear Child</span>,—No; I don’t mind your saying anything
-that is in your heart.</p>
-
-<p>‘As regards knowledge. We use this word, it seems, in
-different senses. It is not at all identical with “to form a conception
-of”: <i>e.g.</i> I cannot form a conception of what gravitation
-or electricity is, but I <em>know</em> each in a sense. These are names
-for something without which the kosmos as it is could not be.
-Or I might perhaps illustrate better by saying I can form no
-<em>conception</em> of the Universe, no <em>complete</em> conception, and yet from
-my isolated spot I look up and say, <em>it is</em>. Of what <em>can</em> we form
-a complete conception? Not of the “flower in the crannied
-wall.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Any other explanation of the facts of the Universe seems to
-me incredible, except one, viz., that it is the utterance of
-supreme Wisdom and Love, and that it is adapted to the
-intelligence of finite beings. The Unity of law tells us there
-is <em>one</em> God, the Creator and Ruler. As regards the hypothesis
-of order coming out of chance atoms—the myth of a primæval
-chaos—can any one entertain it? <i lang="la">Ex nihil nihil</i>; the order we
-see in evolution must have existed with the original atoms, if
-such were the basis of created life.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, I do not think it your <em>fault</em>, but the fault of Spinoza’s
-system that it cannot give you satisfaction. It is a revival, only
-in another form, too, of the old Greek thought of Zeus, over
-whom there was another God, Fate. So Spinoza’s and the
-Greek Supreme were not Supreme.</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course I can do nothing in a letter but suggest lines of
-thought and lines of reading. After Armstrong, I should most
-like you to take either Green’s <cite>Prolegomena</cite> or Martineau’s <cite>Types</cite>,
-and read both several times. Green will help you to see the
-unity underlying all possibility of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘It is perhaps more than anything the harmony of the Threefold
-Unity which helps me to realise the conception of the
-divine which Jesus uttered most clearly.</p>
-
-<p>‘One sees the absolute physical unity, each atom forming
-part of the complete whole, and standing in vital relation to the
-whole.</p>
-
-<p>‘One sees all knowledge as real, only when it takes its place
-as in (can I say part of?) the Universal thought. One can see
-things only when one sees all in God. But one sees that this
-which we have separated off as physical nature, is yet the means
-and the condition of the intellectual too; for Light, which is
-necessary to vital processes, is the means by which the Universal
-thought is revealed to our intelligence, by which God touches,
-as it were, from without and awakens, and causes truly to live,
-our intellectual being.</p>
-
-<p>‘Thirdly, each—the physical, the intellectual—are felt by us
-to be the means to the highest of all, the perfection of the moral
-nature. Without this, goodness, power, and intellect would be
-worthless or horrible; and as the material can only be translated
-into the conception by the intellectual, so we feel that the moral
-alone can interpret the intellectual.</p>
-
-<p>‘That the full solution is not ours must seem natural to us,
-who know ourselves to be shut in by space and time. But I am
-sure that men will not long remain blind to other facts, as they
-have been to some extent in this generation, owing to the
-scientific sudden growth of our day.</p>
-
-<p>‘The facts of conscience are to me quite inexplicable on any
-other hypothesis than that of One who is supremely good
-speaking to His children, not through “eye or ear,” but directly.
-There is the unity of consciousness which makes memory possible,
-and moral judgment possible; and yet there is a secondary
-consciousness, the “categorical imperative,” the ideal goodness,
-ever revealing to man a higher and better. What if the conscience
-has never—I should say Except in One—received the
-perfect vision of goodness? This is only to say that the receiver
-is limited and imperfect, not that the perfect spiritual sun is not,
-or rather I should say the universal light, for the sun is a localisation
-of that which is invisible; is saturating through infinite
-space. Words ever fail.</p>
-
-<p>‘I know that endless questions are still unanswered, but this
-seems to me to be a real knowledge, which is consistent and
-which gives peace, that all other theories are inconsistent, and
-that the highest, the moral being is starved upon them.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 27, 1892.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘ ... The Bishop of Gloucester was here to-day, and began
-talking about your Goethe, which he praised; he is a good
-judge. I thought you would like to know. Would you send
-him the book, and say I have asked you; he will tell people
-about it. He reads philosophy too, and specially advises
-<cite>Lotze</cite>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘Written from <span class="smcap">Sudeley Castle</span>, (probably) <i>December 1893</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘I fetched your Magazine from the Post Office about
-five o’clock, and I have just read it through. I must express
-to you how delighted I am with it. It is so clear, so well
-written, it gets to the centre of things. I have seen nothing
-you have done at all to compare with it. I must get the
-number. I think I shall take in the Magazine, it looks good
-throughout. A friend takes the philosophical review and lends
-it to me. I might take this and lend it to her. I have a paper
-in hand against an article in that, but I fear I shall not be able
-to polish it off. You must have had days, <em>weeks</em>, of quiet
-thought to write this. This makes me want you still more to
-go to Oxford, and get to know Caird. Did I tell you I lunched
-with Jowett <i lang="fr">tête-à-tête</i> not long before his death?</p>
-
-<p>‘You must come and see me if I can’t come to you....’</p>
-
-<p>‘PS.—If you lend it to other friends, ascertain about the
-postage.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>November 1895.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘ ... I am sending you a little book on <cite>Psychology</cite> by a
-young teacher and writer. I wish she had shown me the MS.
-or the proof. If you feel inclined to look at it, and give her a
-few written criticisms I should be glad. We want so much
-common language in all these subjects, words are used so differently;
-<i>e.g.</i> “conception” is not generally used as she does.
-Intuition is another which we must fix the meaning of, for each
-book one reads. <em>Real</em>, <em>reason</em>, etc., want defining. A dictionary
-of philosophical terms should be made by some people authorised
-to establish an Eirenicon.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>? 1896.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘No; I am sure you <em>ought not</em> to give anything. I am sorry
-even that the notice was sent you. Perhaps, however, you may
-know some one or ones who may have money that they want
-to put out in some way for the Master’s service, and might
-think this a right way. We shall not get on if the Guild has
-to produce funds unasked. I don’t want <em>any one</em> to be asked, but
-they might be shown a paper.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 1897.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘ ... I find I read <cite>Not made in Germany</cite> without knowing it
-was yours. It is prettily written, but I don’t consider such
-things worthy of you, and the variations on that <em>one</em> tune are
-so very numerous. I wish we, like the Greeks, had things
-written which turned on other problems. These things are
-very well as a diversion. I wonder what is the subject of the
-novel.</p>
-
-<p>‘One of our teachers has been translating a book of Herbart’s.
-I have sent for his introduction to philosophy. I will tell you
-if I think it would do for what I want; something giving the
-fundamental questions which come before beginners. Herbart
-is much read now, but he is difficult to translate, and the people
-who have tried have not been very successful; I wonder if you
-have read any of him.</p>
-
-<p>‘I send a letter of introduction to Miss Swanwick, I suppose
-you know her translations and writings. I think she is only
-second to Mrs. Browning, and she is charming, and young still.
-When I last saw her, the friend of so many distinguished people,
-her memory was wonderful. Tennyson had one of her books
-open upon his table during the last days.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘(Date uncertain.)</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... Herbart is a power. I have not got the book yet.
-You really must not let yourself be diverted altogether from
-philosophy. You have not thought and suffered so much for
-nothing, and though your philosophy will come out in most
-things, even in stories, you <em>must</em> give it us sometimes “neat.”
-You remind me of Darwin’s earth-worms; you have had to
-burrow and work underground, and you have turned up some
-fruitful soil. Well, the Spirit which led you into the wilderness
-will bring you out of it, and anoint you to tell some good
-tidings.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 4, 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘ ... I am glad to hear you have come to a satisfactory agreement
-with Blackwood. It is an advantage to have a leading
-publisher. Now as regards the sonnet. I don’t feel as if anything
-could make the Eros of later Greek religion pure. He
-and Aphrodite have fallen from heaven, and I cannot think of
-them at the same time with the Sufferer on Calvary—so it
-rather jars on my feelings.</p>
-
-<p>‘I know there is behind the myth the thought of love, of
-one who is the offspring of truth and purity, of perfect beauty.
-But love, associated with Eros as we know him, is not
-love....</p>
-
-<p>‘I am feeling wonderfully well; the body responds to the
-spirit, and is refreshed too by the sympathy of my dear
-children.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s correspondence with her ‘children’ frequently
-concerned spiritual and mental difficulties of
-various kinds. One or two of the letters she wrote on
-such questions follow.</p>
-
-<p>To one in religious doubt:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘(Undated.)</p>
-
-<p>‘ ... How I wish some one abler and better than I could
-help you now, but as God has given you to me, and something
-of a mother’s heart with my children, I must try.</p>
-
-<p>‘First: I would resolve to take some fixed time each day,
-say ten minutes on first rising, just to plume one’s feathers for
-some short flights above the earth.</p>
-
-<p>‘Secondly: I would think of some of the blessings and thank
-God for them.</p>
-
-<p>‘Thirdly: Then I would plead for light; “Show me Thy
-glory; but I would ask in humility, being content to wait till
-the third or even the fourth watch.” I would ask, “Show me
-the Father and it sufficeth; let me know Thy love, if I cannot
-bear Thy glory.” And I would utter <em>the prayer</em> not only in
-aspiration in spoken words, or only in feeling (which is the
-music of prayer), but I would utter it in act, by reading in a
-childlike spirit some Scripture—climbing as it were the Delectable
-Mountains with the shepherds, and trying to make out
-something through their glasses. Ask that same Spirit, which
-has taught the spirit of man, and which I believe taught you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span>
-specially,—not for your own, but for the Church’s sake, to show
-to you spiritual truths.</p>
-
-<p>‘Fourthly: Then I would see if there was some selfishness,
-some “Evil Eye” preventing my seeing, and ask deliverance
-from any besetting sin.</p>
-
-<p>‘Fifthly: I would ask God to let me offer some sacrifice,
-permit me to join with Him, to hold communion with Him in
-blessing another, and try to look for some to whom I might
-give some cup of refreshment, some way of entering into His
-joy, and of crucifying self.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sixthly: I would place myself under such influences as have
-lifted the souls of others. I would join in common worship as
-much as possible in our prayers here and at Church.</p>
-
-<p>‘Seventhly: I would receive the teaching of Jesus, and
-through the bread and wine of earth ask God to feed me with
-the Heavenly Manna.</p>
-
-<p>‘Will you, my child, try some of these ways, and not be soon
-weary? In <em>due</em> season you will reap, if you faint not.</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps you will soon find some ways more suited to yourself
-than some of those I have suggested; but you asked me.
-I will try to get a beautiful prayer I have heard asking for light.
-It may be that the answer will be a baptism of fire;—a heaping
-coals of fire on our heads, and thus purifying us from evil. I
-would say earnestly, compel yourself (though often unwillingly),
-to look up to the Father, as the noblest souls have done in all
-ages, whether Christian or not. You must catch some beams
-of heavenly light, and see, as St. Stephen did, that man may be
-glorified to stand at the Right Hand of God, and to share with
-Him in carrying out His purposes of love. I think you will
-be led on to see the Father revealed in the Son; to me He is
-the Way, and it seems His words are true for us now: “No
-man cometh <em>unto</em> the Father (cometh near so as to see and know
-Him) but by Me.”</p>
-
-<p>‘May the Good Shepherd lead you to green pastures and the
-still waters of comfort.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To one who found danger and unreality in forms and
-ceremonies, and who wrote: ‘I feel I am cutting
-myself off from you in writing like this.’ She
-replied:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<i>PS.</i>—Nothing will cut you off from me. I thought I had
-given no rules, only such suggestions as a heathen philosopher<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span>
-might have followed. I wrote my letter hastily; I should like
-to see what I said.</p>
-
-<p>‘Your letter gave me pain, which was partly selfish, to find
-I was too ignorant to help you. We must have a little talk
-some day.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To one who had written that she had to fight hard
-against pessimism caused by much unaccountable and
-apparently needless suffering. She answered:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>November 10, 1895.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I think our faith in God, as in any person, rests more on
-what He is than what He does....</p>
-
-<p>‘Now I come to the conclusion:—</p>
-
-<p>‘(1) That in Nature is revealed an intelligence whose limits
-we cannot see; One, <i>i.e.</i> infinitely wise and mighty. (2) In
-good men we see benevolence, the earnest desire to bless up to
-the limits of their power. In the Christ we see this without
-any limit of selfishness, and we say, If Man, the Son, is thus
-loving, then the Father is love. “No man knoweth the Father,
-but the Son.” We can approach God, so as to know the character
-of God, only thus, it seems to me. You have here the
-argument of Saul (Browning). Then when you allege against
-the witness of the heart, the facts of Nature, I answer that
-however inexplicable by us these facts are, this witness for God,
-which comes from within, cannot be overthrown.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nor, indeed, does that fact of animals preying on one another
-trouble me much. Death to them, <i>i.e.</i> the stopping of the
-activities of life suddenly, whilst they are in full vigour, seems
-better than the gradual decay of sickness. There is with them
-no anticipation and no joy in cruelty.</p>
-
-<p>‘The facts of moral evil, those are what seem to overwhelm
-one at times. There are children born into such terrible surroundings,
-we say. There again we can see a little way up into
-the darkness, and trust. We do see that the redemption of the
-lost is often effected by the knowledge that others suffer through
-their sin....</p>
-
-<p>‘Do we not know enough of our interests and God’s infinite
-wisdom to make us trust God for the universal good? Men
-must be left to work out the consequences of evil, to bear them,
-and learn it is God’s purpose for them to rise out of the darkness
-into increasing love of His holy will. At length regenerated
-humanity will so enter into sympathy with the Spirit of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span>
-God mediated through the indwelling Christ, that things in
-Heaven and earth will be recapitulated in Him the Head, and
-will become intelligently and lovingly obedient to that will.
-The cost of suffering is as nothing compared with the infinite
-good. I can only sketch the outline of my faith.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The letter which follows was written to a pupil who,
-while she was at school, did not personally know Miss
-Beale very well. A talk at a Guild meeting eleven years
-after she left revealed to Miss Beale’s penetrating eye
-some distress caused by disillusionment and disappointment.
-A fortnight afterwards she wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I have so often thought of our interrupted conversation,
-and must take a bit of my first Saturday evening to write
-a line.</p>
-
-<p>‘You were feeling, I judge, somewhat as Wordsworth did
-when he wrote the <cite>Ode on Immortality.</cite> This is, I think, how
-the matter stands. When we are young, we think that perfection,
-<i>i.e.</i> the ideal, can be found on earth—we set up,
-perhaps, some earthly idol, and endow it with every excellence.
-Then we find that we have been in a measure mistaken. What
-shall we do? Doubtless there does then come upon us the
-shadow of a great darkness, as we find how much evil there is,
-and we are tempted to believe the lying word of Satan, that the
-kingdoms of the world are his. Shall we then lower our ideal,
-say we will conform to that which is, or believe the heavenly
-proclamation—“the kingdoms of this world are become the
-kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ”—and work on to
-make this as true as we can for our own souls, and for those
-near us? We see that the ideals cannot be realised on earth,
-because this is a place of discipline. Many make a worldly
-marriage because they give up their ideal, and conform to what
-is, instead of ever striving to bring about what ought to be—nothing
-can make that right. But on the other hand we must
-be content to be the companions of those who, like ourselves,
-are “compassed about with infirmities,” to arm them for the
-fight with evil, and to love those who are not perfect, as
-Britomart did the Red Cross Knight. What I want you all to
-keep before you is that one day the ideal will be realised, as the
-Bible and our own hearts assure us, and to join the army of
-light and go right on, confident of eventual victory. You have,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span>
-my dear child, a somewhat heavy burden of responsibility for
-your age, and you miss the sustaining hand, but you must not
-look down, but up! Take our first Cambridge Room motto:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“As the soar falcon, so I strive to fly,</div>
-<div class="verse">In contemplation of the immortal sky.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">There we may look for the realisation of our earthly
-endeavours, as Abt Vogler teaches. I wonder if you read
-Browning. I wish you had a Browning Society.—With much
-sympathy, ...’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To one who had written of the ‘Intolerance of Church
-people’:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1884.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘ ... But it does seem to me quite impossible in education
-to leave religion an open question, <i>i.e.</i>, to teach without hypothesis.
-How could we unite into one coherent whole the teaching
-of optics, unless we presuppose the undulatory theory? Or the
-facts of astronomy without the theory of gravitation? Yet
-both may be, and are questioned. For some philosophical
-theory must underlie all things, and no one can, it seems to me,
-teach history, or geography, or science without it. We who
-believe in Christian philosophy, and feel that it alone makes the
-universe intelligible, and life worth living for ourselves or others;
-who think that it is the power needed to give life to the world,
-and to deliver us from evil and all the misery which oppresses
-us, naturally desire with all the energy of our being to teach
-it, and we most of us would not let little differences hinder our
-working with those who acknowledge the immeasurable blessings
-of Christ’s teaching. Here I found dissenters wishing
-that the teaching of our College should be Church; because
-they said there must be some basis; that they would rather let
-their children hear sometimes what they disagreed with, and
-judge for themselves, than that there should be no definite
-teaching. They thought our Church was on the whole the
-most liberal.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am so grieved, dear friend, that any of us should bring
-disgrace on our Teacher by our faults, but when we do what our
-Master, the Truth, disapproved, the blame should not rest on
-Him. It would not be just to you if we called a child who was
-in your class and loved you, by your name when she told a lie.
-Nor should you say, “See what Christians do,” when they sin
-against Christ. <em>In so far</em> as they are untruthful they are un-Christian.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Then, had you not, even as you admit, condemned utterly
-those whose conduct admitted of a more favourable interpretation?
-We are not utterly truthful, unless we do more than
-act up to our convictions, unless we do our utmost to make
-those convictions as near the truth as we are able. And do you
-know I felt so disappointed after talking to you the other day,
-because it seemed to me as if you had not cared to search into
-the depths of things, as if you were content to float about
-instead of searching for the rock beneath the flood. Our
-apprehension of the truth regarding the goodness of God, and
-His purpose for us, and our duty to our Father and to one
-another, seems to me the priceless pearl. I found you had not
-read what I thought you would have read, the works in which the
-ages have indeed drawn for us pictures of those who wrestled
-with God in the darkness and cried—“Tell me Thy Name.”
-And now you disappoint me again, as some other of my dear
-Agnostic friends. They seem wanting in the tenderness of
-those who ever look up to Jesus Christ, and therefore learn to
-feel in the light of His example. This our miserable failure,
-the habitual self-examination and definite confession of sin, helps
-us to. There, I have told you what is in my heart. The
-former on thinking over our conversation I meant to say,
-because I love you. The latter, (the want of sympathy,) I did
-not know of. I wonder if you will misunderstand me now,—perhaps,—but
-I have felt you did not before.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The following was written to a former student, who
-after a time of great religious privilege had been assailed
-by special temptation:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 1888.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My dear Friend</span>,—I am grieved that you have suffered so
-much, and yet it was not sent you in vain. It was to correct
-faults in yourself, and to help you in your vocation to correct
-those in others. You did not, I feel sure, yield to the wrong,
-but fought against it, and temptation is not sin.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have been thinking what you could read. Do you know
-Froebel’s own works? I think some of these (which are not
-light reading) would be nice for you on your travels. I like
-always a book that is suitable for a little reading and much
-thinking. He is so bathed in the spirit of love, so deeply Christian
-and so full of the spirit of liberty. When you come home
-you must come and pay us a visit,—that and Rosmini I should
-like you to read. I have asked Miss Gore to send you one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span>
-my photos, in case you care to have it, when we go home.—With
-deep sympathy, yours most sincerely,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">D. Beale</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Among the letters are many to old pupils on the
-deaths of relations or friends. The next was written
-to Miss Alice Owen, now Mrs. Mark Collet, on the
-anniversary of her mother’s death:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 1891.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘This was a birthday eight years ago into a world of larger
-scope than this, and I feel as if her spirit were still watching
-over those she loved on earth....</p>
-
-<p>‘Surely the tides of eternal love, flowing in upon our narrow
-lives, will make us all of one spirit, sorrowing and rejoicing
-with one another, instead of judging, because we feel, as she
-taught in that beautiful parable, that we are one.</p>
-
-<p>‘May our Lord give you an ever larger measure of His own
-love.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The next letter refers to the death of Mrs. Russell
-Gurney:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>October 1896.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I got a letter from Orme Square this morning. Our beloved
-friend entered into rest yesterday. I think of the glad meeting
-of those who were kindred souls on earth. I had also a note
-from Addington saying how thankful Mrs. Benson is, and
-happy in spite of her loss.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Several other letters of a kindred nature follow.</p>
-
-<p>To Miss Giles, on the death of her father:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>April 1871.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Still in one way we who are old suffer less from parting. To
-us the time seems so short, ere we may hope to meet once more
-where are no more partings or tears.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Miss Susan Wood, on the death of her mother:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>May 1880.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I need not tell you I have felt much for you. One could
-not have wished the suffering prolonged, and yet one does not
-feel the loss less. Happily, one seems generally to forget, when
-all is over, the last painful incidents of the sickness, and to remember
-the past years. Few have had a more devoted mother.
-How proud she was of your successes! How old it makes us<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
-feel when we take our place in the front rank of the army of
-life; may we be able to say, when we too are struck down, “I
-have fought a good fight.” May God bless your work, my dear
-child, to the everlasting weal of those whom He has given you.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Miss Frances Crawley, afterwards Mrs. Wells:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1881.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I must write you one line of sympathy in this great
-sorrow. I know how much you loved your dear father, and
-had longed for this visit, and now there will be a great blank.
-You will not think now “How glad he will be if I do well.”
-But on the other hand, my dear child, you will feel you must be
-more than ever to your mother. You children will be all to her
-now. Besides, God never takes but He also gives—only we
-often miss the gift because we don’t look for it. He will help
-you to know Him better as your Father, partly because you will
-think of your own father as near Him, for where our treasure is,
-there our hearts are also. You will think more of pleasing
-Him, and so preparing to meet those who have loved you and
-loved God, where there will be no more death for ever.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To an old pupil, on the death of her father:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>November 9, 1896.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My dear Child</span>,—This is indeed a blessed death for one
-so good as your father; you must give thanks for him.</p>
-
-<p>‘There is no service I think so strengthening as the burial;
-may you be comforted and strengthened for the battle of life
-by a clearer vision of that unseen host which is ever near, though
-“our eyes are holden that we see them not” through want of
-faith. Soon must we join their ranks. Shall we join in their
-psalms of thanksgiving?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Miss Strong, on the death of Miss Margaret
-Clarke:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>February 3, 1897.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed I am grieved; she has been a power for good, and
-has sent out some grand workers, and I shall miss her greatly.
-I am thankful I was with her at Christmas.</p>
-
-<p>‘One feels sure “her works will follow her,” and He who
-gave her power will raise up others. It is, so far as one can see,
-too heavy a burden for Kate alone. Her memory will be a
-power, her life was so wonderfully guided, and one feels sure she
-has work to do beyond, for which the training of earth will have
-prepared her.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To Miss Rowand, on the death of her mother:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 1901.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘It is grievous for you and those who loved that dear and
-noble, simple-minded woman, for her goodness gave unity to
-her life. Now the alabaster box is broken, only the fragrance
-of the life remains. She has been spared the living death such
-as I have seen, when the soul finds in the body a tomb. She
-is released and doubtless carries on ministries of love with your
-noble father and beloved brother.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have just seen Fräulein, whose only sister has just passed
-away.</p>
-
-<p>‘How little the sorrows of earth will seem to us as we look
-back, I think; even as many which even here issue in blessing.
-We realise that all things do indeed “work together for good to
-them that love God,” and I know that through this fresh sorrow
-the fire will burn up more and more of the earthly, so that the
-spirit may shine forth more brightly “to give light to all that
-are in the house.”—Yours with deep sympathy and affection.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Miss Caines, just before her death:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>March 1901.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My very dear Friend</span>,—We can only pray now that if it
-be God’s will you may be spared to the many who love you, and
-to whom you have been a blessing during these many years of
-faithful service. But if the Master should come and call for you,
-then He will go with you through the Valley of the Shadow of
-Death. His Rod and Staff which stay your tottering steps will
-comfort you, and He will bring you forth to the light.</p>
-
-<p>‘We must say for you and for ourselves;—“Jesus, I trust
-Thee.” We do believe that what the world calls Death is
-birth into a brighter world.</p>
-
-<p>‘May we all meet again where sorrow and sighing are no
-more.—With much love, your very affectionate.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To a friend, on the death of Miss Caines:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘This morning my dear friend passed away, full of peace and
-content to go. The children have been all that we could wish,
-full of sympathy, but quietly impressed and very sorrowful. We
-do not wish them to leave, but to learn to look calmly on death,
-and hopefully up to Him Who has taught His servants to
-triumph over death....</p>
-
-<p>‘The loss to me is more than I can say. God’s will be done.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The next letter is to Mrs. Cooper,<a name="FNanchor_105" id="FNanchor_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> a much-loved old
-pupil, who in 1902 lost a son, a promising young artist,
-and seven months later her husband through death:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 1903.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I am sending you such a nice sermon by our good bishop, which
-I think you will like. I quite agree with you that one ought
-not to seek intercourse through mediums. I would never join
-the Psychical Society. It was <em>right</em> to enquire as these scientific
-men have done, but the inexperienced are almost sure to be taken
-in by such, and it seems to me that we ought not to try to draw
-aside the veil but wait until God’s herald bids us enter.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think you must expect to feel the sense of loss becoming
-greater, but then you will get to feel how short is the time of
-mourning on earth, and to ascend in heart and mind—and so to
-be above the storms and clouds of earth—even as the lark—and
-yet with him to hover over the earthly home, “that nest which
-you can drop into at will,—Those quivering limbs comprest.”
-You will want to speak to and help others with the comfort
-wherewith you are comforted of God....</p>
-
-<p>‘It is nice to look back on that time forty years ago. I remember
-your confessions to me then. Well, you have not been
-forsaken, nor left to beg your bread.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>October 1903.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I have just heard of this fresh trouble. Surely you must be
-intended to do some work for others specially needing heart’s
-blood.—This paper was put into my hands just as I heard of your
-fresh disappointment and anxiety.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the Misses Hibbert Ware, on the death of their
-sister:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>March 1905.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed one ought only to give thanks for her. I think of
-her looking down on us all at peace having escaped from the
-long enduring pain associated with this earthly body, and springing
-up like the lark into the larger heaven.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, we must wait to understand these things which it has
-not entered into the heart of man to conceive in all their joyful
-reality, though in some measure they are revealed here to saintly
-souls which have been made partakers of Christ’s sufferings.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To Mrs. Mace, on the death of her husband:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>May 1906.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Only to-day did I hear of the death of Mr. Mace.... It
-did seem grievous after his suffering with so much courage and
-hope the operation. One can only give thanks now that the
-soul has escaped from “the body of humiliation,” through which
-it has risen to the spiritual life. I don’t like the word resurrection,
-ἀνάστασις does not suggest that the soul has put on its
-old clothing, after being delivered from the body of corruption.
-You must be glad that he is free.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale wrote several letters, from which extracts
-are given, to Miss Belcher during her last illness.</p>
-
-<p>The following was written after the Head-mistresses’
-Conference on October 8 and 9 at Oxford
-in 1898:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>October 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My dear Friend</span>,—I got home last night. Everybody was
-asking and thinking about you and missing you so much. I
-hoped for a line this morning; Susan will doubtless write to-day.
-I brought back Agnes Body for the Sunday here. The
-text in my birthday book for to-day is: “I have prayed for thee
-that thy faith fail not.” I know this prayer is fulfilled for you.
-How I long to have some real talk with you now; but I think
-even in the body there is communion, and still more out of the
-body. It seems to me as if Miss Carter must be with you.
-Your love and care for her was returned in blessings on your
-own life, and through you on others. Miss Strong looks ill. She
-has been staying with her Bishop; that will strengthen her.
-That good Miss Day of Westminster was there, and sweet Mrs.
-Woodhouse of Sheffield.</p>
-
-<p>‘I feel sure the Conference will do good, there were so many
-good women there;—only we missed <em>one</em>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A day or two later she wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My very dear Friend</span>,—I feel somewhat cheered by Susan’s
-letter to-night. Each morning I have so many enquiries, “Have
-you heard?” Susan is good in writing. Here are three letters
-from some staying at St. Hilda’s, where we were always thinking
-of you....</p>
-
-<p>‘Just two years on the 11th, since the Archbishop fell asleep.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span>
-I wonder if he looks down at the school, and its first Head-mistress
-too. Shall we see and be able in some measure to
-“succour” those on earth? May the peace of God which
-passeth all understanding be with you.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The next alludes to a proposed visit of Miss Beale to
-Miss Belcher:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>St. Luke’s Day.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Friend</span>,—I am so looking forward to Friday. I
-thought of you so much on this the Physician’s day, as we sang
-that beautiful hymn and Psalm xxx.; and our window told of
-the raising of the daughter by the Healer. My own life seems
-to me almost a resurrection, I must hope that you too may be
-raised up to do work on earth, ere you go to a higher sphere.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After this visit Miss Belcher wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My dear Friend</span>,—The strength and comfort of your
-visit has been with me ever since, and far from its doing me any
-harm it has done me untold good. May God bless you for
-having imparted to me so richly of the “comfort wherewith you
-yourself have been comforted of God.” I do so trust you were
-not over-tired; hope to hear from some one to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p>‘Will you call me Marian in our private letters? I have
-never liked being only Miss Belcher, and since the close communion
-and rich gift of yesterday, I feel I should like it.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale’s reply was:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>October 23, 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dearest Marian</span>,—It is good to hear that you were none
-the worse for my visit, and that our Lord put into my mouth
-some words of comfort. I shall hope to hear about Dr. Broadbent.
-I had a nice note from Susan. All here were so glad
-to get news of you direct....</p>
-
-<p>‘I wonder if you know Fechner’s little book; there is one
-chapter I like much, from which I am sending you some
-extracts.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The next letter was written after an operation Miss
-Belcher had undergone:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘ ... I lingered this morning, and the postman brought me
-Susan’s cheerful letter, just as I was starting, and I was able to
-make the service specially a Eucharist on your account. What<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span>
-a wonderful epistle; it is one to feed on. It tells how suffering
-strengthens the inner man, and enlarges one’s sympathies and
-makes us know the love of God. And the Gospel tells of
-renewed life after going down nearly to the grave. You and I
-can give thanks for both; may St. Paul’s wish be accomplished
-in us.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Belcher replied:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>Sunday Evening.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My dear Miss Beale</span>,—My first few lines written by myself
-must be to you. All through last week the Epistle and your
-words about it have been such a help. It was just like one of
-your Scripture lessons every day all to myself. I am still going
-on so well, but of course it must take time, and I am not out of
-the wood. Still, as you said, all is well and will be well. Thank
-you so much for Lilla’s letter. I am so sorry she is not well,
-and Lucy Soulsby too. I am so rejoiced to hear you are so
-well and vigorous, and that College is overflowing. How wonderful
-it all is, and so inspiring.</p>
-
-<p>‘I had begun Archbishop Benson’s <cite>St. Cyprian</cite> and your book
-before the operation, but have been too weak to read since. I
-hope to begin to-morrow. If you have read anything lately you
-think I should like, will you tell me the names? It must not
-be philosophy. I hope to have the best papers of the Church
-Congress read to me....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Shortly after this Miss Belcher wrote herself on an
-anticipated visit from another physician:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My very dear Friend</span>,— ... Dr. Robson of Leeds comes
-to-morrow. I know you will pray that the “right judgment”
-will be given. It is thought he will operate, but not certain.
-Please let Eliza and Susan Draper know. I cannot forget all I
-owe to you, my friend and guide, of so many years. We have
-a private celebration to-morrow at eight, but you will not get this
-in time to think of us.—Ever your loving and grateful friend,</p>
-
-<p class="right">‘<span class="smcap">M. Belcher</span>.</p>
-
-<p>‘You shall hear as soon as possible.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘<i>Dearest Marian</i>,—I have heard from Susan.... Of
-course we can’t understand, and we only know that all is well.
-I thought of you so much at prayers this morning. I read the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span>
-Lesson instead of the Epistle. “The souls of the righteous are
-in the hands of God, and there shall no torment touch them.”
-We missed your accustomed visit on the term holiday yesterday.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>First Sunday in Advent, 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My very dear Marian</span>,—We were all so full of hope at
-first, and are much disappointed that relief has not come, but that
-you are still stretched upon the cross. “No chastening for the
-present seemeth to be joyous but grievous, yet at such times one can
-just <em>think</em> of the ‘Mystery of Pain,’ and realise that each sufferer
-does in uniting his will with God’s in some measure, ‘fill up
-that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ ... for His
-body’s sake.’” I think perhaps you may be suffering specially
-for one, that her faith may be once more awakened. Every
-sufferer thus “lifted up” does in a measure draw the hearts of
-others to Him through whom we are able to reveal the power
-of faith.... I said to Miss Drummond, “I dare say you would
-not have been spared any of the suffering”; she answered so
-heartily, “not one half-hour.” We see now what a wonderful
-work she did among the College boys, and it must be that your
-suffering is a part of the work God has given you to do for the
-school, and that you, too, will be enabled to say “not one half-hour,”
-when the darkness passes away, and the true light shines
-into the things of earth, and we know as we are known. I
-know that suffering so <em>claims</em> the attention, but one can only
-know and believe, not feel it; but it is much to live by faith. Faith
-is the illuminating power through which alone we truly know.
-Was not Miss Carter’s suffering felt by you to be mediatorial
-too, and you are her successor. I shall try to spend a few days
-with Miss Martin at Christmas.</p>
-
-<p>‘To-day the Jairus window comes before me; the thought of
-the Lord sending away all those who pressed round the maiden,
-that she might know the advent of Him who is the Lord and
-Giver of life.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The following is the last letter Miss Beale wrote
-to Miss Belcher:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>December 5, 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My very dear Friend</span>,—I have tried to write several
-times, but tore up what I wrote. Susan is good in telling me
-about you, and at times my heart sinks, when I think of all you
-are suffering, though there do seem to me to be some hopeful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span>
-signs.... Well, we ought not, I suppose, to wish, we are so
-sure that “in all our afflictions He is afflicted,” and “the angel
-of His presence saves us,” and makes our souls strong to bear
-and our “light affliction is but for a moment.”</p>
-
-<p>‘I dare say this term has seemed to you unending. I think
-when the strain of thinking about school is taken off, you will
-feel stronger. I hope to go to Kilburn from January 5 to the
-9th; there we shall think much about you. I am just writing
-about St. Hilda’s East.... Things seem going on well, I
-think I shall stay there after the Retreat, and try to get more
-into touch.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Enclosed in this letter were some verses from Ken’s
-‘Midnight Hymn,’ with the words, ‘I thought you
-might like this if awake at night.’</p>
-
-<p>After Miss Belcher’s death on December 15, 1898,
-Miss Beale wrote to Miss Strong: ‘Three of my noble-hearted
-friends gone so lately—Miss Buss, Miss Clarke,
-and Marian Belcher. The road to the Dark Tower gets
-lonely, but we look beyond.’</p>
-
-<p>A few letters on general subjects are given. The first
-of these was written to Miss Susan Wood, in 1897, in
-reply to an inquiry about women teachers:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I should not like to say I would have none but women
-teachers. I consider a combination good, better than either
-men or women only. Still, if a woman is equal in knowledge
-and ability, I consider she generally teaches better than a man.
-If all women are ultimately forced to go to the University, the
-higher teaching will be taken out of their hands, or else women
-will teach there.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The following extract, from a letter to Miss Sturge
-in October 1902, deals with the developments of the
-College:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The numbers enable us to have an aggregate of schools and
-to have virtually about seven who might have and ought—Headships
-elsewhere, had they not an independent sphere of their
-own.</p>
-
-<p>‘Lastly, are you right in saying that an inspiring personality<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span>
-can be taken away? The inspiration is not from any person
-who can pass away; we are but the earthen vessels; the light
-persists and is given just so long as it is needed, to any one
-who has to give light. The inspiration for the Headship will be
-given to my successor in turn....</p>
-
-<p>‘I do hope God may allow me to go on longer, and it is
-a comfort to feel that you are glad I should.</p>
-
-<p>‘As regards the growing size of the College. I may add
-in addition to what I have said, that I have never wished
-independently to add to the size merely, and that in each
-development I have felt I was obliged to go on, though
-often I dreaded it; <i>e.g.</i> the training of teachers could not
-be refused when Miss Newman offered. Then the Kindergarten
-grew up, and the elementary teachers was really forced
-on one. It is unprofitable in money (the Elementary School
-Department), and a great strain on me, but I feel we have to do
-this special work. In fact, it is not our work, but we are set
-here by the great Captain, and I trust we are taking our share
-in advancing somewhat the kingdom of truth and righteousness.
-I cannot see that in this erection of buildings, or in any other
-way, we are acting from self, but under direction. I have not
-yet read the comments on the buildings, but wanted to reply to
-the letter at once.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The following was written to Bishop Fraser of Manchester,
-who had publicly referred with approbation to
-the saying of Thucydides, that ‘that woman was most
-to be admired who was least spoken of whether for
-good or evil’:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>December 1878.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">My Lord</span>,—We owe to you so much for education work
-that I cannot but feel sorry you should by your recent quotation
-from Thucydides place before women a standard lower than the
-highest. I felt bound to protest against it, when a few days
-later I read a paper before the Social Science Congress in
-my own schoolroom.</p>
-
-<p>‘Will the excuse be received from us: “I was afraid of being
-spoken of for good, and so I hid my talent in a napkin?”
-Must we not expect that our work will be measured, as was that
-of another woman by the words, “She hath done what she
-could?” I venture to enclose a few lines from an article
-of mine, signed “A Utopian,” in a Fraser<a name="FNanchor_106" id="FNanchor_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> of 1866. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[410]</a></span>
-provoked by the same quotation from Thucydides in a <cite>Quarterly</cite>
-of that year.—I am, my Lord, yours with sincere respect and
-esteem,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">D. Beale</span>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Mrs. Ashley Smith, at that date Miss Lucy Hall,
-a relation of Bishop Fraser’s, on the same subject:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>December 12, 1878.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Lucy</span>,—I was glad to hear you thought you could be
-of use in the Board School. Could you not teach the boys some
-mathematics? If you could, I will send you an amusing book
-about Euclid.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have asked Miss Gore to send you a copy of what I wrote
-to the Bishop. I think he should have got his secretary just to
-send me a line. I did not do it in a perky spirit, but I felt bound
-to protest, and having protested, I thought I should rather say
-to him, why. Many women do leave undone the things they
-ought to do, because they shrink from coming forward. I have
-done so myself. If he would preach that we should do what we
-ought in God’s sight, and never trouble our heads about what
-people say, when our conscience speaks, it would be better.
-Perhaps he will think twice before he again quotes that, and if
-so, I shall be satisfied. I would not care, if he were not so good
-and clever that people listen to what he says. He is, too, not
-conventional, yet he says what may promote a wrong kind
-of conventionality. I have since seen such a nice bit of a sermon
-about the idle lives that women lead; so if you do see him,
-I should like you to ask him about this too.</p>
-
-<p>‘You must let me know when you really get to work as
-manager.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Miss Laurie, after reading <cite>Pasteur’s Life</cite>:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>1902.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I want to have a general conference about organising our
-Science work better; we are using razors for stone-cutting.
-I should like a great deal of the correcting taken from the
-“Professoriate,” and young specialists entrusted with work
-under superintendence. Talk with M. Reid and A. Johnson.
-We ought to let our superior minds “expatiate,” and let me
-have a few notes, as I can’t talk much now. We might bring
-up a body of inspirers as well as workers. Pasteur’s life has
-specially excited me to ask what more we could do. The
-teachers ought to read more of the lives of discoverers, <i>e.g.</i>
-Lodge (though that is too slight, <cite>History of Matter</cite>, etc. etc.).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[411]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘If there are disadvantages in the London changes, at least I
-hope we shall get more liberty; let us try to find “a soul of
-goodness in things evil.”</p>
-
-<p>‘What a beautiful character is Pasteur’s. I find it quite
-a Sunday book.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Miss Nixon, on Henry George’s <cite>Progress and
-Poverty</cite>:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>April 1884.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I am sorry to have given you pain, but I do hope you will
-read the writings of those who understand political economy
-better than we do. I think if you had read about the evils
-which preceded the abolition of the old Poor Law, you would
-have seen why I cannot approve Mr. George’s plans, and not
-thought that I desire less than you do that these miseries of
-the people should be lessened. It is so important for us teachers
-to try to get right views about history; to pray by our acts that
-we may have “a right judgment in all things.”</p>
-
-<p>‘It is more pathetic than anything to see people led by false
-hopes to follow wandering fires to their destruction; and such,
-I am sure, are some of the new lights. The history of the
-Crusades and the French Revolution ought not to have been
-written in vain for us. There are three articles that I think you
-ought to read,—the Duke of Argyle’s, Mr. Herbert Spencer’s,
-and Mr. Brodrick’s, in the last <cite>Nineteenth Century</cite> and <cite>Contemporary</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>‘Reforms I <em>earnestly</em> desire on laws of succession, land transfer,
-etc. etc., but I am sure that no external bettering of conditions
-can do good without this is the outcome of right principles, and
-that people can be raised only by raising the moral standard
-of all. Perhaps we may have time to talk some day.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Mr. Coates after a lecture he had given at
-Cheltenham:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1888.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Coates</span>,— ... What I especially regretted was
-that the lecture raised a number of questions to which it
-furnished no answers, but seemed to me to suggest erroneous
-ones; words were used which were not defined.</p>
-
-<p>‘(1) Persecution; (2) Official dignity; (3) Rights of the
-individual in relation to the community.</p>
-
-<p>‘(1) Now as regards persecution, you said people could not, if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[412]</a></span>
-they were in earnest, help persecuting. That was equivalent to
-the assertion that persecution was right; but you did not say
-what you understood by persecution. Everything depends on
-that to girls accustomed to associate persecution with bodily
-torture. I think what you said would suggest wrong ideas. I
-can’t agree with your general proposition, but of course I may
-be wrong.</p>
-
-<p>‘(2) “A Dog in Office” is to me a different being from one
-who has not been appointed to the charge. He feels it, and
-I feel it. He respects himself more, and by his “investiture,”
-though it be only by a costermonger, he becomes capable of acts
-of which he would otherwise have been incapable, and his bearing,
-in combination with his legitimate title derived from the owner
-of the barrow, obtains recognition from all the street curs.</p>
-
-<p>‘I may, of course, be superstitious, but I do regard a consecrated
-king, a President elected deliberately by a great nation,
-a man solemnly set apart to serve a church, as in some sense
-different from others. It seems to me that this is a matter of
-some importance in these days, when the sacredness of human
-relationships is called in question. I think we teachers cannot
-feel too strongly the duty of doing for thought what the feudal
-lords did for material forces in erecting bulwarks or breakwaters
-against the floods of undisciplined opinions in question, passion
-clothed in rags of thought. We want, like the old alchemists,
-to make the indeterminate clouds of smoke like actual forms.</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not think you and I really differ, but I suppose the fact
-of my having a little kingdom has aggravated my sense of
-responsibility, and I can’t help always regarding teaching as
-purposeful. I hold in abhorrence the maxim “Art for Art’s
-sake.” I <em>always</em> want it to have a purifying influence on the
-character. I believe you do the same, only you are afraid of
-“preaching.”</p>
-
-<p>‘You will be saying, “I wish some one else shared my aversion,”
-so I will spare you No. 3. I hope you will not misunderstand
-me.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Mrs. Rix:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 1891.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘It is always an anxious thing when people of different nations
-marry....</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope your good husband will not desert his post. I feel
-sure these scientific things were given us to prevent our feeling
-crushed by the weight of the “unintelligible world” of philosophy,
-and the atonement of science and philosophy is the work<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span>
-of our age—through nature we have to go to find the spiritual
-Christ. Poor Mr. Lant Carpenter. I wonder if it was the
-Sphinx who killed him.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To Sir Joshua Fitch, after the death of Miss Buss:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July (?) 1897.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I have been thinking what I could write to you about Miss
-Buss. I don’t think I could send you anything that would help
-in an article, or say much more than I have in the Guardian.
-I am spoken of as her life-long friend, but I did not know her
-until long after I came to Cheltenham, a little before you joined
-our Council. It is said in many papers that I attended with her
-the evening classes at Queen’s College. I never did. She
-assisted at the evolution which transformed our governing body
-from a local Committee to what it is now, and by getting an
-enlarged Council we were saved from dying of atrophy....</p>
-
-<p>‘From that time we were intimately associated in educational
-movements, and I ever felt that she was utterly to be trusted
-never to think,—much less to do anything but what was true,
-straightforward, unselfish. She was deeply, unostentatiously
-religious, lived in the spirit of prayer, and had the love of God
-in its twofold sense ever guiding her thought and actions.
-Often have we knelt together, at her request, the last thing at
-night and said together the Veni Creator.</p>
-
-<p>‘If I spoke the other day of troubles with the governing bodies—it
-was not from anything definite that she said to me; but
-she has often, to allay my impatience, repeated what one of her
-Governors said: “Do you think we come here to register your
-decrees?” She received it as a deserved reproof, though, of
-course, she must have known what was best for the school, and
-never desired her selfish good,—only that of the School.</p>
-
-<p>‘The large view she took of the general outlook for the
-growing up teachers struck me much. The provision for the
-future, the opening of new occupations, the health and bodily
-development. Her gymnasium, I think, she herself built and
-gave to the school.... She had a lady doctor to examine the
-girls, weigh them, etc., etc.</p>
-
-<p>‘The formation of the Head-mistresses’ Association was
-entirely due to her. The first meeting, and, I think, the second
-was held at Myra Lodge. She was very anxious about the
-“Teachers’ Guild.”</p>
-
-<p>‘I sat with her on the Council of the Church Schools’ Company,
-and was surprised at the amount of time and thought she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span>
-gave to it. With such solicitude she used to say, “My dear,
-we must help these young Head-mistresses.” Whenever any
-school-mistress got into difficulties she was of such sympathy
-and help.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then she tried so much to help her old girls, to promote
-the love of reading in her staff, to call out their helpfulness in
-many ways. That exhibition of things made that cost nothing,
-was a very original idea, and taught economy by an object
-lesson....</p>
-
-<p>‘The ways in which she used to help poor girls were hardly
-known to any one; clothes she used to get sent to them, and
-she had friends to whom she could mention cases where money
-help was needed and get it. Then she was not one to give up
-because she could not influence people by what were <em>for her</em> the
-highest motives; but appealed to the best <em>in them</em>, would give
-ethics when she could not give religion, and when she spoke of
-wrong, it was with a sorrow which covered the indignation.</p>
-
-<p>‘There was a real solicitude, in spite of her many occupations,
-to help all teachers. She would get books to send round to
-other schools to help them, and never seemed to think of any
-being rivals, but rather fellow-workers.</p>
-
-<p>‘But you must know most of what I am saying, for you knew
-her well, and she specially loved your wife. I am only writing
-what comes to my mind to do what I can; but you see I have
-so few definite facts, and I knew her only when she was full-grown
-in character and her work established.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think, having a Boarding House as well as a School was a
-mistake, and she felt it so at last. It was impossible for her to
-attend to it much herself; and I think she should not have
-rushed off on foreign tours at Christmas.</p>
-
-<p>‘Finally, perhaps, I may say that she was, it seemed to me,
-always pained and surprised at wrong in others, and expectant
-of good, and able to see the latent good underlying the apparent
-evil. She had the charity that hopeth all things.</p>
-
-<p>‘Her generosity in money matters was very great, especially
-to her family. She used to speak with such joy and pride of the
-battles her brother fought in Shoreditch, and her brave sister-in-law,
-and great was her affection for her nephew.</p>
-
-<p>‘Forgive my incoherence please, and take the will for the
-deed.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Beale wrote but little about herself, but in her
-correspondence with an intimate friend, she would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span>
-give glimpses of her own personal life, even of her doings,
-as well as of her thought and reading. Her letters to
-Miss Amy Giles are the most interesting from this point
-of view, covering as they do the last period of her life.
-Some extracts from these are given:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 6, 1897.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Amy</span>,—I wonder what you will do now that you have
-quite lost your beloved mother. I was talking with Miss
-Sewell about you, and said I wished you could come and spend a
-week here.... If you came the week after next, perhaps you
-would like to stay for our Quiet Days at the end.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 15, 1897.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I have kept your letter so long, hoping I might see my way
-to pay you a visit, which I should so very much like to do, but
-I am afraid the prospect is a diminishing one. It was a great
-pleasure to renew my acquaintance with one whom I had loved
-as a pupil, and to find we had grown even nearer during the
-intervening years. It would, too, be a pleasure to see Miss
-Sewell, for whom I have so great an admiration. I will not
-altogether give up hopes, but I am much afraid it will be impossible.
-The work for Longmans is to fill two hundred pages. I
-get ordinarily a hundred and fifty letters a week on College
-business, and now that we are beginning this Elementary work,
-there is a Head to be found, prospectuses to be drawn up, the
-Education Office to be consulted, etc., and also the Magazine
-to be edited, and some few people I must see....</p>
-
-<p>‘There are many things one has to deny one’s self “for the
-work’s sake,” but it is worth while. I cannot be too thankful
-for being allowed to do it.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 25, 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘My sister has come home on purpose, and I am spending a
-week with her on the hills; my niece helping to copy the MS.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the summer holidays of 1898 Miss Beale stayed
-with Miss Giles at Bonchurch. They afterwards visited
-Marlborough College and Savernake Forest together,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span>
-parting at Marlborough station. Miss Beale wrote after
-this to Miss Giles:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>August 28, 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I will own that after you were gone all things seemed
-colder.... The doctor thought me wonderfully well, and my
-ears much better than usual after so long an absence. He says
-I can go to-morrow, and highly approves of cycling if I can do
-it.... May the spiritual sun ever rise for you, my dear child,
-more and more until the perfect day.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>September 7, 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I had some bicycle lessons at Woodchester, but all united in
-recommending tricycling instead for me.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>October 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘That cycling is wonderful, I am so much better.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>November 13, 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Miss Belcher is still very ill, but yesterday brought me a
-gleam of hope. Thanks to you I am wonderfully well. I have
-cycled two mornings as far as our Sanatorium, and got back
-about 8 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span> ... I think this renewed life must mean that
-there is some more work for me to do, or that I want strength
-to bear some coming trials....</p>
-
-<p>‘We have been getting some lectures from Mr. de Sélincourt,
-also a son-in-law. We like him very much.... Next Saturday
-I have to attend six meetings. I had to go to London
-lately, and spent a night at St. Hilda’s East; it looks so nice,
-and seems going on so well.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>November 29, 1898.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I am glad you have seen the Chapel of the Ascension. Mr.
-Shields is far the best interpreter I have ever seen of Bible
-thoughts in pictures.... Thanks to you I am wonderfully
-strong this term.... I have joined the Aristotelian Society.
-I shall almost never, perhaps <em>never</em> be able to attend the meetings,
-but I shall get papers.... Miss Belcher is still battling with
-the disease. Sometimes we hope, and then we fear we may lose
-her, but to gain time is much.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To the same. Written when there was some idea of
-Miss Giles living abroad:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>May 14, 1899.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t like the idea of your being uprooted from England....
-It is different to go for a time, but it seems to me that
-most English people who live abroad have their lives comparatively
-wasted.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same. After alluding to the death of Mrs.
-Moyle:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 16, 1899.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘It seems so wonderful that I should be alive, and see so many
-dear children pass away.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same. Speaking of the South African War:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>December 26, 1899.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘It is indeed a sad time, and I don’t see how it is to end;
-surely we as a nation have to pass through the fire.... I think
-all the advantages we women have had this last half century
-were to prepare us for some terrible trials. Shall we be able to
-look up and lift up our heads above this earth, and know that
-salvation draweth nigh? I think you will understand me.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same. Also about the South African War:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>February 10, 1900.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘It is difficult to keep up one’s active powers with this nightmare:
-one is so sure that all suffering is intended to be purifying,
-and so we must glorify God in the fires. War does seem to be
-waged in a more humane spirit than ever before, that is one
-comfort, and there are many others.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same. Miss Giles had sent a paper for the
-Magazine:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>September 1900.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I feel sure I shall not accept Guinevere as a subject for our
-magazine. I am not fond of the Idylls.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same. On recovering from bronchitis:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>1903.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Thanks for your kind offer, but I must not ask any one to
-stay this term; I must reserve every bit of strength for the
-work.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same. Towards the end of the Easter holidays,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span>
-when she had been confined to her room with a bronchial
-attack:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘I have been reading a very pretty book, <cite>The House of Quiet</cite>.
-Now I have Herbert Spencer’s <cite>Autobiography</cite>, which I am
-not reading, but a friend picks out bits for me. I have
-been going over again some old friends, <cite>Dr. Jekyl</cite>, <cite>Cecilia de
-Noel</cite>, etc.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>June 1905.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I had a very enjoyable visit to Winchester to the annual
-meeting of head-mistresses, and last week I dined at the Clothworkers’,
-my first experience of a City company’s dinner. There
-were many interesting people.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the summer holidays of 1905 Miss Giles accompanied
-Miss Beale to Oeynhausen. The two following
-letters concern the preparation made for this visit to the
-German baths.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>July 1905.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Have you quite made up your mind not to come to the
-Quiet Days?... remember you will have a period of spiritual
-starvation as regards church-going....</p>
-
-<p>‘I mean to take as little as possible ... we do no visiting
-... a few books I must have. If you come, you could write
-out your notes of addresses and read them to me, as I am not
-likely to hear them.... We have had twelve concerts, and I
-was present at most of them. I have not yet signed a report,
-and have taken leave of only some of the <em>about</em> one hundred and
-twenty who will leave.</p>
-
-<p>‘I thought of taking Illingworth’s <cite>Personality</cite>,—and perhaps
-<cite>Lux Mundi</cite>, if you do not know it well; also some <cite>Hamlet</cite>
-books: but I shall take chiefly light books, in a material sense.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On returning from Germany Miss Beale went to
-Hyde Court for her niece’s wedding, and wrote on
-arrival to Miss Giles.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>September 1905.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Lena looks lovely!’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A letter followed describing the wedding, and concluding
-thus:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘The country is looking lovely—even in the rain; but the
-swallows are flying about in great excitement. I think they
-must be departing at once. I wonder how long I shall be
-privileged to go on working before I too migrate. I do hope I
-may be able to work on to the end....’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To the same:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>September 1905.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘I had nightmare last night about war in India. Russia is
-quite ready to turn her armies into Afghanistan, and she is
-allowed to keep all ready in Manchuria. Well, one can only
-hope that still out of the strife will come soul evolution.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In September 1905 Miss Beale’s letters speak of
-exhaustion, but others wrote of her that she was busy,
-full of energy, and ‘does not seem to tire.’</p>
-
-<p>To the same. Speaking of her visit to London in the
-Christmas holidays:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">‘<i>January 15, 1906.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘One afternoon I spent with Mrs. Benson, and Miss Benson
-lent me the book recounting her digging up of the Temple of
-Mut. Arthur Benson too was there, and Miss Tait and Mrs.
-Henry Sidgwick.</p>
-
-<p>‘What a revolution we have! If we had stood still things
-might have been as they are in Russia. One could not be satisfied
-with the late government, but one dreads violent changes;
-it is well there are a few strong men in the Ministry. Mr.
-Balfour deserves his fate for not bringing in a re-distribution
-Bill, and for tyrannising—but one feels sorry for him too.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>PS.</i>—Think of us on Tuesday’ (the opening day of term),
-‘I feel so weak.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The weakness to which Miss Beale alluded was destined
-to continue, but amid the decay of natural health
-long-rooted hopes grew strong and blossomed afresh.
-But a few weeks before her own death she wrote to a
-friend who had recently lost her mother:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘You will miss your beloved mother, but it is well. I suppose
-none of us desire to live after our faculties fail.... I am feeling
-old age is creeping on.... Well, we shall soon all meet—Behind
-the veil, behind the veil!’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> MS. Autobiography.—D. Beale.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> MS. autobiography.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> ‘Have you seen Miss Cornwallis’ <cite>Letters</cite>? A very remarkable woman,
-though a little uncomfortable to herself and others, and a little too audacious
-now and then. She wrote these <cite>Small Books on Great Subjects</cite> which were
-much thought of at the time, and always considered a man’s work.’—<cite>Letters
-of Dr. John Brown</cite>, <span class="smcapuc">CLXXXIV.</span>, ‘To Lady Airlie.’ (Adam Black, 1906.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> See <a href="#CHAPTER_XV">chap. xv.</a>, Letter to the Bishop of Manchester.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5" id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> William Cornwallis Harris, Major H.E.I.C., was also a cousin of Mr.
-Beale’s. Major Harris saw service in India, shot big game in the heart of
-Africa, was sent in charge of a mission to Shoa in Abyssinia, returning after
-arranging a commercial treaty. For this he was knighted. He died in India
-in 1848, aged 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6" id="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> MS. autobiography written about 1895.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7" id="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Author of <cite>Malvern Chase</cite> and other works.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8" id="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> MS. autobiography.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9" id="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> MS. autobiography.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10" id="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> <cite>Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11" id="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> MS. autobiography.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12" id="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> On the Education of Girls.—<cite>Fraser’s Magazine</cite>, October 1866.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13" id="Footnote_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> MS. autobiography.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14" id="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> MS. autobiography.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15" id="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> MS. autobiography.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16" id="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> <cite>Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17" id="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> MS. autobiography.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18" id="Footnote_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> <cite>Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19" id="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> See <a href="#APPENDIX_A">Appendix A</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20" id="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> <cite>Nineteenth Century</cite>, April 1888.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21" id="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Mr. Carus Wilson was ordained the following year by the Archbishop
-of Canterbury.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22" id="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Bishop Jackson.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23" id="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> <cite>Kaiserwerth Deaconesses.</cite> By a Lady.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24" id="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> <cite>Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25" id="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> <cite>Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26" id="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> See <a href="#APPENDIX_B">Appendix B</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27" id="Footnote_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> See <a href="#APPENDIX_C">Appendix C</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28" id="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> See <a href="#CHAPTER_V">chap. v</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29" id="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> <cite>Nineteenth Century</cite>, 1888.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30" id="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Mr. Bellairs was subsequently Vicar of Nuneaton, and Hon. Canon of
-Worcester.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31" id="Footnote_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Afterwards first Bishop of Tasmania.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32" id="Footnote_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> ‘Cheltenham is Attica in architecture and Bœotia in understanding.’—<cite>Gentleman’s
-Magazine</cite>, 1828.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33" id="Footnote_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> ‘Cheltenham: a polka, parson-worshipping place of which Francis Close
-is Pope, besides pumps and pump-rooms, chalybeates, quadrilles, and one of
-the prettiest counties of Britain.’—<span class="smcap">A. Tennyson</span>, Letter, 1845.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34" id="Footnote_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> These were among the first in the country.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35" id="Footnote_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> See <a href="#APPENDIX_D">Appendix D</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36" id="Footnote_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> <cite>History of Ladies’ College</cite>, p. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37" id="Footnote_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> These marks of omission occur in the copy of Miss Beale’s letter left
-among her papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38" id="Footnote_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> <cite>History of the Ladies’ College</cite>, p. 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39" id="Footnote_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Afterwards Sir Thomas Barlow and Sir William Gull.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40" id="Footnote_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> ‘Of Queens’ Gardens,’ <cite>Sesame and Lilies</cite>, J. Ruskin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41" id="Footnote_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> See <a href="#Page_11">p. 11</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42" id="Footnote_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> On the Education of Women. A Paper read by Mr. William Grey at
-the meeting of the Society of Arts, May 31, 1871.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43" id="Footnote_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Mrs. Grey.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44" id="Footnote_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Heroic couplets.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45" id="Footnote_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Lincoln’s Inn.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46" id="Footnote_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> <cite>Francis Mary Buss and Her Work for Education</cite>, A. E. Ridley, p. 242.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47" id="Footnote_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> <cite>History of the Ladies’ College.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48" id="Footnote_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> The Rev. G. H. Wilkinson, D.D., then Vicar of St. Peter’s, Eaton
-Square. At his death, Bishop of St. Andrews and Primus of the Scottish
-Church.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49" id="Footnote_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> <cite>Poems</cite>, F. W. Faber.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50" id="Footnote_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> ‘In Retreat, 1883.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51" id="Footnote_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> ‘Building.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52" id="Footnote_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> ‘In Retreat, 1883.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53" id="Footnote_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> Letter to a friend.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54" id="Footnote_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> <cite>Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55" id="Footnote_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> In every embassy in Europe, in many Government houses in our colonies,
-and in several courts of Asia, wives and mothers are living who have drawn
-their earliest principles from the ideal teachings of Dorothea Beale.—<cite>Court
-Journal</cite>, November 24, 1906.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_56" id="Footnote_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> First preface.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_57" id="Footnote_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> <cite>Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_58" id="Footnote_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> Bacon’s <cite>Advancement of Learning</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_59" id="Footnote_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> Guild Address, 1888.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_60" id="Footnote_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> See Bishop Lightfoot’s ‘Sermon on St. Hilda,’ <cite>C.L.C. Mag.</cite>, Spring
-1886.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_61" id="Footnote_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> See Miss Beale’s paper, ‘St. Hilda’s,’ <cite>C.L.C. Mag.</cite>, Autumn 1886.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_62" id="Footnote_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> <a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">Chap. VIII.</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_63" id="Footnote_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> Dr. Kitchin, now Dean of Durham.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_64" id="Footnote_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> Then Somerville Hall.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_65" id="Footnote_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> Mrs. C. T. Mitchell, who has from the first been connected with the
-Guild work.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_66" id="Footnote_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Now Bishop of London.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_67" id="Footnote_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> Afterwards Mrs. Charles Robinson.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_68" id="Footnote_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> Even such an act as this had nothing personal in it. ‘Once,’ writes an
-old girl, ‘I asked Miss Beale to sign a photograph on the last afternoon of
-the term. She said her hand was tired with shaking hands, and asked if next
-term would do. When I said it was a Christmas present for Mother, and I
-wanted to give it complete, she at once sat down and signed it.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_69" id="Footnote_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Compare with this Miss Beale’s remarks on history as an educational
-subject, <cite>Work and Play</cite>, p. 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_70" id="Footnote_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> Miss Beale published some of her lectures on literature in 1902 in the
-volume entitled, <cite>Literary Studies of Poems New and Old</cite>: G. Bell and Sons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_71" id="Footnote_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> So much did Miss Beale dislike a formal study of the Bible, that when
-first the Oxford Local Examinations were taken in the College, she induced the
-parents of pupils entering for them to sign a conscience clause to the effect
-that they did not wish their children to take a Scripture examination. The
-amount set for study was afterwards lessened, and could therefore be more
-thoroughly taught. Thus her objections were minimised.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_72" id="Footnote_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> <cite>Relation of Home to School Life, No. II., Truth.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_73" id="Footnote_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> <cite>Work and Play in Girls’ Schools.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_74" id="Footnote_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> She spoke of tennis as ‘playing archery.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_75" id="Footnote_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> At Miss Clarke’s school in the Christmas holidays of 1877, the first
-Retreat Miss Beale attended.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_76" id="Footnote_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> See <a href="#CHAPTER_XV">chap. xv</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_77" id="Footnote_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> Death of Miss Newman at Mayfield House.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_78" id="Footnote_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> Now Ely Professor of Divinity at Cambridge, and Canon of Ely.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_79" id="Footnote_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> <cite>Frances Mary Buss and her Work for Education.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_80" id="Footnote_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> Now at Mukti, Poona District.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_81" id="Footnote_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> Its objects are: a systematic study of mission work in all lands; formation
-of closer links with those old College girls who are now missionaries.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_82" id="Footnote_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> Bishop Webb.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_83" id="Footnote_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> In this section the methods best adapted for the secondary instruction of
-girls, specially as regards Modern Languages and Science, were discussed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_84" id="Footnote_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> M. Fallières, then Ministre de l’Instruction publique.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_85" id="Footnote_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> It is interesting to compare this opinion with those expressed in the last
-Head-masters’ Conference (December 1907) by the Head-masters of Eton and
-Winchester, who were in the minority which would have lessened the amount
-of scholarship Greek required from boys of thirteen and fourteen.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_86" id="Footnote_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> The marvels of astronomy had always a special fascination for Miss
-Beale. When the Leonid meteors were expected on one night in 1898 the
-Chief Constable, Admiral Christian, by her wish instructed the police as soon
-as they appeared to ring up Miss Beale, and she was to pull the alarm-bell to
-rouse the girls.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_87" id="Footnote_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> The news reached Miss Beale two days later. See <a href="#APPENDIX_E">Appendix E</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_88" id="Footnote_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> On Secondary Education.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_89" id="Footnote_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> Charles Smith, M.A., Master of Sidney Sussex College.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_90" id="Footnote_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> Designed by Mr. E. R. Robson, F.S.A.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_91" id="Footnote_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> Raphael.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_92" id="Footnote_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> Mrs. James Owen.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_93" id="Footnote_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> Letter to Miss Strong.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_94" id="Footnote_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> Now Sir Arthur Rücker.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_95" id="Footnote_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> Queen Margaret’s College.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_96" id="Footnote_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> He was surreptitiously introduced into the gallery of the Hall while Miss
-Beale was giving a lesson.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_97" id="Footnote_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> Miss Buss.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_98" id="Footnote_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> Miss Gretton.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_99" id="Footnote_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> This proved to be the date of her funeral.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_100" id="Footnote_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> See <a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">Letters</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_101" id="Footnote_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> The allusion is to Mrs. Charles Robinson.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_102" id="Footnote_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> See <a href="#APPENDIX_F">Appendix F</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_103" id="Footnote_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent11">‘Nature never lends</div>
-<div class="verse">The smallest scruple of her excellence,</div>
-<div class="verse">But, like a thrifty goddess, she determines</div>
-<div class="verse">Herself ...</div>
-<div class="verse">Both thanks and use.’—<cite>Measure for Measure.</cite></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">A favourite quotation of Miss Beale’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_104" id="Footnote_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> After Mrs. Robinson’s death in 1906, Miss Beale wrote to Canon
-Robinson, ‘I think I may say that Clara was the best beloved of all my
-children.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_105" id="Footnote_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> F. Du Pré.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_106" id="Footnote_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> <cite>Fraser’s Magazine</cite>, October 1866.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="APPENDIX_A">APPENDIX A, <a href="#Page_28">Page 28</a>.</h2>
-
-<p>A lady who attended Dr. Bernays’ German classes with Miss
-Beale has interesting recollections of her. She remembers her
-as in appearance ‘very fair and slight and interesting looking,’
-with a quiet dignity and attraction about her which gave her
-an influence; one remarkable instance of this may be told.</p>
-
-<p>Dorothea and Anna Beale were once absent from the German
-class on its first meeting for a new term. Dr. Bernays said
-they should read <cite>Faust</cite>, and accordingly all the pupils brought
-copies of <cite>Faust</cite> to the next class. When all were seated,
-Dorothea stood up and said quietly and respectfully that she
-thought <cite>Faust</cite> objectionable reading for young girls, and
-suggested some other book. Dr. Bernays looked just a little
-annoyed, but listened quite kindly. He said it was a pity the
-books had been bought, but put it to the class what should be
-done. Such was Miss Beale’s influence that all decided to
-submit to her judgment.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2 id="APPENDIX_B">APPENDIX B, <a href="#Page_74">Page 74</a>.<br />
-<span class="smaller">TITLES OF CHAPTERS IN MISS BEALE’S <cite>TEXTBOOK</cite> 1858.</span></h2>
-
-<table summary="Titles of chapters in Miss Beale’s Textbook">
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcapuc">A.D.</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">First</span></td>
- <td><span class="smcap"> Century.</span>—</td>
- <td>Christianity.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Second</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Good Emperors.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Third</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Barbarian Invasions.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Fourth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Establishment of Christianity in the Roman Empire.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Fifth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Fall of the Roman Empire.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Sixth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Struggles of the Eastern Emperors with the Barbarian Kings.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Seventh</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Saracens.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Eighth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Charlemagne.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Ninth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Northmen.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Tenth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Cities increase in importance.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Eleventh</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Hildebrand.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Twelfth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Crusades.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Thirteenth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>The Age of the Schoolmen.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Fourteenth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>The Middle Classes increase in importance.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Fifteenth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Invention of Printing.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Sixteenth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Reformation.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Seventeenth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Religious Wars.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Eighteenth</span></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td>Struggles for Political Liberty.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="APPENDIX_C">APPENDIX C, <a href="#Page_75">Page 75</a>.<br />
-<span class="smaller">A PAGE OF MISS BEALE’S <cite>SELF-EXAMINATION</cite> 1858.</span></h2>
-
-<table summary="A page of Miss Beale’s self-examination">
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="5"><p>Have I been always careful to return anything borrowed?</p></td>
- <td><p>The ungodly borroweth and payeth not again.—<cite>Ps.</cite> xxxvii. 21.</p></td>
- <td rowspan="5"><p>Most of the forms of injustice come under the head of sins of
- the tongue; <i>e.g.</i>, ascribing false motives, evil-speaking, &amp;c.
- Cheapening, making bargains, is generally injustice. Also, delaying
- to pay what you owe—you may deceive yourself, so far
- as to think that you are only anxious to be economical, that
- you may have more to give away; but will it not be an insult
- to God to offer Him part of your unjust gain? It is much
- more charitable to pay justly, than to give; but there is not so
- much chance of praise.</p></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><p>The spoil of the poor is in your houses. What mean ye that ye
- grind the faces of the poor.—<cite>Is.</cite> iii. 15.</p></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><p>Woe unto him that buildeth his house by unrighteousness, and
- his chambers by wrong; that useth his neighbours’ service without
- wages, and giveth him not for his work.—<cite>Is.</cite> xvii. 13.</p></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><p>I will be a swift witness against them that oppress the hireling
- in his wages.—<cite>Mal.</cite> iii. 5.</p></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><p>Say not unto thy neighbour go, and come again, and to-morrow I
- will give, when thou hast it by thee.—<cite>Prov.</cite> iii. 28.</p></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><p>Have I indulged my body by idleness, not rising when I ought,
- taking unnecessary rest?</p>
- <p>Wasting time with unprofitable or idle talking, or reading?</p>
- <p>Allowing idle thoughts to run on unchecked?</p>
- <p>Refusing prompt and cheerful obedience because unwilling to
- give up some interesting occupation?</p>
- </td>
- <td><p>Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy
- might.—<cite>Eph.</cite> x. 9.</p>
- <p>Be not slothful in business.—<cite>Rom.</cite> xii. 11.</p>
- <p>Early in the morning will I direct my prayer unto Thee, and
- will look up.—<cite>Ps.</cite></p>
- <p>Rising a great while before day, He departed into a solitary
- place, and there prayed.—<cite>S. Matt.</cite> i. 35.</p>
- </td>
- <td><p>Do not leave yourself time to think about anything it is your
- duty to do.</p>
- <p>Idleness, by delaying, conquers; stop to parley and you have
- lost the day. It is a great help in getting up, or beginning any
- occupation, to have some signal, and then never allow yourself
- one second after. Be careful to make some fixed arrangement of
- your time, as far as possible; at any rate, put in as many
- landmarks as you can in the day; but do not praise yourself
- for your conscientious arrangement of your time, or you will
- find, in a few days, that you have become quite unpunctual.</p>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2 id="APPENDIX_D">APPENDIX D, <a href="#Page_90">p. 90</a><br />
-<span class="smaller">PROSPECTUS OF THE CHELTENHAM COLLEGE FOR YOUNG LADIES<br />
-<span class="smcap">November 1, 1853</span></span></h2>
-
-<div class="prospectus">
-
-<p class="center">PROSPECTUS<br />
-OF<br />
-THE CHELTENHAM COLLEGE INSTITUTION<br />
-FOR<br />
-THE EDUCATION OF YOUNG LADIES<br />
-AND OF<br />
-CHILDREN UNDER EIGHT YEARS OF AGE;<br />
-Cambray House.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Committee:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><span class="smcap">Rev. H. W. BELLAIRS</span>, M.A., one of H.M.’s Inspectors of Schools, <i>3, Priory Parade</i>.</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Rev. W. DOBSON</span>, M.A., Principal of the Cheltenham College, <i>2, Sandford Place</i>.</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Rev. H. A. HOLDEN</span>, M.A., Vice Principal of the Cheltenham College, Fellow and late Assistant
-Tutor of Trinity College, Cambridge, <i>The Queen’s Hotel</i>.</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Lieut.-Col. FITZMAURICE</span>, K.H., <i>14, Royal Crescent</i>.</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">S. E. COMYN, Esq.</span>, M.D., <i>4, Berkeley Place</i>.</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">NATH. HARTLAND, Esq.</span>, <i>The Oaklands, Charlton Kings</i>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="center">Honorary Secretary:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><span class="smcap">Rev. HUBERT A. HOLDEN</span>, M.A.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="center">Treasurer:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><span class="smcap">NATHANIEL HARTLAND, Esq.</span></li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="pad">The <span class="smcap">Committee</span> are now able to publish a detailed Prospectus of the Course and Arrangements
-of this Institution, with the Hours and Terms for the various Departments and Classes.</p>
-
-<p>The management of the educational Working of the College, which it is proposed to open after
-the ensuing Christmas Vacation, will be committed to a <span class="smcap">Lady Principal</span> to be assisted by Teachers
-and Professors, appointed by the Committee.</p>
-
-<p class="center">FEES, PAYABLE HALF YEARLY IN ADVANCE.</p>
-
-<p>The Pupils of the Institution will be arranged in <span class="smcap">Four Divisions</span>, according to attainments;
-and the terms will be regulated according to the following scale:—</p>
-
-<table summary="Fees" class="nw">
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">For the First Division</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">12</td>
- <td><i>Guineas for the Half Yearly Session</i>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">For the Second Division</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">9</td>
- <td><i>Guineas</i> <span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="ditto">”</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">For the Third Division</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">6</td>
- <td><i>Guineas</i> <span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="ditto">”</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">For the Fourth Division</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">4</td>
- <td><i>Guineas</i> <span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="ditto">”</span></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Children will be admitted after the completion of their Fourth year; but Boys
-must be withdrawn on the completion of their Seventh year.</p>
-
-<p class="center">REGULAR COURSE OF STUDY:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><span class="smcap">Holy Scripture and the Liturgy of the Church of England</span>,</li>
-<li>The <span class="smcap">Principles of Grammar</span> and the Elements of <span class="smcap">Latin</span>,</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Arithmetic</span>,</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Calisthenic Exercises</span>,</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Drawing</span>,</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">French</span>,</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Geography</span>,</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">History</span>,</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Music</span>,</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Needlework</span>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="center">EXTRA AND BYE COURSE OF STUDY:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><span class="smcap">German</span>,</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Italian</span>,</li>
-<li><span class="smcap">Dancing</span>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>For Pupils desirous of availing themselves of <em>extra</em> Lessons in <span class="smcap">Music</span> and <span class="smcap">Drawing</span> from Professors
-attached to the College, extra Classes will be formed and extra charges made.</p>
-
-<p class="center">EXTRA OR BYE STUDENTS.</p>
-
-<p>Students, not engaged in the Regular Routine of the College Course, will be at liberty to attend the
-Bye Course of Study and also the <em>extra</em> Classes in <span class="smcap">Music</span> and <span class="smcap">Drawing</span>. Such Students may be
-nominated upon either Ordinary or Bye Shares (issued at £10 each), and will be required to pay a Fee of
-<em>Two Guineas</em> a year to the College, exclusive of the Fee to the Professor.</p>
-
-<p class="center">HOURS OF ATTENDANCE.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcapuc">MORNING.</span>—From a Quarter past Nine to a Quarter past Twelve.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcapuc">AFTERNOON.</span>—From Half-past Two to Half-past Four.</p>
-
-<p>(<em>Wednesday and Saturday Half Holidays.</em>)</p>
-
-<p>Children under Seven Years of Age will attend in the Mornings only.</p>
-
-<p><em>Members of Classes for Religious Instruction under the Parochial Clergy, will be excused attendance at
-the College on Monday Afternoons.</em></p>
-
-<p class="center">BOARDING HOUSES</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">for the reception of Pupils will be opened, with the sanction of the Committee, in the immediate neighbourhood
-of <span class="smcap">Cambray House</span>, under the Superintendence of the following Ladies:—Mrs. <span class="smcap">Murgeaud</span>,
-<i>7, Oriel Terrace</i>; Miss <span class="smcap">Atkinson</span>, <i>of Kingsbridge, Devon.</i>; Mrs. <span class="smcap">Trew</span>, <i>of Stoneham House, Bath Road</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Charge for Boarders is £35 per annum. Extras: Washing £4, 4s.; Seat in Church £1, 1s.</p>
-
-<p>A few of the Fifty £20 Shares remain to be disposed of; application for which should be made
-to the Hon. Secretary. The Proprietors of such Shares will have the option of nominating either
-one Regular or two Bye Students.</p>
-
-<p>Several Teachers and Professors have been appointed, the announcement of whose names is
-deferred for the present, till the list is complete.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>November 1, 1853.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="APPENDIX_E">APPENDIX E, <a href="#Page_332">Page 332</a>.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><span class="smcap">Edward Beale.</span></span></h2>
-
-<p>The Reverend Edward Beale, a member of the Society of
-St. John the Evangelist, Cowley, died at Mazagon, Bombay
-Presidency, on February 3, 1894. He was a younger brother
-to whom Miss Beale was much attached. His early promise
-of a brilliant career was cut short by severe illness while
-he was still an undergraduate at Oxford. For years he was
-wholly incapacitated, but on recovering partial health he received
-deacon’s orders, and before joining St. John’s Society, worked
-for a time at Warminster. Here he gave the addresses afterwards
-published under the title of <cite>The Mind of Christ</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>From Cowley Mr. Beale was sent to the Society’s Mission in
-Bombay. He was much beloved and looked up to by those
-among whom he worked. At the time of his death (which
-occurred after a very short illness) he was engaged to read a
-paper at the coming Diocesan Conference on ‘The Necessity
-of Faith in the Church as the Fullest Possible Manifestation of
-the Life of God in Creation.’ His funeral was attended by a
-crowd of the poorest poor.</p>
-
-<p>The following lines in her brother Edward’s handwriting,
-found among Miss Beale’s papers, seem to be undoubtedly
-original, and to tell the history of his consecrated life:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<p class="center">INDIA—WRITTEN IN ILLNESS, 1884.</p>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Once I was wont to prize</div>
-<div class="verse">Glance from approving eyes,</div>
-<div class="verse">And sun myself too fondly in their light.</div>
-<div class="verse">Too eager to entwine</div>
-<div class="verse">The flowers about Love’s shrine</div>
-<div class="verse">With pulses throbbing with a wild delight.</div>
-<div class="verse">And one who loved me said,</div>
-<div class="verse">With voice of boding dread,</div>
-<div class="verse">‘Oh child, these hopes will fade, these flowers will die,</div>
-<div class="verse">And what will then remain</div>
-<div class="verse">To ease the long, slow pain,</div>
-<div class="verse">Unless your heart be lifted up on high?</div>
-<div class="verse center">...</div>
-<div class="verse">Once when I heard a name</div>
-<div class="verse">Of high heroic fame,</div>
-<div class="verse">Of lives of lasting influence for good,</div>
-<div class="verse">I felt my heart on fire</div>
-<div class="verse">With one long vague desire</div>
-<div class="verse">To join the ranks of those who have withstood.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[423]</a></span>
-<div class="verse">But now I do not ask</div>
-<div class="verse">For such heroic task,</div>
-<div class="verse">My heart is all too faint to stand the glare,</div>
-<div class="verse">My eyes too weak to see</div>
-<div class="verse">The path laid out for me,</div>
-<div class="verse">I only wait and feel that One is there.</div>
-<div class="verse center">...</div>
-<div class="verse">One, at whose blessed feet</div>
-<div class="verse">I lie in silence sweet</div>
-<div class="verse">Perhaps unheeded as the world goes by,</div>
-<div class="verse">There only lying still</div>
-<div class="verse">Waiting to know His Will,</div>
-<div class="verse">Till He shall bend on me His gracious eye.</div>
-<div class="verse">Then in that glorious gleam</div>
-<div class="verse">Shall every earthborn dream,</div>
-<div class="verse">Darkness, delusion, doubt all flee away:</div>
-<div class="verse">Truth shall be brought to light,</div>
-<div class="verse">Faith shall be lost in sight,</div>
-<div class="verse">In the clear shining of the perfect day!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2 id="APPENDIX_F">APPENDIX F, Page 368.</h2>
-
-<p>The following notice by an old pupil, now a head-mistress,
-appeared in the <cite>Times</cite> of November 17:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>‘Miss Beale’s personality made itself everywhere strongly felt, but
-most of all in her own school. Even in later days, when she could
-come in contact with a very small minority of the 1000 under her
-care, her absence was felt by all as a loss of moral support, almost a
-lessening of tension. Strenuousness was a dominant note of the tone
-she inspired by the force of her own vitality, and, to use a favourite
-word of her own, she was always “energizing” the school. And it
-told. “I am sending my girl to Cheltenham,” said one, “because I
-find that those who have been there do their work—paid or unpaid—with
-thoroughness and attention to detail,” and others paid the same
-testimony to the training. This thoroughness was eminently characteristic
-of Miss Beale’s own work. To the end she prepared her
-lessons with the same care she would have asked from the merest
-beginner in teaching. Her correspondence was unlimited, and an
-astonishing amount of it was written in her own hand. She superintended
-every detail of the building which she loved—which was
-indeed her hobby. While allowing her subordinates much scope and
-encouraging suggestion, she kept the threads of the intricate organisation
-in her own hands. Her physical energy was only second to her
-force of will, though her “spirit” was pathetically shown in latter
-days by her refusal to accept the limitations set by failing health.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[424]</a></span>
-“We have talked for three minutes about my health,” she said to one
-who saw her after a serious illness, “let us speak of something more
-interesting.” And, though she had lost the sight of one eye, and was
-so deaf that listening to others reading must have been a strain rather
-than a pleasure, she still continued to read every book of importance
-as it appeared. Her intellectual vigour was fresh to the end, and her
-keen interest in every new branch of learning unimpaired. She
-would plunge on a railway journey into a discussion of the last book
-on psychology, or demonstrate the latest method of teaching shorthand.
-She was astonishingly young in thought, always “up to date,”
-and often in advance of the general progress.</p>
-
-<p>‘Her personal influence, though strong, and in some cases almost
-overpowering, was peculiarly free from any weakening element. She
-did not encourage demonstration, and, though in later years she
-allowed her tenderness more play, the atmosphere about her was
-always bracing. Perhaps she was more in touch with the strong
-than the weak. She had little understanding of, or sympathy with
-any form of frivolity, still less of flippancy. She made decisions
-herself on principles always, and she expected the same from others.
-Very often she induced it by her mere expectation, and so made the
-weak strong. It was this partly which made so many come to her
-for the advice which was given at the cost of any amount of time or
-trouble to any “old girl.” And, though she never sought, or perhaps
-enjoyed, popularity in the ordinary sense of the word, many who had
-feared her in their school-days, grew afterwards to love her as well as
-to admire her, and often to depend on her. She had a great reverence
-for the conscience of each with whom she dealt. She brought up
-her “children” to think for themselves, and, though naturally disappointed
-when they differed from her, she always acknowledged their
-right to hold their own opinions. She was incapable of pettiness, and
-nothing could exceed her generosity in owning herself mistaken.
-Indeed she loved a fair fight, and greatly appreciated an honourable
-opponent, and she welcomed as fellow-workers those of very different
-views from herself, and had, indeed, the most wonderful power of
-discovering worth in all.</p>
-
-<p>‘Much of her outward success was due, no doubt, to her shrewd
-business capacity—her physique, her intellectual strength, her single-minded
-absorption in the cause of education, and its concrete embodiment
-in her own school. But the real success, her power of inspiring
-others, was due to her greatness of character. The Guild meetings,
-at which there was often an attendance of some hundreds of old girls,
-were the source of inspiration to many. “I come back feeling a poor
-thing, but knowing that great things are possible,” was the feeling of
-many, if not expressed in these words. And this was due, not to her
-organising power, nor even to her freshness of thought, but to her
-spiritual genius. She was a seer, perhaps, rather than a prophet, for,
-though of original mind, she found accurate expression of thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[425]</a></span>
-difficult. “I never understood Miss Beale’s Scripture lessons,” said
-an old pupil, “they were so vague; but I always felt a bigness of
-thought about them, and sometimes the meaning of things she said
-begins to dawn on me now.” Her religious life was not expressed
-formally; but it was beyond all doubt a real force and the source of
-her strength. The feeling was there and was intense. Years after
-she could not speak without tears of a time of doubt and uncertainty.
-She was rapt in prayer, and at times fervent to passion. It was with
-absolute reality that she taught that the important thing was to know
-and do the will of God, and it is this above all else which is causing
-thousands of her children to “rise up and call her blessed.”’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The following extract is from a notice in the <cite>Guardian</cite> of
-November 21, 1906:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Dorothea Beale. In thankful remembrance.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Miss Beale is dead. To many of us who loved and reverenced
-her, death seems the wrong word to use, she looked forward with
-such loving hopefulness to the great time of direct revelation, that
-one would rather (following Dr. Pusey’s practice) call her deathday
-her last and greatest birthday. Much has been said and written of
-her work—comparatively little of her personality. As one who was
-honoured by her friendship for over thirty years, I would ask for a
-little space in which to describe her. Her most marked characteristic
-was her profound reverence for truth. If truth hurt her, none the
-less did she accept it loyally. This sanctified her scholarship. Her
-generous gratitude to all who in any way helped her evidenced her
-large-heartedness. Especially did she remember her father’s indirect,
-unconscious teaching....</p>
-
-<p>‘Among the most treasured memories of the present writer are those
-of certain Sunday afternoons spent at Cheltenham with Miss Beale,
-her great friend, Miss Buss, and another friend who has also entered
-into rest. After saying the Veni Creator together we talked with
-perfect openness of those things we most loved and dreaded. This
-close personal communion with such personalities as those of our two
-great leaders was at once a privilege and a responsibility. Mention
-has been made elsewhere of Miss Beale’s reading at College prayers.
-Even more penetratingly beautiful was her reading on some of those
-afternoons. In a time of great trouble she read to us Kingsley’s
-<cite>St. Maura</cite>. And the pathos with which she lingered on the words,
-“Who ever found the Cross a pleasant bed?” made, at least on one
-of her hearers, an indelible impression.</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps the words which most adequately describe her whole life
-are, “I have set God always before me.” She has been, and still is,
-to those who knew her, a true Dorothea—the gift of God.’</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">E. T. Day.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[426]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[427]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Address to Parents, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aitken, Miss V., <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aldrich-Blake, Dr., <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alston, Miss, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alverstone, Lord, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ambleside, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Andrews, Miss A., <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Angélique, La Mère, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="MISS_C_ARNOLD">Arnold, Miss C., <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372-389</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Asquith, Mr., <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Assistant Mistresses’ Association, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Astell, Mrs., <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Austin’s, St. (boarding-house), <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Autobiography, Miss Beale’s, <a href="#Page_3">3-13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Balliol College, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barlow, Sir T., <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barnes, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barrett, Mrs., <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Professor, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barry, Canon, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bartholomew, Mrs., <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bath, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Batten, Mrs., <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Battenberg, Princess Henry of, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beale, Anna, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Dorothea, childhood, <a href="#Page_1">1-9</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">schools, <a href="#Page_9">9-14</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">home life, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60-66</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Queen’s College, <a href="#Page_20">20-35</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Principal of Cheltenham Ladies’ College, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">as teacher, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254-275</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">early difficulties, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Blue-book, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">as principal, <a href="#Page_276">276-285</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">religious faith, <a href="#Page_73">73-89</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187-202</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">honours, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letters, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280-285</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287-290</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304-310</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371-419</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beale, Edward, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_E">Appendix E</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Eliza, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Henry, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miles, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="MRS_BEALE">—— Mrs., <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bedford College, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Duchess of, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— High School, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belcher, Miss, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404-408</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bell, Mr., J.P., <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bellairs, Canon, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102-107</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bennett, W. Sterndale, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Benson, Archbishop, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mrs., <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bernays, Professor, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_A">Appendix A</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Berridge, Miss, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bidder, Miss, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blackwell, Dr. Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blackwood, Lady Victoria, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blenkarne, Mrs., <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bloemfontein, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boarding-houses, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170-175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Body, Canon, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bonchurch, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boyd, Dean, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bradfield, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brancker, Mr. J. H., <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120-124</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brasseur, Professor, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bray, Mrs., <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brewer, Professor, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bromby, Bishop, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Rev. G., <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown, Miss M., <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[428]</a></span>—— Dr. Morton, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bruce, Miss, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bryant, Mrs., <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bryce, Sir J., <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Commission, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buckoll, Miss, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Budge, Professor, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burdett-Coutts, Baroness, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burney, Fanny, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burrows, Mrs., <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burton, Canon, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buss, Miss, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Caines, Miss, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caird, Dr. Edward, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cambray House, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— —— School, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cambridge, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cardew, Dr., <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carpenter, Dr., <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mr. Lant, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carter, Miss, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Casterton, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36-61</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Catherine, St., of Siena, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charles, Mr. Justice, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Chart</cite>, the, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cheltenham, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— College, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Child-Study Association, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Child, Dr., <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Church Schools’ Company, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clark, Rev. S., <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clarke, Miss Margaret, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clewer, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Close, Dean, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clough, Miss, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coates, Mr., <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cock, Rev. T. A., <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collet, Mrs. Mark, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colson, M. Théodore, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Complin, Dorothea M. See <a href="#MRS_BEALE">Mrs. Beale</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Compton, Bishop, Lord Alwyne, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Comyn, Dr. S. E., <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cooper, Mrs., <a href="#Page_403">403</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corbet, Rev. R., <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corbett, Miss, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cornwallis, Archbishop, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cornwallis, Caroline F., <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mrs., <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Rev., <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coulson, Mrs., <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Council, Ladies’ College, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cowan Bridge, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cowley House, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crawford, Annette Bear, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Creighton, Bishop, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crosby Hall, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curling, Dr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Daldy, Dr., <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davenport, Mrs., <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davies, Miss E., <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davis, Rev. L., <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Day, Miss E., <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_F">Appendix F</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mr. Philip, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Degree, Edinburgh University, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Morgan, Mr., <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Denton, Rev. W., <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Diary, Miss Beale’s, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dobson, Rev. W., <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mr. Austin, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dove, Miss, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Draper, Miss, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drummond, Miss, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dufferin, Lord, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunn, Mr. W., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Durham, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— University, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Eaton, Miss, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edmonds, Miss, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eliot, George, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ellicott, Bishop, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elwall, Miss, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Endowed Schools’ Commission, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136-145</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Evans, Archdeacon, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Examinations, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Fairbairn, Dr., <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fallières, M., <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fauconberg House, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fermi, Miss, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fielden, Mrs., <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[429]</a></span>Fitch, Sir Joshua, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fitzmaurice, Colonel, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fliedner, Pastor, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flower, Sir William, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fontenay-aux-Roses, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forster, Mr., <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frankfort, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fraser, Bishop, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mrs., <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frederick, the Empress, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Freedom of Cheltenham, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">French, Bishop, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Froebel Society, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Galloway, Miss, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Garnier-Gentilhomme, Mme., <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Garrett, Miss, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gedge, Rev. W. W., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">George <span class="smcapuc">III.</span>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilbert, Miss E., <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Giles, Miss A., <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415-419</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Girls’ Public Day-School Company, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Girton, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gladstone, Mr., <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss H., <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gleichen, Countess F., <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gloucester, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Dean of, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gore, Miss, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Governesses’ Benevolent Institution, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grahamstown, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grant, Sir Ludovic, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Granville, Lord, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green, Mr. T. H., <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greene, Mrs., <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gresham Lectures, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gretton, Miss, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grey, Mrs. William, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Griffith, Mrs., <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grzywacz, Fräulein, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guernsey, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guild, the, <a href="#Page_213">213-221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— —— Plays, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— —— Settlement, <a href="#Page_221">221-225</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gull, Sir William, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gurney, Mrs. Russell, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Rev. Alfred, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss M., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guyon, Mme., <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Hackett, Miss Maria, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hall, Dr. Stanley, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harraden, Miss B., <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harris, Dr., <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Hon. and Rev. C., <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harrison, Miss J., <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hartland, Mr. N., <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93-95</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hay, Mrs., <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hayes, Mrs., <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Head-mistresses’ Association, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Conference, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Helen’s, St., Church, Bishopsgate, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— —— (boarding-house), <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hibbert-Ware, the Misses, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hilda, St., <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hilda’s, St., Association, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— —— College, Cheltenham, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— —— East, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— —— Hall, Oxford, <a href="#Page_235">235-240</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— —— Work, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hinton, James, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">History of the Ladies’ College, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hitchin, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holden, Rev. H. A., <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holland, Canon Francis, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hopkins, Miss Ellice, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">House of Education, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hullah, Mr. John, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hutchinson, Canon, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hyde Court, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Illingworth, Rev. Dr., <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ince, H., <cite>Outlines</cite>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">International Congress of Education, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Jackson, Bishop, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Rev. T., <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jervis, Rev. C., <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jex-Blake, Dean, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnson, Miss A., <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Sir S., <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jowett, Dr., <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jubilee of Ladies’ College, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[430]</a></span>Kaiserwerth, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66-69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kensington Society, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ker, Miss F., <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keyl, Miss, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kindergarten, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244-246</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King, Miss, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kingsley, Rev. C., <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirby Lonsdale, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kitchin, Dean, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knight, Professor, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kynaston, Canon, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ladies’ College, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109-130</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">new buildings, <a href="#Page_158">158-163</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">constitution, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">extensions, organ, etc., <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Princess Hall, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">science wing, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lady Margaret Hall, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laing, Rev. D., <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lancaster, Mrs., <a href="#Page_62">62-65</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lane, Miss, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laurie, Miss, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Professor, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leckhampton, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lewis, Miss Wolseley, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lloyd, Mrs., <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loan Fund, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">London, Bishop of, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Institution, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— University, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Londonderry, Lord, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Longe, Mr. F. D., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Louch, Miss, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lowe, Mr., <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lumby, Miss A., <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lyttelton, Lord, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">M’Causland, General, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mace, Mrs., <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mackenzie, Prebendary, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mackintosh, Sir J., <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Magazine, Ladies’ College, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203-210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Magrath, Rev. Dr., <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manchester, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Mangnall’s Questions</cite>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Margaret’s, St., Bethnal Green, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maria Grey Training College, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marlborough, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marriott, Mr. T., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martin, Miss, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mason, Canon, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mason, Miss C., <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maurice, Professor F. D., <a href="#Page_20">20-24</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mayfield House, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Medd, Canon, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mellish, Miss, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Merchant Taylors’ School, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Merritt, Mrs. Lea, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Michaelis, Mme., <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Middleton, Mr. J., <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mrs., <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Milner, Miss E., <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Missionary Study Circle, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monroe, Mrs. E. H., <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monteagle, Lady, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moyle, Mrs., <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mugliston, Miss H., <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mulcaster, Miss, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murray, Miss, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Music-teaching, <a href="#Page_110">110-112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">National Education Association, U.S.A., <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Vigilance Association, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newcastle, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newman, Miss C., <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss M., <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Francis, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— J. H., <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nicolay, Rev. C. F., <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nightingale, Miss F., <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nixon, Miss, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Norman, Mr., <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northcote, Sir S., <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Oakeley, Sir H. E., <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oeynhausen, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Officier d’Académie, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oliver, Rev. J., <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ormerod, Miss, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Osborne, Mrs., <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Overwork, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Owen, Mrs. J., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mr. S., <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><cite>Paidologist, The</cite>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parents’ Educational Union, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paris, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parratt, Sir W., <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parry, Miss, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[431]</a></span>Pearce, Colonel, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Phillipps, Miss L. March, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Piper, Miss, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plumptre, Dean, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plunket, Mr. W. L., <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Procter, Mrs., <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Adelaide, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pullen, Professor, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pusey, Dr., <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Queen’s College, <a href="#Page_19">19-35</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Radley, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramabai, Pundita, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reid, Mr., <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss M., <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rein, Dr., <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Retreats, <a href="#Page_286">286-291</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reynolds, Mrs., <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richardson, Miss M., <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Riddle, Rev. A. E., <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ridley, Miss A., <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rix, Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robertson, Rev. F., <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robinson, Mrs. C., <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>. See <a href="#MISS_C_ARNOLD">Miss C. Arnold</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rooke, Mr. T. M., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rowand, Miss, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rowley, Miss, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rücker, Sir A., <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ruskin, Mr., <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letters, <a href="#Page_207">207-212</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314-318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Russell, Major-General, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ryan, Sir E., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Saintsbury, Professor, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salazaro, Signora Zampini, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Samuelson, Lady, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saumerez, Lord de, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scholarships, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Self-Examination Questions</cite>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_C">Appendix C</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sélincourt, Mr. de, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Selwyn, Miss, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sewell, Miss E., <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mrs., <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shannon, Mr. J. J., <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shepheard, Rev. H., <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mrs., <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shields, Mr. F., <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shireff, Miss, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shorthouse, Mr. S., <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Simeon, Rev. C., <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sinclair, Miss M., <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, Mrs. Ashley, <a href="#Page_215">215-218</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Rev. Charles, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Professor G. A., <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soames, Miss, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Social Science Congress, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somervell, Mrs. A., <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerville College, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soulsby, Mrs., <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stanley, Lady, of Alderley, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Hon. Lyulph, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stanton, Rev. V. H., <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stepney, Bishop of, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stevenson, the Misses, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stirling, Miss, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stoke, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Storrar, Dr., <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Storrs, Mr., <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story, Dr., <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strettel, Rev. A. B., <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strong, Miss L., <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stroud, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stubbs, Bishop, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sturge, Miss, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sudeley Castle, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swanwick, Miss A., <a href="#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Symonds. Rev. W., <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Synge, Miss B., <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Tait, Miss, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tallents, Mrs., <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teachers’ Guild, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Temple, Bishop, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennyson, Alfred, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Textbook of General History</cite>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_B">Appendix B</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thompson, Miss, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tiesset, M. and Mademoiselle, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Training of Teachers, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trench, Dean, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trimmer, James, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Sarah, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tuke, Sir John Batty, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Twining, Miss, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[432]</a></span>Vaccination, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Verrall, Mr. H., <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss A., <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Victoria, Queen, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vincent, Miss, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Wantage, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wardell, Miss, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Webb, Bishop, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mr. S., <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wedgwood, Mrs., <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Welldon, Miss, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wellington, Duke of, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wells, Mrs., <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Westcott, Bishop, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weston, Miss Agnes, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Widgery, Mr., <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilderspin, Miss, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilkinson, Bishop, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilson, Rev. C., <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Mr. E. T., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winkworth, Miss C., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Withiel, Mrs., <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood, Lady Page, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Miss S., <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woodchester, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woodhouse, Mrs., <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wordsworth, Miss, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Work and Play</cite>, <a href="#Page_326">326-329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Working Men’s College, Cheltenham, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Worsley, Rev. E., <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wright, Dr., <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">York, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">Printed by T. and A. <span class="smcap">Constable</span>, Printers to His Majesty
-at the Edinburgh University Press</p>
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